Random Play by Graham Reid

Thai coup, or Thai food?

There are so many important things to discuss -- cancerous politicians, the state of our nation’s mental health, Eden Park on the Harbour, TVNZ thinking people wouldn’t be pissed off by The Sopranos early exit -- that it’s hard to know where to start: so I’m not going to.

Just to say that if the coup in Thailand caught you a little by surprise then you might like to consider what I wrote back in March (Troubled Times in Thailand) when things were heating up.

The subtext of what I was saying then still applies: if this has kinda crept up on you it’s probably because the media hasn’t been watching on our behalf. And yep, we still have friends there and use it as our playground if we’ve got a few grand to spare and time to lie on a beach. We really should be paying more attention.

But I’m not going to essay anything of great importance right now because I am nakedly soliciting your help.

I’m off to Vancouver on Sunday and will be bopping around the area. If you know of anything I REALLY MUST SEE/DO then I’d appreciate a few tips, I’ve never been there and while I have things I must do I’m keen to get out and about and into more, shall we say, “obscure” pleasures. Flick me an e-mail if you can help.

The Vancouver Film Festival is on while I’m there so I may just end up going to the pictures.

And the other thing I’m soliciting for is my website
here which is constantly expanding as new ideas occur to me.

The Music From Elsewhere section -- where I post commentary about terrific albums that usually aren’t being reviewed anywhere else, plus a sample track -- is going like a rocket. Feel free to subscribe, it’s free.

And there has been some funny feedback about the Windows On Elsewhere pages I launched this week.

I try to take a photo out of every room I stay in, so there are about 100 pix up there which range from views of brick walls and fire escapes to white sandy beaches and enticing panoramas.

Check ’em out. You click on the pix and they blow up big with a caption saying where the place is. Some refer to places about which there are stories elsewhere in Elsewhere.

It’s just a bit of fun and should amuse you on a slow day in he office. And yes, I can tell you more if you really are interested in staying in some of the places I have had the good and bad fortune to. The brothel in Taipei was interesting.

But now it’s your turn to contribute to Elsewhere.

Over the years I have collected recipes from various people -- top chefs in luxury lodges to mates who can whip up something special -- and so I’m going to launch Recipes From Elsewhere soon. I’ve got some cracking stuff from genuine gumbos to Thai dishes, and much more.

If you want to contribute just send me in a recipe, and it doesn’t really have to be from “elsewhere” although that would be useful.

It shouldn’t be too complicated, just something your average person could get together and enjoy making. And be pleased to serve up to guests. Something a little bit different.

I’ll have to make every dish or idea you send in just to check that it can be done (sometimes people add an extra “0” onto a measure so we need to be cautious), but of course if I’m hospitalised your recipe won’t be posted.

But the idea is to just share some good ideas, whether they be of interesting Mexican food or a good goat curry. (A recipe that turns muttonbird into something edible would be welcome!)

You won’t get anything out of this (if I’m not you sure aren’t) but you’ll have the pleasure of knowing your recipes are being read and tried by people around the world -- and you’ll be in excellent, professional company too.

You will get full credit of course, and if you’ve got a decent picture of the dish or yourself making it then flick that along too. Naked chefs are okay by me, although they may not get posted.

So let me know what you’ve got, what works for you and your guests, and let’s share the good times.

Anything involving too much stuff from cans or which looks suspiciously like Allyson Gofton once did it will be scrutinised very carefully.

Righto, I look forward to a swag of recipes when I get back from bear country. I guess I’ll be bringing home some good Canadian music for Elsewhere -- and recipes for elk.

Outta here.

Alt.Nation: Mental Health Strikes 1 in 2

More than half of all New Zealanders will not have a mental illness at some time in their lives according to a survey released yesterday.

And of those people, four out of five said that they had not suffered any kind of anxiety, stress, or depression, or enjoyed substance misuse in the past five years.

The study conducted over eight years by research students at Waikato University’s Centre for Sanity further shows that many New Zealanders are sort of pretty happy all round, although they get a bit down when it rains for weeks on end.

