Very Deep Thoughts

Get inside my head. Get in, get in.
Dec 05
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It’s 10 below here in Chicago. My good friend Sloan recommended I get myself on of these. God bless America.

It’s 10 below here in Chicago. My good friend Sloan recommended I get myself on of these. God bless America.

Nov 26
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The Makem and Spain Brothers perform at the Irish American Heritage Center in Chicago

The Makem and Spain Brothers perform at the Irish American Heritage Center in Chicago

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[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

This is my second audio story ever, so please have mercy on me. But I thought blog readers might enjoy a listen.


Sons of Irish folk musician keep a tradition alive

In a stirring tribute to Irish Folk singer Tommy Makem, at the Irish American Heritage Center on Saturday night, his sons gathered to pay homage to an ancient oral tradition.

Giving thanks to Makem, through stories and song, the event featured his sons’ band, The Makem and Spain Brothers, as well as Chicago favorites, The Dooley Brothers, The Chancey Brothers, and The Larkin and Moran Brothers.

The Makem brothers remembered their father with his music, his stories and his life growing up in Ireland during World War II.  With his passing, the brothers’ talk about how they hope to preserve what he gave to music and what his Irish heritage gave to them.

Proceeds from the show were donated to the American Cancer Society through the Tommy and Mary Makem Fund.

Nov 06
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Bookends

After watching Barack Obama’s victory speech on Tuesday night I could not help but draw similarities between it and MLK’s I Have a Dream speech from 1963. The cadence of Obama’s speech reminded me of King’s, as well as the ever present refrain, “yes we can, Yes we can.” Even the structure was similar, in the fact that just like King, Obama waited until the oration had built up steam to launch into the the repeated phrase. If you remember King did not open with the words which later became the signifier of his speech. And nor did Obama.

For those who witnessed the first speech I can only imagine how emotional hearing the second was. While we still have a fur piece to go, these speeches were obvious bookends to a long and hard-fought struggle.

Watch the two and see for yourself. The experience is quite amazing.

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Part 1

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Part 2

Nov 05
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Hyde Park Hair Salons celebrates the victory if its most famous client

Hyde Park Hair Salons celebrates the victory if its most famous client

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Hyde Park barbershop has a hand in shaping the future

by Meribah Knight
Nov 05, 2008

Zariff, the one-named barber with the famous client, was late for the election night party at his decked-out Hyde Park Hair Salon.

It seems that the client needed a last minute trim before his acceptance speech in Grant Park.

He was “very relaxed. Very proud. We prayed,” Zariff said.

“It’s what I saw in his face. I saw the president of the United States. I saw Barack but I saw a president.”

Zariff said he has cut Obama’s hair for 14 years. But tonight, only one chair stood in the shop at 5234 S. Blackstone Ave. The rest had been cleared out to make way for white-clothed tables laden with fried chicken, cole slaw, potato salad, mashed potatoes, collard greens and Remy Martin. And two televisions to watch election returns.

“Our client, our client is about to be the president of the Unites States,” said Ishmael Alamin, the salon’s owner. “They’re toying with our emotions. Nobody expected this.”

Yet the sentiment of skepticism was widespread, as most of the crowd admitted they never expected to live to see a black man become president of the United States.

Phillip Sinclair, 32, who has been getting his hair cut regularly at the barbershop for the past three-and-a-half months, remembers the last two elections all too well and remained dubious until the very last moment. “Until it happens, you never know.”

“No, I never thought I would see this happen,” said Susan White, a mother of two boys who frequent the shop. White said her whole family had the opportunity to meet Obama at the shop recently. He signed two copies of “The Audacity of Hope” that she had bought for her sons weeks earlier. “When they get older they are going to read that book and realize how lucky they are,” she said.

Zariff said Obama “is the same man who walked in that door 14 years ago.” When asked what he admired most about the president-elect he said, “He’s trustworthy. He’s a man of his word.”

Gerard Edge stood outside the shop with a brand new Cuban cigar to commemorate the historic event. But in this celebratory moment he said he understood the difficulty that lies ahead. “I want him to go ahead and do what his has gotta do,” Edge said. “Which means cutting the budget, getting out of the war and cutting some good programs.”

For Edge Obama’s victory signified a bittersweet unity among Americans. “African-American people have always been tired, but this time the whole America was tired.”

When it became apparent that Obama had won the election, the shop’s publicist, Kenya, gathered the crowd for a prayer. As they joined hands, tears streaming, the people in Obama’s neighborhood shop asked the Lord for his protection and guidance.

Nov 04
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VOTE!

VOTE!