Saturday, April 26, 2008

SATURDAY!!!

What goes on? Here is a copy of Thursdays (4/24/08) NEWS FROM the SERVICE ENTRANCE. Thanks to Brig Feltus - a big, big thank you for being on the show this week. That MySpace is somethin' else ain't it ?!? Check this space for commentary regarding the acquittals of the NYC cops and murdering the brother on his wedding day in 2006.

See you soon.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

SUNDAY MORNING PAPER

4/20 DAY

Just when you think you know everything about smoking weed...I didn't know that the term 4/20 may have been developed by high school students you can read more about it here...man I loves me some weed! Oh yes no doubt...ever watched Reefer Madness? Who wouldn't want some weed after seeing that? Half Baked, one of my favorite movies with more than its share of popular quotes, Harold and Kumar Go To White Castle I mean the list is endless...so go out there and learn more about the sticky icky... and by all means inhale...

STOP THE VIOLENCE

I posed this question on the radio show this past week..."are you crazy"? It certainly appears that way based on the moronically senseless shooting that has taken place this weekend. 20 reported shootings in the past 24 hours. 24 Chicago Public School kids dead (it's only April). I used to dispute the whole "it's really going to be bad when it gets hot" thing but I am convinced now that this summer in Chicago at least is going to be horrid.

Where are the parents of these teen shooters you ask? Well mama is WGCI and daddy is the TV. I am not blaming rap music or TV or even the movies. I blame access to these things. You Tube falls in there too. I mean by virtue of this blog I give people access to information. What a person chooses to do with that info is called consequence. It seems to me when you give people misinformation they are bound to react to it especially if that misinformation appeals to them in some way.

Pass the Information, Extend the Knowledge
. Pass misinformation and you get what you get. Access is everything and so is exposure. If these same young people are exposed to positive images in music alone - what do you think the result would be?

IF YOU FEELIN' LIKE A PIMP...

Did you see Barack Obama brush his shoulders off this past week? Is this black enough for you? If you live in Pennsylvania - VOTE WITH YOUR HEAD, NOT WITH YOUR HEART. Make a choice you can be comfortable with...get that dirt off ya shoulders Philly...you know what to do.

AND FINALLY

The quote of the year from Chicago White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen upon the Sox losing to the Tampa Bay Rays 5-0 in two hours and two minutes one of the fastest games in the history of Tropicana Field. ''That was a fast ass-kicking,'' Guillen said.


SUNDAY!!!

Hey Now! Here is the Thursday edition of NEWS FROM THE SERVICE ENTRANCE and I hope you enjoy it!

Saturday, April 12, 2008

SATURDAY!!!!!

You can listen to this past weeks edition of NEWS from the SERVICE ENTRANCE here. We were joined by the beautiful Elishema who graced us with her voice. You can catch up with her here.

PLAYLIST

1. Meat Grinder - MF DOOM
2. Girls and Boys - PRINCE
3. Boom Boom Boom Boom - John Lee Hooker
4. Kid Charlemange - STEELY DAN
5. Run - GNARLS BARKLEY

GET LOOSE - ELISHEMA

6. (Just Like) Music - MARVIN GAYE/ERICK SERMON
7. Check Out Your Mind - THE IMPRESSIONS

THE JAMES BROWN SONG of the DAY - MOTHER POPCORN

8.
Drivin' Me Wild - COMMON f/LILY ALLEN


Wednesday, April 2, 2008

History Repeats Itself...22 Times and Counting

I've seen this kind of outrage before but for the purposes of this diatribe I would like to go to a couple of weeks before the most profound event of my teenage life. I was standing in the parking lot at Gately Stadium with a friend from another high school. We were checking out the girls, wondering where the rest of our friends were. It's funny now at forty years old going back in my mind to 1984...

Ben Wilson was a phenom. He had a tremendous presence on any basketball court he played on, the ladies loved him and he went to my rival school. Chicago Vocational and Simeon Vocational shared the distinction of being the hardscrabble south side schools. Blue collar places of learning. Simeon happened to have the best basketball player in the US at the time and we didn't - not too far away from being horrible but better than everybody except "The Meon". Ben Wilson was 17 when he was killed. His kid was 10 months old and the city mourned in a very quiet outrage.

Sam and I were in the parking lot at Gately and I think Chicago Vocational played Hyde Park Career Academy in football that night. Ben Wilson walked past and one of us spoke and to my surprise he stopped. Now I know that people like to gloss over the reputations of people while alive and especially when they aren't around - to be certain. Benji's rep was that of a super dare I say Uber star. Nonetheless he stopped. We would have a conversation with him that now sounded like a goodbye...in the amber of Chicago's streetlights, Ben Wilson talked about all of the things a Senior in high school talks about. It was a conversation that would become a part of the grief I feel still 24 years later. My aunt would tell me that when we were very little kids Ben and I played together on south Champlain...I wish I could've known that when we were in that parking lot October 1994.

On Tuesday in downtown Chicago a rally was held in response to the alarming number of deaths of Chicago Public School students since January (22 - 20 from gun violence) and the lack of Gun control laws in the state of Illinois. Check this out from the New York Times written by Ira Berkow (a great writer) in 1993.

Three days after the shooting, at a wake in the school gym on Friday, members of Congress, state senators, Mayor Harold Washington and college basketball coaches like Joey Meyer of DePaul and Lou Henson of Illinois, who had hoped to recruit Wilson, were among the 8,000 people who stood in line in the cold outside, then filed past Wilson's coffin, which was strewn with flowers.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson spoke at Wilson's funeral. He called for gun control and it brought cheers from the mourners. "But his demands that parents take responsibility for their children brought foot-stomping agreement and deafening applause," The Chicago Tribune reported.

Mary Wilson, Ben's mother, would go before the Chicago City Council and appeal for gun control and an end to gang violence. The council listened and promised action. "Nothing really was done," she later recalled.

Police statistics in 1984 showed that 119 young people between the ages of 11 and 20 had been murdered in Chicago by the end of October. Wilson's death was one of more that increased that figure. Similar numbers were recorded in cities across the country.

It pains me that in 2008 the message of that tragedy is lost on young people and that my friends is our fault. If you were in or graduated from high school in 1984/1985 you know I am correct. The murder of Ben Wilson made the entire city promise to do something and now we stand in the wake of those hollow promises. Twenty two dead in 2008 so far...119 between 11 and 20 before October in 1984. We swore that we would change things. During the rally held Wednesday, students from ironically Simeon the site of the most recent shooting -demanded that the rash of violence stop. It must stop and the demand for gun control legislation in 2008 is as loud as it was in 1984.

In thinking about that evening in the parking lot, I realize that Ben was changing...maturing. I didn't know that his kid was 10 months at the time. I remember him mentioning that he looked forward to college. He really loved his kid...many focus on the basketball player. I like remembering that evening when I met the man.

If we don't change history we are doomed to repeat it and that is our karmic payback. Please join me in finding a viable solution to this horrendous problem. It shouldn't require a world class athlete in high school to be murdered to get people - hell an entire city up in arms.

Ben Wilson was one of 119 young people murdered in Chicago prior to October in 1984. In 2007, there were 267 shootings involving children under the age of 16 in Chicago, up from 247 the previous year.

This is an epidemic in no uncertain terms.