It's a small thing, but I think I've discovered the source for Trump's strange "bing" habit. Here is a compilation or Trump moments. And here — wait for it — is Joe Pesci in Goodfellas.
In each case, we see a storytelling entertainer, the center of attention for all those around him, able to intimidate and mess with people, and capable of sudden surprising violence.
I haven't seen Goodfellas (dir. Martin Scorsese, 1990) in years, and I'm not really sure that the resemblance to Pesci's Tommy DeVito would play out in a coherent way. But who needs coherence when it comes to Trump? I saw this brief scene by chance and immediately thought of him.
I do know that Tommy comes to a bad end (whacked), which might click with Trump’s penchant to see himself as a victim. At any rate, it's not surprising that Trump would identify with a mob figure.
Am I seeing things here? Your thoughts, reader, are welcome.
*
June 17: Several reputable sources, e.g. this one, from 2012, and this one, citing a 2016 source, name Goodfellas as one of Trump’s favorite movies. Elaine and I watched it last night, for the first time in many years. The picture of outer-borough guys who are able to do or get anything they want is telling.
Saturday, June 15, 2024
Trump’s “bing”
By Michael Leddy at 5:06 PM comments: 0
Today's Saturday Stumper
Today’s Newsday Saturday Stumper is by Kate Chin Park, whose last (and first?) Stumper appeared on April 6, and prompted me to write “Please, more KCP Stumpers.” And now that I’m quoting myself, I’ll add that this puzzle, like that one, is “a solid sender, difficult, misdirective, punny, and blessedly free of trivia and strain.” I looked around for a place to start and hit on 45-D, five letters, “Mes después de Navidad .” And then jumped around, here and there. 1-A, which felt like an impediment to any chance of succeeding with the puzzle, was the last answer I filled in.
Some clue-and-answer pairs of note:
1-D, four letters, “Malfunction message.” A recent puzzle helped here.
5-D, six letters, “Bowls, for instance.” Nicely misdirective.
9-D, eight letters, “Ultimately plain?” NOFRILLS fits but isn’t it.
14-A, nine letters, “Campus coveralls?” An answer that I didn’t understand even after finishing the puzzle. My only excuse is that I’d call them something else. Elaine explained it to me.
23-D, eleven letters, “Deactivating but preserving.” A wild answer.
24-D, seven letters, “Candy striper?” The ones I thought of appeared in young-adult novels.
35-A, fifteen letters, “Cap wearer’s sassy slogan.” I thought first of what might be written atop a mortarboard. Highly unexpected.
43-A, five letters, “Puzz to crack.” An easy anse.
47-D, five letters, “Storms with precipitation.” It’s a trick.
49-D, four letters, “It’s from the Greek for ‘pie.’” I did not know that.
57-A, five letters, “Be a bumbler?” Groan.
58-A, nine letters, “Waiting periods.” The answer made me smile out loud.
My favorite in this puzzle is that initial impediment: 1-A, eight letters, “Outpay, but not outearn.”
No spoilers; the answers are in the comments.
By Michael Leddy at 9:04 AM comments: 3
Friday, June 14, 2024
Word of the day: tire
Why, our household wondered, are those things on cars and trucks and bicycles called tires?
The Oxford English Dictionary answered our question, or nearly did. It’s probably because the tire was originally regarded as “the ‘attire,’ ‘clothing,’ or ‘accoutrement’ of the wheel.” The first tires were, of course, metal rims. The OED definition of the modern tire begins on a startling, beautiful note: “an endless cushion of rubber, solid, hollow, or tubular.”
The dictionary would appreciate my adding that tires are also found tricycles, prams, wheelchairs, light horse vehicles, &c.
By Michael Leddy at 9:08 AM comments: 2
Avoiding the d-word
In The New Yorker, Susan Glasser writes about Donald Trump, who turns seventy-eight today: “If ever there were a case for age-related diminishment of a candidate, Donald Trump is it.”
Glasser politely avoids the d-word. But it must be said, as Drs. John Gartner and Harry Segal say, again and again, on their podcast Shrinking Trump, that there is a difference between aging and dementing: one major-party candidate for president has a brain that’s aging; the other, a brain that’s dementing. As Gartner and Segal also point out, psychopathy gives dementia cover: the former guy always says crazy things, right?
