That's the joke of the whole thing: you can't be loved by everybody. I know that, and I've really come to accept it. That denial of love, in fact, eases my mind… Because now, when I put my work out for the dogs, I'm well aware that some will like it and some won't. It's a tough thing to do, but I don't always like to give people what they expect. | | Singer/Songwriter Ric Ocasek of The Cars performs at The Omni Coliseum in Atlanta Georgia October 16, 1980. (Rick Diamond/Getty Images) | | | | | "That's the joke of the whole thing: you can't be loved by everybody. I know that, and I've really come to accept it. That denial of love, in fact, eases my mind… Because now, when I put my work out for the dogs, I'm well aware that some will like it and some won't. It's a tough thing to do, but I don't always like to give people what they expect." | | | | | rantnrave:// I was what some may call a latchkey kid. I came home to an empty house each day after school. My sister and I would go to our rooms. Do some homework, well, maybe she did. I listened to music, watched movies and TV. They were my escapes. My mom loved music. She had a great album collection. From THE BEATLES to FRANK SINTRA to SIMON and GARFUNKEL to MOTOWN greats, the JACKSON 5 and on and on. But it was DREW GOLDBERG in Bunk 13 at CAMP WINAUKEE that really led me down the path of music being an integral part of me. He introduced me to AC/DC and KISS. I added on some of REO SPEEDWAGON's 'HI INFIDELITY," and even RICK SPRINGFIELD's 3-chord pop in "WORKING CLASS DOG." But when MTV burst into my life, my first real music passion was "new wave." And while BRITAIN seemed to rule that genre, BOSTON band THE CARS were kings. Guitars and synth. With influences but unique. I loved them. On the radio. On MTV. In concert. And featured in films like FAST TIMES AT RIDGEMONT HIGH ("MOVING IN STEREO.") As I sat down to write yesterday, I got the alert that RIC OCASEK, one of the leaders of The Cars, had passed away. Like a kick in the gut. Literally. We're losing lots of epic talent lately. BOWIE. PRINCE. FREY. And last week my beloved MTV-era pop-rock working man, EDDIE MONEY. Now Ric. He was HOWARD STERN tall. A totally unique voice that was as recognizable as STING. Or any great. He didn't look like your typical rock star. But the role fit to him, his way. He was an iconic talent and the epitome of silent cool. He didn't move much. When I heard the news, the first person I contacted was MusicREDEF's MATTY KARAS. A Boston native. A devotee of THE CARS. He loved them. That was a hard text. "They were the first new world Boston band. J. GEILS, AEROSMITH, BOSTON were all old world. The Cars were the future." And then a group text my MTV "lunch table." TOM FRESTON, JUDY MCGRATH, VAN TOFFLER, JOHN SYKES, BILL FLANAGAN, and DOUG HERZOG. All fans. All watched their brand and fortunes rise as The Cars did. As Sykes put it, "He helped put us on the map. Such a nice guy." And McGrath, "They made great videos and he was always good to us. Glad they got the Hall of Fame." Freston too, "I got to know him a bit. Loved The Cars. They were out front on the new wave thing. I saw them in 1979 at the WOLLMAN RINK in CENTRAL PARK and a guy next to me fell out of a tree and killed himself. Right next to me. That was hard to forget. He was a big Cars fan. RIP." THE KILLERS frontman BRANDON FLOWERS inducted his heroes into the ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME. So glad this happened while Ric was alive. The band's speech here. Ocasek was also a prolific producer. ROMEO VOID's "NEVER SAY NEVER," THE BAD BRAINS, and others. The Cars and Ocasek gave me so much to enjoy growing up. I still listen all the time. But to do justice, I'm going to hand you off to the best curator and biggest music fan I know, my partner in crime, Matty Karas and his thoughts. And oh, if you don't subscribe to the MusicREDEF newsletter, you're missing out. It's way better than mine. Matty on Ric and The Cars on YOUTUBE... Happy Birthday to NICK MEHRA, ANDY SERWER, ERIC SCUDERI, and JONATHAN MEDVED. Belated to TREVOR GROTH, OREN AVIV, CHRIS ROOKE, TORY JOHNSON, JANET FRIESEN, WILL KEENAN, BRADFORD CROSS, ELLE PREZANT CELINSKI, JIM LUCCHESE, TIM ARANGO, PHILLIP ALVELDA, JONAS HELLER, OLIVIA MA CORWIN, and SCOTT SCHWANBECK. | | | - Jason Hirschhorn, curator | | | | | GQ | Meet four sneaker-flipping sherpas, each of whom might make you rich-and benefit handsomely themselves, too. | | | | POLITICO Magazine | Today, it's a cutting-edge lab. In the 1950s and 1960s, it was the center of the U.S. government's darkest experiments. | | | | Newsweek | A day in the life inside the iron bubble of the West's public enemy number one | | | | The New Yorker | If you're wondering how "Succession," the HBO series about siblings fighting for control of a family empire-thought to be inspired by Rupert Murdoch's family-ends, James Murdoch can tell you, despite never having watched the show. | | | | Billboard | While many music rights holders, songwriters and industry trade groups support changes sought by ASCAP and BMI in order to have one simplified decree to cover both performance rights organization for a transitional period culminating with its expiration, a few of the other music industry players with a big stake in the issue are either silent for now, urging caution, missing in action altogether, saying it's not the right time for changes, or outright telling the Dept. of Justice to let the... | | | | NZS Capital, LLC | If you traveled into the future and brought a newspaper back in your Delorean from the year 2029, what headlines might it contain? With the dramatic wave of disruption coming to the restaurant, delivery, and food supply chain over the next few years, it might contain a story about the death of the grocery store. | | | | The Daily Beast | First he trained and worked as an assassin for Mexico's most powerful crime group; now he uses that training to "clean up" cartel infestations. | | | | Def Jam Recordings | On September 11th, 2001, Jay Z released his sixth studio album, "The Blueprint." An undisputed classic, "The Blueprint" is often regarded as one of the best albums of all time. "The Blueprint" revitalized Jay Z's career. | | | | The New York Times | As authorities work to understand the spate of vaping-related lung illnesses, a small-town drug bust offers a closer look at the vast black market for vaping supplies. | | | | No Mercy / No Malice | Professor Scott Galloway | They started out benign, a group committed to peace and prosperity in the galaxy. Slowly, they aggregated power and, wanting to maintain that power, turned to the dark side. They built a weapon 900km in diameter, staffed by hundreds of thousands of personnel and robots. Of course. | | | | Digiday | 'LonelyGirl15' set the stage for YouTube's emergence. | | | | REDEF | Three decades in and a lot of bucks spent, OTT competition has clarified. Though not in ways that were expected. | | | | The Atlantic | Caught between a brutal meritocracy and a radical new progressivism, a parent tries to do right by his children while navigating New York City's schools. | | | | Mediaite | CNN host S.E. Cupp went after 2020 Democrats for largely ignoring President Donald Trump during this week's primary debate, arguing the overarching goal is to beat Trump. | | | | Benedict Evans | Apple announced another phone, but pretty much all phones are great now, and most of the dramatic innovation is behind us as the market matures. The one place for really obvious improvement is in cameras, where Apple and Google are using computational photography to get more and more out of the laws | | | | GeekWire | Election security vaulted to the top of public officials' concerns in the U.S. following the attempted intervention by Russian hackers in the 2016 presidential election. The hacking attempt captivated the country and became a political football in Washington D.C. as a major sticking point in partisan rancor between Democrats and Republicans. | | | | VentureBeat | It was easy to call 5G inevitable. Whatever it was, some next-generation cellular technology was certain to follow 2G, 3G, and 4G into the mainstream of global life. It was harder to predict that 5G will be omnipresent. | | | | Monday Note | What's going on at "Le Monde"? Is its independence in peril? Probably not. But the current confrontation might radically change the ownership structure of France's flagship paper. | | | | The Boston Globe | In a wide-ranging interview at Fenway Park, Ortiz reflected on the crime and investigation, the lifesaving Samaritan who rushed him to the hospital, his three surgeries and potentially deadly infection, and how differently he views the world now. "People need to understand, this isn't a movie where you get shot in the street and you're back two minutes later,'' Ortiz said. | | | | Six Colors | Apple likes talking about the awesome chips it designs for its iPhones, but it hates even hinting at products it hasn't yet announced. The new U1 chip--introduced with the iPhone 11 but never mentioned on stage at Tuesday's iPhone event--strikes at the heart of this conflict. | | | | Nieman Journalism Lab | Earlier this year, Nieman Lab's Christine Schmidt conducted an informal analysis of the stories found on Today In, Facebook's local news feature, over a 10-day period. What she found: "Satire, obituaries from funeral home websites, lots of local TV, and a weird network of sites that scrape other local news and yet somehow make it into Facebook's scanner...over half of the news was just crime, courts, and dead bodies." | | | | The Guardian | Gangsters, superheroes, schoolkids, lovers, slaves, peasants, techies, Tenenbaums and freefalling astronauts - they're all here in our countdown of cinema's best movies since 2000 | | | | | | YouTube | | | | | | | | | | | | | © Copyright 2019, The REDEF Group | | |
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