Lyndhurst Police Blotter by Philir Silva Octoberfest in the Park Prehended on Sept

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Lyndhurst Police Blotter by Philir Silva Octoberfest in the Park Prehended on Sept Spores B ulletin South Bergen fall sports re See story page 5 THE COMMERCIAL I don’t have any solution, but I certainly admire the problem. H e a t e r 2 5 4 ~AshIeigh B rillant THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2000 Established 1922 OF LYNDHURST Opacity arrested by B.C. prosecutor !°™£investigation ends in arrest A joint investigation conducted by methods o f taking Ketamine into the for falsifying military history records the Lyndhurst Police Department and body include snorting it in powder the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Of­ form, or injecting it into muscle. Community By Cindy Capitani fice Narcotics Task Force came to a On Sept. 9, the Narcotics Task Force A township commissioner could find close recently with the arrest of a approached luele at his home, asking himself behind bars for up to five Lyndhurst resident at his basement him to sign a search warrant, luele re­ Briefs years if found guilty of charges by apartment. portedly complied, and both the Bergen County Prosecutor’s of­ Authorities reportedly began inves­ Lyndhurst Police Department and fice that he falsified his military tigating the activities o f 23 year old County O fficials searched the apart­ records. Massimo luele several months prior ment for evidence. The search re­ A lbert P. O pacity, 50, o f Third A v ­ to his arrest. According to Lyndhurst sulted in the location o f nine 10-m illi- Casino trip planned enue, was charged with tampering Police C hief James B. O'Connor, sev­ meter bottles of Ketamine, five tab­ with public records, a third degree lets o f anabolic steroids, two hypo­ St. M ichael’s Rosary o f Lyndhurst eral people were witnessed stopping offense. Bergen County Assistant dermic syringes, a razor blade with is holding a trip to M ohegan Sun in at luele’s Summer Avenue and Prosecutor Ike Gavzy said that Opac­ drug residue on it, and other parapher­ Bingo or Casino Sept. 23. The bus Ridge Road apartment for short peri­ ity is alleged to have filed altered m ili­ nalia. leaves at 7 a.m. from the St. M ichael’s ods o f time. During those short vis­ tary records with the Lyndhurst Tax luele was arrested at the time o f the parking lot. its, Luele was allegedly selling 10 m il­ Office. search. He was charged with two There w ill be coffee and rolls, 50/50 limeter bottles o f the drug Ketamine According to Gavzy, his office has counts o f drug possession and pos­ prizes and bingo on the bus. Call Fran for approximately $75 to $80 each. a copy o f Opacity’s original military session o f hypodermic needles, pos­ at 933-4536 for more information. Ketamine, a drug more popularly form (D D -2 14), which is on file in St. know as “ Special K ,” has seen a session w ith intent to distribute, pos­ Louis, M o. The form says that Opac­ steady increase in popularity with session w ithin 1,000 feet o f a school Health Dept, offers ity was a member o f the armed forces Green Beret? - Lyndhurst Commissioner Al Opacity is shown here young drug users. O riginally devel­ zone, and possession o f drug para­ (left) wearing his Green Beret at the Nov. 11,1999 unveiling of the Viet- _ free medical services between March o f 1975 and March o f oped as a veterinary tranquilizer, when phernalia. He was processed at 1977. The document indicates that he nam Monument in Lyndhurst. He's shown with American Legion Com- 7n“ab'" 0^ dosesTKeiam'ine Lyndhurst Police Department Head­ The Lyndhurst Health Dept, under was discharged as a clerk/typist. Spe­ mander Michael Carroll, center, and Lyndhurst Commissioner Peter can induce what some users describe quarters, and later released on his own the direction o f Thomas B. Graffam cialist 4th class. Russo. as a near-death experience. Popular recognizance. w ill be offering the follow ing tests for Gavzy said that the DD-214 that Lyndhurst Township Attorney everything. Forms, documents, pho­ the month o f October: Oct. 4, choles­ Opacity has on file with the Lyndhurst James Guida Jr. said that he, too, is tos, newspaper articles... everything terol, from 9 to 11 a.m., by appoint­ Lyndhurst school day Tax Office indicates his military record shocked. “ I hope it’s not true. Hope­ is in order ” ment; Oct. 10, eye screening, from I A WW1I Veteran