Thursday, November 24, 2011

Another Rolling Stone List

Way back in 2004, I think, Rolling Stone put out a pretty dreadful Top 100 list of the... I don't remember what they called it, "World's Best Guitarist" or something like that.  Not important since Rolling Stone hasn't mattered in decades.  Anyways, that list was compiled by what looked like non-guitarists. 

Sales must be down at the magazine over the last couple of months so they made another list. Last week, RS whittled it down to "The Top Ten Greatest Guitarists of all time".
  1. Jimi Hendrix
  2. Eric Clapton
  3. Jimmy Page
  4. Keith Richards
  5. Jeff Beck
  6. B.B. King
  7. Chuck Berry
  8. Eddie Van Halen
  9. Duane Allman
  10. Pete Townshend
It's such a white list.   You may as well throw in Ace Frehley while you're at it.
The people that "compiled" this list remind me of the same type of people that buy Greatest Hits albums and/or get their music from Rock Band.  If they changed the title to "Top 10 Most Influential Guitarists to Baby Boomers", then it'd be a lot more accurate.
On that list, I love 2 of them, like 7 of them and just can't stand 1 one them. I'm not going to name names though.
This time around, I'm going to flip through the Reader's Comments.  I think most comments refer to the old Top 100 List because there's no way some of the suggestions could be in a Top 10.  Some comments have to be a joke.  One guy actually said Jeff Beck "was nothing". Have a look: 
  • Mike McCready from Pearl Jam and Johnny Greenwood from Radiohead
  • Billy Corgan
  • The Edge
  • Jack White
  • Joe Bonamassa
  •  Tom Morello
  • Jerry Cantrell
  • Bruce Springsteen
  • Dimebag Darrell
  • "Whoever plays lead in the Fresh & Onlys"
  • John Mayer
  • Kurt Cobain
When I did my list so many years ago I remember writing a line like, "If kids are told that this is what "great" is, then we're in a lot of trouble."  I had no idea I'd be right.  John Mayer?  Ugh.

Now many years later and many years of hearing new things (my Number 1 pick back from the first list was Django), I may not have a Top 10 list, but I'll tell you who should be a realistic number 1 in a credible and relevant list: Chet Atkins. I bolded it so you kids might get the spelling right.  Not one person on that list can or could keep up with Chet.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Let's Have A PETA-free Thanksgiving

I was going through the RSS Feeds and I saw this one: PETA hounds kids not to eat turkey.

It’s that time of year again: holiday cheer, turkey feasts – and PETA ads, making you feel guilty about the aforementioned feasts.

In an ad released Monday, PETA directs a question to kids: “If you wouldn’t eat your dog, why eat a turkey?” The ad features an expertly Photoshopped turkey-dog hybrid.

“Turkeys may not be as familiar to us as dogs or cats, but they have the same ability to suffer; they are sensitive, curious creatures, and it doesn't make sense to call dogs our friends and turkeys our food,” Ashley Byrne, PETA’s manager of campaigns, told TODAY.com. “There are a lot of kids out there who don’t want to see such cruelty on the Thanksgiving dinner table.”
But wait, that’s not all. In addition to these ads encouraging kids to go vegan, PETA also sent a letter Monday to the mayor of the tiny town of Turkey, Texas (population 421 in the 2010 census), asking him to change the town’s name to “Tofurky” for Thanksgiving Day. In exchange, PETA promises to provide a “healthy, vegan holiday feast for all the town’s residents.”

The letter goes on to explain the horrors faced by farm-raised turkeys, and ends trying to whet the mayor’s appetite by describing the Tofurky meal in great detail:
“PETA's feast would feature Tofurky with mushroom gravy, mashed potatoes (made with vegan margarine), and vegan apple pie topped with vanilla dairy-free ice cream.”

Byrne said the mayor hasn't responded to the invitation, but points out: “There's still some time until Thanksgiving.” She added that she hopes it will encourage some residents of the mostly meat-loving state to go vegan for one of the most meat-filled holidays.

OK, so here's the obvious: Ashley's an airhead.  For starters, why would someone try and compare a turkey with a dog?  Can turkeys be domesticated? Nope.  If they could be, we'd all have to eat chicken.
Me, I love turkey.  For one thing, it's tasty, and another reason I love turkey is it's good for you.  It's low fat (I don't really care about that one), it has zinc and potassium that keep blood cholesterol levels down and it even boosts the immune system.  Not bad for something that's only raised for eating.  Turkey should really replace chicken.

I'd love to see a poll of how many people in PETA have ever lived on a farm.  Probably not-many to none.  "Farm raised" turkeys (I'm hoping that means the same as free range turkeys) are treated a lot better than their over-cornfed counterparts.  But the thing is, turkeys have always been bread to be eaten.  That's their purpose.  They don't have any other meaningful function other than being tasty and being healthy to eat.  Turkeys don't know the "horrors" - they only have simple consciousness at best.

It really bothers me that people are so self-centred that they'd think you'd change your habits for them because they think they're morally correct.  Does Ashley think that she'll get a town to change its name for a day and expect 400 people to eat Tofu?  She might want to give her head a shake...and let some air out of it because, really, who the hell genuinely likes tofu?

So, Ashley, enjoy your kelp and tofu dairy-free Thanksgiving dinner.  Me, even though I had Thanksgiving already, will be heading to Subway for a 12" turkey sub next week.

And it's going to be so good.