“This is indeed encouraging result,” said Dr Peter Clarkson yesterday, “and while some of it reflects a kind of ’she‘ll be right’ attitude by New Zealanders there is no need for us to be complacent.

“At any time -- especially if we are in disadvantaged circumstances, are women, or Polynesian -- we may be susceptible to some form of anxiety.

“But let’s look on the bright side: white rich people are doing pretty well. And that is something we couldn’t have predicted. And while the white population is in relative decline as a percentage of the population there is ample evidence that some people are becoming really, really rich -- and they of course won’t be a drain on the health sector.

“They’ll probably just got to Melbourne for the weekend if they are feeling a bit down.”

The prime minister yesterday applauded the findings and said that one immediate result was that there would be no need to spend $8 million on further research or support programmes for healthy citizens.

“This kind of result shows clearly that people in this country have never had it so good, and that they have also never felt so good.

“It would be very convenient for my government to take credit for such findings and, although the issue is more complex than that, we will.”

Leader of the National Party Dr Don Brash said that while the figures were good news they should not be used to divert attention from what he called “the real issues”.

“It would be nice to be complacent about such a survey result, but once again we see something which the media banners in big headlines which actually diverts public attention from more important matters, such as just what David Benson Pope was doing at that school in Reefton last Wednesday around 11pm, and why the last album by Nesian Mystik didn’t sell as well as their debut.

“I note too that in the result Asian people are less prone to mental illness. My wife is Asian so in our family statistically that probably means that . . . well, if one out of every two people suffer from depression or anxiety then I suppose . . .”

Dr Clarkson acknowledged that what the survey also showed was that there were a significant number of people who did however suffer from depression.

“We have noted that depression is prevalent in some sectors of the community, notably amongst the young. But what we have also observed is that they tend to join rock bands or make movies about murders in small rural towns, and they invariably get great public recognition for that -- and are often recipients of grants so they can study abroad.

“So mental illness -- or as we call it, loopy behaviour -- is not necessarily a bad thing.

“After all, where would New Zealand literature be without manic depressives or folk who take a bit of a dark turn?”

Head of the New Zealand Authors and Writers Book Council Mrs Faye Taverstock-Te Whaa agreed.

“What is significant about more than half the population enjoying good mental health is that they are therefore able to hold down regular paid employment, which means they have an income with which they can buy books by some of our more depressing writers. In New Zealand Book Month this is excellent news.”

The sole dissenting voice came from editor of Investigate magazine Mr Ian Wishart who said the figures were open to interpretation and that he had evidence which would cast doubt on the findings.

“I can’t say just where and when I will be making this available, or who conducted the counter-survey, but in due course, once some photographs have been developed and we have identified the sexual orientation of some of those people behind the Waikato findings, I will be releasing it to the media.

“Well actually I won’t, I’ll just be suggesting that I have such a counter-survey -- and that should be enough for most people. It will certainly be a wake-up call for all New Zealanders.”

Dr Clarkson said that while further research was needed into the needs of those not suffering from depression there were some very simple solutions for the afflicted.

“We have found that a brisk walk in the morning, healthy eating, having a well-paid job, being in a caring family and having shitloads of money will help with anxiety problems or depression.”

Trevor Mallard could not be contacted for comment.

[The usual Alt.Nation disclaimer applies.]

Chairman Mao and student unrest

Further to my previous posting about buying old records . . . I have just come back from Dunedin, a city I don’t know at all but have discovered rather belatedly.

Actually before I tell you about my brief encounter with Dunedin I should observe that the South Island isn’t a place I’m overly familiar with: I’d always felt that until my legs and spirit gave out I’d more profitably spend my short time on Earth having a good look around elsewhere.

When I was old I’d take on the easier things, like my own country where they speak the same language, use the same currency and can give me the familiar food my ailing body would require.

