Author Archives: MarkFranco

Hawaii’s coral reefs may be safe from sunscreen — but not climate change.

First: Toxic coal ash, which was a problem on the territory well before Maria’s landfall. A coal-fired power plant in the southeastern city of Guayama produces 220 thousand tons of the stuff each year, which studies have linked to an increased risk of cancer, heart, and respiratory ailments.

Puerto Rico’s Environmental Quality Board directed the plant, operated by multinational corporation Applied Energy Systems (AES), to cover its giant pile of coal ash prior to the storm. This weekend, PBS News reported that never happened.

Researchers and community members had worried that the heavy rainfall heightened the risk of coal ash toxins leaching into the soil and contaminating drinking water. Now, AES’ own groundwater monitoring report showed a sharp increase in the levels of arsenic, chromium, and two radioactive isotopes in groundwater near the plant after Hurricane Maria. Federal and local government have historically ignored this region of the island, experts told Grist shortly after the storm.

Second: Statehood! A disaster response nearly as chaotic as the storm itself has highlighted the real risks of the United States’ colonial relationship with the island.

Puerto Rico’s Resident Commissioner Jenniffer González plans to introduce a bill to the House this spring petitioning for Puerto Rico to become a state, the Washington Post reports.

“Ask yourself, if New Jersey or Connecticut had been without power for six months, what would have happened?” she asked, “This is about spotlighting inequities and helping Congress understand why we are treated differently.”

More here – 

Hawaii’s coral reefs may be safe from sunscreen — but not climate change.

Posted in alo, Anchor, Brita, Everyone, FF, G & F, GE, LAI, Landmark, LG, ONA, Ringer, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Hawaii’s coral reefs may be safe from sunscreen — but not climate change.

Radiation City’s Feast of Retro Pop

Mother Jones

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC “-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN” “http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd”>

Radiation City
Synesthetica
Polyvinyl

Courtesy of Polyvinyl Records

Drawing on from ’60s easy listening and ’70s dance grooves, among a host of other sources, the third album from Radiation City offers a feast of attractive pop that sounds great in the background—kudos to John Vanderslice’s shiny production—but also holds up under closer scrutiny. Like spiritual and stylistic cousins the Bird and the Bee, minus the sardonic undertone, the Portland, Oregon combo uses retro as a ruse, with poised singer Lizzy Ellison gently suggesting a melancholy heart full of desire and regret. For all its breezy allure and obvious echoes, from Paul McCartney (“Juicy”) to bossa nova (“Separate”) to James Bond themes (“Butter”), Synesthetica is subtly original and quietly powerful work.

View this article: 

Radiation City’s Feast of Retro Pop

Posted in Anchor, ATTRA, FF, GE, LG, ONA, Radius, Uncategorized, Venta | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Radiation City’s Feast of Retro Pop

Lemony Snicket Walks the Plank

Mother Jones

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC “-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN” “http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd”>
Mark Murrmann

THE NOVELIST DANIEL HANDLER is bobbing ahead of me in the cold bay water at San Francisco’s Aquatic Park. His head, swathed in a red cap, resembles a maraschino cherry, and I struggle to keep up as the current presses me back toward land. “They told me to wear a swim cap so I wouldn’t be mistaken for a seal,” he explains. “So I was always wearing it, but then I wondered, ‘What happens if I get mistaken for a seal? What then?'”

The “Balclutha” docked in Aquatic Park Maddie Oatman

Handler, 44, is best known for his Lemony Snicket kids’ books, but his latest novel, the gruesome and delightful We Are Pirates, isn’t so child-friendly. We’d arranged to meet here at the Dolphin Club, where he swims three or four mornings a week in the presence of historic tall ships such as the mighty Balclutha. Swimming makes him feel free, he says. It lets him shake off his celebrity and escape urban life for a bit.

Gwen, Handler’s 14-year-old protagonist, also yearns to slip away. She’s an awkward kid from SF’s hypersafe Embarcadero neighborhood, grounded for pilfering makeup and a porn mag from the drugstore. Aided by her friends and a demented old man spewing pirate lore, she steals a boat and sets out for high adventure on the bay. As the dazzle of piracy darkens, Gwen’s father, a dweebish radio producer, tries to bring her back to safety. Without skimping on talking parrots, Handler’s novel touches on the nature of modern surveillance and the forces that compel us to reckless acts.

