Comments

1
Such disrespectful for Shirley Temple Black. But then, if you are young, you have no idea of how much her cheer brought to millions of Americans during and after the Depression. She was not just some child star. She was THE most popular star of her time of any age. She is the only person to have her own personalized pint-sized Oscar.

And, she was immensely talented.

And yet, Sylvia Plath, she's the one you give the most coverage of and the video clip.
2
Can't wait to see Charles' 2 page treatise on the Amanda Knox porn.
4
TrollEy
5
When was the last time you heard anybody say "I'd do anything for $20,000?" Not the kind of money that is going to turn many heads.

Other than Five Large. Some people are for sale for practically nothing.
6
@3 It seems that way.
7
Not that I think she would do it under any circumstances, but if I were Knox I'd be offended by a $20,000 offer. She's way hotter than most other "celebrities" who get those kinds of propositions.
8
@2: Charles writes his own Knox-porn, and sometimes even tricks The Stranger into publishing it.
9
Way to go, Porn Co. More grist for the Euro tabloid mill.

Leave her the fuck alone.
10
Yup, that trolly was headed straight to Yemen. Why does Seattle have to have such embarrassing protesters?
11
!@ seriously..
shirley temple black wasn't just some 'baby jane' child star turned conservative she was the definition of pluck and wit. as infectiously cutesy as she was you can't imagine how millions of little girls ( and gay boys *ahem* ) were inspired by those films were she was thrown in the harshest of circumstances and managed to win the hearts of everyone around her. and at least in film she made friends with black people, with the differently abled, with misfits and criminals, with the ugly, mean and stingy and always, always came out on top.
as a poor black child from the south side of chicago, i learned the art and value of survival partially from watching her films while i was a child in some of bad circumstance myself. i always wanted to meet her and tell her so. i'm sorry i never got to.
12
The Amazon and Microsoft protests are deeply stupid. Is this a protest against jobs and an improving economy? Against building more housing (which would stabilize rents?) Why not just protest in favor of poking yourself in the eye?
13
Isn't protesting gentrification in this manner sort of like protesting nuclear war AFTER the bombs have been dropped?

These decisions are made in tiny little offices at city hall long before hipsters are even moving in. They have nothing to do with markets. Anarchists can shadow box in Plato's cave all they want, but that is the fact.
14
@12,13 try again reading what the protests were about.
15
@11, thank you for that. She was great.
16
I like how the fact our President is thinking about killing another American without the sticky business of due process isn't what people on Slog are freaking out about.

17
No one's ever accused the anarchists of being a particularly bright or logical bunch.
18
@16, so you'll be challenging the fed in court then?
19
Hey! As long as Mr. President isn't thinking about killing me...
20
After you're done denigrating a respected diplomat by trying to tie her to the current GOP, ignoring her later accomplishments and not using her full name, maybe you could tell us about about Wellesley-alumna-turned-Goldwater-campaign-staffer Hillary Rodham.
21
You forgot to mention this gem, just another reason to hope for the demise of the Wall Street Journal:

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/ja…

because sexual assault victims should be blamed for what happens to them. What a fucking POS.
22
"Amazon is now directly complicit in every death caused by the CIA."

Just as much as an average American taxpayer.
23
@14 Looks like angry people who think their problems are rooted in some kind of external mystical radical reification, and not reality.
24
One reason to avoid living in Seattle, even if you make 40k a year, why would anyone put up with these morons who protest just for the sake of protesting? Why would anyone want to live in a city where protesters demand the right to tell others who can and cant live in the city? Why listen to anyone who refuses to even identify themselves, hiding behind masks? These morons should be hit with a barrage of rotten eggs the second they decide to stop traffic as they have earned no right to tell me or anyone how to live their lives.
25
Amanda Knoxxx: Innocent until Proven Filthy is a spectacularly good title.

Shirley Temple Black raised money for the Reagan, a man who rose to power by labeling anyone who disagreed with him a commie and working closely with the FBI to wreck their careers. She could sing, she could dance, and she could act but her politics sucked.
26
@24 Yeah, telling people how to live their lives is a prerogative reserved for the rich and powerful only.
27
I'll bet if you tried to pull the masks off these asshats they'd move out of street.
28
@1: Shirley Temple got a whole post on Slog, Sylvia Plath has a portion of the morning news.

