Recently Deceased Playlist

Spotify playlist: https://rb.gy/kh0s65

Dickey Betts

“Ramblin’ Man”

“In Memory of Elizabeth Reed”

Richard Tandy

“Can’t Get It Out of My Head”

Doug Ingle

“In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida”

Eric Carmen

“Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)”

“Run-Away”

Mike Pinder

“The Best Way to Travel” 

Mary Weiss

“Remember (Walkin’ in the Sand)”

Melanie

“Lay Down (Candles in the Rain)”

“Brand New Key”

Wayne Kramer

“Kick Out the Jams”

Kinky Friedman

“Sold American”

David Sanborn

“Somebody Up There Likes Me”

Charlie Cohn

“Free”

John Barbata

“Happy Together”

“Long Time Gone”

Duane Eddy

“Rebel Rouser”

Karl Wallinger

“Ship of Fools”

James Chance

“Contort Yourself”

Mojo Nixon

“Don Henley Must Die”

Martin Mull

“Eggs”

Margo’s Got Money Troubles

https://rb.gy/9arc1d

I couldn’t put this book down.

And the problem is…if I tell you anything about the plot, it will ruin it.

First and foremost it’s an easy read. Not “simple,” but “contemporary.” No airs. Rufi Thorpe does have an MFA, but from Virginia, she’s not a product of the Iowa Workshop, which Hannah in “Girls” attended and left because of its pretension, because it adheres to a formula, because everything is overthought and overworked.

That is not Margo, Who ultimately says:

“When you’re going to do something stupidly brave, it helps to have less time to think about it.”

This is where the college educated lose out to the adventurous. Sometimes you can be so busy analyzing pitfalls that you don’t even start. Sometimes you need to just dive in. Step into the darkness and you have no idea what will happen, positive or negative.

And Margo certainly does a number of things stupidly brave.

She lives in Fullerton and goes to junior college. The product of a single mother. She’s going nowhere fast. And then…

She derails herself. But finds a way forward anyway.

And if that’s not obtuse enough for you…

As for encouraging you to read “Margo’s Got Money Troubles,” let me quote the opening paragraph:

“You are about to begin reading a new book, and to be honest, you’re a little tense. The beginning of a novel is like a first date. You hope that from the first lines an urgent magic will take hold, and you will sink into the story like a hot bath, giving yourself over entirely. But this hope is tempered by the expectation that, in reality, you are about to have to learn a bunch of people’s names and follow along politely like you are attending the baby shower of a woman you hardly know. And that’s fine, goodness knows you’ve fallen in love with books that didn’t grab you in the first paragraph. But that doesn’t stop you from wishing they would, from wishing they would come right up to you in the dark of your mind and kiss you on the throat.”

Getting over the hump. Reading enough of a book to get into it, to be hooked. Sometimes it’s too heavy a lift.

But “Margo” begins with this knowledge of the reader, it’s both present and irreverent, a sensibility too often lacking in today’s vaunted fiction. Too much literary fiction is just too damn hard to read, and so much stuff is just lowbrow, romance, mystery, genre.

Not that “Margo” is highbrow. And it seems to me that Rufi Thorpe may have written it for commercial success, something absent from her career to this point.

I absolutely loved Thorpe’s previous book, “The Knockout Queen.” I detailed my devotion here: https://rb.gy/wjofxk But “The Knockout Queen” stalled in the marketplace. It wasn’t completely ignored, it got 637 reviews on Amazon, with four stars, but readers and reviewers still preferred her debut, “The Girls From Corona Del Mar.”

This happens all the time. I read Roxana Robinson’s “Leaving,” released this year, loved it and researched and it turned out everybody kept pointing me to her 2008 work, “Cost,” which I then read. I recommend BOTH! The latter…deals with issues of family and addiction yet is contemporary and real. If you’re a Boomer or Gen-X’er you will relate to so much, when you think it’s going to be predictable, it is not.

But “Cost” is heavier than “Margo.” You do have to get over that reading hump before you’re hooked.

