Miami 2024

“You know those lights were bright on Broadway

That was so many years ago

Before we all lived here in Florida…”

“Miami 2017”

Billy Joel

Hasn’t Billy moved to Florida, and Howard Stern for a lot of the time too?

Actually, I first heard this song in 1981, as the opener of Billy’s “Songs in the Attic,” live versions of numbers that were previously cut in the studio that Mr. Joel felt didn’t get proper treatment, and now after a trifecta of hit albums, it was finally time.

Actually, “Miami 2017” was originally on “Turnstiles,” the overlooked 1976 album that convinced Billy to stop self-producing and work with Phil Ramone, and the rest is history. But pound for pound, “Turnstiles” is fantastic. It includes the original “New York State of Mind” and “Summer, Highland Falls,” which follows up “Miami 2017” on “Songs in the Attic” in a rollicking version. (I was looking for a description, I couldn’t quite nail one in my head. It’s fast, but not exactly jaunty. Let me just go with the generic it’s GREAT!)

And the thing about “Turnstiles” is it was made when Billy was on the downswing, so it’s personal in a way what came thereafter was not. Kinda like David Gray’s “White Ladder.” You could picture Billy on the New York Thruway, you could see him in the Catskills.

And that’s a state of mind I know so well, it’s in my DNA, but instead of decamping for Florida, I came to Los Angeles. And in the meantime, Miami became hip.

You’ve got to know, it was where old Jews went to die. Where those with money vacationed during the winter, you know, the people whose parents drove Cadillacs.

And then Madonna came along and then “Miami Vice” and cocaine and… Funny these United States, you see it on TV, but until you actually go there, you don’t really get it.

That’s what I was thinking in the drive from the airport. Used to be we were all focused on the same things. I just asked a woman with daughters to name me two Taylor Swift songs and she couldn’t. You get the impression from the media that we’re all focused on the same things, but never has America been so Balkanized, at least in my lifetime. In other words, what happens in Miami may not travel to the west coast, and vice versa.

Actually, I regretted booking a hotel downtown, I thought we should have stayed at the airport, like Steve and Nancy. We weren’t going to arrive until 7 and had to be out just twelve hours later.

But I was wrong, because if we’d stayed at the airport I would have missed it.

This is not the Miami of my youth, not that I ever went there, but Jackie Gleason used to do his show from there, and the Beatles played “Ed Sullivan” down there. But the landscape was not populated with skyscrapers. Empty skyscrapers.

America is now about the haves and have-nots. And barring some economic revolution, it’s going to stay that way. Then again, there’d be a revolution if the poor saw how the rich truly live.

If you’re checking your wallet, you don’t belong in Miami, at least not downtown, by Riverwalk.

It’s kind of like “Blade Runner.” Tower after tower. Each one more than half dark. Because the wealthy now have multiple homes, and this is shoulder season, it’s not quite cold enough in the northeast to decamp.

And it’s the three rules of real estate, location, location, location. As in how close to the water you can be.

And to tell you the truth, if I told you I’ve seen more than twenty five minutes of “Miami Vice,” I’d be lying. But it’s midnight, and yachts are cruising, music blasting, such that you can hear it up on the 24th floor as the boats idle waiting for the bridge to rise.

There are boats in Marina Del Rey, but you don’t see them unless you go there, whereas just downtown… Actually, a hundred footer was docked right outside the hotel. And two other yachts almost as big. And I’m asking myself which comes first, the yacht or the jet. Probably the jet. But do you really need to own a yacht? I mean most people are on them even less than the number of days people spend in these Miami residential towers.

But it’s part of the lifestyle.

I mean you’re looking out at the lights, which don’t quite rival Broadway, but it’s far from dark, and you stare at the boats and you can see it…cocaine. I don’t think you can bring in Bolivian Marching Powder by boat these days, never mind marijuana, but they once did.

As Jimmy Buffett would say, it’s a haven of pirates.

