Thursday, May 15, 2014

Ice Cream Truck Song... Racist Roots?

Recall That Ice Cream Truck Song? We Have Unpleasant News For You

This story may well sour any pleasant childhood memories of chasing after ice cream trucks in the summer.
This story may well sour any pleasant childhood memories of chasing after ice cream trucks in the summer.
iStockphoto.com
EDITOR'S NOTE: This article is about a virulently racist song. Read no further if you wish to avoid racist imagery and slurs.
"Nigger Love A Watermelon Ha! Ha! Ha!" merits the distinction of the most racist song title in America. Released in March 1916 by Columbia Records, it was written by actor Harry C. Browne and played on the familiar depiction of black people as mindless beasts of burden greedily devouring slices of watermelon.
I came across this gem while researching racial stereotypes. I was a bit conflicted on whether the song warranted a listen. Admittedly, though, beneath my righteous indignation, I was rather curious about how century-old, overt racism sounded and slightly amused by the farcical title. When I started the song, the music that tumbled from the speakers was that of the ever-recognizable jingle of the ice cream truck. (For the record, not all ice cream trucks play this same song, but a great many of them do.)
As quickly as it began, the music paused, and this call-and-response ensued:
Browne: "You niggers quit throwin' them bones and come down and get your ice cream!"
Black men (incredulously): "Ice Cream?!?"
Browne: "Yes, ice cream! Colored man's ice cream: WATERMELON!!"
My mouth dropped. The music immediately resumed and so did the racism. I soon realized that the ice cream truck song was forever ruined for me, especially once the chorus began:
Nigger love a watermelon ha ha, ha ha!
YouTube
Nigger love a watermelon ha ha, ha ha!
For here, they're made with a half a pound of co'l
There's nothing like a watermelon for a hungry coon
Origin Of The Song
I wondered how such a prejudiced song could have become the anthem of ice cream and childhood summers. I learned that though Mr. Browne was fairly creative in his lyrics, the song's premise and its melody are nearly as old as America itself. As often happens with matters of race, something that is rathervanilla in origin is co-opted and sprinkled with malice along the way.
For his creation, Browne simply used the well-known melody of the early 19th-century song "Turkey in the Straw," which dates back to the even older and traditional British song "The (Old) Rose Tree." The tune was brought to America's colonies by Scots-Irish immigrants who settled along the Appalachian Trail and added lyrics that mirrored their new lifestyle.
The first and natural inclination, of course, is to assume that the ice cream truck song is simply paying homage to "Turkey in the Straw," but the melody reached the nation only after it was appropriated by traveling blackface minstrel shows. There is simply no divorcing the song from the dozens of decades it was almost exclusively used for coming up with new ways to ridicule, and profit from, black people.
The "Zip Coon" was a blackface character who parodied a free black man attempting to conform to white high society.i
The "Zip Coon" was a blackface character who parodied a free black man attempting to conform to white high society.
Library Of Congress
Blackface Minstrels Steal The Show
In the late 1820s, the music was given new lyrics that dripped with racism and titled "Zip Coon." The blackface character of the same name parodied a free black man attempting to conform to white high society by dressing in fine clothes and using big words. Fifty years later in postbellum America, the character became an archetype of the black urbanite and propelled minstrel shows to the height of their popularity. Zip Coon was the city-slicker counterpart to the dimwitted, rural blackface character whose name became infamous in 20th century America: Jim Crow. These two characters would often interact on stage and were the inspiration for the hugely successful Amos 'n' Andy act decades later.
The lyrics of "Zip Coon" follow the namesake through encounters with possums, playing the banjo and courting a woman whose skin was so black that he calls her "ol Suky blue skin." A century later, it was still celebrated and inspiring America's music. The recognizable melody aside, we've all sung a variation of the lyrics. The chorus goes:
O zip a duden duden duden zip a duden day.
(If this sounds similar to the Academy Award winning "Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah," it's because that song was derived from this chorus.)
At the turn of the 20th century, one of the nation's most popular collectibles was the coon card — a postcard with racist artwork, such as bug-eyed, clown-faced blacks eating watermelon. These items were essentially the racist version of trading cards and were nearly ubiquitous. Browne meshed the theme of the popular coon cards with the familiar melody, and voila: "Nigger Love a Watermelon Ha! Ha! Ha!"
The ice cream crossover happened concurrently: 19th century ice cream parlors played the popular minstrel songs of the day. After World War II, the advent of the automobile and the ensuing sprawl required parlors to devise a way to take their products to customers. Ice cream trucks were the solution, and a music box was installed in them as a way to announce their presence in neighborhoods. Naturally, the traditional minstrel tunes of the previous century were employed to evoke the memorable parlor experience.
And this is the story of why our beloved ice cream truck plays blackface minstrel music that sends kids dashing into homes in a Pavlovian frenzy searching for money to buy a Popsicle.
Race, Ice Cream And America
Here in the nation's capital, the cherry blossoms have come and gone. This means the warm weather will soon bring out the ice cream trucks, and I'll be confronted once again by their inconvenient truth. It's not new knowledge that matters of race permeate the depths of our history and infiltrate the most innocent of experiences, even the simple pleasure of ice cream (who can forget Eddie Murphy's famous, NSFW routine about the poor black experience with ice cream trucks?). However, when the reach of racism robs me of fond memories from my childhood, it feels intensely personal again.
Whenever I hear the music now, the antique voice laughing about niggers and watermelon fills my head. I can live with this, but what's to be done on the summer day when my children's eyes light up at the far-off sound of the familiar melody, and they dash in a frenzy toward me for change? Do I empower them with the history of our country, or encourage the youthful exuberance induced by the ice cream truck? Is it my responsibility to foul the sweet taste of ice cream with their first taste of racism?
The answer is intellectually complex, but parental intuition provides clarity. When teeth fall out, I blame the dollar under their pillow on the tooth fairy. When presents appear overnight under the fir tree, I say Santa Claus is the culprit. And so when a song about niggers and watermelon fills the suburban air, I will smile and hand over money from my pocket. The sight of my children enjoying a Good Humor ice cream bar will fight back the racist song that lampooned black people who happened to be in good humor. The delivery of the cold hard truth can wait until another day.

