Wednesday, July 29, 2009

"Paco Paco Paco que mi Paco"

It´s summer, and time for the fiestas en los pueblos de Espana! But what will be this year´s hit song, that will get all the kids up and dancing in every village? This year´s song may actually be a case of musical recycling, a mash-up of flamenco pop and Beyonce´s "Single Ladies" known as "Paco Paco Paco."

¿El fenómeno que arrasó en España y que igual se convierte en la canción más bailada de las fiestas de verano es la remezcla del baile de Beyonce con una canción de "flamenco pop" de Encarnita Polo, de hace 30 años



El video de Beyonce, "Single Ladies,"  fue sincronizado con "Paco Paco Paco" con resultados sorprendentes. 



Claro, las imitaciones caseras empezaron a llover, y el "Paco Paco Paco" pasó a ser un fenómeno televiso. Unos humoristas de un programa de televisión lanzaron un concurso nacional de imitadores.

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Como dijo alguien en los comentarios al videoclip: "Ahora todo el mundo se sube al carro del paco paco jaja. Lo k hace la crisis, madre mia k mal vamos a acabar jaja." 

Saturday, July 18, 2009

I'm away from my digital desk

AAAAH! I am struck by irrational exuberance! Because I have finished grading papers and I'm leaving town for a few weeks, off the grid. No phone, no laptop, only intermittent access to email. I'm going to power down.
So I leave you with these links to playlists of great group danceshere, and hip-hop hits , and ballroom highlights. Here are some contemporary routines and assorted other fun things as well.
All bow down before MightyGodKing!

I won't be able to watch my favorite show, live, for a few weeks. I'll have to make do with the recaps, gossip and spoilers posted by my viewing buddies.

Back in August, ciao!

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

SYTYCD 5: top ten dance



Jason and Jeanine dance to Travis Wall choreography.

So You Think You Can Grandstand?

I've been glued to the "Sotoshow" or the third day of the Sotomayor confirmation hearings. How I wish we could judge the Senators for their performance the way we judge the dancers on our favorite reality show! Some of these "Bitter Old White Guys" don't get it (or just don't care) that they are showing their true colors in front of the nation.

Here, I'm recycling one of my very favorite SYTYCD remixes, in which the judges and fans watch the performances of Obama and McCain in the presidential debate. It's all footage from last season's show, but used to great effect. How I wish there were a similar remix for the Senate hearings of the nomination of Sonia Sotomayor for the Supreme Court: but of the Senators, not her!



It's disgusting but fascinating, the way all those angry white men are trying to prove that the Puerto Rican woman who worked her way out of the projects to the top of her class, the top of her profession, is a RACIST! who is keeping the white man down! Because we all know that white men are the most oppressed! And that Latina women have their boots on the throats of DA WHITEMAN! Poor white men, they have no power and status in our world today.

Last night, I issued a plea, via Twitter, that the Senators end this asshattery, with this song:
"Dear Senators Graham, Kyl, and Sessions, this song is for you. #sotomayor ("Please Stop the Asshattery" by Josh Millard, from MeFi)

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

"Warning Sign" Talking Heads 1978 Lower Sproul Plaza


I was there. Still a great song.

The Sotomayor confirmation hearings.

Yesterday I had to work and couldn't follow the live coverage of the "Sotoshow"--the confirmation hearings of Judge Sonia Sotomayor-- but I did get to check out Anne Marie Cox's live-blogging (a hilarious antidote to the pontificating and posturing by most of the Senators). After all the snark and laughing though, I get back to the fact that it's still OK for the mainstream media to make outrageously sexist and racist remarks with impunity. And some of the Senators, especially Sessions, were appealing to that hateful rhetoric.

The Women's Media Project documents the relentless smears against Sonia Sotomayor since her nomination. Listen to all these white men--all the usual suspects--rant and rave, attempting to accuse Sotomayor of what they themselves promote: malice and hate. Bullies who are afraid of mommy and teacher.


Thank goodness that there are a few people of common sense who can offer a different perspective. Like Rachel Maddow!



And Amy Klobuchar. Thank you, Senator, for showing us what it's like when a grown-up talks.


And what about Judge Sotomayor herself? Here she answers a question from Diane Feinstein on the limits of executive power. (For the Constitutional law wonk take on this process, try The SCOTUS blog. For the analysis of the political theater, try HuffPo's live coverage)

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Comedy and the news, or laugh so you don't cry

Minnesota has sent a comedian to Washington DC. Yes, I'm talking about Michelle Bachmann, whose name too often is closely followed by the words "loony tunes." MPR reporter and blogger Bob Collins did some fact-checking at his blog News Cut about some recent inflammatory statements Bachmann made about the U.S. Census., and found this great clip from The Colbert Report:
The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
The Word - Noncensus
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorJeff Goldblum


Now Bob is much too professional a reporter to turn to the Dump Michelle Bachmann website for more examples of her crazy talk, but like him, I can supplement my fact-checking with the work of professional comedians: Here's Bachmann on Autotune the News!"

