Good news for chocolate lovers: eating dark chocolate (more than 65 percent cacao) can slow the growth of cancer cells:
Dark chocolate fights cancer.
Chocolate compound stops cancer cell cycle.
Chocolate-cancer fighting connection, new findings.
Chocolate ingredient may stop cancer cell division (stopped breast cancer cell division).
Chocolate: A cure for cancer?
So go ahead . . . . indulge.
Warning: Dairy cancels out the anti-cancer effects of chocolate, so I avoid milk chocolate and don't wash dark chocolate down with my (anti-cancer) raw milk.
Friday, May 29, 2009
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
Village Interviews: Jay Dee Daugherty
WEDNESDAY, May 20th
7:30 PM
MNN, Channel 67
Dear Friends :
Happy May 19th, birthday of Al-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X), Ho Chi Minh, Augusto Sandino & Lorraine Hansberry!
The following can be viewed on any high-speed computer anywhere or on TV in Manhattan:
This Wednesday (tomorrow), May 20 at 7:30 PM, on my shoestring cable show Famousx2, on Channel 67, I am re-airing the first of two half-hour programs of interviews I did in 1998 with Jay Dee Daugherty, drummer of the infamous Patti Smith Band. This is one of my really good outdoor interviews, one with a man who is very shy when you first meet him, but who is very kind, interesting and funny. Jay Dee, like many of those who made the glitter into the punk/new wave generation of the 1970s, was an upper-middle-class kid, in his case from southern California, who rejected his straight-jacketed upbringing and hit NYC, especially downtown, to become a hit. Jay Dee is just about the nicest and most modest guy you can meet, a good compliment to the audacious Smith, whom he is still in awe of. The two still play together at times.
In this installment, Jay Dee and I walk from the Jefferson Market library past what used to be Trudi Heller's, go inside Electric Ladyland Studios, where Horses was recorded and end up in front of the Hotel Earle at the corner of Washington Square, where Jay Dee and so many other characters used to stay back in the day. Along the way, Jay Dee talks about his coming to NYC with Lance Loud and the Mumps, his encounters with David Bowie, Television and others, and his falling in love with the character and artistry of Patti Smith the first time he saw her perform. He talks about the recording of Horses.
If you are in Manhattan and have access to Time Warner, you can see it this Wednesday at 7:30 PM (DST-that's NYC Daylight Savings Time) on channel 67. On the RCN system, that should be channel 85 or near it.
If you are outside of Manhattan, anywhere in the world, and you have a good high-speed connection on your computer, you can go to What's On Now or to MNN and click on channel 67 to see it at the same time.
Sometimes MNN does screw up broadcasts, but usually they air things without too many problems.....Be patient.
Best,
Jason
7:30 PM
MNN, Channel 67
Dear Friends :
Happy May 19th, birthday of Al-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz (Malcolm X), Ho Chi Minh, Augusto Sandino & Lorraine Hansberry!
The following can be viewed on any high-speed computer anywhere or on TV in Manhattan:
This Wednesday (tomorrow), May 20 at 7:30 PM, on my shoestring cable show Famousx2, on Channel 67, I am re-airing the first of two half-hour programs of interviews I did in 1998 with Jay Dee Daugherty, drummer of the infamous Patti Smith Band. This is one of my really good outdoor interviews, one with a man who is very shy when you first meet him, but who is very kind, interesting and funny. Jay Dee, like many of those who made the glitter into the punk/new wave generation of the 1970s, was an upper-middle-class kid, in his case from southern California, who rejected his straight-jacketed upbringing and hit NYC, especially downtown, to become a hit. Jay Dee is just about the nicest and most modest guy you can meet, a good compliment to the audacious Smith, whom he is still in awe of. The two still play together at times.
In this installment, Jay Dee and I walk from the Jefferson Market library past what used to be Trudi Heller's, go inside Electric Ladyland Studios, where Horses was recorded and end up in front of the Hotel Earle at the corner of Washington Square, where Jay Dee and so many other characters used to stay back in the day. Along the way, Jay Dee talks about his coming to NYC with Lance Loud and the Mumps, his encounters with David Bowie, Television and others, and his falling in love with the character and artistry of Patti Smith the first time he saw her perform. He talks about the recording of Horses.
If you are in Manhattan and have access to Time Warner, you can see it this Wednesday at 7:30 PM (DST-that's NYC Daylight Savings Time) on channel 67. On the RCN system, that should be channel 85 or near it.
If you are outside of Manhattan, anywhere in the world, and you have a good high-speed connection on your computer, you can go to What's On Now or to MNN and click on channel 67 to see it at the same time.
Sometimes MNN does screw up broadcasts, but usually they air things without too many problems.....Be patient.
Best,
Jason
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Village Interviews: Hayden Planetarium
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6th
7:30 PM
MNN (Channel 67)
Dear Friends :
This Wednesday (tomorrow), May 6th at 7:30 PM, on my every-other-week shoestring cable show Famousx2, on Channel 67, I am re-airing the footage I shot at the old Hayden Planetarium on its last day of operation on January 5th, 1997, before it was demolished by the Museum of Natural History trustees using their frontboy astronomer Neil Degrasse Tyson, who is a good astronomer and a nice guy but a shill.
