Category Archives: Popular Culture

1 Corinthians 9:19-23

Time Magazine announced their annual Person of the Year this week. The honor went to 3 people on behalf of their work with the world’s poor. Bill and Melinda Gates and Bono were named Persons of the Year for 2005. I know that I talk an awful lot about Bono here but I wanted to call attention to his determination and his strategy for speading the word about helping the poorest of the poor.

As I read the article on Bono I couldn’t help but think about the apostle Paul. Paul tells us in Corinthians that he became all things to all men in order that the Gospel might be heard and accepted. Here is what the Time article tells us about Bono’s strategy to bring his message of debt eradication and developmental aid to the men and women of the US:

When he lunches with President Bush, as he did in October, Bono quotes scripture and talks about small projects in Africa that have specific metrics for success. Then he asks for more money to fund them. In the office of Sen. Dic Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois, he speaks of multilateralism and how developmental aid reminds the rest of the world of America;s greatness. Then he asks for more money. In stadiums, he tells people that if they join together, they have a chance to make poverty history. Then U2 plays One.

Bono’s great gift is to take what has made him famous- charm, clarity of voice, an ability to touch people in their secret heart- combine those traits with a keen grasp of the political game and obsessive attention to detail, and channel is all toward getting everyone, from world leaders to music lovers, to engage with something overwhelming in its complexity. Although it is easy to cast his global road show as the vanity project of a pampered celebrity, the fact is that Bono gets results.

Know thy audience! Know thy message! Know how to tell that message to thy audience!

The rest of the article is great and gives you a real backstage glimpse at Bono’s “global road show”- briefings, meetings, days without sleep, concerts, and manilla folders. The article takes you from Live Aid through Live 8 and to today. A must read for U2 fans, ministers and leadership strategists.

Good on ya, Bono!

Time Person of the Year Photo Essay: Bono

A Noble Spirit Embiggens the Smallest Man

Last night U2 performed in Nebraska for the first time. According to one fan review, Bono took a moment to apologize for something that he has been criticized about quite frequently over the last few years. During Sometimes You Can’t Make It On Your Own, Bono apologized for his use of foul language in the past. According to Shaun Grantski‘s review on U2tours, Bono told the crowd

I’ve been known to use colorful language in the past…and I’m really working on stopping it. I do not mean to offend anyone; it’s just the way I grew up and the culture we’re in…it’s all around us.

Bono’s “colorful language” caused quite a stir at the Golden Globes when he and the Edge accepted an award for the song The Hands That Built America from the film The Gangs of New York.

Everyone of us deals with different struggles and shortcomings and celebrities are no different. It takes a big man to admit that he isn’t perfect. Good on ya, Bono.

Case In Point

On Friday, the much anticipated Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe opens in theaters nationwide. I am pumped! Last week, I posted a recently uncovered letter that C.S. Lewis had written concerning his thoughts on a live-action movie based on his beloved stories. Lewis told a then BBC producer that he would be oppossed to a live-action TV version. Of course, there was no such thing as CGI back in 1959. The illusion and mystery of Narnia would have been lost on the small screen back then. Today that is not the case. I am quite postitive, based on what I have seen and heard about this production, that Lewis would be delighted with this adaptation. We shall see on Friday.

While I was perusing the internet this weekend, I came across a rather humorous picture. I decided to again post the letter that Lewis had written to the BBC concerning a live-action Chronicles and place a link to the picture as an example of what Lewis may have been oppossed to. I don’t think that Disney/Walden Media have anything to worry about. Enjoy.

Dear Sieveking,
(Why do you ‘Dr’ me? Had we not dropped the honorifics?) As things worked out, I wasn’t free to hear a single instalment of our serial [The Magician’s Nephew] except the first. What I did hear, I approved. I shd. be glad for the series to be given abroad. But I am absolutely opposed – adamant isn’t in it! – to a TV version. Anthropomorphic animals, when taken out of narrative into actual visibility, always turn into buffoonery or nightmare. At least, with photography. Cartoons (if only Disney did not combine so much vulgarity with his genius!) wld. be another matter. A human, pantomime, Aslan wld. be to me blasphemy.

All the best,
yours
C. S. Lewis

Uh Oh!

According to a letter sent to BBC producer Lance Sieveking in 1959, C.S. Lewis would have been very opposed to a live-action movie based on The Chronicles of Narnia.

Dear Sieveking,
(Why do you ‘Dr’ me? Had we not dropped the honorifics?) As things worked out, I wasn’t free to hear a single instalment of our serial [The Magician’s Nephew] except the first. What I did hear, I approved. I shd. be glad for the series to be given abroad. But I am absolutely opposed – adamant isn’t in it! – to a TV version. Anthropomorphic animals, when taken out of narrative into actual visibility, always turn into buffoonery or nightmare. At least, with photography. Cartoons (if only Disney did not combine so much vulgarity with his genius!) wld. be another matter. A human, pantomime, Aslan wld. be to me blasphemy.