You do not have to read much of Margo to be hooked. I was hooked by the first paragraph. And it was rolling along, and then there was a turn, so wild, but so right that even though it was one in the morning I wanted to wake up my girlfriend to tell her about it.

Too often literary writers are detached from modern society. Don’t you know, the smartphone is the devil? And you can’t even participate in the social media you denigrate?

NOT MARGO!

The book is set in the now. Without pandering. I guarantee you’ll read it and not catch some of the references, some of the slang. But this is what people in this demo, late teenagers, early twentysomethings, employ.

Margo is living in the now. And that’s such a thrill.

Then again, so many readers of fiction do so because they want to avoid the now. However, the most talked about book of the last couple of years is “Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow,” at least in my circles. Whenever I bring it up, people’s faces light up, you can see it in their eyes, they devoured it, it touched them, they’re thrilled you’re on the same page.

I’d like to say “Margo’s Got Money Troubles” is as good as “Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow,” but it is not. Which has me wondering how successful it will be. Reviews have been very positive. But sometimes when you’re pandering, you’re rejected. Like Katy Perry.

Not that Thorpe is exactly pandering. But reading the book I think she consciously wanted to write something that connected with the public.

But that does not detract from the reading experience.

And I was surprised by the wisdom, evidenced in literary fiction but absent so much of the trash people read.

“‘Beauty is like free money,’ Shyanne used to say as she did Margo’s face.”

Bullseye. Which too many want to deny. And the truth is beauty comes with a cost, not that anybody wants to believe it. But the doors it opens, the freebies it rains down…they’re real, it’s a distinct advantage.

“Like how comedians have to bomb. If you don’t learn how to bomb, then the audience has you on such a tight leash, you’re stuck saying only the things you think they’ll like.”

They should post this on every studio wall. Record label execs should be beaten over the head with this. You don’t want to be constricted by your audience. Which doesn’t really know what it wants anyway. They want you to be just like you were, but then you are and they criticize or ignore you. Furthermore, failure today counts a lot less than it did in the pre-internet era. It’s rolled over by the endless flow of creative lava that pours on to Spotify, on to TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, the whole web, each and every day.

“But Margo knew the world was perfectly willing to punish you no matter what you had done.”

Everything does not happen for a reason. That’s a myth people tell themselves so they can soldier on. Bad things do happen to good people. You can do the right thing and get a bad outcome. The lesson is to learn this and metabolize this and soldier on. Life is unfair. Period. But that doesn’t mean you should stop living, stop risking.

And here’s the apotheosis, what you have to know about every creator, including me!

“…and we would scream to the crow, ‘Look at me! Look at the beautiful insane things I can do with my body! Look at me! Love me!’

Because that’s all art is in the end.

One person trying to get another person they have never met to fall in love with them.”

And it’s so hard. It’s one thing for your family to dig what you’ve done, but someone you’ve never met, have no contact with? That’s the challenge.

And the funny thing is when you achieve this, it still doesn’t make your life whole. It feels good for a while, like winning a trophy, or an award, and then you’re right back to where you were. Kinda like with beauty. You think it will solve all your problems, but it won’t.

And I still haven’t told you what “Margo’s Got Money Troubles” is about.

Yes, Margo has money troubles. But why? And how does she deal with this?

That’s the essence of this book.

If you love historical fiction, “Margo” is not for you.

If you like dense writing, wherein you have to pick apart each sentence, oftentimes with a dictionary in hand, “Margo” is not for you.

If you like a whodunit, “Margo” is not for you.

If you like science fiction, fantasy, “Margo” is not for you.

It’s kind of like Hollywood, it’s easier to repeat the formula. To create something brand new is seen as too risky.

Not that “Margo” plays with the form. It’s a regular book, but the adventure, the choices, the outcomes, are so wild and unpredictable, yet wholly real, that you’re thrilled as you go on the ride.

If you’re a member of the self-satisfied elite, you might not be able to handle “Margo.” Because, once again, instead of being set in the Ivory Tower, it all takes place in Orange County, a flat, overpopulated wasteland full of strip malls and boredom.

