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Friday, May 16, 2025

Happy Birthday, Janet Jackson!

May 16th, in addition to being St. Brendan the Navigator's feast day, is also the birthday of one Ms. Janet Damito Jo Jackson, born in Gary, Indiana. In honor of my fellow Hoosier lady, here are a few of my favorite Janet Jackson videos. Today she turns 59.

All-time fave: "If," from janet, the first album I ever bought in CD format. It samples Diana Ross & The Supremes' 1969 hit "Someday We'll Be Together."


In "Alright," the choreography and video styling allude to classic musicals of the 1960s and earlier. It premiered in 1990. In the long-form mv, Black musical pioneers the Nicholas Brothers and Cab Calloway appear. The video also features legendary dancer-actor Cyd Charisse (one of my people, a white Jewish woman). 


Another classic that contains some interesting pop culture cameos is "Nasty," from 1986. It features Paula Abdul and Dennis Franz*. The video was directed by Mary Lambert, who directed several of Madonna's iconic 1980s music videos as well as feature films including Pet Sematary (1989).


*Dennis Franz was also in City of Angels with Andre Braugher.

Jackson's 1989 smash hit album Janet Jackson's Rhythm Nation 1814 spun off many hit singles, including "Love Will Never Do (Without You)." 



The video features Beninese-American actor Djimon Hounsou. In addition to videos by Jackson, Madonna, Tina Turner, Paula Abdul, and En Vogue, he's also starred in many hit feature films and played Caliban in Julie Taymor's The Tempest (2010). 

Prior to 2012, when the film was scrapped, Hounsou was signed on to play John Milton's self-insert character, the seraph Abdiel, in the Bradley Cooper adaptation of Paradise Lost. (Cooper would have played Lucifer.) 

Jackson's single "Again" from 1993's janet was used in her film with Tupac Shakur, Poetic Justice*, also starring the poetry of Maya Angelou.


*And Clifton Collins Jr., just a little bit.

This is another fun one from janet: "You Want This." It's a playful tease.


"Got 'Til It's Gone," featuring rapper QTip and interpolating Joni Mitchell's rock classic "Big Yellow Taxi," was one of the big hits off of Jackson's 1997 album The Velvet Rope.


Jackson's 2001 hit "Son of a Gun (I Betcha Think This Song Is About You)" does for Carly Simon's "You're So Vain" what "Got 'Til It's Gone" did for "Big Yellow Taxi." These tracks were done with the cooperation of Mitchell and Simon respectively. 


I could go on and on. The Velvet Rope alone has many good singles. "Go Deep" is one; the video was directed by Valerie Faris and Jonathan Dayton, who also directed the "1979" video for The Smashing Pumpkins. The song is a super-infectious earworm. I love it.


Janet Jackson is an iconic female singer/songwriter/rock star who uplifts and upholds other women in the music industry. If you like this kind of music, I am once again recommending that you read She’s A Rebel: The History of Women in Rock & Roll (Expanded Second Edition) by Gillian G. Gaar.

Friday, May 2, 2025

We Didn't Start the Fire, Part 3

"We Didn't Start the Fire," again, but this time the links are to the blog of author Julie S. Howlin. She's covered many of these topics in depth in the form of Top Ten lists.


[Verse 1]

Harry Truman, Doris Day

Red China, Johnnie Ray

South Pacific

Walter Winchell, Joe DiMaggio


Joe McCarthy, Richard Nixon

Studebaker, television

North Korea, South Korea

Marilyn Monroe


Rosenbergs, H-Bomb

Sugar Ray, Panmunjom

Brando, The King And I,

And The Catcher In The Rye


Eisenhower, vaccine

England's got a new queen

Marciano, Liberace

Santayana goodbye


[Chorus]

We didn't start the fire

It was always burning

Since the world's been turning

We didn't start the fire

No, we didn't light it

But we tried to fight it


[Verse 2]

Joseph Stalin, Malenkov

Nasser and Prokofiev

Rockefeller, Campanella

Communist Bloc

Roy Cohn, Juan Peron

Toscanini, Dacron


Dien Bien Phu Falls, "Rock Around the Clock"

Einstein, James Dean

Brooklyn's got a winning team

Davy Crockett, Peter Pan

Elvis Presley, Disneyland


Bardot, Budapest, Alabama, Khrushchev

Princess Grace, Peyton Place

Trouble in the Suez


[Chorus]

We didn't start the fire

It was always burning

Since the world's been turning

We didn't start the fire

No, we didn't light it

But we tried to fight it


[Verse 3]