That philosophy has served me well, but this year I’ve had a some luck: I was just back from two weeks on the West Coast (which we thoroughly enjoyed) when I was asked to go to Dunedin for a couple of days.

And so I did: and loved it. (Of course the weather was fine which helps I am sure)

I had dinner with Graeme (Verlaines) Downes and Jo at a great place called High Tide. But after slightly dismissing whitebait fritters (it’s still just a fishy omelette to me) and earning the wrath of those for whom it is something akin to a dish prepared by God, I’m going to go out on a limb on another South Island speciality: muttonbird.

Looks like duck, tastes like anchovies which have been saturated in salt, right? Inedible, if we are being honest.

Graeme said it was much like you’d imagine a seagull to taste like -- and that’s why we don’t eat seagulls. I look forward to hearing from anyone defending the indefensible.

Anyway, I had a lovely poke around the old and new architecture of Dunedin, bought some old books at the eccentric Octagon Books and, of course, made my way to Records Records which was once owned by local legend and mentor-to-the-stars Roy Colbert.

I bought some real gems, among them some wonderful 10 and 12 inch albums of Maori artists from the 50s and 60s (with cringe-inducing liner notes and garish covers), an album called Rock Made in Switzerland (well, someone had to) which features those household names Flame Dream, Carmen and Thompson, Trampolin and the Steve Withney Band.

Pick of the crop though -- after the Cryan’ Shames sub-psychedelic masterwork A Scratch in the Sky -- was Our Great Leader Mao Tse-Tung, a 10 inch which features songs with such inspiring titles as Chairman Mao Scales the Peak of Lushan, The Helmsman Sets the Ocean Course, and Mao Tse-Tung’s Thought is Incomparably Bright.

My favourites though are Chairman Mao is Dearer To Us Than Our Parents and Chairman Mao, You Are The Red Sun in the Hearts of the World’s People.

This is wonderful stuff and we probably need more of it in the world: Trevor, Your Jibes in the House Are Witty and Revealing.

Something like that perhaps?

Anyway Records Records was just one highlight of an enjoyable trip -- which happened to coincide with students being pissed off about the uni announcing a Code of Conduct which would discipline them for anti-social activities off-campus. You know, petty stuff like couch burning, bottle throwing, police baiting and the like.

My natural instinct is to side with those students who say that their behaviour in their own time is their business. And that’s a pretty good benchmark to start at.

But while I was there I popped in to the Otago Museum where there is an exhibition called Scarfies, and to some small extent it legitimises filthy flats and outrageous behaviour. (There is a mock-up of a typical flat with scattered beer bottles, pizza boxes etc)

This is kinda fun, but I did part company with one student who said that couch burning was part of “scarfie culture”.

Well, apparently the cops have been called out to 234 fires in north Dunedin this year until the end of August (although I have to assume not all of them to couch fires otherwise there’d be a shortage and students would suffer appalling cases of piles from sitting on cold damp floors).

But frankly, setting fire to couches in the street, smashing bottles and baiting cops doesn’t strike me as a part of any “culture”.

The word “culture” is thrown around a lot to justify certain kinds of behaviour but -- as with bear baiting, bull fighting and beating your wife if she displeases you -- not everything in a culture is worth preserving.

I don’t think couch burning should be of such intrinsic value to a culture that anyone would want to get fired up (ho ho) to defend it. I would have hoped students might have had more important things to get angry about.

But maybe I was just a bit down on students.

I was staying at the very comfortable and modestly priced Albatross Inn on George St (which I recommend) just a block or so from the campus.

Around 6pm one evening the side of the house was battered by something which made hellishly loud thumps. It stopped for a while, then started again. I looked out my window and there on the ground were dozens of smashed apples.

I assumed it was kids but when a couple sailed terrifying close to my window -- lobbed from a house two doors down -- I went and mentioned this to the woman who owned the place with the comment that, “if they are over eight you’d think they know better”.

It was the students she said, the same ones that a few weeks before had thrown a burning something into the backyard of the female students’ place next door and set the fence on fire.

