They make a great stocking stuffer
Wednesday, Jan 26, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Who would buy these?
They won’t have a blooper reel and you can’t get them at Blockbuster, but Illinois House proceedings are now available on DVD.
In recent years the chamber’s sessions have been broadcast live on the Internet. As of Wednesday, the sessions are being recorded and copied to DVD for anyone who wants them.
House Speaker Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, decided to archive the sessions and sell copies to make following state government easier, said spokesman Steve Brown. Some people could find the recordings interesting, he added.
“We’ve got a sense that what we do here has a bit of history surrounding it,'’ Brown said.
Each disc from the House clerk’s office will cost $5.
Bill Black probably has the answer to my question.
Still, Rep. Bill Black is concerned that the recordings may be put to political uses. The Danville Republican said footage could be edited, or even altered electronically, to make a lawmaker look bad and then used in a negative campaign commercial.
“We always worry about being taken out of context,'’ Black said. “But if you do that to a digital video disc and use it as a campaign commercial it could be devastating.'’
Brown said the House will do its best to prevent improper use of the video recordings by branding a logo onto the picture. But he said technology is such that if someone wanted to make an attack ad based on what goes on in the Legislature they “could probably create a virtual House debate with computers and graphics.'’
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Charlie sez
Wednesday, Jan 26, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
My ol’ buddy Charlie Johnston has one of the best analysis pieces I’ve ever seen at the Leader. I don’t agree with everything, of course, but it’s darned good.
A little taste:
Why, then, haven’t more county chairmen made common cause with dissenting conservative organizations? Bluntly, the caustic rhetoric and corrosive tactics of some movement conservatives have left county chairmen leery.
They suspect many movement conservatives would be more at home on a demolition crew than on a construction crew. Whatever their problems with the institutional party, they want to fix it; not destroy it.
This opens a great opportunity, both for movement conservatives and for the establishment, over the next year. If movement conservatives can tone down their rhetoric and demonstrate a credible approach to building a majority party they will find a lot of unexpected allies in the ranks of the county chairmen.
Similarly, if the top establishment can re-connect with county chairmen, entering into genuinely collegial dialogue and showing as much concern for what the chairmen need from the party as for what the party demands from them, it can re-cement the chairmen to the traditional party process. Neither side seems particularly poised to pull off such a diplomatic coup.
Call me crazy, but I don’t think the “movement” types will ever tone down their acts. Still, Charlie’s piece is a good roadmap for McKenna.
By the way, I don’t know the woman next to Charlie, but I’m sure the CrossBlogger hounds are now on the case. It says on this website that she’s a “press secretary/webmaster.” In other words, Dring and Rhodes could both be replaced in one fell swoop. On second thought, maybe they won’t do any further research.
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Piling on
Wednesday, Jan 26, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Hey, Larry, if you think his photo is weird, wait until you hear about his tooth
Syverson is a Republican who says he’s so dedicated to the cause that seven years ago he got a tattoo of the GOP’s elephant logo on one of his upper molars.
Yep, a molar tattoo.
OK, feeling guilty for piling on (and the pangs hit quicker than I expected - I must be getting soft in my dotage). Really, he doesn’t look so bad in this photo.
UPDATE 2: OK, I can’t help myself. This is from a 1997 edition of the Rockford Register Star. Sorry, no link.
‘Tattooth’ fame earns dentist TV appearance
ROCKFORD — Dave Syverson’s upper molar — the one adorned with a “tattooth” of the Republican Party emblem — has become the talk of the town, the state capital and the nation.
A story about the state senator’s red, white and blue porcelain elephant appeared Sunday in the New York Times, and the Family Channel is flying the dentist who implanted the GOP-festooned crown to Los Angeles to appear Monday on the cable station’s “Home and Family” show.
“I’ve got the most famous tooth in the country,” Syverson joked Wednesday.
The conservative legislator’s trendy dental work also was a hit at the Boone and Winnebago county fairs.
“People were standing in line to see his tattooth,” said Gloria Franklin, Syverson’s legislative aide. “It’s been unbelievable.”
The tattooth isn’t easily visible: Syverson has to stick his finger in his mouth and pull his lip aside to display it.
Since the tattooth story broke last week, Syverson’s office has been flooded with telephone calls, including several from colleagues in Springfield who wanted to tease him after reading about his racy conduct in the newspaper.
The 40-year-old senator was a guest on radio station WMAQ in Chicago and has more big-city radio interviews scheduled for next week.
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Dick Walsh
Wednesday, Jan 26, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Condolences to the family and many friends of Dick Walsh, who passed away this week. He was 74.
The wake is Thursday, from 3-9 at Dreschler, Brown and Williams funeral home in Oak Park. The funeral is Friday at 11 at St. Lukes in River Forest.
