Friday, November 27, 2009

The Rhetorical Situation, Sweet Potatoes and Green Beans, 2009

Yesterday, Jacob and I shared a few tips on how to cook the Thanksgiving bird, delivered an engineer's recipe for green bean casserole, and read a couple of PSAs ourselves for the first time. But more importantly, we played just a few of the bands we're deeply thankful for, artists who continue to influence the music we love today. Neil Young, Jerry Garcia, Sonic Youth, The Magnetic Fields, Pavement.

Hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Be careful out there today. Is it a coincidence that we call the first day of the Great Depression and the day of consumption after Thanksgiving black? In 2007, 137 million people participated in the Black Friday shopping rush, about 6 million more than the number of people who participated in the 2008 presidential election, which had the largest turnout in United States history.

Tune in live every Thursday at noon Pacific on KBVR.com or 88.7 FM in Corvallis to hear The Rhetorical Situation.




The stuffing:

Neil Young, "Helpless," from The Last Waltz
Jerry Garcia, "Dire Wolf," from the Oregon State Prision
The Velvet Underground, "Rock and Roll"
Elvis Costello, "Less Than Zero"
The Rolling Stones, "Sweet Virginia"
Sonic Youth, "Teen Age Riot"
Violent Femmes, "Please Do Not Go"
The Magnetic Fields, "I don't want to get over you"
Radiohead, "Just"
Pavement, "Blue Hawaiian"
Arcade Fire, "Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels)"
Ray Charles, "What I say"

Thursday, November 19, 2009

The Rhetorical Situation, Nov. 19, 2009

Today, Jacob and I fought and defeated the Technology Monster, but we walked away with a few flesh wounds.

The damage done: we had to interrupt someone's pre-recorded interview/show at the start of our show; online streaming wasn't available for the first 10-15 minutes; one of the CD players wouldn't recognize Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros (and I called them the Magnificent Zeros); finally, for the second straight week, our last song of the show, at least on the mp3, is cut off and something otherworldly replaces it.

The victories: we opened with a fantastic new band, Delta Spirit, and considered whether or not there are mountains in San Diego; Girl in a Coma made a second appearance; Las Cruces's Retsila Gem hit Oregon airwaves for the first time; we discuss some great bands coming to Doug Fir in Portland next month; finally, we promise to bring the sweetest potatoes next week.

Tune in every Thursday at noon Pacific for The Rhetorical Situation at 88.7 FM in Corvallis, or kbvr.com on the web.




Today's playlist:

Delta Spirit, "People Come On"
The Walkmen, "Postcards from Tiny Islands"
Retsila Gem, Unknown
Girl in a Coma, "Vino"
Xiu Xiu, "I Love The Valley Oh"
Blitzen Trapper, "Black River Killer"
Felice Brothers, "Take This Hammer"
Grizzly Bear, "While You Wait For The Others"
Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros, "Home"
Mount St. Helens Vietnam Band, "En Fuego"
Hockey, "Song Away"
Bodies of Water, "Under the Pines"

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

The Boycott List (running)

From time to time, I just need to take a stand. I boycott a product, a company, a location, business, my landlord, stopping at stop signs, whatever. I really stick it to The Man.

Here is a running list of things I am boycotting:

• Widmer Brothers Brewing. Seventh largest brewery in the country. Their hef helped me get hooked on beer, but that's not enough to override their general dickery, and the new Brrr commercial campaign is sexist and made to appeal to the people I like least in Oregon.

• Sportscenter. Stroking stupid sports fans and Northeast sports teams for too many years to count now.

• ESPN.com. See above. Also, I'm not paying a penny to read Hollinger's self-righteous shit.

• FOX News. Duh, right? But, I mean, I won't even turn to the channel to see what kind of insane things they're doing now. Just makes me too angry.

• Nike. Too dominant, too much money going into the University of Oregon, too many unethical labor practices, and too much Michael Jordan. They can't have my money.