from Lyndhurst to include: service in Vietnam; mem­ fu lly we’ ll find out that there’s been to 3 p.m with Dr. Favetta, bt appoint­ AmVets - who wished to remain bership in Special Forces - Green Be­ some kind o f mistake.” extended by 50 minutes ment; Oct. 20, blood pressures, from anonymous - said the false paper trail ret; that he achieved the rank o f cap­ A mistake is exactly what Opacity’ s By Cindy Capitani 9 to l l a.m., no appointment neces­ tain; that he received a Bronze Star, friend o f four years, Robert F. Brack notion is out o f the question. “ That’s Now that the Lyndhurst School day tial,” said Abate. “Negotiations, of sary. baloney. The government would Purple Heart, Republic o f Vietnam o f Lyndhurst, said the whole thing is. is on par w ith the state’s average, course, are a give and take.” Proof o f Lyndhurst residency must Campaign Ribbon and a Combat In* Brack, a Special Forces, Green Beret never do that. A fter it [the war] is all Superintendent Joseph Abate Jr. said In return for the 50 minutes o f in­ be provided. over, why would they keep fake docu­ struction tim e teachers are giving to fan try Badge. who spent 37 months in Vietnam, said he’ s looking forward to a great year. students, they w ill receive a 4.5 per­ Opacity declined comment on the that although he didn’t serve with ments? It makes no sense.” It’s great news for Lyndhurst, a Another Veteran agreed, saying that cent increase in each contract year. Woman’s Club to allegations other than to indicate that Opacity, he knows his friend is telling win-win for everyone, a home run,” even i f there was an erroneous docu­ The contract runs July 1, 2000 put on fashion show the whole thing was a smear cam­ the truth. “Through our conversa­ said Abate. tions, the things he’s said, he had to ment, it could be easily corrected by As a result o f the new teacher’s through June 30,2003. On Wednesday, Sept. 27, the paign brought about by his political have been there,” Brack said. “ I be­ filing form SF180. contract ratified Sept. 5, K -8 students “The average teacher raise in Woman’s Club of Lyndhurst will adversaries. His w ife said she stands lieve what A l is saying is the truth.” A decorated Vietnam Veteran from now have an additional 50 minutes Bergen County is 4 percent. So if just hold a fashion show (fashions by 100 percent behind her husband. She Brack speculates that it was A l’s first Wallington said the false paper trail o f instruction time tacked onto their an extra half of percent, the BOE got Dress Bam) and a m in i Chinese auc­ said they are in the process o f obtain­ wife who probably took all his records notion is unlikely. He said that even if day. High school students w ill have all this time,” sad Abate. tion at the Lyndhurst Senior Center, ing a copy o f the D D -2 14. Once it ar­ and dumped them. “ That’s why he Opacity was on a classified mission, an extra 21- minutes o f instruction time The new schedule went into effect 250 Cleveland Avenue. Doors open rives, she said it w ill clearly show her he would be still be listed as being in built into the 20 school clays that end Sept. 11. Students began their day at a t6 p.m. Admission isSIO T h i* 6 md Jwmbjnd is 100 percent telling the probably doesn’t have a lot of stuff, like pictures and such.” He noted that Vietnam as a captain. “ I f you were a at I p.m. VU5JTTH., f t minutes earlier than last raiser w ill benefit children o f the poor truth. Opacity does have an engraved captain, you would always be listed Officials have been campaigning for year. In addition, a 70-minute lunch countries o f the world via “ Operation Opacity’s attorney, Terence M. Scott lighter w ith the Green Beret insignia. as a captain, not a spec. 4,” he said. over a decade to lengthen the school period was reduced to 45 minutes and Smile,” the Battered Women’s Shel­ o f C lifto n , said he hasn’t seen the “That thing [the lighter] is like 30 “ Even i f he was sent to Laos, he’d day. Lyndhurst students used to every class period was extended by ter in Jersey C ity and many veterans prosecutor’s evidence yet. “ We deny years old. It’ s not something that was still be listed as ‘ in country.’ There’s have four hours and 40 minutes of three minutes. in the area. the allegations and stand behind our engraved recently.” always a paper trail and there’s always instructional time each day in school, Lyndhurst M ayor James Guida, a Our dessert table w ill be back, by form (DD-214].