Now I dunno about you, but this doesn’t strike me as intelligent or even interesting behaviour.

Throwing apples? Jesus pal, getta life.

So -- after the guy across the back bursting into song at 2am the following night and keeping it up for a couple of hours -- I have to say I was less sympathetic to what the students were saying.

No, the uni shouldn’t have a discipline code which would penalise people who drag their couch onto the street and set fire to it.

But man, you gotta be bored and woefully unimaginative if that’s the best you can come up with. If your “culture” is defined for you by that kind of activity you’re a pretty sad bastard.

I doubt you’d find the students who sing The Goodness of Chairman Mao is Deeper Than The Sea were much into couch burning.

Rightly or wrongly -- wrongly, and somewhat tunelessly, as it turned out -- they had more important things to do, like try to change their world.

PS: More interesting and different Music From Elsewhere has been posted and I’m pleased to note an album I put up way back in June has just got five stars in the Herald, and my high opinion of the Dylan album posted there (first in the country I’m guessing, it went up on the day of the album’s release) has been vindicated also.

Check out the swag of new music here

And you’ll also see a whole other section at Elsewhere has opened up: Windows on Elsewhere which is just a bit of fun.

I try to take a photo out of every window of every room I stay in when I travel -- Dunedin coming soon -- so I’ve started putting them up there: just click on the pix and they enlarge with a caption.

Of course these are not all glamorous views (in fact very few are) but that’s what most of see when we look out our window in some far flung part of the planet.

It's just a time-waster, but I hope you enjoy what I have sometimes endured.

Off The Record

There was a second hand record sale in a hall just round the corner from us a couple of weekends ago, so naturally I went.

My patient wife tagged along although I did warn her at the door that she would most probably be the only woman in the place. I was out by one.

I don’t know what it is about middle-aged men (like myself) and the thought of running their fingers over old vinyl. I’m not really interested in a whole lot of old Hall & Oates albums, the dozens of copies of Neil Diamond’s Hot August Night which inevitable turn up in such places, or those old MOR orchestral albums by Percy Faith (who knew the guy made so many?)

But of course that is part of the adventure. As with people who climb to the top of high mountains so they can appreciate the view and the reflect on the struggle, I am prepared to wade through Debbie Harry solo albums, scratched copies of Herman’s Hermits Greatest Hits and an unnatural number of mid-80s albums by guys wearing plastic pants just to find that one thing that I have always needed -- even if I didn’t know I needed it when I walked in the door.

So we had fun: I bought The Roy Wood Story (a double album which included some of his early hits with the 60s band the Move, but I wanted for his bloated rocker See My Baby Jive when he was helming Wizzard); Elton’s Madman Across The Water (always loved the string arrangement on the title track which I’m surprised hasn’t been sampled) and Dylan’s uneven Empire Burlesque (and when I got home I remembered I already had a copy, must have been an adrenalin rush).

All up about $10, can’t complain.

These things have amused me a little over the past few days -- although not Losing You To Sleep by Tommy Hoehn which the guy behind the counter said was really great power pop.

It’s not. I know my power pop and this is wimpy. I should have spotted it straight away: the guy has a Kenny Loggins beard -- and power poppers don’t have beards, especially not ones from Memphis.

Anyway these are piled up by the stereo now alongside the Demis Roussos, Cilla Black, Frankie Lane and Brothers Four albums I got for $2 (in total) at the local second hand shop a fortnight ago. (The Cilla is good, the Brothers Four do close harmony on Beatles songs, the Frankie is uneven and the Demis is scratched).

But this is cheap fun, although my astute wife who headed straight for the old 45s got the best stuff the other day.

She picked up singles by Philip Michael Thomas (the guy from the original Miami Vice), Bunny Walters’ election year ballad To Be Free (flipside is the rather more specific To Be Free With Labour!), and Destination Zululand by King Kurt (on Stiff, flipside She’s As Hairy!).