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Louisiana man claims his biological father was Zodiac Killer

Louisiana man claims his biological father was Zodiac Killer

By Michael Martinez and Dan Simon, CNN
updated 10:59 AM EDT, Wed May 14, 2014

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: One of two Zodiac Killer survivors says someone always stirs up the unsolved case
  • Gary L. Stewart was abandoned as a baby in a stairwell in a Louisiana tenement
  • He claims his late biological father, Earl Van Best Jr., was the Zodiac Killer
  • Investigators say they aren't aware of the book but will look into its claims
(CNN) -- A Louisiana man claims in a new book that his biological father was the notorious Zodiac Killer of northern California, who's still sought by authorities, publisher HarperCollins said Tuesday.
The Zodiac serial killer is believed to have killed five people in 1968-69 and gained notoriety by writing several letters to police boasting of the slayings, with swatches of bloody clothing as proof of his claims. The serial killer claimed to have killed as many as 37 people and has never been caught.
Now Gary L. Stewart, a vice president at the cleaning company Delta Tech Service in Baton Rouge, is recounting his decade-long search for his biological father and has concluded that man -- Earl Van Best, Jr., who's now dead -- was the Zodiac Killer, the publisher said.
On Tuesday, police in northern California said they weren't aware of the book or its claims.
A Louisiana man claims his father, Earl Van Best, Jr., who\'s now dead -- was the Zodiac Killer.
A Louisiana man claims his father, Earl Van Best, Jr., who's now dead -- was the Zodiac Killer.
"It's an open and active case, so we don't comment," San Francisco police spokesman Albie Esparza told CNN. "But (it's) certainly something our homicide investigators will take a look at."
Added Capt. Steve Blower of the Napa County Sheriff's Office: "We have talked to many people over the years. We've gotten reports over the years from people who don't pan out. This case is still open, and we still do accept tips or leads that may have bearing on the case."
Bryan Hartnell, one of only two survivors of the Zodiac Killer, was just a college kid more than 40 years ago at Pacific Union College, just north of San Francisco, when he and a then-girlfriend, Cecilia Shephard, were attacked while picnicking. Their attacker was a man in an eerie costume: he wore a black hood and black shirt with a white symbol on the front that looked like crosshairs on a gun sight. That image would later become the Zodiac's trademark symbol.
On Tuesday, Hartnell expressed reservations about the latest claim in the unsolved case.
"I somewhat follow the news, but there has been no time in the last 40+ years when someone was not (stirring) the pot," Hartnell wrote to CNN in an email.
Hartnell was stabbed eight times, and Shephard, between 10 and 20 times. She died a day later at the hospital, but was able to give a description of the attacker before she died.
Stewart was born in New Orleans and abandoned as a newborn in a stairwell of Baton Rouge apartment building. He was later adopted and "had an idyllic childhood," the publisher said.
About 10 years ago, when he was 39, Stewart's birth mother, Judy, contacted him for the first time. He then began his search for his biological father, with whom his mother hadn't been in contact since Stewart was abandoned.
Stewart, who is married with a child, kept a journal during the search, which became the basis for the book. Stewart has bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from Louisiana State University.
His book, "The Most Dangerous Animal of All: Searching for My Father ... and Finding the Zodiac Killer," was co-written with journalist Susan Mustafa.
"Stewart and Mustafa construct a chilling psychological profile of Stewart's father: as a boy with disturbing fixations, as a frustrated intellectual with pretensions to high culture, and as an inappropriate suitor and then jilted lover unable to process his rage," the publisher said.
HarperCollins publicist Tina Andreadis told New York Magazine that "Stewart's father had a criminal record in San Francisco ('forgeries, bad checks'), and there was a strong resemblance between his father's mug shot and the police sketch," the magazine said.
"If you look at Gary's photo next to the sketch of the Zodiac (killer) next to his father's mug shot, you can see that there is very clearly more than just a passing resemblance," Andreadis told the magazine. "They look alike."
The Zodiac Killer craved attention and wrote several letters to newspapers taking credit for his crimes. He also included cryptograms or ciphers that he claimed would shed light on his identity.
But he was never caught.
The unsolved case inspired the 2007 film "Zodiac," starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Robert Downey Jr. and Mark Ruffalo.
CNN's Augie Martin contributed to this report.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Man Who Plotted to Kill Obama Sentenced to Death