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Zoning out on the couch, yes I am!

Churning through stuff at work in a very satisfactory way, but now I'm zonked, eating leftovers and zoning out on the couch. Zoning out is good for you, yes it is! (OMG, Mary Murphy has infected me with her verbal tics!)

This was the most exciting week of So You Think You Can Dance this season, with three or four performances that were among the best ever (Mia's piece for Kayla and Kupono, Brandon and Janette's Argentine Tango AND their number for Wade) and a solo by Ade that tore the roof off. Wade Robson made this wonderful piece for Brandon and Janette, to Roisin Murphy's song "Ruby Blue." "You are two thieves" he told them, and they ran with it.


Several of us had fun trying to guess which 80s song Mandy Moore would use in her choreography, because she almost always uses 80s music. We didn't guess right, but one of the bands that got mentioned was Adam and the Ants. Wow, that brought back some memories!



Adam and the Ants "Stand and Deliver" sure as heck must have been one of the inspirations for Johnny Depp's Captain Jack Sparrow!

Another song that came us was New Order's "True Faith" and it turns out that the video (1987) is wild!

Monday, July 06, 2009

Musicians and fans create together.


Sometimes you come across something so lovely, so creative, it just makes you smile all day.

The band is Sour. Here is their website. They created this video with the participationn of their fans. Here's an interview in which they talk about how they made this video with no money.
I've found the English translation of the lyrics here, but I haven't found a transcription of the Japanese yet.

Buh-bye! Sarah Palin

OK, after my earnest sentimental post about democracy (all those 4th of July fireworks!) here is my razz on the other political news of the week: "Sarah Palin's Iquitarod" (joke first told on @pourmecoffee's Twitter and then turned into Huffpo headline by Geoffrey Dunn).

Well, we won't have Sarah Palin to kick around any more. At least not while she is in elected office. I wish this meant we wouldn't be hearing from her or about her at all, but I fear she will continue to puzzle us with her amazing feats of syntax, and provide the pundits with fodder for punditry. LOL, even the otherwise horrid the Fox media critic Liz Trotta who laughed about Obama getting assassinated ("Osama..Obama... well both would be really good") goes off on her! Hmmmm.


But, for now, I say "Play her off, keyboard cat."

Al Franken interview on The UpTake

Senator Al Franken answers questions from The UpTake, some serious, some frivolous.
Some highlights: on health care: private insurance needs competition from "a public option" (we know he is a strong advocate for accessible and affordable health care for all).He repeats that he favors gay marriage and thinks DOMA will be history soon. Specifically, he emarks that we just observed the 40th anniversary of Stonewall, and 42nd anniversary of Loving vs. Virginia, saying that 40 years from now, people will find it just as incredible that there was a ban on gay marriage as we do now that there was a ban on interracial marriage. Franken quotes his friend Paul Wellstone: "Politics is not about winning, it's not about power; it's about improving other people's lives."

Progress is too slow, but it is real, and we can't drop the ball because we are impatient with the pace. We need that 60th Senator. We needed those seven months of proving that the election was absolutely clean. We need to make sure that every vote is counted.

The swearing-in is tomorrow (see this Minnesota Independent story). He says it is surreal, after seven months, after watching the coverage on the UpTake; he's pinching himself. I'm elated that he will be in office and ready to work for us; it's about time we had our full representation in the Senate. Looking at the events in Iran and in Honduras makes me grateful, even when I'm feeling cynical about politics in the U.S., because it does make a difference that we have elections, that they can be legal and demonstrably free of corruption, that people can have trust that their voices will be heard by someone whose job it is to represent them.

With Sarah Palin's resignation in Alaska, we see that she and the people who support her are not interested in the actual work of governing, of the hard work of leadership; they are more interested in demagoguery and whipping up fear and resentment to frighten people. I hope that we keep our eye on the incremental changes that are slowly happening in Washington, and keep up the pressure to make those changes bigger and better. When I read the news from Iran and Honduras, I am reminded of a more shameful side of our government's history, when it does not obey its own laws. All the more reason to persist in the often tedious but absolutely necessary work of creating the infrastructure of civial society, such as citizen-journalism of the caliber of the UpTake. I'm going to be making a donation to them, because they need the money. Since our major news outlets can't do the job, we need to make sure it gets done.

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Rap around the world video

I am absolutely fascinated by this video: it's a sampler of rap in 30 languages from all around the world. A testament to the power of hip hop culture as a world-wide phenomenon, it also shows--ever so briefly--how languages with different sounds, rhythms, and tone systems have taken what young people identify as some of the basic elements of rap, and made them fit their own circumstances. I would so love to have an idea of WHAT they are singing about!


The YouTube info lists the 30 languages and identifies most (but not all) of the artists. Two notes: the language identified as simply Chinese is, I believe, Mandarin Chinese (because Cantonese is a Chinese languge too). And there is no language called "Swiss" so I suspect it is Swiss-German but I have to listen again.