Recommended publications
  • 10 Hours • Unabridged © 2016 Jennifer Armstrong ℗ 2016 Tantor Media, Inc
    Comedians Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld never thought anyone would watch their silly little sitcom about a New York comedian sitting around talking to his friends. NBC executives didn’t think anyone would watch either, but they bought it anyway, hiding it away in the TV dead zone of summer. But against all odds, viewers began to watch, first a few and then many, until nine years later nearly forty million Americans were tuning in weekly. In <I>Seinfeldia</I>, acclaimed TV historian and entertainment writer Jennifer Keishin Armstrong celebrates the creators and fans of this American television phenomenon. She brings listeners behind the scenes of the show while it was on the air and into the world of devotees for whom it never stopped being relevant, a world where the Soup Nazi still spends his days saying <I>No soup for you!</I>, Joe Davola gets questioned every day about his sanity, Kenny Kramer makes his living giving tours of New York sights from the show, and fans dress up in Jerry’s famous puffy shirt, dance like Elaine, and imagine plotlines for <I>Seinfeld</I> if it were still on TV. <B>Jennifer Keishin Armstrong</B> is the author of <I>Mary and Lou and Rhoda and Ted </I>, a history of <I>The Mary Tyler Moore Show</I>. She writes about pop culture for several publications, including the <I>New York Times Book Review</I>, <I>Fast Company</I>, and <I>Entertainment Weekly</I>. She grew up in Homer Glen, Illinois, and now lives in New York City.
    [Show full text]
  • The Culture of Post-Narcissism
    THE CULTURE OF POST-NARCISSISM The Culture of Post-Narcissism Post-teenage, Pre-midlife Singles Culture in Seinfeld, Friends, and Ally – Seinfeld in Particular MICHAEL SKOVMAND In a recent article, David P. Pierson makes a persuasive case for considering American television comedy, and sitcoms in particular, as ‘Modern Comedies of Manners’. These comedies afford a particular point of entry into contemporary mediatised negotiations of ‘civility’, i.e. how individual desires and values interface with the conventions and stand- ards of families, peer groups and society at large. The apparent triviality of subject matter and the hermetic appearance of the groups depicted may deceive the unsuspecting me- dia researcher into believing that these comedies are indeed “shows about nothing”. The following is an attempt to point to a particular range of contemporary American televi- sion comedies as sites of ongoing negotiations of behavioural anxieties within post-teen- age, pre-midlife singles culture – a culture which in many aspects seems to articulate central concerns of society as a whole. This range of comedies can also be seen, in a variety of ways, to point to new ways in which contemporary television comedy articu- lates audience relations and relations to contemporary culture as a whole. American television series embody the time-honoured American continental dicho- tomy between the West Coast and the East Coast. The West Coast – LA – signifies the Barbie dolls of Baywatch, and the overgrown high school kids of Beverly Hills 90210. On the East Coast – more specifically New York and Boston, a sophisticated tradition of television comedy has developed since the early 1980s far removed from the beach boys and girls of California.