And to tell you the truth, the rich aren’t that law-abiding. How do you think they made that money?

But it’s overwhelming, and inspiring, and HOT! If these people just flew to Los Angeles I doubt they’d buy in Miami. It’s the HUMIDITY! It never feels this hot in L.A., never ever. Up until climate change reared its ugly head you didn’t even need A/C on the westside, even the houses of the rich were naturally cooled.

But not anymore.

And Miami is just three hours from New York. A hop and a skip, but no jump is required. And what you’ve got to know is the east coast mentality is completely different from the west. No one drives ten hours on a whim. And a New Yorker will tell you that the city is the greatest in the world, and there’s no telling them otherwise.

Actually, I might agree, and I’d like a condo there, but I wouldn’t want to live there.

So Miami is New York south, with a whole lot of Spanish speaking people. Every Uber driver. It reminded me of that TV series “StartUp,” which is ultimately unsatisfying but I’m glad I saw it. You’ve got the Latin culture and the dope and it’s visceral and includes the Miami you think you know and the one you don’t.

The U.S. is about the hustle. Sure, there are some entertainers, some tech titans, but everybody else is looking for an edge, a way in, a way to lift their lifestyle above the hoi polloi. And Miami is one place you can do it.

So I rode the elevator down to Riverwalk, which was just outside the door. Can you walk alone in the dark at ten p.m. in Miami? I mean for a long while you couldn’t in New York City, but still…you think before you take chances.

But I’m out there, walking past the hotels, the restaurants, the occasional person, and it was palpable, you could feel the vibe, the opportunity of the city.

Now unlike L.A., if you want to play you’ve got to have the clothes. This may be the beach, but if you’re wearing flip-flops you’re either filthy rich and don’t care, or you’re part of the underclass.

Everybody’s flashing it.

Everybody wants to show up and show off. I saw outfits which never appear in L.A. A one piece green thing with sparkles, a similar tight outfit in red…

That was at the restaurant, not out on the walk.

And the restaurant got busier as the night wore on.

We all want to play, we all want to exhibit our bona fides, evidence our quality, whether it be money, looks, talent, intellect or all of them. Some lick their wounds afraid they’ll lose. But the brave and the ignorant show up. Sometimes the less you know, the further you go.

And I know, I know, they tried to establish a new Silicon Valley in Miami and they failed, even New York has a hard time competing with the real thing.

And you’ve got all the rich New Yorkers who’ve moved for the tax benefits, including those teetering on bankruptcy who want to keep their houses.

And then there are the South Americans. That’s not something you see in L.A.

And all you had to do was go outside, for a walk, or sit on the balcony, and you could feel it. It’s different, and exciting, and hot! People spending all that money to shvitz?

But this is where you go to impress.

Miami has moved beyond the dope and even the partying of the eighties and nineties. It’s now the big time.

And I’m no longer there.

Even More Rock Deaths-SiriusXM This Week

Tune in Saturday October 5th to Faction Talk, channel 103, at 4 PM East, 1 PM West.

If you miss the episode, you can hear it on demand on the SiriusXM app. Search: Lefsetz

Richard Thompson-This Week’s Podcast

The one and only.

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/richard-thompson/id1316200737?i=1000671654137

 

 

 

https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/9ff4fb19-54d4-41ae-ae7a-8a6f8d3dafa8/episodes/22dab886-9681-4c9f-b13e-9e147b0e70ad/the-bob-lefsetz-podcast-richard-thompson

 

The Vice Presidential Debate

JD Vance is very intelligent, but he’s unlikable.

Whereas Tim Walz is smart, he might not have as high an IQ as Vance, but he’s definitely likable.

This is what the Democrats didn’t understand in 2000 and 2004. And 2016, while we’re at it. Their candidates were skilled, but not very likable. I’m still not exactly sure who Al Gore is. The college roommate of Tommy Lee Jones, whooping it up and testing limits, or the buttoned-up son of a career pol?

And John Kerry… Educated war hero or the husband of a very rich widow?