But best of all was Sick Songs And Worse Verse by Horatio, an EP on the HMV label with (of course) a skull on the cover. The tracks include Kiss Me Till My Gums Bleed, Love At First Bite, A Patriotic Song, Horace and Janet, Land of Snobs and Tories (to the approximate tune of Land of Hope and Glory) and Shall We?

All are written by someone Flynn, which we take to be Horatio himself.

It’s hilarious. It is sort of spoken word-cum-music hall piano from somewhere in the mid 60s at a guess.

The liner notes read: “Approximately 23 years ago Horatio was born. At the tender age of six he unsuccessfully stood for parliament. His keepers decided that, on account of the colour of his teeth, he should learn the piano.
He made his first public appearance at the age of 12 and really hit the international headlines. He got six months for that.
It was at this stage that he began to write songs for no other reason than that of inciting the occasional riot. Hence this recording.
Horatio’s tastes are catholic. He is proud of his heritage (Land of Snobs and Tories) and is very fond of animals (Love At First Bite).
He is also an ardent believer in sexual security (Kiss Me Till My Guns Bleed) and the Well-fed State (A Patriotic Song).
Horatio came to NZ to better himself.”

I wonder who Horatio is/was. Any clues anyone?

And the other that my smarter-than-me wife got was Songs of New Zealand on Viking by the New Zealand Maori Chorale (soloist Wiki Baker). One side is Pokarekare Ana -- but the other is the sponsor’s product: Songs of the Railway.

It’s interesting and kinda sad: Simon Morris sings Riding High (that’s the interesting bit, not the sad bit) and it came out in 1978.

It’s a McCann-Erickson thing and was obviously a promo disc for the New Zealand Railways (remember them?) One of the tracks is Rail Freight to the tune of Rawhide which was all over the telly back then.

What is sad is the liner notes.

“Right back in the beginning of this country there was the Railways. That iron track opened up vast areas of New Zealand -- for the people and for the produce of the countryside. It was the Railways [note the use of a capital throughout] in both North and South keeping communications open, keeping trade going. It was the Railways that kept New Zealand in touch with itself -- making New Zealand one country. The look of the railways today has changed beyond recognition. Old steam trains have gone -- the big diesels now hauling 20th century payloads. But even now the railways are as important as they ever were.
“Freight trains are the backbone of the haulage industry. They haul heavier payloads, far more fuel efficiently than road transport. And Railways help to keep New Zealand clean -- the air, the water, the environment.
“The big passenger trains -- the Silver Fern, Silver Star, Northerner, Southerner, Endeavour -- are among the most modern passenger trains in the world with sleeping cars, dining cares and often hostess service. It’s a far cry from the 19th century service.
“But if the Railways look different, their significance is still the same. NZR is one of the largest employers in the country; it takes staff from every walk of life; it binds both islands together with over 4,500 kilometres of track, doing today what it’s always done: driving together and making the country one.”

Quaint, huh? Didn’t seem so long ago either, did it?

PS: Okay, Music From Elsewhere doesn’t -- yet -- have the capacity to play you old vinyl like Horatio, the Rail Freight song or Bunny singing, “remember the dreams of the days our childhood, remember the promises everyone made. How did we lose it? Where have the dreams gone to? We can’t let the promises fade. . . Labour can make it, we’re born to be free . . . With Labour we‘re free“.
Nope Elsewhere can't top that conceit, but there are some interesting tracks listed here which you probably won’t hear anywhere else either. Check ‘em out.

Anniversaries: Lest Me Forget

It is anniversary time -- nine years since the death of Diana and five since 9/11 -- and like most people I can remember where I was on both days. For the Princess I was at work and for 9/11 I was . . . on strike from work actually. But let’s not read too much into that coincidence.

And like most people I have an anecdote about each of these events.

For a long time at the Herald the editor tried to get me to serve some time in the news room to toughen me up, but I kept finding excuses to hide away in the features department writing rock’n’roll interviews, international politics, humour and travel things. Ambulance chasing never appealed to me.