    [Show full text]
  • Masaryk University Faculty of Arts
    Masaryk University Faculty of Arts Department of English and American Studies English Language and Literature Šárka Tripesová The Anatomy of Humour in the Situation Comedy Seinfeld Bachelor‟s Diploma Thesis Supervisor: Mgr. Pavel Drábek, Ph.D. 2010 I declare that I have worked on this thesis independently, using only the primary and secondary sources listed in the bibliography. …………………………………………….. Šárka Tripesová ii Acknowledgement I would like to thank Mgr. Pavel Drábek, Ph.D. for the invaluable guidance he provided me as a supervisor. Also, my special thanks go to my boyfriend and friends for their helpful discussions and to my family for their support. iii Table of Contents 1 INTRODUCTION 1 2 SEINFELD AS A SITUATION COMEDY 3 2.1 SEINFELD SERIES: THE REALITY AND THE SHOW 3 2.2 SITUATION COMEDY 6 2.3 THE PROCESS OF CREATING A SEINFELD EPISODE 8 2.4 METATHEATRICAL APPROACH 9 2.5 THE DEPICTION OF CHARACTERS 10 3 THE TECHNIQUES OF HUMOUR DELIVERY 12 3.1 VERBAL TECHNIQUES 12 3.1.1 DIALOGUES 12 3.1.2 MONOLOGUES 17 3.2 NON-VERBAL TECHNIQUES 20 3.2.1 PHYSICAL COMEDY AND PANTOMIMIC FEATURES 20 3.2.2 MONTAGE 24 3.3 COMBINED TECHNIQUES 27 3.3.1 GAG 27 4 THE METHODS CAUSING COMICAL EFFECT 30 4.1 SEINFELD LANGUAGE 30 4.2 METAPHORICAL EXPRESSION 32 4.3 THE TWIST OF PERSPECTIVE 35 4.4 CONTRAST 40 iv 4.5 EXAGGERATION AND CARICATURE 43 4.6 STAND-UP 47 4.7 RUNNING GAG 49 4.8 RIDICULE AND SELF-RIDICULE 50 5 CONCLUSION 59 6 SUMMARY 60 7 SHRNUTÍ 61 8 PRIMARY SOURCES 62 9 REFERENCES 70 v 1 Introduction Everyone as a member of society experiences everyday routine and recurring events.
    [Show full text]
  • Proquest Dissertations
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy subm itted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6” x 9” black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI' Bell & Howell Information and teaming 300 North Zeeb Road, Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 USA 800-521-0600 A GENERIC ANALYSIS OF THE RHETORIC OF HUMOROUS INCIVILITY IN POPULAR CULTURE DISSERTATION Presented in Partial FuljBUment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Laura K.
    [Show full text]
  • Evolución De La Comedia De Situación
    UNIVERSIDAD DE SEVILLA FACULTAD DE COMUNICACIÓN ESTUDIO DE LA COMEDIA DE SITUACIÓN Y SU EVOLUCIÓN ANÁLISIS DE ROCKEFELLER PLAZA YTHE BIG BANG THEORY TRABAJO DE SAIDA HERRERO MORALES | [email protected] DIRIGIDO POR Dra. INMACULADA GORDILLO ÁLVAREZ Septiembre 2016 MÁSTER EN GUION, NARRATIVA Y CREACIÓN AUDIOVISUAL DEPARTAMENTO DE COMUNICACIÓN AUDIOVISUAL y PUBLICIDAD En memoria de Garry Shandling, creador y protagonista de The Larry Sanders Show (1949-2016). Y de mi tío Mario. Cincuenta y tres años de anécdotas que van más allá de lo que cualquier sitcom podría recoger. Nuestros momentos contigo han quedado enlatados como aquellas risas de estudio, pudiendo recordarlos una y otra vez. Inolvidables cuál gran éxito de la pequeña pantalla. Descansa en paz. ÍNDICE Resumen ............................................................................................................... 4 Palabras Clave ...................................................................................................... 4 Agradecimientos ................................................................................................... 4 1. INTRODUCCIÓN .................................................................................................. 5 2. PLANTEAMIENTO DE LA INVESTIGACIÓN .................................................. 6 Justificación ........................................................................................................ 6 La ‘sitcom clásica’ frente a la ‘sitcom televisiva’ ...............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Binge-Watching Killed the Idiot Box: the Changing Identities of Viewers and Television in the Experiential, Streaming Video Age
    BINGE-WATCHING KILLED THE IDIOT BOX: THE CHANGING IDENTITIES OF VIEWERS AND TELEVISION IN THE EXPERIENTIAL, STREAMING VIDEO AGE ____________________________________________________________ A Dissertation Submitted to the Temple University Graduate Board ____________________________________________________________ In partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY ____________________________________________________________ By Emil Steiner Diploma Date (August 2018) Examining Committee Members: Dr. Carolyn Kitch, Chair, Temple University, Journalism Dr. Fabienne Darling-Wolf, Temple University, Journalism Dr. Brooke Duffy, Cornell University, Communication Dr. Eli Goldblatt, External Member, Temple University, English ii ABSTRACT In this dissertation I explore what binge-watching is, how it is practiced, and its relationship with contemporary identities of television and viewers. Building on the theoretical frameworks of ambivalent cultural studies, post-structural feminism, and collective memory, I examine binge-watching and binge-viewers through their mediated articulations and ritualized actions. In Chapter 2, I chronicle the history of the terms’ usages in journalism from 1948-2016 and use that data to construct a functional definition of binge-watching. In Chapter 3, I analyze advertised constructions of binge- viewers in the commercial rhetoric of media companies from 2013-2015. In Chapter 4, I explore the rituals of contemporary television viewers through semi-structured interviews to understand how and why people binge-watch. In Chapter 5, I synthesize my findings on the articulations and actions of binge-watching and provided a reflexive narrative of my subject position as a binge-viewer studying binge-watching. I conclude that binge- watching is a techno-cultural phenomenon, which, through its action and articulation, is reshaping the identities of and relationships between television and viewers.
    [Show full text]
  • “Not That There's Anything Wrong with That”: A
    GRAAT issue # 2 – June 2007 “Not That There’s Anything Wrong With That”: A Queer Reading of Seinfeld Charlotte Gould Université Rennes 2 – Haute Bretagne One particular expression seems to spring to mind whenever one evokes the reference to homosexuality in a television series or serial: “Not that there’s anything wrong with that.” The phrase appears in an episode of the 1990s American-sitcom- turned-cultural-phenomenon Seinfeld. In “The Outing” (4.57) a young journalist believes Jerry and George to be a gay couple—they bicker in front of her over an unwashed piece of fruit and George reproaches Jerry with not liking his shirt. She writes an article about it which is then taken up by the rest of the national press, and this to the dismay of both characters. Jerry comments thus upon the misunderstanding: “I’ve been outed, I wasn’t even in!” “Not that there’s anything wrong with that” is the leitmotiv of the episode, uttered every time a character denies they are gay or shows amazement at Jerry and George’s outing—though the fact that Jerry is admittedly thin, single, neat and in his late thirties makes the revelation less surprising to his neighbour Kramer. The sentence was introduced in the dialogue after the episode was almost cancelled when the executives at NBC thought it might offend the gay and lesbian communities and was not politically correct enough. Larry Charles, one of the writers of this specific show and a regular contributor to the programme, kept repeating the frightened mantra, which Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld eventually picked up on as a running joke rather than a warning, to great success what’s more, since “The Outing” went on to become a favourite, especially with the gay and lesbian communities, its catchphrase making its way into everyday talk.