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Madigan interview link
Wednesday, Jan 26, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
Here’s the link I promised in today’s Capitol Fax. And here are the relevant paragraphs:
SPEAKER MADIGAN: I think we ought to spend a lot of time on electric utility deregulation because, although Illinois appears to have successfully transitioned to deregulation, there’s a lot of serious issues to be addressed in terms of electric utility deregulation.
Number one would be the rate freeze that was put in place. At the time, it was argued that this would be beneficial for ratepayers, especially residential ratepayers. Over time, a legitimate question has been put, “Well, although we put a lid on what the rates might be, we may have also put a floor on what the rates could be.†And competition over the last couple years, without the rate freeze, may have driven those rates lower than they are right now.
In addition, we provided for what they call stranded costs at the time of the electric utility deregulation, which is an industry way of saying that the mistakes of the utility companies, notably Commonwealth Edison, in building nuclear plants would be paid for by the ratepayers. We did that.
Having done that, having done the rate freeze, you’re now looking at a cliff, in terms of where you go with cost for the utility companies and for the rates.
In the case of the telephone companies, there has been a great change in telephone service. You probably carry a cell phone. And so all of that should be reviewed now, rather than later, because of the dramatic changes in the industry and technology.
ILLINOIS ISSUES: The argument is that a move to a more free-market system would benefit everyone?
MADIGAN: And in the case of the phone regulation — privately, I put the question, and I guess I’ll put it publicly right now: Why couldn’t we follow the model that we followed in electric utility deregulation, where, in essence, we made Commonwealth Edison and the other distribution companies common carriers and took them out of the generation business. Why couldn’t we just make SBC a common carrier for distribution and take them out of the other aspects of it. I’m sure they have some kind of response, but I think it’s a question that ought to be put.
If you were to do that, then there’s a little more rhyme and reason to this idea that they’re deregulated, but the legislature or the Commerce Commission is setting the rate for wholesale sales from people like SBC to the others.
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Dylan diversion
Wednesday, Jan 26, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
A couple of months ago I ran across a bootleg Bob Dylan website. Every few weeks, some guy in Japan uploads new songs, mostly rehearsal tapes and studio outtakes.
There are plenty of Dylan bootleg sites out there, but this one is quite special. Most of the stuff I’ve heard so far is superior to just about anything Dylan has formally released. It’s far more relaxed and less self-important than his commercial recordings, and less distracted and choppy than his concert performances. And the recordings are a higher quality than most of the Basement Tapes.
Tonight, while waiting for a bad case of writer’s block to pass, I’ve been listening to outtakes from his 1983 album Infidels. There are three versions of “Sweetheart like you,” for instance (one of my favorite Dylan tunes), and you can listen as the lyrics evolve.
Got to be an important person to be in here, honey, Got to have done some evil deed, Got to have your own harem when you come in the door, Got to play your harp until your lips bleed.
My absolute favorite track, however, is a jarring bloozy version of “You’re a big girl now” from a concert rehearsal in the late 1970s. Dylan perfectly captures the essence of the song in a way that he didn’t even approach in the commercial release. I never quite understood until I heard the bootleg that it was a great blues tune.
I’m going out of my mind, With a pain that stops and starts Like a corkscrew to my heart Ever since we’ve been apart.
The latest upload from our mystery Japanese guy is a 1988 New York concert bootleg. It’s OK, but I prefer the studio and rehearsal tapes.
I won’t link to the site for fear of getting sued by some giant media monster, but I might be convinced to send you the link if you email me and ask in a nice way. Or, you could just follow the first link in this post and figure it out for yourself.
They say that patriotism is the last refuge To which a scoundrel clings. Steal a little and they throw you in jail, Steal a lot and they make you king. There’s only one step down from here, baby, It’s called the land of permanent bliss. What’s a sweetheart like you doin’ in a dump like this?
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Finally, some good news
Wednesday, Jan 26, 2005 - Posted by Rich Miller
After losing thousands of jobs in the past four years, the Rockford area is finally catching a break. 1,000 high-paying factory jobs at Chrysler, plus lots of suppliers are building new plants in the area.
DaimlerChrysler Corp. will invest $419 million to upgrade the aging Belvidere assembly plant, adding up to 1,000 new jobs and a second production shift which will start in March 2006. […]
Halprin said when the work is completed the plant would increase production from one shift to two for the first time since 2000. […]
After refurbishing, the factory will manufacture a replacement for the Dodge Neon, which will cease production in September 2005.
The state will kick in $36 million, which works out to about $36 thousand per job, not including all the other new positions created by suppliers and construction. That’s not terribly huge, considering some of the other schemes that have been tried in the past.
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