Blacknell.net

Politics, open government, and safe streets. And the constant incursion of cycling.

M.I.A.: Born Free

M.I.A. first hit the scene in 5 years ago, to much acclaim (most of it completely misdirected, but still, it was exposure).  I jumped that train then, and have enjoyed the ride ever since. This new video – Born Free – brings a departure from her musical style, but heads straight down the political path her music has been on. It’s NSFW, and the conceit of it may be a little disappointing at first, but I’d suggest sticking with it.

M.I.A, Born Free from ROMAIN-GAVRAS on Vimeo.

Pardon My French

Worthwhile NYT article on the changing position of the French language as a cultural connector:

French is now spoken mostly by people who aren’t French. More than 50 percent of them are African. French speakers are more likely to be Haitians and Canadians, Algerians and Senegalese, immigrants from Africa and Southeast Asia and the Caribbean who have settled in France, bringing their native cultures with them.

Which raises the question: So what does French culture signify these days when there are some 200 million French speakers in the world but only 65 million are actually French? Culture in general — and not just French culture — has become increasingly unfixed, unstable, fragmentary and elective.

Friday Afternoon Music: Just Right

The Be Good Tanyas:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHNAFRg6jYA[/youtube]

Melden, Belgium

Looking down from halfway up the Koppenberg.

Imagine

that this is you.  Or your mother or father:

Clay and his partner of 20 years, Harold, lived in California. Clay and Harold made diligent efforts to protect their legal rights, and had their legal paperwork in place–wills, powers of attorney, and medical directives, all naming each other. Harold was 88 years old and in frail medical condition, but still living at home with Clay, 77, who was in good health.

One evening, Harold fell down the front steps of their home and was taken to the hospital. Based on their medical directives alone, Clay should have been consulted in Harold’s care from the first moment. Tragically, county and health care workers instead refused to allow Clay to see Harold in the hospital. The county then ultimately went one step further by isolating the couple from each other, placing the men in separate nursing homes.

Ignoring Clay’s significant role in Harold’s life, the county continued to treat Harold like he had no family and went to court seeking the power to make financial decisions on his behalf. Outrageously, the county represented to the judge that Clay was merely Harold’s “roommate.” The court denied their efforts, but did grant the county limited access to one of Harold’s bank accounts to pay for his care.

What happened next is even more chilling.

Without authority, without determining the value of Clay and Harold’s possessions accumulated over the course of their 20 years together or making any effort to determine which items belonged to whom, the county took everything Harold and Clay owned and auctioned off all of their belongings. Adding further insult to grave injury, the county removed Clay from his home and confined him to a nursing home against his will. The county workers then terminated Clay and Harold’s lease and surrendered the home they had shared for many years to the landlord.

Three months after he was hospitalized, Harold died in the nursing home. Because of the county’s actions, Clay missed the final months he should have had with his partner of 20 years. Compounding this tragedy, Clay has literally nothing left of the home he had shared with Harold or the life he was living up until the day that Harold fell, because he has been unable to recover any of his property. The only memento Clay has is a photo album that Harold painstakingly put together for Clay during the last three months of his life.

I’ve quoted more than I should, here, but I wanted to make sure that you saw what happened.  This is what happens when you deny people the basic decency of equality.

Pro Cycling Photography

I’m in the process of trying to re-organize some of the online galleries of the pro cycling races I’ve shot over the past few years.  I’ve occasionally linked them here, but haven’t created any central index.  I’m still working on that, but in the meantime:

The CSC Invitational has been a favorite race of mine for a very long time now.  It helps, of course, that it takes place just blocks away from my house.  It was, in fact, what got me interested in watching pro cycling races after we stumbled upon the first edition of it in 1998.

While the name has changed – it started off as the Clarendon Cup, turned into the CSC Invitational, and will now be known as the Air Force Cycling Classic Clarendon Cup this year – the race has remained the same.  100 laps of a very tight 1km circuit through the middle of the Clarendon neighborhood of Arlington.  Often acting as a prelude to “Philly Week”, it has consistently attracted a top-quality field of US pro cyclists.  It also happens to be the source of one of my favorite finishing shots (see above – Rahsaan Bahati winning for Rock Racing in 2007).

The ING Direct Capital Criterium has only run a single edition, thus far, in 2008.  Notable for its setting – a course that runs through downtown DC – it offered such a spectacular backdrop that it’s been noted as one of the reasons the organizers of the Giro d’Italia are considering starting their race in DC.  Race organizers say it will be back this year – on July 11, 2010.