Continue Reading »

Link:

Lemony Snicket Walks the Plank

Posted in alo, Anchor, Dolphin, Everyone, FF, GE, LAI, LG, ONA, Oster, Radius, Ringer, Ultima, Uncategorized, Venta | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Lemony Snicket Walks the Plank

10 New Songs to Get You Through the Long, Cold Winter

Mother Jones

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC “-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN” “http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd”>

For an end-of-year playlist, I was tempted to focus on the glittering dance tracks, hip hop ballads, and crashing rock numbers that propelled 2014’s late-night bar crawls and caffeinated road-trips. Much of the past year’s standout music packed momentum and pizzazz; new songs by TV on the Radio, Spoon, Taylor Swift, Run the Jewels, the Black Keys, and St. Vincent come to mind.

But for when you’re at home during the grayest and shortest days of the year, none of that will do. Here’s a playlist for afternoons spent hibernating in sweatpants and flipping through photo albums while the snow piles up outside. The best introverted music of 2014. Songs that pair well with nostalgia, daydreaming, the settling feeling of having nowhere to go but the kitchen for more tea. In the words of Axl Rose (as quoted on featured band Luluc’s website): “Said woman, take it slow and things will be just fine.”

You can also listen to the playlist nonstop via Spotify (embedded at the bottom).

1. The Barr Brothers, “Love Ain’t Enough”

This playful and eclectic Montreal-based group experiments with obscure instruments like the African ngoni, dabbles in Delta-inspired blues, and knows how to really bang it out during live shows. But this tender track, with Sarah Page’s hypnotic harp and front man Brad Barr’s ragged voice laid out bare, is a clear standout on the band’s new album Sleeping Operator.

2. Brandi Carlile, “The Eye”

This song is steeped in regret and remembrance, and it rings with simple and assured harmonies. Singer-songwriter Carlile’s forthcoming album The Firewatcher’s Daughter is set to land March 3, 2015. “Vulnerability is all over this record,” she told NPR, and maybe nowhere more than in “The Eye.”

3. Luluc, “Small Window”

Australian duo Luluc has opened for the likes of Lucinda Williams and Fleet Foxes. In this gentle tune, singer Zöe Randell murmurs of dreamy reflections from an airplane seat. The echoey blend of her voice with partner Steve Hassett’s will make you want to float away.

4. Marissa Nadler, “Drive”

Nadler released a burst of new music in 2014: An album July, and then Before July, an EP full of unreleased songs including a fresh take on Elliott Smith’s “Pitseleh.” Like much of her music, something about “Drive” feels haunted—Nadler’s delicate voice and the track’s minor chords swirl together and summon dark woods and lonely highways.

5. James Bay, “Let it Go”

Breakout crooner James Bay perfectly evokes the torturous process of untangling from a lover. This song helped make the soulful Bay a Brit Awards Critic Choice Winner of 2015, and all before releasing his full-length debut, Chaos and the Calm, due out in March.

6. The Staves, “In the Long Run”

Combine the sounds of folksy trio Mountain Man and the ever deep Laura Marling and you get The Staves, a perfect answer to midwinter melancholy. Their angelic voices, flawless picking, and thoughtful harmonies make me want to listen to this bittersweet song on repeat.

7. Sharon Van Etten, “Our Love”

Moody yet transcendent, “Our Love” showcases Van Etten’s vocal control. Paired with this steamy video, the tune is the ideal backdrop for an afternoon make-out session.

8. alt-J, “Warm Foothills”

One of the songs off of alt-J’s latest album, This Is All Yours, samples Miley Cyrus, but I prefer the velvety female vocals of Lianne La Havas and Marika Hackman on “Warm Foothills,” a song braided together with glimmering guitar, silky violins, and hopeful whistling. The lyrics are full of playful poetry: “Blue dragonfly darts, to and fro, I tie my life to your balloon and let it go.”

9. José González, “Every Age

“Some things change, some remain, some will pass us unnoticed by,” González chants in this pulsing paean to life’s journey, the first single off of his forthcoming album. “Every Age” is a “beautifully spare, existential meditation,” writes music critic Robin Hilton.

10. Júníus Meyvant, “Color Decay”

Icelandic group Júníus Meyvant weaves together deft violin and booming brass to create this plush song, a number deemed the year’s best by Music That Matters host Kevin Cole.

View article: 

10 New Songs to Get You Through the Long, Cold Winter

Posted in Anchor, FF, GE, LAI, LG, ONA, Radius, Smith's, Uncategorized, Venta, Vintage | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on 10 New Songs to Get You Through the Long, Cold Winter

How to Extend the Life of Your Christmas Tree

View original post here:

How to Extend the Life of Your Christmas Tree

Posted in FF, GE, LG, ONA, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on How to Extend the Life of Your Christmas Tree