Little Rock, Pasternak

Mickey Mantle, Kerouac

Sputnik, Zhou En-lai

Bridge On The River Kwai

Lebanon, Charles de Gaulle

California baseball

Starkweather homicide

Children of Thalidomide


Buddy Holly, Ben-Hur

Space Monkey, Mafia

Hula Hoops, Castro

Edsel is a no-go


U-2, Syngman Rhee

Payola and Kennedy

Chubby Checker, Psycho

Belgians in the Congo

[Chorus]

[Verse 4]

Hemingway, Eichmann

Stranger in a Strange Land

Dylan, Berlin

Bay of Pigs invasion

Lawrence of Arabia

British Beatlemania

Ole Miss, John Glenn

Liston beats Patterson


Pope Paul, Malcolm X

British Politician sex

J.F.K. blown away

What else do I have to say?


[Chorus]

We didn't start the fire

It was always burning

Since the world's been turning

We didn't start the fire

No, we didn't light it

But we tried to fight it


[Verse 5]

Birth control, Ho Chi Minh

Richard Nixon back again

Moonshot, Woodstock

Watergate, punk rock


Begin, Reagan, Palestine

Terror on the airline

Ayatollahs in Iran

Russians in Afghanistan

Wheel of Fortune, Sally Ride

Heavy metal suicide

Foreign debts, homeless vets

AIDS, crack, Bernie Goetz

Hypodermics on the shores

China's under martial law

Rock and Roller cola wars

I can't take it anymore


[Chorus]

We didn't start the fire

It was always burning

Since the world's been turning

We didn't start the fire

But when we are gone

It will still burn on, and on

And on, and on


[Outro]

We didn't start the fire

It was always burning

Since the world's been turning

We didn't start the fire

No, we didn't light it

But we tried to fight it

We didn't start the fire

It was always burning

Since the world's been turning

We didn't start the fire

No, we didn't light it

But we tried to fight it


We didn't start the fire

It was always burning

Since the world's been turning

We didn't start the fire

No, we didn't light it

But we tried to fight it

Thursday, May 1, 2025

Bummer May

This is a repost of some previous Pagan Spirits book blog content. It combines the original Bummer May post with the update.

This is an affiliate link: https://amzn.to/4etWetj

May 2, 1981: Antiques dealer Jim Williams shoots 21-year-old Danny Hansford at Williams’s historical home, Mercer House (formerly owned by composer Johnny Mercer), in Savannah, Georgia. The lovers had been in an argument; Williams argued the killing was self-defense. After four trials, Williams was acquitted. The homicide is the basis of John Berendt’s book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil


May 4, 1897: On the second day of a charity bazaar set up by Catholic charitable organizations in Paris, aristocratic women shop in a wooden warehouse set up to look like a Medieval market. Decorations of cardboard, cloth, papier-mache, and wood help achieve this effect. As an extra attraction, an early movie projector called a cinematograph is set up with ether lamps as a light source.

The projection equipment catches fire. With flammable materials all around and little to no signage marking the exits, the largely female crowd is trapped inside. 126 people die; 200 more are injured. Many of the dead were so badly burned that they could only be identified by their clothing, jewelry, or expensive dental work. 


May 5, 1994: American Michael Fay, age 18, receives four lashes with a bamboo cane after being convicted of vandalism in Singapore. Fay attended the Singapore American School and lived with his American mother and Singaporean stepfather. This is believed to be the first time an American was sentenced to corporal punishment in another country.


May 7, 1896: Serial killer H.H. Holmes (real name: Herman Webster Mudgett) is executed by hanging at Moyamensing Prison in Philadelphia after his conviction for 27 murders and attempted murder of six other people. His neck does not break when his body is dropped, and it takes over 15 minutes for Holmes to strangle to death. 

Erik Larson's book about H.H. Holmes. Affiliate link: https://amzn.to/3VRiS7s

May 8, 2012: Children’s book illustrator and author Maurice Sendak dies in the hospital of complications from a stroke.


May 9, 1914: Cereal manufacturer Charles William (C.W.) Post, recovering from emergency surgery for what was believed to be appendicitis, dies by self-inflicted gunshot wound when he can longer stand his severe abdominal pain. 

His death leaves the Post cereal fortune to his only child, Marjorie Merriweather Post, who uses some of it to build her mansion, Mar-a-Lago, in Palm Beach, Florida.

May 9, 1977: American novelist James Jones dies at age 55 from congestive heart failure. 


May 10, 1933: Led by Joseph Goebbels, a crowd of 40,000 Germans gathers at the State Opera building in Berlin to watch the German Student Union burn approximately 25,000 books that they’ve decided are “un-German.”