I probably shouldn’t link this gallery, as I didn’t go to de Ronde van Vlaanderen (Tour of Flanders) with the intention (or capacity) of really shooting it.  I went purely as a fan of the Belgian cobbles, and managed a few pictures.  Frankly, the quality is a little embarrassing, but I was particularly lucky to be positioned on the Muur.

Which is exactly where Fabian Cancellara opened up his (ultimately race-winning) attack on Tom Boonen.  This is an unedited set, to be whittled down in the future.

The Philadelphia International Cycling Championship is a grand tradition in US pro cycling, with 25 editions behind it.   It is not, I suppose, as grand as it once was.  The Philadelphia International Cycling Championship used to cap off a week’s worth of racing through the Pennsylvania countryside, but a tough economic environment has pared it down to a single day of racing on Sunday.  But a fantastic day of racing it is.  It’s a short road circuit that winds its way along the Schuylkill River, through the working class neighborhood of Manayunk, and then back onto Benjamin Franklin Parkway, a finishing straight I’d put up against any in the world.  It’s a lot of fun to shoot – and not just the action on the road, but the crowds there to see it.

The Tour of California is the US last and greatest stage race left in the US (sorry, Tour of Missouri – I fear we won’t see you in 2010).  I only made it in for a couple of stages, but got some great time trial shots.

The Little Bald Nugget of Santa Rosa (Levi Leipheimer) almost looks scary, doesn’t he?

The Tour de Georgia was the first stage race I had a chance to properly cover.   It was a great experience, meeting a lot of folks from whom I learned a lot.  The galleries below (hopefully) illustrate that progress.  I’m particularly happy with how the 2008 race coverage turned out, and have broken it out into stages (check out Stage Four, which consisted of a team time trial at Road Atlanta).

Unfortunately, 2008 was the last edition of the race.  Though promoters are claiming to be working to bring it back in 2011, the TdG is by all reasonable standards dead.  They haven’t even renewed the race’s domain name.  A shame, really.

The Air Force Cycling Classic is a recent addition to the DC cycling calendar, added by the promoter who has been running the Clarendon Cup for the past decade.  The Air Force, as a sponsor, is behind this Crystal City circuit race in a big way, and I hope it will find a long-term place in the domestic cycling scene.  This race briefly took over the Clarendon Cup’s traditional slot on the National Racing Calendar, but it looks like that’s been handed back.   You might want to check out the Service Academy Shootout for my (entirely luck-based) How To Win A Sprint The Army Way series.

The U.S. Open Cycling Championships, which took place in Richmond, Virginia in 2007, was rather notable for a number of reasons.  First, it was nearly canceled because of heavy snow at the start (in April!).  Second, there was even a cobbled climb!  But most important, it was the first pro cycling race broadcast live on a major network (NBC) in recent memory.  Unfortunately, that wasn’t enough to keep the race alive, and despite year after year of assurances from the promoter it would return, this remains the only edition on this race.

So what’s next?  I’m definitely getting to the 2010 editions of the Clarendon Cup, Air Force Cycling Classic, ING Direct Capital Criterium, and the Philadelphia International Cycling Championship.  Also aiming for the USA Cycling Professional Championships in Greenville, this year.  Had been hoping to (finally) get to the Nature Valley Grand Prix, but that will have to wait for another year.

. . . and Saturday Morning Music

Sunrise music, actually.  Urban Dance Squad’s Deeper Shade of Soul:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qw5Gl28Xe5o[/youtube]

Did you know they were Dutch?  Not me.  Now on to Big Audio Dynamite (II)’s Rush:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-h8zs898lr4[/youtube]

I think I wore out at least two cassettes of the RHCP Mother’s Milk album:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZQIvhOcMhI[/youtube]

Friday Music: Peachtree Edition

In Atlanta, Friday night were always easy:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=twgArtVqMlM[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7MK5Esy-L0[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ddnt_upvkFI[/youtube]

Ready to Sue, Cuccinelli?

Obama takes a big step forward on the decency front:

President Obama mandated Thursday that nearly all hospitals extend visitation rights to the partners of gay men and lesbians and respect patients’ choices about who may make critical health-care decisions for them, perhaps the most significant step so far in his efforts to expand the rights of gay Americans.

This is something he should have done long ago, I think. In any event, I’m glad it’s done now. The next step, I presume, is Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli suing to stop this from taking force in Virginia.

One Of My (Many) Failures

Among the multitude of reasons I’d never make it in the big leagues of political commentary these days is my inability to look you in the eye and lie:

Page 37 of 227

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén