Tuesday 2 September 2008

Chicago Tribune Examines How Health Care Is Playing In Presidential Election, Among Voters


Both presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.) and presumptive Republican nominee Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) get announced "elaborated -- just very different -- wellness care plans," the Chicago Tribune reports.

In recent weeks, Obama and McCain have focused on other issues -- such as the state of war in Iraq, the economy, gasoline prices and home security -- and some polls have found that health care is "languishing far behind" other issues as top concerns for voters, according to the Tribune. While health forethought appeared as "daily cannon fodder in the debate all over which prospect would do a better job as president" during the Democratic presidential elementary campaign, the Tribune reports that the "silence is deafening" on the egress during the general election campaign.

Reaction
Obama interpreter Bill Burton said, "The issue of health care may be getting less attention than it deserves from the media, only it's still a top concern for voters and among the top issues that Sen. Obama talks about on the campaign trail."

Tucker Bounds, a spokesperson for McCain, acknowledges that, although health upkeep issues have not standard a large amount of attention in the general election movement, they "could hardly escape the conversation each prospect will have with voters" because of the "complete contrast" in their proposals.

Anna Greenberg, a Democratic pollster, aforementioned, "For a lot of people wHO have health insurance, they are paid more for health care, but it may not show up as concretely as compensable $70 to fill their gas tank."

According to Republican pollster Gary Ferguson, world Health Organization specializes in health care, despite the lack of attention to health fear, the issue remains part of boilers suit economic concerns.

Drew Altman, president and CEO of the Kaiser Family Foundation, said that, although gas prices are the "canary in the coal mine" for economic concerns, "when you probe, when you ask people what's bothering you about the thriftiness right now, in economic downturns -- problems paying for health care and health insurance policy really loom large." He added, "After people's fixations paying for gas prices, problems gainful for wellness care are right at the big top with job issues."

In Congress, Democratic and Republican staffers have begun to meet in preparation for the consideration of health care legislation following year, regardless of which candidate becomes president. Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-Ill.), chair of the House Democratic Caucus, added that health care is an important issue in House races nationwide and that he expects Obama to address the effect next calendar week during the Democratic National Convention in Denver (Zuckman, Chicago Tribune, 8/21).


Editorial Addresses Obama Comments on Single-Payer System
A recent statement by Obama that he would "'probably go forrader with a single-payer'" health care system if he was "'designing a scheme from scratch'" indicated his support for the "idea of a health care market -- or nonmarket -- only run by the government," a Wall Street Journal editorial states. According to the editorial, most "liberals support single-payer, aka 'Medicare for All,' because it would eliminate the profit motive, which by their lights is the reason Americans ar uninsured."

Obama "takes a more moderate campaign line, though we suppose exactly about everything is 'moderate' compared to a total government takeover," the editorial states. "Obama's health forethought plan includes a taxpayer-funded insurance programme, much wish Medicare simply open to everyone," and seeks to "displace current private coverage and replacement people to the default option government alternative," according to the editorial.

The editorial states, "What's young is Mr. Obama's drum sander political publicity." The editorial states, "With good reason, critics oftentimes call this a backdoor route to a centrally planned wellness care bureaucracy," adding, "For all his lawyerly qualifications, Mr. Obama has fundamentally admitted that his proposal is very the front door" (Wall Street Journal, 8/21).


Broadcast Coverage

NBC's "Nightly News" on Wednesday included analysis from NBC News Political Director Chuck Todd on a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal crown on the presidential election. Among former results, the poll plant that 48% of voters believe Obama would direct health care more efficaciously, compared with 27% wHO believe McCain would address the number more in effect (Curry, "Nightly News," NBC, 8/20).


In addition, NPR's "Morning Edition" on Wednesday reported on how both candidates this week discussed health care and early concerns for veterans during the annual Veterans of Foreign Wars convention (Horsley, "Morning Edition," NPR, 8/20).


Reprinted with kind license from hTTP://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can view the integral Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or signboard up for email rescue at hTTP://www.kaisernetwork.

Thursday 26 June 2008

Pharrell Williams calls The Strokes 'genius' at London signing

N.E.R.D's Pharrell Williams has described The Strokes as "a genius band", after Albert Hammond, Jr. responded positively to his suggestions that he produce the New York group.

The producer and singer spoke at London's clothing boutique The Hideout, where the group were signing copies of their new album 'Seeing Sounds'.

The store, which attracted hundreds of fans to the signing, also stocks Williams' clothing ranges Ice Cream and Billionaire Boys Club.

Speaking to NME.COM, Williams said: "Julian [Casablancas] and I have already worked together, of course I would be up for [producing the band].

"I would work with Julian in a heartbeat, in a heartbeat. They are a genius band, a genius band."

Check out NME.COM's Office blog later for the inside story on the signing, including snaps of Williams and his expensive clothes ranges.

Wednesday 18 June 2008

Sparks, Exotic Creatures Of The Deep

One almost despairs at the thought of reviewing another great Sparks album. 21 albums into one of the most idiosyncratic careers in pop/rock and the Mael brothers remain firmly on the periphery; such is the place to reside when you consistently and annoyingly demonstrate original thinking. The impossibility of pigeonholing the pair makes most people run for the hills. But the brave amongst us know for a fact that next to no one is making such criminally underrated and startlingly original music, in any genre, these days.

The last two albums, Lil' Beethoven and Hello Young Lovers, were filled with cod-operatic, Reichian repetitive odes to fickle humanity, love and vanity. Exotic Creatures is filled with yet more biting commentary. The title is presumably a reference to the characters dredged up in the songs therein. There's the guy whose girlfriend rejects him because he's not as deep as Morrissey (Lighten Up Morrissey); the amnesiac party animal who can't remember the identity of the girl next to him (Good Morning); the complete non-party animal (I Never Got High); or even the porn star at the center of The Director Never Yelled 'Cut'. And then there's the evisceration of modern manners. How about Photoshop - a tale of the ease with which we airbrush our past lives, or let The Monkey drive, which may or may not be about srvitude and decadence? There's even a song about the Rennaisance, called simply This Is The Renaissance. Dumb pop, this is not.

Stylistically it's slightly more varied than the previous two albums. The same staccato piano and electronica template with multi-tracked choirs of Russell holds sway, but there are also heavy guitars (courtesy of Dean Manta) and even a return to the barbershop and swing pastiches of the 70s glory years. Best of all there's the glitter stomp of the brilliantly-titled I Can't Believe You Would Fall For All The Crap In This Song. But in the end words fail to do justice to the odball greatness of this band. Undoubtedly the live performances of this album will be the usual multimedia extravaganza: Everyone is urged to attend. Such special, intelligent pop cannot bear indifference forever.


See Also

Monday 9 June 2008

My Morning Jacket's Evil Urges 'Was The Hardest Record We've Ever Made,' Says Jim James




"We almost broke up the band," My Morning Jacket drummer Patrick Hallahan joked on the topic of the laborious sequencing process for the new record, Evil Urges. But joking aside, the band makes it clear that the recording process was far from easy this go-round.

"It was the hardest record we've ever made. We did have a lot of fun in the conceiving of it — but in the making, it was more like work," lead singer Jim James explained. "It was just like kind of slamming at it — working with sounds and trying to get it to work out."

While James typically demos new material on his own, the recording process for the Louisville rockers' new album had a few more stages than usual. About 25 demos were presented to the band for realization in a lax Colorado atmosphere.


"I thought there'd be songs on the record that [in the end] didn't even make the record," said James. "A lot of the songs don't work out — but some of them work out great that you didn't think would work out." And after a month or two of fiddling around in Colorado, it was on to New York for the actual recording.

This time, the pressures of recording in a New York studio, as opposed to their usual Louisville spots, added some creative restrictions. "I think we're more used to working on our [own] terms ... just the pressure of having an end point added a different edge to our workday because before, we could just record whenever the feeling hit," Hallahan said of the problems they faced.

"From, like, noon to midnight, we could only be in the studio for 12 hours," James added. "We didn't want it to be an electronic-sounding record. I wanted it to be organic — [just] a band playing. And to do that on some of the songs, it took a lot of takes and a lot of time, miking, getting everything worked out so it would be ... almost to halfway trick you into thinking it was a drum machine. But it's not. It's a person playing. But trying to do that in the real world took a lot of time."

Due in stores June 10, Evil Urges is a hodgepodge of different sounds and genres that coalesce nicely into a new My Morning Jacket package. It won't be the opus to launch them into superstardom, but it continues what has been their slow upward trajectory to the top echelon of American rock.






See Also

Tuesday 3 June 2008

Bombay Sisters

Bombay Sisters   
Artist: Bombay Sisters

   Genre(s): 
Other
   Folk
   



Discography:


Sri Dattatreya Stotram   
 Sri Dattatreya Stotram

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 9


Sri Lalitha Sahasranamam   
 Sri Lalitha Sahasranamam

   Year:    
Tracks: 2




 






Tuesday 27 May 2008

Live: Wango Tango

They came for the Dey. They came for Shwayze. They came for Cherish and Danity Kane. Many, many came for Miley Cyrus. Those on the verge of adulthood came for Snoop Dogg and Pitbull. But above all, it seems, they came for the Jonas Brothers.

These tween flowers of the Southland, girls from 6 to 16, traveled from the cities and hamlets of SoCal to gather at the Verizon Wireless Amphitheater on Saturday. In a place once enchantingly known as Irvine Meadows, they raised a thousands-strong shriek as the 10th installment of 102.7 KIIS-FM's daylong outdoor hootenanny took flight.

Wow, could they make some noise. "Wango Tango," a term some may know from the 1980 Ted Nugent song, used to be a slangy term for sex, "a crazed gyration of the rock generation," as Nugent put it.




















But KIIS-FM -- with the support of an army of young girls who just a few years ago were immersed in Dora the Explorer but now wish only to keen, wail and pogo dance to the frenetic croonings of three brothers from New Jersey and the thrashings of a 15-year-old from Tennessee who is known in Disney-speak as Hannah Montana -- has taken this bawdy reference to something grown-ups do and transformed it into a successful mélange of pop concert and family carnival.

Ryan Seacrest, who in addition to his duties as the host of "American Idol" does the KIIS-FM morning show, roamed the seats, mike in hand, stoking the crowd.

The demographics were astonishing: every race, culture and creed seemed to be represented. Bemused dads, probably with misty recollections of summers chasing Phish from town to town during the first Clinton administration, were hauled around by hyperventilating daughters in pink trucker hats created specifically for the occasion. Moms chaperoned whole phalanxes of girls who vainly struggled to document Wango Tango '08 using the limited memory of pastel cellphones.

The day was loosely structured as three acts, ringmastered by Seacrest with an appearance from guest host Lindsay Lohan. First, there was the battle royale between the Jonas Brothers, who opened the show, and Miley Cyrus, who wore a black rhinestone-studded halter top and thanked her fans for supporting her as she grappled with the aftershocks of her controversial half-naked Vanity Fair photos. She also exhorted them to raise the volume. "I heard y'all during the Jonas Brothers set," the underage ingénue twanged, "and you were way louder." Game on!

Act 2 was a transition from the bubble gum stuff to more mature performances (KIIS-FM gave fair warning) of Act 3, when the R-rated rappers went on. Throughout, a steady flow of entertainment and Taco Bell pitches were beamed from stage-flanking big-screens. During performances, a stream of text-messaged "shout outs" crawled along the bottom of the picture.

And although "awesome" was the day's favored honorific, the audience wasn't exactly uncritical. The Beardsley sisters of San Marino -- 16-year-old Elizabeth, 14-year-old Sarah and 10-year-old Kate -- were enjoying their first Wango Tango and fell solidly into the pro-Jonas Brothers camp. "Miley's not as good," they agreed. "She's not as entertaining. The Jonas Brothers are more down to earth."

Angie Aguirre of Santa Ana was surrounded by her two daughters and their two friends, ranging in age from 6 to 12. She chuckled as the girls enthused over which Jonas Brother was their favorite. "I think it's funny," she said. "I grew up with the Backstreet Boys. They're going though their boy-crazy phase."

Providing a counterpoint to the Jonas juggernaut was a quartet of mop-haired young men in hooded sweat shirts, clustered on a bench, who had driven down from Los Angeles. They generally dismissed the teeny-bopper performers -- they were awaiting the appearance of Snoop Dogg -- but conceded that Miley was "energetic." Their real motives for attending? Hormonal. "There's a lot of hot girls here," said John Mitchell, 16. His comrades nodded.