May 10, 1943: Fire destroys the grounds of the National Library of Peru in Lima, taking it with numerous irreplaceable historical artifacts.


May 12, 2010: Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771 leaves Johannesburg, South Africa, bound for Libya. A series of errors by the flight crew causes the aircraft to crash into low terrain, killing 103 of the aircraft’s 104 occupants. Among the dead is novelist Bree O’Mara, an Irish and South African dual citizen. 

The sole survivor is a 9-year-old boy from the Netherlands. Both of his legs are broken, but he sustains no life-threatening injuries. His parents were killed in the crash, so he is adopted by his aunt and uncle. 


May 13, 1988: American jazz musician Chet Baker dies of an apparently accidental fall from a window in Amsterdam, Netherlands. If you're like me, you recently heard this story on the "Sunflowers" episode of Ted Lasso.


May 14, 1998: Frank Sinatra dies of a heart attack. He's 82 years old.


May 15, 1886: Poet Emily Dickinson dies of kidney disease at her home in Amherst, Massachusetts. She’s 55 years old. Dickinson has not left the home since 1865.

May 15, 1953: Chester “Chet” Miller dies in a car crash during practice for the 1953 Indianapolis 500. He is 50 years old. 


May 16, 1940: During World War II, the library of the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium, rebuilt after German troops burned it down in the First World War, is shelled by the Nazis. The rebuilt library catches fire again, and approximately one million books and other materials are lost.

May 16, 1955: Writer/activist James Agee has a heart attack and dies in the back of a taxi cab in New York City. He’s 45 years old. 


May 17, 2012: Singer Donna Summer dies of lung cancer. She's 63 years old.


May 19, 1935: Thomas Edward Lawrence, a.k.a. “Lawrence of Arabia,” dies of his wounds six days after a motorcycle crash. He is 46 years old. 

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May 21, 1703: Under the reign of Queen Anne, novelist and political pamphleteer Daniel Defoe is sent to prison for seditious libel on the basis of his satirical writings. He’ll spend six months in prison before the Earl of Oxford helps get him released in exchange for Defoe supplying the Earl with intelligence about his political rivals.

May 21, 1956: Léo Valentin attempts a dive using a wing suit at an air show in Liverpool. Among the 100,000-person crowd that day are George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and 3-year-old Clive Barker. Valentin’s wing suit malfunctions after it makes contact with the plane as he jumps. He attempts to land using a backup parachute, but it fails, and he falls to the ground to his death.


May 25, 1895: Oscar Wilde is convicted of "committing acts of gross indecency with other male persons" and taken to Newgate Prison for processing. He is later transferred to Pentonville Prison, where he is sentenced to hard labor, is malnourished, and is only allowed to read either the Bible or The Pilgrim’s Progress


May 25, 1979: American Airlines Flight 19, bound from Chicago to Los Angeles, loses an engine shortly after takeoff due to improper maintenance. It crashes less than a mile from the end of the runway. All 271 people on board are killed, as are two people on the ground. 

Author’s note: My mother’s first cousin, James Zielinski, was one of the passengers killed in this incident.  


May 26, 1991: Lauda Air Flight 004, flying from Bangkok to Vienna, breaks apart mid-flight and crashes into a national park in Thailand. All 223 people on board are killed. The bodies of victims who could be recovered were taken to a hospital in Bangkok, where they were stored without refrigeration; as a result of decomposition, 27 victims were never able to be identified. 

Lauda Air belonged to Austrian Formula One driver Andreas “Niki” Lauda, who himself had suffered severe burn injuries and almost died in a racing accident on August 1, 1976, at the German Grand Prix. 


May 29, 1997: 30-year-old musician Jeff Buckley drowns in the Wolf River in Tennessee.


May 30, 1955: William John Vukovich Sr., who won the 1953 and 1954 Indianapolis 500s, dies in a car crash during the 1955 Indy 500. Vukovich’s car went over a wall, sailed through the air, flipped several times, and struck a low bridge. Vukovich is partially decapitated and dies instantly when his car struck the bridge. His grandson, William Vukovich III, will die during racing practice in 1990. Metal roll bars installed in vehicles and safety-certified driver helmets were mandated starting with the 1956 Indy 500. 

May 30, 1958: Pat O’Connor is killed during the last lap of the Indy 500 amidst a 15-car pile-up. O’Connor’s car strikes Jimmy Reece’s car, sails through the air, lands upside-down, and catches fire. His death is due to head trauma from the car’s upside-down landing.