All the best,
yours
C. S. Lewis

Uh oh, indeed! The letter even mentions Disney.

I, for one, have been eagerly anticipating the live-action/CGI extravaganza The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. The movie, produced by Walt Disney and greenlit by the Lewis estate, is set to open on December 9th. From all accounts the movie seems to be a literal translation from page to screen. Still, this letter does make me squirm a little. I wonder if the media’s intrest in making the letter public has to do with a commercial campaign led by conservative churches a’la The Passion of the Christ. CNN reports that “Disney hopes that the movie, which has its world premiere in London on December 7, will be as big a hit with children as the “Harry Potter” series, thanks in part to the support of Christian church leaders.”

Regardless of the media’s agenda in making this letter public, the question remains:

What would Jack think of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe?

Blasphemy in Narnia
Via

Let The Choir Sing…


Africa needs justice, not charity. The purpose of Live 8 was for the citizens of the world to demand this justice from the leaders of the 8 most powerful countries in the world at their summit a few days later. Under great pressure from the billions of people who took part in Live 8 and the Global Campaign for Action Against Poverty, world leaders made promises to double aid and cancel the unpayable debts of the poorest countries. This was an amazing breakthrough which we should all be proud of. Campaigners will be working to make sure world leaders keep these promises and go further.

One of the big stories over the summer was the historic Live 8 concerts that went on all over the world. Bob Geldof and friends used the G8 summit as a way to highlight the problems with poverty and AIDS, not just in Africa, but all over the globe. Thanks to the concerts and organizations like ONE the information and images concering young children dying of starvation and preventable disease made its way into Western homes this past summer.

Today, Live 8 was released on DVD. The 4 discs come loaded with music and images that you may have missed if you watched the Mtv and VH1 coverage that day. The sound quality is great and all of the best performances are included. Go check it out but… before you do that… make sure that you have signed the ONE Declaration. Let the world know that you care.

ONE.org

Tommy, Can You Hear Me?

And then, on July 7, 2001, at 10:30 am, I lost my ability to hear everything. While I was waiting to pick up a rental car in Reno, I suddenly thought the battery in my hearing aid had died. I replaced it. No luck. I switched hearing aids. Nothing.

I got into my rental car and drove to the nearest emergency room. For reasons that are still unknown, my only functioning ear had suffered “sudden-onset deafness.” I was reeling, trying to navigate in a world where the volume had been turned down to zero.

But there was a solution, a surgeon at Stanford Hospital told me a week later, speaking slowly so I could read his lips. I could have a computer surgically installed in my skull. A cochlear implant, as it is known, would trigger my auditory nerves with 16 electrodes that snaked inside my inner ear. It seemed drastic, and the $50,000 price tag was a dozen times more expensive than a high-end hearing aid. I went home and cried. Then I said yes.

This was the beginning a fascinating article from this month’s Wired magazine. It is the story of one man’s desire to hear his favorite peice of music again despite his hearing loss. I love listening to music and I can’t imagine what I would do without my hearing but I am thankful for people like the men and women in this article who are willing to endure the long process of pushing the scientific envelope. Read the article and get lost in the geek that is cochlear implant software development.

Link

Not Safe But Good

Yesterday’s Catalyst sessions ended with a big surprise. We were treated to roughly 12-15 minutes of clips from the upcoming Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe movie. The film was flown in straight from Disney on a red eye flight to Atlanta. So, be forewarned: Spoilers ahead! Spoilers ahead! Spoilers ahead! Spoilers ahead! Spoilers ahead! Spoilers ahead! Spoilers ahead! Spoilers ahead!

I’ll tell you right up front that I cried. Like a baby. So help me I cried like a baby.

I never read The Lord of the Rings before watching Fellowship so my ideas and visions of the scenes and characters have been shaped forever by Peter Jackson and the artists at Weta Wokrshops. I heard Rings fans talk of how Jacksons vision was spot on to theirs. Now I understand.

Narina is the place I would most like to visit. I have read the Cronicles many times and I have my own visions and assumptions of what the characters look like and how they sound and how they interact. Based on what I saw today, my wildest imaginations have come true. Mr. Beaver was there. Edmund was there (although I didn’t catch a glimpse of the sweet Turkish delight which looks like Baclava in my dreams). The evil White Witch was there staring at us with her black eyes and hollow heart. Narina was alive and moving up on the screen.

Then came the song with a roar and he appeared. Aslan- larger than life itself.

The clips featured were from all over the picture but were reserved relatively in order. The tears started at the sight of the stone table. Then it showed Aslan ascending the stairs willfully sacrificing himself on the great stone table. It didn’t show the shearing of his mane but you could see the king lifeless without his crown upon that cold table. The very next scene showed the White Witch wearing Aslan’s mane into battle. I absolutely lost it.

There were quite a lot of shots of the battle but the final shot was the White Witch looking to the horizon and saying, “No! It’s impossible!”