    [Show full text]
  • Kramer Reality Tour for Seinfeld Fans
    Kramer Reality Tour for Seinfeld Fans Kenny "The Real" Kramer, Larry David's across the hall neighbor, and inspiration for the character Cosmo Kramer, invites you to join him as he takes you on a 3-hour theatrical multi-media stage, bus and video tour of New York City to the sites made famous in the world's most popular sitcom. Of course there will be a stop at that world famous soup stand. Along the way Kenny Kramer will answer your questions, share backstage information as to how the show was created, and how many story lines and characters' names came right from real life. The first hour and twenty minutes of the tour takes place in the theater, so go right into the theater when you get there. Please feel free to bring cameras as there are a lot of fun photo opportunities. Soup is included Date: Saturday, October 5th, 2019 Time: 12:00 pm Notes: Please sit in the same seat going and coming. Fee: $85 /Residents $95/Non-residents includes bus to city & soup (Please make checks payable to Inc Village of Port Jefferson) Tickets are non-refundable - Call 631-802-2160 Bus leaves Village Hall at 9:00 am and returns immediately after show. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- KENNY KRAMER OCT 5, 2019 |12:00PM Name:__________________________________ Phone:_________________________________ Address:________________________________________________________________________ Email:___________________________________________________________________________ THE UNDERSIGNED AGREES THAT THE VILLAGE OF PORT JEFFERSON, ITS AGENTS, OFFICERS, ELECTED AND APPOINTED OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYEES SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIMS, INJURIES, DAMAGES OR EXPENSES SUSTAINED BY THE UNDERSIGNED AS A RESULT OF PARTICIPATION IN THE ACTIVITY DESCRIBED ABOVE.
    [Show full text]
  • Issue 12 Issue - 12 Vol
    december2016 vol. 12 - issue 12 larchmontledger.com COMPLIMENTARY SUBSCRIPTION! Ledger A.L. PostLarchmont 347 Honors the Fallen, POW/MIA’s and Living Veterans BY STEPHEN E. LIPKEN Councilman Thomas A. Mur- Commander Al Bend- phy; Councilman/Deputy Su- er performed the POW/MIA Larchmont American Le- pervisor Ernie Odierna; New Remembrance Ceremony, gion Post 347 honored the fall- York State (NYS) Assemblyman accompanied by members of en, POW/MIA’s and living vet- Steven Otis; TOM Supervisor Boy Scout Troop 4 utilizing erans in a series of poignant, Nancy Seligson and NYS Sena- a little table with symbols of emotional ceremonies at their tor George Latimer. captivity. “This table set for Flint Park location on Friday, “I am very happy and one is small—symbolizing November 11. honored to be with veterans on frailty of one prisoner alone Officials attending- in Veterans Day because I think against his/her oppressors... cluded Village of Larchmont that the veterans in our com- More than 78,000 Americans Trustees Peter Fanelli; Mal- munity give us such an added are still unaccounted for from colm Frouman and John dimension, with their experi- World War II; 8,100 from Ko- Komar on behalf of Mayor ence, their service and being rea; 120 from the Cold War; Lorraine Walsh; Town of Ma- part of the community,” Selig- 1,810 from Viet Nam and 3 maroneck (TOM) Council- son stated. “They add to the from the Gulf War,” Bender woman Jaine Elkind Eney; richness of our lives…” stressed. Bender cited Carl John- Left to right: Larchmont Trustee Peter Fanelli; New York State Senator George Latimer; Trustees Malcolm Frouman, John continued on page 9 Komar.
    [Show full text]
  • Kramer Vs. Kramer MARIE-JOELLE PARENT Much Better Looking, C’Mon,” His Personal Phone Number, QMI Agency the Real One Says As He Sits 1-800-KRAMERS
    In tomorrow’s Sun ... Movie critic Liz Braun tells us whether or not the new Russell Brand and Jonah Hill comedy Get Him to the Greek rocks. Kramer vs. Kramer MARIE-JOELLE PARENT much better looking, c’mon,” his personal phone number, QMI Agency the real one says as he sits 1-800-KRAMERS. He has across from me wearing a also been known to use the NEW YORK — I have the pink shirt and a baseball cap number to pick up women in most famous neighbour in tel- turned backwards over his city bars. evision history sitting in front long, hippie-length grey hair. Born in the Bronx, Kramer of me: e man who inspired e upright hairstyle from the describes himself as a prod- the world-renowned charac- show’s Kramer is the only part uct of the psychedelic revolu- ter of Cosmo Kramer in the missing. tion of the 1960s. “I’m really sitcom Seinfeld. Kenny and Larry lived next good-for-nothing,” he says. Kenny Kramer tells me to each other for six years. He left school at age 17, sold there’s only one difference Just like the show, their doors magazines door to door, was a between him and the TV stayed open all the time and drummer in a band and had a character he inspired: “I don’t there was constant traffic stint as a stand-up comedian. burst into rooms.” back and forth between each But it was his line of glow-in- It’s hard to imagine a more other’s apartments.