Will a guy love “Margo”?

The funny thing is guys have been affected by so much of what is in this book, but they may not like seeing things from a woman’s perspective.

You’ll laugh, you probably won’t cry, but you’ll learn about life in these United States today.

I’m smiling as I write this. Some of you are absolutely going to adore “Margo’s Got Money Troubles,” not that I can tell you exactly who that is, all I can tell you is I LOVED IT!

More Recently Deceased-SiriusXM This Week

Tune in Saturday July 20th 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

Pelosi Pushes

“Put Donilon on the phone.”

That’s the quote of the day.

Takes a woman to do a man’s job. While wimps like Schumer kept saying their hands were tied, Pelosi set the bait last week, when she went on MSNBC and countered Biden’s statement that his nomination was a done deal, he was continuing to run.

And then Pelosi pierced the bubble.

“One ally said that Ms. Pelosi told Mr. Biden in a recent call that she had seen polling data suggesting that he could not win, and the president had pushed back, saying he had polls showing otherwise.

“Ms. Pelosi, never shy in such situations, challenged him on that.

“‘Put Donilon on the phone,’ Ms. Pelosi told the president, referring to Mike Donilon, the president’s longtime aide, according to people familiar with the exchange, which was reported earlier by CNN. ‘Show me what polls.’”

Free link: https://t.ly/AhNwF

You don’t want to argue with the data.

And speaking of the data, you need to subscribe to Nate Silver’s “Silver Bulletin”:

https://www.natesilver.net

All data is not created equal. But even worse, all data analysis is not created equally. This is what is happening with AI. The problem isn’t hoovering up data, it’s trying to prevent the model from hallucinating. Google had to pull back because of this. In other words, can you trust AI? Not yet! So when you see a result in your search engine, don’t accept it at face value. Because it may be wrong. Dig deeper, or you might end up with egg on your face.

Silver has made his name with his model that averages the polls. And so far, no one has been able to do it as well. (Read Silver’s takedown of the new 538 model here: 

“Why I don’t buy 538’s new election model – It barely pays attention to the polls. And its results just don’t make a lot of sense.”

https://t.ly/OlpV3

Silver left the “New York Times” for greener pastures at ABC, establishing 538.com, but that was a financial failure and the entertainment behemoth refused to renew Silver’s contract, so Silver went independent, on Substack, and he’s asking for money, but in truth his e-mail is free, and you should sign up.

This is the information age, and you need all the information you can get. Now is the time to sign up for the “New York Times”, if only for the next three months, because the Gray Lady has been breaking this story.

Save me the blowback. I’m just trying to help you. Democracy does die in darkness, and you want to shed some light. Scott Galloway took a huge swing at MSNBC last week and he’s positively right. Every time I’ve  tuned in Lawrence O’Donnell since the debate…speaking of hallucination, you’d think Biden is triumphing. Cable news is inherently biased, that’s how they get eyeballs, ratings. And unless there’s an assassination attempt or something gigantic to which they can send a film crew, they do almost no reporting, only opinion, and that gets old, very old.

And regarding the straight dope, every Democrat must read Bret Stephens’s recent piece in the “Times”:

Free link: “The Secret of Trump’s Resurrection.” – https://t.ly/2mRY3

The landscape has changed, and too many on the left refuse to acknowledge this.

Turns out life is too hard for too many people. Sure, the economy is good, if you own stock, as long as you don’t have a service job.

Rightly or wrongly people are sick of others gaining a seeming advantage, whether it be via affirmative action or immigration. As for pronouns… This has got to stop. Along with trigger warnings. The pendulum has swung back. Too many on the left can’t see which way the wind blows.

This is why the Democrats’ reluctance to put the stake in the heart of Biden after the debate, letting three weeks go by, is so bad. It makes them appear weak, whereas Trump appears strong.

Don’t shoot the messenger, literally.

Bottom line is you’re college educated, you think you know better, and the disadvantaged and less financially secure know you do.