As I predicted in the program I edited a few months later, the new Hayden Planetarium, built over the following three years, lacks the charm or pedagogical skills of the old one, and the skyshows are high-tech but bland and more than four times the price of the shows of the mid-90s, when one could encounter a true diversity of races and classes in the planetarium (and the Museum), unlike now.
Although the Museum of Natural History has a shady history of serving elites and as a front for imperialist ventures in the so-called Third World, by the time of the 60s and 70s, when I was a regular visitor of it and its planetarium, it had become an institution that was relatively affordable and, more importantly, responsive to the minority and working communites of NYC through numerous low-cost or free cultural events and science-education workshops. One found all kinds of working and middle-class people involved in these virtually every week. Now, like the Space Program itself, the museum serves corporate and commercial interests and has regained its patrician atmosphere and prices. I should not be surprised to learn that it is involved in a consultative or R-and-D way in the militarization of space that has been quietly increasing for some years now in both the private and public sectors.
Anyway, for those of you who remember and perhaps were introduced to the wonder, beauty and even democratic implications and potential of outer space and astronomy through the grand but inviting (almost) a common people's hall that was the Old Hayden Planetarium, you will appreciate seeing these shots of what you remember. I have added appropriate outer-space themed jazz, rock, classical and other music to alleviate some of my bad camera work. LOL.
Ad Astra!
Last summer, the last time I aired this, the computer stream was not working. This morning (Tuesday), it is, so that is a good sign for tomorrow.
If you are in Manhattan and have access to Time Warner, you can see it this Wednesday at 7:30 PM (DST-that's NYC Daylight Savings Time) on channel 67.On the RCN system, that should be channel 85 or near it.
If you are outside of Manhattan, anywhere in the world, and you have a good high-speed connection on your computer, you can go to MNN - What's On Now or to MNN and click on channel 67 to see it at the same time.
Sometimes MNN does screw up broadcasts, but usually they air things without too many problems.....Be patient.
Best,
Jason
7:30 PM
MNN (Channel 67)
Dear Friends :
This Wednesday (tomorrow), May 6th at 7:30 PM, on my every-other-week shoestring cable show Famousx2, on Channel 67, I am re-airing the footage I shot at the old Hayden Planetarium on its last day of operation on January 5th, 1997, before it was demolished by the Museum of Natural History trustees using their frontboy astronomer Neil Degrasse Tyson, who is a good astronomer and a nice guy but a shill.
As I predicted in the program I edited a few months later, the new Hayden Planetarium, built over the following three years, lacks the charm or pedagogical skills of the old one, and the skyshows are high-tech but bland and more than four times the price of the shows of the mid-90s, when one could encounter a true diversity of races and classes in the planetarium (and the Museum), unlike now.
Although the Museum of Natural History has a shady history of serving elites and as a front for imperialist ventures in the so-called Third World, by the time of the 60s and 70s, when I was a regular visitor of it and its planetarium, it had become an institution that was relatively affordable and, more importantly, responsive to the minority and working communites of NYC through numerous low-cost or free cultural events and science-education workshops. One found all kinds of working and middle-class people involved in these virtually every week. Now, like the Space Program itself, the museum serves corporate and commercial interests and has regained its patrician atmosphere and prices. I should not be surprised to learn that it is involved in a consultative or R-and-D way in the militarization of space that has been quietly increasing for some years now in both the private and public sectors.
Anyway, for those of you who remember and perhaps were introduced to the wonder, beauty and even democratic implications and potential of outer space and astronomy through the grand but inviting (almost) a common people's hall that was the Old Hayden Planetarium, you will appreciate seeing these shots of what you remember. I have added appropriate outer-space themed jazz, rock, classical and other music to alleviate some of my bad camera work. LOL.
Ad Astra!
Last summer, the last time I aired this, the computer stream was not working. This morning (Tuesday), it is, so that is a good sign for tomorrow.
If you are in Manhattan and have access to Time Warner, you can see it this Wednesday at 7:30 PM (DST-that's NYC Daylight Savings Time) on channel 67.On the RCN system, that should be channel 85 or near it.
If you are outside of Manhattan, anywhere in the world, and you have a good high-speed connection on your computer, you can go to MNN - What's On Now or to MNN and click on channel 67 to see it at the same time.
Sometimes MNN does screw up broadcasts, but usually they air things without too many problems.....Be patient.
Best,
Jason
Saturday, May 2, 2009
Great Art: Kurt Vonnegut Compost Bin
Is this not the coolest composting bin you have ever seen?
Vonnegut is chewing up garbage on Columbia Street
Unfortunately, it was just vandalized, as reported in The Brooklyn Paper and by The Huffington Post Green.
AND SO IT GOES! Vonnegut dirt-box destroyed!
Photo Credits:
Top Two Photos: The Brooklyn Paper/Bess Adler
Bottom Two Photos: The Brooklyn Paper/Julie Rosenberg
Vonnegut is chewing up garbage on Columbia Street
Unfortunately, it was just vandalized, as reported in The Brooklyn Paper and by The Huffington Post Green.
AND SO IT GOES! Vonnegut dirt-box destroyed!
Photo Credits:
Top Two Photos: The Brooklyn Paper/Bess Adler
Bottom Two Photos: The Brooklyn Paper/Julie Rosenberg
Friday, May 1, 2009
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