    [Show full text]
  • The Real Kramer Plans Run for New York Mayor
    Published for friends & supporters of the Libertarian Party / • •0 • • 0 , )0 , Iii • Libertarian National Committee, Inc. • 2600 Virginia Ave, NW, Suite 100 APRIL 2001 Washington DC 20037 ♦ Phone: (202) 333-0008 ♦ Fax: (202) 333-0072 newsletter The Real Kramer plans NEWS FROM AROUND THE USA SOUTH PARK CREATOR: LIBERTARIAN Trey Parker, the co-creator of the pol- run for New York mayor itically incorrect and foul-mouthed enny Kramer, the man Kramer, "I'm TV cartoon South Park, has announced who inspired the Cos- not kidding." that he is a Libertarian. K mo Kramer character Kramer, Parker, 31, made the revelation in on the hugely successful 57, has an April 4 Los Angeles Times article, Seinfeld TV series, has worked as a where he described himself as a "regis- announced that he is seeking stand-up tered Libertarian." ■ the Libertarian Party's nom- comedian Parker and creative partner Matt Parker: A ination to run for mayor of and manager Stone were interviewed by the newspa- Libertarian. New York City. ■ Kramer: of a British per about their new Comedy Central "I'm in it to win," said Not a joke. reggae band. show, That's My Bush!, a send-up of the Bush presi- Kramer. "With the success However, he dency and TV sitcom clichés. of Jesse Ventura becoming became famous because he Although it was the first time Parker has publicly governor, why can't I be- lived across the hall in a Man- claimed a Libertarian affiliation, it's not the first time come mayor?" hattan apartment building he's been tagged with that label: Last year, National Kramer will seek the from Seinfeld co-creator Review complimented South Park for its "extremely nomination at the state Larry David in the 1980s.
    [Show full text]
  • The Culture of Post-Narcissism
    10.1515/nor-2017-0330 THE CULTURE OF POST-NARCISSISM The Culture of Post-Narcissism Post-teenage, Pre-midlife Singles Culture in Seinfeld, Friends, and Ally – Seinfeld in Particular MICHAEL SKOVMAND In a recent article, David P. Pierson makes a persuasive case for considering American television comedy, and sitcoms in particular, as ‘Modern Comedies of Manners’. These comedies afford a particular point of entry into contemporary mediatised negotiations of ‘civility’, i.e. how individual desires and values interface with the conventions and stand- ards of families, peer groups and society at large. The apparent triviality of subject matter and the hermetic appearance of the groups depicted may deceive the unsuspecting me- dia researcher into believing that these comedies are indeed “shows about nothing”. The following is an attempt to point to a particular range of contemporary American televi- sion comedies as sites of ongoing negotiations of behavioural anxieties within post-teen- age, pre-midlife singles culture – a culture which in many aspects seems to articulate central concerns of society as a whole. This range of comedies can also be seen, in a variety of ways, to point to new ways in which contemporary television comedy articu- lates audience relations and relations to contemporary culture as a whole. American television series embody the time-honoured American continental dicho- tomy between the West Coast and the East Coast. The West Coast – LA – signifies the Barbie dolls of Baywatch, and the overgrown high school kids of Beverly Hills 90210. On the East Coast – more specifically New York and Boston, a sophisticated tradition of television comedy has developed since the early 1980s far removed from the beach boys and girls of California.
    [Show full text]