At least they are protesting the right company this time.
29
Shirley Temple's daughter used to be the bassist for The Melvins. Just thought I'd throw that out there.
30
I think I like the first picture best, where masked men are holding up public transportation whose signage indicates it is enroute to our respected local cancer research and treatment institution.
31
@28: Weird, right? It is almost like Plath died 50 years ago, and Temple died just yesterday.
32
@26 Except the rich and powerful don't wear masks telling me where I can and cannot live. What tells me that I cant live in a neighborhood is the price of rent, which has NOTHING to do with Amazon or Microsoft providing commuter buses for their employees.
33
29, pretty much everybody played bass for the Melvins at some point or another.

11, another appreciative person for your post. Shirley Temple Black was an amazing person.

The stupidity and short-sightedness of the protests is just further proof to me that these 'anarchist collectives' are organized by the FBI.
34
ha ha; I remember when all of you centrist, sell-outs were clamoring to assure us that Occupy was a good thing overall but "it's being ruined by bad apples". These guys are basically a smaller, braver, more vulnerable version of Occupy and look how quick you are to trash them.
35
24: Why live in an open society? That's ultimately what you're saying.
36
32: Actually, the rich do do that. By making places un-affordable they effectively tell the lower-income people there where they can and cannot live. When the market sets the prices, wealthy people can pretty much dictate where people can live. This process is greatly aided by stuff like homeowner/renter associations, zoning in around where they live, and the complicity of police departments that profile people who don't "don't look like they belong there." The interesting thing about the pro-free market housing position is how it always falls back on the argument that poor and middle class people don't have a right to pick where they live while ignoring the fact that their argument tacitly acknowledges that wealthy people do have a right to choose where they live. When money rules everything, the people who have it call the shots.
37
@1: Indeed.

It's high time to remove the letter R from all keyboards at The Stranger until the staff has gone through an objectivity awareness program.
38
@11, you need to learn to read. I loved Shirley Temple and I think my post @1 reflects that.
39
@38, I believe @11 was cheering you on. Yoko Ono just tweeted a photo of herself at 3 dressed up as Temple.
@yokoono When I was 3, I won a costume competition by being Shirley Temple. Bless you, Shirley! love yoko pic.twitter.com/PmC8ijnseR
40
@38 and you need to learn to chill.. i was agreeing with you.
41
Nice that Sylvia Plath mentioned Sexton in such an admiring tone. Sexton always struck me as a younger, more-intimate and more accessible Plath; or more enjoyable to read, at least.

Here is one of my favorites:

That Day

This is the desk I sit at
and this is the desk where I love you too much
and this is the typewriter that sits before me
where yesterday only your body sat before me
with its shoulders gathered in like a Greek chorus,
with its tongue like a king making up rules as he goes,
with its tongue quite openly like a cat lapping milk,
with its tongue - both of us coiled in its slippery life.
That was yesterday, that day.
That was the day of your tongue,
your tongue that came from your lips,
two openers, half animals, half birds
caught in the doorway of your heart.
That was the day I followed the king's rules,
passing by your red veins and your blue veins,
my hands down the backbone, down quick like a firepole,
hands between legs where you display your inner knowledge,
where diamond mines are buried and come forth to bury,
come forth more sudden than some reconstructed city.
It is complete within seconds, that monument.
The blood runs underground yet brings forth a tower.
A multitude should gather for such an edifice.
For a miracle one stands in line and throws confetti.
Surely The Press is here looking for headlines.
Surely someone should carry a banner on the sidewalk.
If a bridge is constructed doesn't the mayor cut a ribbon?
If a phenomenon arrives shouldn't the Magi come bearing gifts?
Yesterday was the day I bore gifts for your gift
and came from the valley to meet you on the pavement.
That was yesterday, that day.
That was the day of your face,
your face after love, close to the pillow, a lullaby.
Half asleep beside me letting the old fashioned rocker stop,
our breath became one, became a child-breath together,
while my fingers drew little o's on your shut eyes,
while my fingers drew little smiles on your mouth,
while I drew I LOVE YOU on your chest and its drummer
and whispered, 'Wake up!' and you mumbled in your sleep,
'Sh. We're driving to Cape Cod. We're heading for the Bourne
Bridge. We're circling the Bourne Circle.' Bourne!
Then I knew you in your dream and prayed of our time
that I would be pierced and you would take root in me
and that I might bring forth your born, might bear
the you or the ghost of you in my little household.
Yesterday I did not want to be borrowed
but this is the typewriter that sits before me
and love is where yesterday is at.




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