In other words, we’ve got a repeat of 2016. Trump is more in touch with the public than the Democrats. How did Biden squander success?

Once again, read Stephens’s piece.

But know that the cavalry is coming.

There are leaks that Biden will announce he stops running on Sunday, that he won’t endorse Kamala Harris. Take all that with a grain of salt, but know that James Carville is right, that if Harris is handed the torch the Democratic public will be deflated. They were left out of the decision to anoint Biden’s second term run and they won’t like being left out of the decision this time. They’re just like the Republicans, sick and tired of being dictated to, told by those in power that they know better.

So what happened here?

Well, of course we had the disastrous debate.

But then came the aforementioned “Times” with its editorials and opinion columns, from the aforementioned Carville to Clooney. People have been talking about the power of Fox News for decades, why can they not accept that the “Times” has power?

And then came the drying up of the money. Recent donations have been anemic. Turn off the spigot and you end the race. Period.

But you need someone to put the stake in the heart, of in this case Biden.

Or maybe it’s like a bullfight, a number of knives and then a deep gash by Pelosi.

But this illustrates how out of touch our leaders can be. Biden has done almost as much to hurt the country as Trump has. If Biden is out of touch on the polls, refuses to face facts that all of the hoi polloi can see, what else is he delusional on?

So for nearly a week it’s been all Trump/RNC, all the time.

But the best piece I saw on this was in the “Atlantic”:

“STOP PRETENDING YOU KNOW HOW THIS WILL END – The failed assassination of Donald Trump might not have any lasting effect on the election or politics in general”: https://t.ly/sU0zD

Bingo. Not only does no one know, everything lasts less these days.

Kind of like the assassination attempt itself. If you lived through JFK and MLK and RFK you know that coverage was wall to wall, the only thing on TV, but in today’s multifarious world you saw the headline and then…moved on. The media keeps telling us how big a deal it is, but is that the way the average person feels?

The despicable two-faced Vance is young and smart. He duplicates Trump, but he’s a bulldog who can press the case. Where is the Democratic bulldog?

That’s what we’re going to find out.

One thing is for sure, Biden’s replacement will be much younger, with a greater facility with the language, and will be absent at least some of Biden’s baggage.

Stop saying the Republicans’ success is based on white nationalism, that it’s racism at the core.

What is it going to take for Democrats to accept reality?

Once again, it takes a pro to win. Which is why Trump lost in 2020. And once Minnesotans had seen Jesse Ventura govern, they wanted no more.

So you can stop saying you want Michelle Obama, or Oprah Winfrey, or even Clooney. Now is the time for a pro.

Harris ran a terrible campaign in 2020 and didn’t get a single delegate.

As for her inclusion on the ticket as VP… The “Wall Street Journal” had this right: 

“The Mess Democrats Have Made, Kamala Harris Edition – Imagine if Biden had chosen a Vice President for competence rather than identity politics.”

Free link: https://t.ly/rbj0y

Did Biden ever contemplate that Harris might have to replace him, and this would be unpopular with most Democrats?

But you keep telling me women and Blacks will cashier the Democratic candidate if it’s not Harris. Based on what? Nobody gets everything they want, ever hear of taking one for the team?

Maybe Harris ends up the candidate, but let’s get the public involved, let’s put it to a vote, let’s squeeze out the Republicans’ hold on publicity.

Pelosi won because she’s a pragmatist.

It’s time for Democrats to embrace that viewpoint. If you think Trump is so bad, concentrate on winning, that and no less.

Biden is finally toast. Funny that he didn’t even realize it until today. But he’s gone. Kaput. Out of the way. The Democrats are getting a do-over. Take out the flashlight and pore over every nook and cranny of potential candidates’ lives and careers. And when we end up with the candidate…

We all need to rally around them. Period.

It will be time to shut up.

But if you kept supporting Biden after the debate…

As we said in the sixties, you’re either part of the problem or part of the solution.

You learn, you adjust on the fly, that’s the only way you succeed.

The game starts NOW!