Man Who Plotted to Kill Obama Sentenced to Death


A South Dakota judge formally sentenced a man to death for killing a woman as part of what he said was a plot to assassinate President Barack Obama.
The hearing Tuesday formalized the unanimous vote of a jury to sentence 44-year-old James McVay to death. McVay would have been sentenced to life in prison without parole if the jury's decision had not been unanimous.
McVay pleaded guilty, but mentally ill, to murder in the 2011 stabbing of 75-year-old Maybelle Schein. McVay said he killed Schein and stole her car as part of his plan to drive to Washington and kill the president. He was later arrested in Madison, Wisconsin.
Schein's family declined to speak during the hearing. Prosecutors, McVay and his defense team also did not comment.
"I don't have a lot to say here," said Circuit Judge Peter Lieberman. This is a situation where a jury's verdict has a lot more weight than what I could say."
Minnehaha County public defender Traci Smith filed a motion hours before the hearing asking Lieberman to vacate the sentence based on remarks made by the prosecution during closing arguments last month.
Smith argued that closing arguments about protecting the community "inflamed the passions" of the jury creating a bias against McVay, the Argus Leader newspaper reported. Lieberman rejected the motion saying the jury reached a decision after a thoughtful process.
McVay's sentence will be automatically reviewed by the South Dakota Supreme Court.
The state's highest court considers three issues in such reviews. They include whether the sentence was affected by passion, prejudice, or any other arbitrary factor; whether the evidence supports the finding of a judge or jury of a statutory aggravating circumstance, and whether the sentence of death is out of line with the penalty imposed in other, similar cases.
Messages left Tuesday for Smith and Amber Eggert, also a public defender for McVay, were not immediately returned.

3 Kids Hurt When Wind Blows Bounce House Into Air

3 Kids Hurt When Wind Blows Bounce House Into Air


Two New York boys are hospitalized after a strong gust of wind blew an inflatable bounce house high off the ground while they were playing inside it.
Police tell The Post-Star of Glens Falls ( http://bit.ly/1gj8m1b ) that a 10-year-old girl and two boys, ages 5 and 6, were in the structure at a South Glens Falls townhouse community Monday afternoon when it broke loose from stakes holding it down.
Officers say the girl was near the door and fell as it became airborne, suffering minor scrapes. They say the bounce house was about 15 feet off the ground when the boys tumbled out.
One landed on a parked car while the other fell onto asphalt.
Both are hospitalized Tuesday morning. Information on their injuries and conditions hasn't been released.
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Information from: The Post-Star, http://www.poststar.com

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Michael Jackson's Alleged Son POSITIVE DNA Match

