Tuesday Trivia Time

Movie trivia for the aficianado. Please play whether or not you suck.

1. His suitcase contains (among other things) a baseball cap, a copy of Fortune magazine, and an old copy of the book Curious George.
Solved by Daven.

2. Her pickpocketing is aided by a pair of false arms attached to her dress.
HINT: This 2002 movie had a controversial shot of the Twin Towers.

3. A Russian agent sleeps with his contact, then decodes a note reading “Kill her.”
HINT: The Russian agent is played by a future James Bond, and his contact is perhaps best known for her role as a snake-charming stripper.

4. He is angry that his wife doesn’t want to go out in public wearing her own hair.
HINT: The primary location makes up the title of this movie about immigrants.
Solved by Melville.

5. He returns a stolen motorcycle by telling the owner it needs gas.
Solved by Ken.

6. He spends most of the movie unsuccessfully trying to give his beloved roses, and finally hits on a unique solution.
Solved by Ken and Daven.

7. A ghost enlists the aid of his friends to annoy his wife with late-night movie watching.
Solved by Ken.

Radio Update 2.0

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Monday Movie Review: Inside Deep Throat

Inside Deep Throat (2005) 10/10
The pornographic film Deep Throat, released in June of 1972, becomes a benchmark for political and social change. Documentary.

People like to make fun of the seventies; the wildness, the fashion, the naïve hope that the world could be changed, the primitive lack of technology. Here was a time when pornographic filmmakers considered their work art, and believed they were heading for a day when explicit sex would be a normal part of mainstream movies; when Hollywood and porn would merge into a single industry. Here was a time when porn stars had their original breasts and faces, how innocent is that?

Deep Throat changed the ability of Americans to talk about sex. Then it changed it again. And again. Porn became the focus of what we now call Religious Right activism, just as gay marriage is today. Lawsuits were numerous. The most prominent effort to shut down Deep Throat as obscene ended up as a battle on the nature of female orgasm, with the defense contending the film had educational value, as it depicted a woman seeking the source of her problem achieving orgasm. The prosecution, however, used the Freudian canard that clitoral orgasm is unhealthy, and since this was the kind of orgasm the film encouraged, it could demoralize women who would never learn the true pleasure of vaginal climax. I know, it sounds silly, doesn’t it?

The film then became the focus of anti-porn feminists, who declared it abusive to women. This argument gained power a decade later when Deep Throat star Linda Lovelace (who died in 2002 in a car crash) revealed that she was forced into performing in the film by her then-husband (filmmakers were never implicated, and contend she appeared perfectly happy during filming; Lovelace argued she was coerced and controlled at all times, and that the film shows her being raped). In a bizarre coda, we learn that Lovelace’s daughter was asked to star in “Deep Throat 7” (she turned it down).

This is definite NC-17 material. The actual “deep throat” sequence itself is shown (which is a relief, I think; it would be maddening to talk and talk and talk about a moment that was never shown for propriety’s sake).

The documentary does a great job of bringing a wide range of different concepts together; the porn industry, the amateur filmmakers, the mob involvement, public and political reaction, the court cases, the “where are they now” aspect, and more. It ties it into the current political climate quite intelligently, making the movie so very pertinent today.

Sunday Meditation: Self-perception

Today I was thinking about how odd it is to get fan mail. People have a perception of me, and I have a perception of me, and they might meet in the middle, or they might not.

That’s true for everyone.

Sometimes we’re misjudged. Sometimes it’s negative. Earlier this week, I got a strange email. A guy had asked me if it would be more convenient to do X than Y. I said yes it would, and thank you for considering my convenience. His response was that this proved to him I was selfish. It was some kind of test and I failed. What I actually failed at was being too trusting and honest; I took him at face value instead of realizing I was being tested. So his negative impression was a misjudgment.

Sometimes a misjudgment is neutral; it’s not negative or positive, just incorrect, like someone being wrong about your age or background. They might, indeed, be wrong about your spirit.

So, the first part of this meditation is to allow your self-knowledge to shine through misperceptions.

Ground and center.