• Walmart. I don't care how cheap it is. Please do not ever buy me a Walmart gift card.

• Coors. Nope, I won't drink a Coors Light if it's the only beer at the party and I've had the worst week of my life. Pete Coors makes me hopeful there's a hell.

• David Sedaris. Just not very funny, although he's okay on This American Life. Overhype = boycott. (Dave Eggers, you and your McSweeney's crowd are on my radar, too! Influencing pop culture by publishing your friends = boycott!)

• Rogue. Oh. My. Gosh. I still need to fully explain this one in a separate post. Man, I'll never drink another Rogue beer in my life. We were treated like children over a perfectly legal ID at the brewery in Newport, and subsequent e-mails between myself and one of the founders/co-owners revealed just how awful they really are, how profit trumps all, and how lying is okay when you're a big enough brewery. (Josh also experienced such unprofessionalism and disrespect.)

• Australian wine. Seriously, you live near some of the best wines in the world if you live in Oregon, Washington, or California. Let's support the Oregon and Washington wine industries.

• Myspace. So happy this company is dying in the hands of News Corp. Last.fm and Pitchfork are just as good (Better? Wouldn't know anymore!) for finding music.

• U2. I will childishly plug my ears and scream Boycott Boycott Boycott!

• Onions. Obviously.

• David Bartholomae. Write for the institution, write for the institution, write for the institution. (I'm probably misrepresenting here, but what the hell, right?)


More to come!

Tell me what you're boycotting. I'm probably down for the cause!

Thursday, November 12, 2009

The Rhetorical Situation, Nov. 12, 2009

Four weeks in, and we're still going strong. Today, Jacob and I introduced a couple of Portland bands, Hockey and The Dead Trees, discussed the use of the word "partner," and went about 6 minutes over our allotted time. We had a couple of mishaps on today's show, and while we're not ashamed (pun?), we promise to do better next time.

You can hear us live at noon on Thursdays on 88.7 FM in Corvallis, or at KBVR.com.

(Podcast starts about 17 seconds in. Patience, grasshoppers.)




Today's playlist:

Hockey, "Too Fake"
Starfucker (Pyramiddd), "Girls Just Want To Have Fun"
The Dead Weather, "60 Feet Tall"
The Drive By Truckers, "Sink Hole"
The Dead Trees, "Killer in Me"
Thao and the Get Down Stay Down, "Geography"
Papercuts, "You Can Have What You Want"
Grampall Jookabox, "Old Earth, Wash My Beat"
These United States, "West Won"
Ryan Adams and the Cardinals, "The Hardest Part"
Wilco, "Kingpin"
Deer Tick, "Ashamed"
Built To Spill, "I Would Hurt a Fly"

Thursday, November 5, 2009

The Rhetorical Situation, Nov. 5, 2009

Here it is, episode 3 of The Rhetorical Situation. Today, Jacob and I gave a nod to Kenneth Burke, determined which beer is the best in Corvallis, and I shared some safety tips for bicyclists and motorists in Corvallis. Not to mention, rocked off some socks with Girl in a Coma before gettin' twangy with it.

Apologies for not recording the beginning of the show. Technical difficulties. (Read: Couldn't figure out how to get the mp3 recording started.) So, it begins a minute or so into the first song.



Remember, high noon on the Pacific, www.kbvr.com or 88.7 on the radio.

Here's the playlist from today's show:

Girl in a Coma, "BB"
The Felice Brothers, "Helen Fry"
The Builders and the Butchers, "Golden and Green"
Modest Mouse, "Three Inch Horses"
The Shins, "Gone for Good"
Leslie and the Badgers, "The Torture"
The Decemberists, "Grace Cathedral Hill"
Animal Collective, "Leaf House"
TV on the Radio, "DLZ"
The French Kicks, "Love in the Ruins"
The Fiery Furnaces, "Drive to Dallas"
Portugal. The Man, "Guns and Dogs"
Of Montreal, "A Sentence of Sorts in Kongsvinger"