Then came the song with a roar and he appeared. Aslan- risen from the dead!

I wonder why this story resonates in my heart?

The Irish Been Coming Here For Years

Feel Like They Own the Place

What kind of U2 fan would I be if I didn’t mention the fact the they are taking over the Conan O’Brien Show tonight? Taking over the show!!! Sweet! According to some people at the taping they were asked to make sure that they could be at the taping for at least 2 hours in case the band wanted to keep playing songs. How awesome is that?!?!?! Apparently, Conan was walking the waiting line goofing off, asking trivia, and taping segments for the show. I am going to try and stay up in order to watch it but I’m on East Coast time. Conan will come on a wee bit later than I’m used to. Who knows, Conan tonight and Nobel tomorrow. We shall see.

Coldplay in Atlanta

Coldplay 1Phil Spector may have created the “Wall of Sound” but Coldplay has perfected it. Their September 28th performance at the Phillips Arena in downtown Atlanta, GA was a sonic experience in sight and sound. For close to two hours, the audience raised their hands, danced, and sang along with Chris Martin and the boys from Coldplay. It was a great evening and a great comeback for a band that had not played Atlanta for nearly two years. The fans welcomed the foursome with open arms and open hearts grateful for the wonderful set and the few surprises that were left along the way.

Square One

There was much anticipation in the arena as the time came for the band to take the stage. The house lights were on until a certain blonde actress had emerged from the backstage area and was able to take her seat directly in front on the sound board. Then the music began to fade in as the lights were turned down. The band kicked off with the song “Square One,” the first track off of Coldplay’s latest album X&Y. The video screen behind the band was lit like a clock counting down to the number one and then counting back again. Visually, the show was breathtaking. Soft blues against warm reds were the colors of choice for the evening. That is until the third song, “Yellow,” was played. The stage was bathed in bright light as yellow beach balls filled with glitter fell from the catwalks onto eager fans. “Toys!” Martin exclaimed to a cheering audience. In all the concerts that I have been to I have never heard the audience sing as passionately or as loudly as they did that night. Admittedly, I was one of them. The hits kept coming with “Speed of Sound” and “God Put a Smile on Your Face.” Then Martin began banging out the opening notes to “Trouble,” a hauntingly beautiful track off 1999’s Parachutes.

Sing it like Ruben Studdard

This particular concert was full of grace for the city of Atlanta and it was also full of humor. Martin continuously heaped praise and thanks onto the city and her people. The band expressed their gratitude to Atlanta by thanking the audience for helping them become famous. As for the humor, the show briefly stopped when Martin flubbed the first few lines from the song “The Scientist.” “If this was American Idol,” he said, “I would be voted off and wouldn’t be able to perform next week.” The audience went wild. The video on the screen rewound and the band restarted. It was a great recovery. From that point on, Coldplay owned their audience.

Coldplay 3In the middle of the show, the boys came together at the front of the stage to play a small acoustic set. “Kingdom Come,” a tribute to Johnny Cash, was followed up with a cover of the Cash classic, “Ring of Fire.” It was a fitting memorial closed out with the classic “Don’t Panic.” “Clocks” and “Talk,” another track off of X&Y, closed out the set. With that, Martin and crew retired backstage with a promise to return with a big surprise. All that the crowd could do was wait. 2 years ago, Coldplay surprised the audience with special guest Elton John. Would John, who is in Atlanta this weekend supporting his Peachtree Road tour, return for a second appearance? Nope. This time Michael Stipe, lead singer for REM, took the stage with Martin for the first song of the encore. REM’s “Nightswimming” was beautifully covered by Martin on the piano. Stipe, singing his lyrics from a stand on stage, sounded incredible and was genuinely overwhelmed by the reception he received from the audience. The remaining members of Coldplay joined Martin on the stage for the final two numbers.

It was obvious that Coldplay loves Atlanta and that the feeling is mutual. “In My Place” had the whole arena stomping and singing along at the top of their lungs. It was an awesome sight to behold. Yet the show was far from over. With a lone light bulb hanging from the stage, “Fix You,” their newest single, was performed as the finale. Coldplay closed their set in a dizzying display of lights and sounds that built to an astonishing crescendo. With that, the four men took their time leaving the stage mugging for the camera, taking their bows, and waving to the audience. For some, the concert ended too soon. While exiting the arena, the songs were still being echoed from the audience members as they filed out of the arena and into the streets of downtown Atlanta. A good time was had by all.

Coldplay 10 Coldplay: September 28, 2005 Set List
Square One
Politik
Yellow
Speed of Sound
God Put A Smile On Your Face
Trouble
Everything’s Not Lost
White Shadows
The Scientist
Kingdom Come
Ring of Fire
Don’t Panic
Clocks
Talk
NightSwimming feat. Michael Stipe from R.E.M.
In My Place
Fix You

A very special Thanks to Michael for the set list. It was great seeing you last night man!