As for Hillary Clinton, I know exactly who she is. I don’t like that she can be duplicitous, triangulating to the point where you know she doesn’t believe what she is saying, but Hillary was and still is incredibly skilled, incredibly experienced, and could probably tie JD Vance in knots intellectually.

But people didn’t like Hillary. People don’t even like the Hillary type. The elite educated person who thinks they’re better than you are.

This played in the day of JFK, when government was all about the best and the brightest, but with Reagan ushering in income inequality, with the passing of NAFTA, America got divided into winners and losers, and most of the winners were given every advantage and it’s hard for the losers to still believe in the American Dream.

Politics is not business. Could JD Vance be good at business? Possibly. But in politics? He barely won his Senate seat, this guy is smarmy, I don’t believe he believes half of what he said tonight. This is a guy like Don King, who starts off in one corner of the ring and ends up in the other, when his fighter is beaten by the challenger.

So what does tonight’s debate have to do with next month’s election?

NOTHING!

The best article you can read about the election is by Ronald Brownstein in “The Atlantic,” it comes as part of your Apple News+ subscription, but if you’re cheap or a Windows person you’re allowed some access to “The Atlantic” before the paywall kicks in, so unless you’ve used up your quota, you can read this article:

“The Undecided Voters Are Not Who You Think They Are – For most, the big decision is about whether to vote at all.”

https://t.ly/n6234

Bottom line?

There are no undecideds. It’s a fiction propagated by big media and the self-styled political pundits online in order to sell advertising, make money and boost their image.

To tell you the truth, I don’t know anybody who is still following the presidential race.

Oh, that’s a bit dramatic. But no one e-mails, no one texts, no one calls about the election anymore. Literally, zippo. Ever since the debate.

But there are gotchas in the news on a regular basis.

You have the out of touch Bret Stephens still needing to be convinced to vote for Kamala Harris. He needs more information, more policy. The best response to Stephens was by Stephanie Ruhle on Bill Maher’s show. This is what she said to Stephens:

“‘For the last two weeks, I’ve been going on and on, like, I can’t figure out where … informed undecided voters are,’ Ruhle said. ‘Like, who’s the person who has a list on their refrigerator of, like, “Well, she said this, and he said …” I’m, like, who is this person? And then I open the New York Times three days ago and it’s you.'”

https://t.ly/H6IZC

Bingo. And the video went viral.

You’ve got to laugh at the opiners. They think they matter, but they’ve lost touch with the public.

I don’t care whether Tim Walz was at the protest in Tiananmen Square and it’s interesting to me that JD Vance was against Trump before he was for him, but I don’t think these revelations are swaying a single voter.

Like tonight’s debate. Which had an element of kumbaya. This is the debate we’ve been hoping for for years. Although by the end it was akin to high school.

We agree on most things. Walz acknowledged this. But some of Trump’s statements are so wackadoodle…

It’s about Trump.

Now in the old days, the Republican party was run by business people, fat cats. The Republican candidates were the ones you couldn’t really get a bead on, who were smiling, but you knew beneath it all they were really just for themselves and their fat cat brethren. Lower taxes and little regulation! So business can prosper. Talk about a bill of goods for the middle class. None of the benefits trickled down to them, and business started to take over politics.

Donald Trump tapped into the discontent of those without a voice, who got screwed.

Oh, don’t tell me about the upper middle class white nationalists. There are not enough of them to win. But the lower classes, who’ve suffered these past few decades, they were all in on Trump. Was there racism? Sure, but these people were sick and tired of being told what to do by the educated rich. Don’t you remember Trump claiming that he loves the uneducated?

Clinton couldn’t tap into this. Biden was a bit better, and was boosted by Trump hatred. But rust never sleeps and Trump is back, meanwhile, the Democratic party turned into the Republicans, everything was done behind closed doors, we were told Biden was ready to serve into his middle eighties. We don’t even want many people to drive at that age, if they’re even alive!