From your center, allow a glowing light that is you, your true self, to shine.

Brighter and brighter, the real you radiates light that leaves your body and surrounds you.

Visualize the people near you, sending ideas, judgments, and perceptions that just don’t fit. And now visualize the light of your center clearing those misperceptions away. As light devours shadow, the truth about you wipes away judgment.

There is a second way we interact with the perceptions of others, and that is when our own perceptions are negative or false, and we can see ourselves most clearly through the eyes of another.

Sometimes I am massively frustrated with my own stupidity, and yet people I know tell me I’m smart. It can help to take that information in, to allow myself to know that I am seen as smart in a way that enriches my self-perception. If you think of yourself as unlovable, it is wonderful to meditate on the people who love you, and to feel their perception correct yours.

When my friends tell me how brave I am, it is easy to think, ‘Oh, no, they’re wrong. They wouldn’t think that way if they knew how terrified I was.’

But maybe they’re not wrong. Maybe they understand that behaving bravely in the world (the part they see) is a truer test of courage than feeling afraid while doing so (the part I see).

So, the second part of this meditation is to allow perceptions in.

Still grounded and centered, continue to focus on the bright light of your center. Make sure that light feels secure and stable, it will never fade. You know yourself.

And now, knowing yourself, allow loving and truthful perceptions in. Allow your knowledge to wake up, to expand, as a result of the things others say to you.

Hear the words your friends have said. Hear, in your mind, the voices saying “I love you,” “You’re so smart,” “You’re so kind,” and any other things that they said.

Sometimes it is hard to take those words in. Take them in now. Feel how the light that is you glows stronger and brighter when enhanced by loving perceptions.

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World AIDS Day

Today is World AIDS Day.

The first friend I lost to AIDS died twenty years ago, in 1986. It was such an early date that when Steve was walking around with pneumonia for months and months, no one in our group of friends thought anything of it except that he needed antibiotics. When I visited him in the hospital, he wouldn’t accept a kiss on the cheek, afraid he would infect me.

By 1987 everyone I knew was very aware of what pneumonia might mean, but no one, I think, believed we’d still be fighting this disease in the 21st century.

I cannot think of AIDS without thinking of my dear friend Scott, gone since 1993. Scott thought he was so lucky to have AIDS when he had it, living as long as he did. AZT gave him years more than if he’d been diagnosed in 1987. Then again, had he been diagnosed just a couple of years later…

AIDS has challenged previously carefree communities to face death, and has taught adults to speak openly about sexuality. The language of safer sex forces communication. Irresponsibility looks uglier. Of course, it allows Puritans to be even more Puritan, prudes to be more prudish, and the hateful another venue by which to spew hate. But I don’t think you can judge anything by how the hateful react to it.

Now AIDS challenges us to face ethnocentrism, as Americans struggle to care about Africa, normally a place we know and care nothing about. The world is small and we can’t afford such carelessness. Time to wake up and grow up yet again.

Answers to Tuesday Trivia

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Graceless

I heard this on the radio this morning, Bush says there will be “no graceful exit from Iraq.”

What kind of fucking idiot doesn’t understand that the opposite of graceful is graceless, awkward, and clumsy? What braindead dickweed actually wants to assure the American people that he leads just such a graceless, clumsy Presidency.

Why, our braindead fucking dickweed idiot, of course!

Kevin McClory, RIP

I have just learned that Kevin McClory passed away on Tuesday, November 21st (Wikipedia has November 20).

McClory is well-known to Bond afficianadoes. Credited co-author of the novel Thunderball, he was the producer of the film of that name and of the “rogue” Bond film Never Say Never Again. The history of lawsuits is complex.

May he rest in peace.

What Kind of Intelligence Do You Have?


Your Dominant Intelligence is Linguistic Intelligence


You are excellent with words and language. You explain yourself well.
An elegant speaker, you can converse well with anyone on the fly.
You are also good at remembering information and convicing someone of your point of view.
A master of creative phrasing and unique words, you enjoy expanding your vocabulary.

You would make a fantastic poet, journalist, writer, teacher, lawyer, politician, or translator.