Admittedly, holding back the anger of almighty God is a bigger challenge than driving a bus, but we should consider where and how we fit.
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Andrew Coe, author of "Chop Suey: A Cultural History of Chinese Food in the United States," passed a difficult test this afternoon. He spoke on "Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese Food," sponsored by YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, and offered a sensible overview of the subject. He solidified his credentials by making explicit reference to Wu Han, not the alleged ground zero of Covid-19, the Chinese restaurant upstairs on Pitkin Avenue in Brownsville, Brooklyn, where I first entered Heaven on Earth and Wo Hop, 17 Mott Street, the quintessential Chinatown Chinese restaurant, where I have spent the best hours of my life in the absence of my young bride.
His presentation was relatively
brief. You can replay it here, if you've never had lunch with me in Chinatown: https://www.youtube.com/watch?
. . .
Staying in the food and beverage aisle, consider
the link between Rabbi Dov Behr Manischewitz (1856?-1914) and Billy Eckstine (1914-1993). https://slate.com/business/
. . .
Two weeks ago, I kvelled
over the title of a new biography of James Beard, chef and cookbook
author, "The Man Who Ate Too Much." In noodling around, I discovered
that I used the same title on my blog dated April 27,
2013. Is there a copyright lawyer in the house?
Wednesday, December 23, 2020
. . .
I
can't speak for African Americans, but if they asked "Is it good for
African Americans?", I believe that the answer would be No far too often
throughout American history. I think that this is a perspective that
we white Americans generally fail to recognize. An obituary of a former
governor of Mississippi said that, until 1982 "Mississippi was the only
state without public kindergarten, and it was
the only state without funding for compulsory public education, a
vestige of its extreme reaction to the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision
striking down school segregation." https://www.nytimes.com/2020/
The median age of the U.S. population is 38.3, meaning that 1982 was within the lifetime of half of us. It ain't ancient history. While there were ugly acts of racial violence before, during and after 1982, this example of institutional racism took its toll on so many lives for decades.
Thursday, December 24, 2020
I am a faithful reader of The New Yorker.
This week's edition, cover date December 28, 2020, is labelled "The Cartoon Issue."
The cover itself is a brilliant lampoon of the outgoing presidency and Calvin Trillin, my hero, writes "Some Notes on Funniness" that are, of course, funny.
But, 18 pages (18 pages!) are given to a graphic vignette that is not only humorless, but pointless, in my rarely humble opinion. The next-to-last panel has a character saying what we should be hearing from the editor: "I'm really sorry if you feel that I made the wrong decision, but I have my methods, and I was doing what I thought was right." Maybe that's the joke.
. . .
The American Dialect Society determined that one of the words of the year was the Yiddish-based oysgezoomt, meaning fatigued or bored by Zoom. https://www.americandialect.
Appropriately, I am thoroughly oysgetrumpt.
Oysgetcovid
ReplyDeletewhy is there a "t"? Not oysgecovid?
ReplyDelete