And I can’t tell you who Kamala is either. But I know Tim Walz. I’ve had this guy as a teacher. What you see is what you get. And in a world where this has been absent so long, this is appealing.

Ever try teaching? Forget what you know, especially today it’s about keeping order in the classroom, it’s a skill, that most don’t have. But Walz does.

As for those who said Josh Shapiro should have been the vice presidential candidate… I heard him on James Carville and Al Hunt’s podcast. Shapiro is whip-smart. You believe he believes what he is saying, unlike JD Vance. But Shapiro is much closer to Vance than Walz, as in he is highly intelligent and very articulate.

Walz seemed to stumble at times. No, let me say that he FROZE at times. Threw me way off guard at the beginning. Were we in for another Biden debate? And then I was convinced it was a matter of being overprepared. He was so stuffed with facts, so concerned with getting it right, that he had a hard time being folksy, being natural.

But as the debate wore on, he continued to have those frozen moments. I guess that’s just him and I hadn’t seen him enough previously. But this mannerism does not mean I won’t vote for him.

Tim Walz is a man of the people.

JD Vance…WENT TO YALE LAW SCHOOL!

As did Hillary Clinton. And Vance is much closer, much more similar to Hillary than Trump.

So, I could delineate the issues…

Vance started off pretty good, irrelevant of the veracity of his statements, but then it became a constant hammering of energy and immigrants, he shoehorned these issues into every answer, and everything isn’t about energy and immigrants.

Walz was more straightforward and honest. And the more you watched, the more appealing he became.

As for the truth, the vaunted fact-checking CBS QR code? I guess Paramount Global’s lack of cash has trickled all the way down to their news service, because CBS didn’t have enough bandwidth for people to see the page! How in the hell can you be this unprepared? You’re a news organization? This is laughable. I refreshed and refreshed, it never loaded. Hell, you could have contracted with AWS and been ready, but NO… And if CBS gets it so wrong on this, how trustworthy is it on the big issues?

So for a while there the debate was good entertainment. And then it slowed down and got boring and it was hard to stay off your phone, multitasking.

Donald Trump is an anomaly. His strategy is to try and win in the swing states and if not, challenge a Harris/Walz victory via the legal system. I mean JD… He lost all credibility when he wouldn’t admit Trump lost the 2020 election. I mean really? You went to Yale, you worked in banking and you’re buying the canard that Biden didn’t win? You could see he didn’t believe it just watching him, but this is a litmus test for Trumpers, and he couldn’t cross the boss.

So Trump screwed up. He should have nominated someone folksy, to cut through his high strung, silver spoon ravings.

Vance adds nothing to the ticket. If anything, he convinces you that the whole Trump enterprise is a Trojan Horse affair. Everybody telling Donald what he wants to hear, but no one with any power believing it.

If you’re the smartest person in the room, think twice about going into politics. Because that’s not what’s needed. Being warm, likable, being able to relate is a skill, one which many business titans don’t have. Can you say “ELON MUSK”?

You can get away with it in business, not all the time, but if you put up the numbers and/or have voting control…

But Steve Jobs excoriated his employees on a regular basis. All in pursuit of excellence, which was often achieved, but people were not lining up to go for a drink with him, furthermore Jobs didn’t want to go for a drink with THEM!

Walz’s closing statement was amazing. Upbeat and optimistic about a coming together, a great antidote to the Trump train.

But, once again, stop paying attention and vote. You know who you’re going to vote for. Encourage your friends to vote. The ones who never have or only sometimes do. That’s what’s going to make the difference.

The news for another thirty-odd days?

It’s just a sideshow. A bad blockbuster being pushed by a studio that people don’t want.

This debate had additional gravitas because Trump won’t get in a room with Harris again. And it was not a cartoon, like most VP debates. It was more edifying than the Trump/Harris debate.

But in truth, that’s who it comes down to, either Trump or Harris, the VP candidates really don’t make a difference.

You know who you’re going to vote for.

Do so.