Eventually he gave up on me -- he admitted it was always going to fruitless, I was far too slippery -- but one day they changed the rosters and feature writers had to take on a Sunday shift in case any big news broke. The feature writer -- sort of the flashy winger to the grunty forward pack in the news -- was there in case a backgrounder was needed for a breaking story.

Of course back in those days -- sort of pre-terrorism as it were -- bugger all ever happened and I was reliably informed that you just turned up around 10am, did whatever you were already working on, and by about 2pm you could probably go home. At least that is what had happened for everyone prior to me turning up with a story to polish off and a book to read.

And it was everyone said: dead silent in the features department (although I imagine the ambulance chasers in news were busy checking police and hospital for Saturday night mayhem).

But then around maybe 2pm when I was ready to pack up Jane the features editor came to me and asked what I knew about Lady Diana. I laughed and said pretty much nothing.

The beautiful Princess -- like Hollywood celebrity relationships, Madonna’s career, and John F Kennedy Jnr whose death I had to write about some years later -- had gone right by me. Except for one time.

I’d been in London a few years previous for the launch of the Beatles’ Anthology series and that duff single Free As A Bird. I’d spent the day at the Savoy watching Sir George Martin, Derek Taylor and other Beatle-associates being asked dumb questions by Japanese and German reporters.

Back at my hotel the primitive laptop wouldn’t connect and so I was forced to find their business centre, bang out a story and fax it through to the Herald for publication. By the time that stressful thing was over it was about 8pm and so my partner and I hit the streets looking for dinner, drinks and some action.

And the streets were empty. There were barely a dozen people in Oxford St, only a couple of cars on the move, and no cabs in sight.

We were baffled, it was as if a curfew had been announced -- or someone had forced everyone inside to huddle around the telly.

And indeed that is pretty much what had happened: it was the night Diana went on the telly and did her dew-eyed tell-all and became the Princess of Hearts, or whatever people liked to call her thereafter.

That was pretty much the extent of my knowledge about Diana (the papers the following day gave over dozens of pages to it and somewhat bumped off the new Beatles single). I’d never even paid attention to her wedding -- although I do have the vinyl album of the music in a gatefold sleeve. (I just knew the marriage of the redhead to the other Windsor wouldn’t last, they didn’t get the gatefold.)

So there I was on a lazy Sunday at the Herald being asked about Diana: turned out she had been injured in a traffic accident in Paris and somehow pursuing paparazzi were to blame. My job was to write a piece for the following day.

So I got the enormous Diana file from the library and did a skim read. But my eye alighted on that famous photograph of her sitting alone in front of the Taj Mahal -- a disingenuous pose designed to engender sympathy for her via a media only too willing to play along. The woman was certainly savvy.

And so that is what I wrote: how she had manipulated the media but, like so many before her, found that she could no longer control it. She had invited the media in for tea and sympathy and couldn’t believe it when they wouldn’t go home.

I wrote this -- and wasn’t entirely unsympathetic to her I have to say -- when Jane came back and asked how I was getting on. I said I was finished and she said, “Can you just change the tense then, she’s just died”.

So I did, put a suggested heading on the top (“Dead As A Dido”, sorry -- but it went unused) and went home. I didn‘t even think much about it -- until I saw the news that night. The woman was everywhere. I had no idea there would be such an outpouring of grief. More fool me.

Of course I gulped slightly at the thought of my slightly cynical but genuinely felt piece running the following day. But what the hell.

Surprisingly it was very well received -- largely because in the comparison to everything else it was notably free of gush and romanticising. Letters to the editor (unpublished) were passed to me, and for a while thereafter I became the guy who would knock off a clear-eyed obit (John Kennedy Jnr, we hardly knew ya!)

But I never worked a Sunday again.

On the morning of America’s 9/11 I woke very early and, as was my habit, banged on CNN. I was having a cup of tea as those horrific events unfolded. I’d been up the Twin Towers not long before and my immediate thoughts were about how those buildings had crashed down on the mall and subway station below. For some weird reason I thought about all those poor people trapped and killed down there, as if the people in the buildings might have survived the drop with maybe a bruise or two. Stupid, I know.