You may have seen Tamara Keith veer away from any consideration of the d-word on the PBS NewsHour this past Monday. After a brief compilation of odd remarks from Trump’s June 9 Las Vegas rally (excluding the death by shark/death by electrocution bit), Amna Nawaz asked for comment:
I just want to point out all of those remarks were within one 10-minute window.And Keith:
Tam, for all his calls for President Biden to undergo some kind of cognitive test, it’s clear to say Mr. Trump’s remarks are not at all coherent in these rallies.
Mr. Trump’s remarks have never been super coherent in his rallies. I’m not sure that I can weigh in on how much they have veered in the last couple of months, but this split screen [Trump/Biden] has always been there, will always be there.Yeah, fun.
They are different people. And the people who stood in 110-degree weather to see that speech got what they came for. They got the greatest hits. They got some surprising things that they weren’t expecting, because the teleprompter went out, which just made it a little bit more fun.
By Michael Leddy at 9:06 AM comments: 1
Thursday, June 13, 2024
No master builder
The narrator’s father is an architect.
Anton Chekhov, “My Life: The Story of a Provincial,” in “Peasants” and Other Stories, trans. Constance Garnett (New York: New York Review Books, 1999).
Related reading
Chekhov and Larry David : Chekhov and Joyce
By Michael Leddy at 8:32 AM comments: 0
Domestic comedy
“I realize that’s a shallow thing to say, but I think it’s a valid shallow thing to say.”
Related reading
All OCA domestic comedy posts (Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:24 AM comments: 0
Wednesday, June 12, 2024
Another Lassie–MTM connection
[Florence Lake as Martha Dudley. Click for a larger view.]
I somehow discovered that Florence Lake played Martha Dudley in the Mary Tyler Moore Show episode “Lou’s First Date” (November 3, 1973). A mix-up pairs her with Mr. Grant for a broadcasters’ dinner.
“Who is Florence Lake?” you may ask. None other than the actor who played Jenny, the Calverton telephone operator on the television series Lassie. Lake appeared in eighteen Lassie episodes between 1954 and 1962 and was the only cast member to serve for the duration of the show’s Calverton years. Her off-screen character was spoken to in many, many more episodes: “Hello, Jenny? This is Ruth. Would you ring Doc Weaver?” Jenny’s most prominent Lassie appearances: “Party Line” (December 23, 1956) and “The Phone Hog” (April 3, 1960).
[Florence Lake and, of course, Lassie, in “Party Line.” Click for a larger view.]
Florence Lake started in pictures in 1929. Her last appearance was in television’s Most Wanted in 1977. Here’s her IMDb page. Two fun facts via IMDb: Lake appeared with Ed Asner (who played Lou Grant) in The Girl Most Likely to ..., a 1973 made-for-TV movie, and
In a mid-70s interview, Mary Tyler Moore remembered the cast becoming exasperated with Florence Lake. It seems she didn’t see the character as elderly and feeble as written. Moore said Valerie Harper took special time with Ms. Lake to get the performance needed from her.“Why another Lassie-MTM connection?” you may ask. Because Ted Knight (Ted Baxter) appeared as a traveling entertainer and World’s Greatest Ventriloquist in an episode of Lassie. And the dog-puppet from that episode showed up in a Mary Tyler Moore episode.
Related reading
All OCA Lassie posts (Pinboard)
[I loved Lassie in boyhood and love Lassie now. Straight outta Calverton.]
By Michael Leddy at 8:56 AM comments: 2
The Alitos and revenge
Timothy Snyder (On Tyranny) writes about “Modern revenge culture, explained by Mrs. and Mr. Alito.”
Here are the Alitos as caught on recordings: Mr. and Mrs.
An aside: the Sacred Heart flag that Mrs. Alito would like to fly is widely understood as a counter to the pride flag. A cursory search will confirm that. See, for instance, a comment left on a webpage selling a Sacred Heart flag.
By Michael Leddy at 8:50 AM comments: 4
Tuesday, June 11, 2024
One more kwoi
[From New Universal Self-Pronouncing Dictionary (Chicago: John C. Winston, 1943).]
Click on the image for a larger kwoi sound. As in macOS Sequoia.
Thanks, Kevin, for entrusting me with this beautiful little dictionary.
A related post
macOS Something (How to pronounce sequoia )
By Michael Leddy at 3:51 PM comments: 0
Eugene Robinson asks a question
In The Washington Post (gift link): “Is Trump okay?” The answer, which Robinson doesn’t quite voice: No.
By Michael Leddy at 9:20 AM comments: 0