News Aug 27, 2011 at 8:44 am

Comments

1
WTF, PJ and Slog are seeing each other again?
2
I really love it that we actually have a recording of a historical figure saying "bunghole."

I've heard that a number of times but it just now registered that he says his weight varies 10-15 pounds *per month*. Jesus, I know he was stressed about Viet Nam and such, but that ain't healthy.
3
LBJ was a Texan. I have no doubt that "bunghole" was among the least colorful words he was known to use.
4
@2, the weight fluctuation was dependent on the time frame between massive steak-eating and consequent massive dump-taking.
5
@4, Knarf, I wish you had spared us that imagery.

LBJ - he actually named his beagles "Him" and "Her" as I recall.
6
Speaking of Irene, if they're calling for evacuations, should MLB be going on with their games? SFGate reports that the A's and Red Sox are getting underway with game 1 of a double header, with a hope that they'll be able to get in at least five innings of game 2.
7
What a hell of a tape - nothing Johnson did failed to include pushing, needling, nudging, persuading. To hell with his health, his body was meant to be run into the ground - politics was everything to him. My favorite bit from his early days was explained by his biographer Robert Caro, who's spent decades researching him by now.
He'd learned from two sources that, as a young congressional assistant living in Washington in the early 1930s, Johnson could be seen making his way to work each day at the crack of dawn, running up Capitol Hill. Why, Caro wondered, would he run? If the sun was rising, he wouldn't have been late to work, and, even if he were, Johnson's do-nothing, bon vivant congressman boss wouldn't have much noticed. Caro paced the route, searching for answers, finding none. "I must have gone 20 times, I'm not exaggerating," he says. Then it occurred to him: he'd never walked the walk at the break of dawn. And so, early one morning, he made the trek one last time. What he saw was a revelation. In the rising sun, the Capitol looked like its ideal Greek form, "gleaming, brilliant, almost dazzlingly white." After weeks of wondering, Caro finally understood: "There it was, everything Johnson ever wanted in life; of course he would run."
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/20…
8
wow, even the Orca waited longer than Bristol Palin.
9
I wonder how many Vietnamese were burned alive by napalm while he was ordering those pants?
10
@6, not really sure what you're talking about. There are a shitpile of cancelled games out there right now. They're playing in Beantown because it's not raining there. Yet. They'll never get the second game in.

Here's the enhanced satellite pic.
http://www.goes.noaa.gov/GIFS/ECI8.JPG
11
@10

Just wondering at the wisdom of allowing tens of thousands to gather in a stadium and then flood the streets later with foot and auto traffic when there's an imminent hurricane. I notice that games in Baltimore, NYC, and Philly have been canceled--is Boston in that much less danger than the other places? (That's actually kind of a genuine question, since I don't know the geography of the East that well.)
12
@7, Caro's biography of LBJ is nothing short of a triumph. The volume on Johnson's childhood is ehhh, as are most childhood bios, but "Means of Ascent" about his 1948 campaign for Senate, is a knockout, and "Master of the Senate" is tells the story not just of LBJ, but of the Senate, and how the Senate and the two parties changed during the tumultuous mid-century years, grappling with issues like civil rights. I am so disappointed that he didn't finish the 4th book. The series is a tour de force that I can't recommend enough.
13
@11: Yeah, it's pretty far away from those other places (at least relatively speaking). Look at the link I posted. Boston's way up to the northeast.
15
@12, absolutely, Caro is a hero. Not just his LBJ work but the Robert Moses bio "The Power Broker" was a triumph. Every local yokel in Seattle who hopes to write about issues relating to our own public works projects must read it carefully. But there's absolutely no evidence a single one of them has even heard of it, must less tried to read it.

And what what what, you say Caro's not going to finish the fourth LBJ volume? I hadn't heard anything like that. You must be wrong, you must. He's only 75 years old now - plenty of work left in him. In a January piece on his fact-checking of the Robert Moses musical (yes! there was one!) Caro said he was working away at Vol. 4, and in fact had to tear himself away from his Smith-Corona typewriter. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/13/theate…

You see, I've been expecting reading that to be one of the crowning pleasures of my life - I'll have to take up heroin or something if he's not going to publish it at all.
16
@15, I had just kind of assumed since it had been quite a while. I knew he liked to spend a lot of time on each book but it was getting a little ridiculous. Glad to hear he is still at work and I will buy it the instant he finishes!
17
Gus, as a future urban planner, I'm a-gonna read that Moses book.
18
@15, "The Power Broker" is one of my touchstone books. You can't understand cities without reading it.
19
big l @16, delighted to hear it - I was scared something was up.

And TVDinner, you are going to eat that book up with a spoon, I bet. It's a bedrock work any planner would adore, as would any community organizer or public works staffer. If you should happen to run across Caro's third LBJ volume there's a staggering recounting in there of Moses' Cross-Bronx Expressway project told through the lens of Johnson's influence, too.

It wasn't long ago I first read Caro myself, and I'm envious of anyone experiencing him for the first time. Enjoy!
20
@18, isn't it amazing. I loved Caro's recounting how Moses built his career through a "series of merciless vendettas against wealth and wealth's power" - and to watch the worm turn as Moses gained more and more unfettered influence. Magnificent.

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