I was keen to apply my small local knowledge of New York to any story the Herald might want me to write, but I was staunchly in the union -- and we were on strike.

We had a meeting that morning and I remember thinking that all of us, being journalists who wanted to be part of a big story, would obviously vote to call off the strike and man the typewriters. But we didn’t, we stood strong (as we should have) and let management and a few contract workers try to get the paper out.

That’ll teach ‘em we thought.

Of course the paper didn’t need us at all: all the stories were all coming from New York and other international media. A couple of cub scouts could have put out the paper in the week that followed.

I recall now that when I wasn’t handing out flyers outside the Herald I was spending hours in front of the telly trying to get a handle on the enormity of 9/11 -- not a bad option for a journo come to think of it.

A year later I flew into New York from Chicago on 9/11. The concourse at O’Hare in Chicago that morning was as deserted as the streets of London on Di-night. There were four people on the flight and the guy opposite kept crossing himself. We flew over that hole in the ground and the pilot (it was a United flight) dipped his wings and the stewardesses were in tears.

On the ground in New York armed soldiers in camouflage clobber were everywhere in the airport --but they stood out somewhat, green and black gear tends to do that in a gleaming neon-lit concourse of pale colours -- and I made my way downtown.

There was a huge and nervous crowd at Ground Zero and people looked to the sky fearfully every time a small plane flew overhead. It was weird. I tried to explain to someone that terrorism, by its very mature, contains an element of surprise so it was highly unlikely that anything might happen when everyone was on high alert.

I couldn’t be bothered waiting for the president to arrive to went to a nearby Irish pub where some British bobbies flown over to pay their respects to fallen policemen had done their parade and were knocking back Guinness. That night I walked the streets, talked to people in bars and restaurants, and tried to get a feel for the mood of the city on the first anniversary of this unfathomable event.

The following morning I found an internet café above a Chinese grocer near Little Italy and wrote my 1800 word article for the Herald.

But that night I had dinner with some friends in their mid-town apartment. They had lived in New York for years and loved the place, had some crazy artist friends over who told very funny stories, and we had a blast. Then late in the evening after the wine had flowed our hostess -- who had lost friends in the Twin Towers -- said, “I’m getting sick of the whole 9/11 thing: we had the one month anniversary, we had the three month anniversary, we had the 100 day anniversary and the nine month anniversary . . . I hope after this we can just put it away and get back on with our lives”.

Of course 9/11 will never go away, not for anyone, least of all New Yorkers.

But I knew what she meant.

There is a culture of 9/11 (just Google “9/11 songs” and see what comes up) as there is with Diana. The latter is receding (no more stories to tell until the Big Anniversary next year perhaps?) but the other just keeps growing.

I’ve seen the shorts to the forthcoming Oliver Stone movie and I wouldn’t cross the street to see it: it looks mawkish and sentimental and raises only major question: just what was the last decent Nicholas Cage movie?

But the other night I did see Flight 93 which was utterly compelling. If you haven’t seen it I do recommend it. It isn’t a comfortable night out, but it takes you right there on that doomed flight.

I wonder if they have it on the plane when I fly to Vancouver in a couple of weeks?

Finally, and on a more cheerful note: Music From Elsewhere is going like a rocket. If you haven’t checked it out this week let me tell you there is some damn fine music there (and that’s not just my opinion). But there is also a very, very funny thing by Harry Shearer (bassist in Spinal Tap and numerous voices on the Simpsons).

I know hostage taking isn’t funny -- but comedy about hostage taking certainly is.

Have a look and listen: it’s all right here

If you like what you see/hear then maybe you’d like to subscribe: it’s free and you can’t say that about too much these days.

Anyway, have a good week, and prepare for 9/11 coverage. Suspend disbelief: I find that footage still chilling and unfathomable.