Michael Jackson's Alleged Son POSITIVE DNA Match

 Dennis Hegstad
Michael Jackson's Alleged Son POSITIVE DNA Match
There's a 99.9% chance a 31-year-old man is Michael Jackson's illegitimate son ... at least that's the claim after an alleged DNA test turned up a match.
According to the test results -- obtained by Alki David and his company, FilmOn.com -- Brandon Howard is almost certainly Michael's son. David told TMZ Live he got MJ's dental impression from a Beverly Hills doctor that he got at an auction. The impression is 30 years old but David says its filled with DNA.
Brandon -- who now goes by B Howard and looks and acts very much like Michael -- was not present for the unveiling, but David says he had Howard's DNA and it matched up.
Brandon's mom -- Miki Howard -- is a famous gospel singer who Michael knew. She went by the name "Billy" back in 1982. Interestingly ... a year later Michael released "Billie Jean," which included the lyrics, "Billie Jean's not my lover" and "The kid is not my son."
For B Howard's part -- he's distancing himself from the whole spectacle, insisting he had nothing to do with it.
Michael Jackson's Alleged Son DNA Confirmed

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Sony has figured out how to cram 185TB of data onto a single cassette tape

Sony has figured out how to cram 185TB of data onto a single cassette tape

Sony Cassette Tape Data Storage
It turns out that audio cassette taps might be the wave of the future after all, at least when it comes to data storage. Forbes reports that Sony has figured out how to cram a whopping 185TB of data onto a single cassette tape using technology called sputter deposition that Forbes says “involves layers of magnetic crystals firing argon ions at a polymer film substrate.” To get an idea of just how amazing this is, consider that atypical Blu-ray disc holds around 50GB of data, which means that Sony’s new storage cassette can hold somewhere in the neighborhood of 3,700 Blu-ray films. Sony says that it’s working on ways to make magnetic tape used in cassettes a practical technology for storage and backup and it hopes to release a commercial product based on its breakthroughs in the future.

Monday, May 5, 2014

VIDEO : 8 women seriously injured @ rhode islane circus


Eta Aquarid meteor shower peaks early Tuesday morning

See bits of Comet Halley: Eta Aquarid meteor shower peaks early Tuesday morning

(NASA)
(NASA)
Catch fleeting pieces of Comet Halley trash, as Earth passes through the famous dirty snowball’s path. Those sand-size particles produce the annual Eta Aquarid meteor shower, which peaks very early tomorrow (May 6) morning.
For those who awaken before dawn to examine the sky from dark heavens, you might see a handful of shooting stars during the peak, which is about 3 a.m. to 5 a.m. Eastern time, according to NASA.  The Eta Aquarids meteors appear to emanate from the constellation Aquarius – and that constellation ascends the eastern sky at about 3 a.m.
Comets – made from ice, gases and cosmic dirt – prowl our solar system neighborhood. As the sun warms these objects on their passage through the inner solar system, the comets leave a dusty trail in their wake. When Earth orbits the sun, our blue planet smacks into the comet trails. Sand-size comet particles strike and burn in our upper atmosphere – and we get treated to shooting stars.
Now, we’re hitting the stream of Comet Halley, which last passed Earth in 1986 and returns in 2061.
Thanks to the teenage first-quarter moon setting just after 1 a.m. Eastern time, our skies get dark for meteor watchers.  Unfortunately, cloud cover may pose viewing a obstacle for the Mid-Atlantic and  northeastern U.S.. Viewing conditions should be excellent in the southern U.S.
Cloud cover simulation from high resolution NAM model at 4 a.m. EST (WeatherBell.com)
Cloud cover simulation from high resolution NAM model at 4 a.m. EST (WeatherBell.com)
The International Meteor Organization predicts about 55 shooting stars each hour at peak, but Southern Hemisphere residents will likely see a higher number since this shower favors them. At best, the Northern Hemisphere could see around 30 at peak, says NASA. (With light pollution in the Washington area, though, devoted sky gazers will likely see just a few.)
Last year many Eta Aquarids shooting stars zipped across the heavens. Reports from observers throughout Europe said the shower peaked at 135, according to the International Meteor Organization.
See meteors from the comfort of home
If weather proves a hindrance, watch live coverage of the meteor shower on SLOOH.com, with the web cast starting at 9 p.m. eastern time, with host astronomer Bob Berman.
Also, NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center offer a live Ustream view of the skies from Huntsville, Ala. Through the magic of video, the Marshall center has captured shooting stars from previous showers. For example: NASA All Sky Fireball Network Cameras Catch Perseids (embedded below).

Halley and his comet
In the 18th century, English astronomer Edmond Halley was the first person to realize and calculate that this comet had visited the inner solar system many times before. Comet Halley last visited us in late 1985 through spring 1986. It reached perihelion (the comet’s closest point to the sun) on Feb. 9, 1986.
Worried that you’ll miss these Comet Halley debris? Don’t. Earth passes through the Halley dust stream again in October for the weaker Orionid meteors.