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The Vietnam War was over and America seemed in the midst of a
nationwide party. The self-proclaimed Me generation was flocking to
discotheques, recreational drug use was high, and sexual taboos
were being shattered nationwide. Then The Village People appeared
on the music scene. Never before had gay sexuality been as up-front
and in the face of America. The Village People struck a cultural
nerve and fueled a craze that had them playing to sold-out crowds
at Madison Square Garden. Even today, few adults could not at least
hum the tunes to "Y.M.C.A." and "Macho Man." Because of the unique
role they played in the United States of the late 1970s, The
Village People are able to provide a powerful lens through which to
view the emergence and development of gay culture in America. In
"Macho Man," readers can travel back with one of the first gay
icons in popular music, and a top pop culture biographer, as they
describe this complicated process of change.
In these pages, Randy Jones, the original cowboy in the band,
takes us inside the time period, the discos, and the new musical
style that was in many ways unprecedented in giving a voice to a
previously closeted gay culture. Assisted by Mark Bego, one of the
most popular and prolific pop culture authors working today, Jones
shows how the fast-lane rise, fall, and rebirth of this novel band
paralleled activities across the last 40 years within the gay
culture and gay rights movement. The work concludes with a
gayography -- a listing of openly gay musicians and performers in
the United States before and since The Village People - along with
a discography and filmography. This work will interest pop culture
and music enthusiasts, in addition to scholars in gay studies.
If, like most Americans, you think an Ivy League diploma paves the
way to Nobel Prizes, Wall Street riches, and a life of prosperity
and happiness, think again. Consider these "distinguished" alumni:
* John Fairbanks (Dartmouth AB, 1946), embezzler * Amy Bishop
(Harvard Ph.D., 1993), mass murderer * Eliot Spitzer (Princeton BA,
1981; Harvard JD, 1984), disgraced NY governor and patron of
prostitutes * Cardinal Bernard F. Law (Harvard BA, 1952), protector
of abusive priests * Jeffrey Skilling (Harvard MBA, 1979),
felonious Enron CEO * Madison Grant (Yale BA, 1887; Columbia
LL.B.), eugenicist * Ann Coulter (Cornell BA, 1984), professional
bully * Jonah Lehrer (Columbia BA, 2003), plagiarist * Theodore
Kaczynski (Harvard BA, 1962), the Unabomber In 85 brief profiles of
murderers, rapists, racists, cheaters, lying politicians, slavers,
oligarchs, war criminals, traitors, forgers, kiddie-porners, and
other moral reprobates, MONSTERS OF THE IVY LEAGUE effectively--and
entertainingly!--bursts the bubble of America's obsession with
elite colleges.
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Some Kind of Ending (Paperback)
Conon Parks, Mike MacNeil; Illustrated by Randy Jones
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R455
R385
Discovery Miles 3 850
Save R70 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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E. Basil St. Blaise, the curmudgeonly movie reviewer of few words
and less tact, skewers everything from the biggest blockbuster to
the artsiest indie in short, but sour reviews. He stares down the
Not-So-Good, the Bad and the Ugly in the world of Cinema, and tears
em all a new sprocket hole. Accompanied by more than 100
illustrated send-ups of all the stars and their flicks by ace
cartoonists Randy Jones and Martin Kozlowski.
A collection of Biblical summaries and gospel articles about our
never changing God to help inspire you in today's ever changing
world.
This story is based on a series of dreams that both authors have
had over the past twenty years. It all begins with a dream, a
nightmare from the past. Steve and Emily move to Alaska seeking
adventure. What they find is an old sourdough named Mac and the
beginning of a journey.
Emma was a young, Victorian Brooklyn seamstress. Independent,
strong willed, intelligent and beautiful she had everything going
for her. That is until James came into her life. A wealthy,
handsome, debonair, prominent, older physician, James was also
married into the cream of society. Their affair changed all four
lives.
After the death of Mac, their mentor, Steve and Emily's ideal life
begins to unravel. When their best friends are transferred to
California and Steve is transferred to Vermont, they realize their
life of bush flying and outdoor exploration is coming to an end.
James and Emma take a romantic ride through the sites and sounds of
late 19th Century New York City. Silk top hats and lace, and
horse-drawn cabs on gas-lit cobblestone streets all draw the reader
into this world of Victorian elegance.
Steve and Emily's life deteriorates as a series of tragic events,
jealousy and lies ultimately leads to a repeat of history. A repeat
that only the right decision can remedy.
When Emma finds herself pregnant, her idyllic romantic ride soon
comes crashing to an end. Loss, betrayal and blackmail sets the
stage for her inevitable suicide.
Clues throughout the story link past life characters with present
day characters. Dream sequences strategically placed throughout the
present give enticing previews of events that happen in the past.
All 19th Century sequences were written in pasttense and all
present day sequences in present tense. A story with two endings,
one evolving from the other.
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