tickets to Celtic Woman at the Fox Theater
for my birthday. We went last night and
it was great!! Here's some pics of the night.
What they did with the lighting on stage was
awesome...this picture doesn't begin to capture it.
The lobby
I just saw Michael Moore's Bowling for Columbine. On the one hand I found it very powerful, on the other hand, I'm not sure I quite got where he was going. I thought he started out with some really important observations about the violence in American culture. He does a fair amount of investigation into our various perceptions of where the violence problem comes from. In doing this Moore takes on the idea that this is merely a "gun problem" and points out the high gun-ownership and low violence rates in Canada, among other countries. He examines out how we commonly point to ethnic diversity or national history as sources for our violence problem, but points out that many less-violent countries have a high amount of diversity and very violent histories as well. It's here that he lays his finger on what I think is the real issue: how we have created a culture of fear that is perpetuated in our news media. While Canadian news focuses on political issues, social issues, etc. American news focuses on crime--and specifically crime perpetrated by low-income members of minority groups. Yet, while we huddle behind locked doors in suburbia, one professor Moore interviews points out that while violence (in an unspecified period) had dropped by 20%, media reporting of violence had risen by 600%. A Canadian he interviews makes the observation that all the locked doors in America indicate that we're afraid of our neighbors. Meanwhile to our north, he couldn't find a locked door or a person who claimed to lock their doors.
I saw this and had to post it. As it's a copyrighted image I'll also put a plug in for despair.com they've got lots more where this came from and their heavy dose of cynicism and sarcasm is hilarious!