Tuesday, October 7, 2025
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Preview of “Bach at Leipzig” at Little Fish Theatre

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By John Farrell

If you want to see Johann Sebastian Bach in action, then you probably don’t want to see Bach at Leipzig, the enormously informative and entertaining slapstick farce that is currently at the Little Fish Theatre on the weekends through October 14.

Preview of “Noise Off” at Norris Theatre

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By John Farrell

You’d be surprised by just how many laughs you can get with a plate of sardines.

Then again, maybe you wouldn’t, because thousands of people have laughed at Michael Frayn’s Noises Off since it first premiered in London 30 years ago. If you’ve seen it, you’ll want to see it again at the Norris Theater in Rolling Hills Estates, where it is playing weekends through October 7. And if you haven’t seen it, do yourself the favor of going and discovering just how funny sardines and actors can be.

Lee M. Anderson Died Sept. 24, 2012

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On Sept. 24, Lee Marie Anderson, widow of former congressman and California Lt. Gov. Glenn Anderson (1959 – 1967), died from from complications of melanoma at the age of 87.

In Theaters Now: The Master

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  • Written and directed by Paul Thomas Anderson
  • Starring: Philip Seymour Hoffman, Joaquin Phoenix, Amy Adams

After fighting in the Pacific theatre of World War II, Freddie Quell, played by Joaquin Phoenix, returns home a lost soul teetering on the brink of madness. By chance, Quell encounters the charismatic Lancaster Dodd, played by Philip Seymour Hoffman, who indoctrinates the disturbed veteran into The Cause, a fledgling cult that promises its members a better way of life. But as an uncooperative convert, Quell’s disruptive nature threatens to wash the Cause onto the shoals of the American psyche.

Chasing Endeavour

By Lionel Rolfe

I stood on the banks of the Los Angeles River in order to get a glimpse of Endeavour flying over the southeast end of the Santa Monica Mountains on its way to Griffith Park Observatory.

It would have been much better, of course, to get up to the observatory, a mile or two west of the river bank. Endeavour was scheduled to fly as close to the observatory as it safely could. Whereas here by the river, the precipitous southeastern mountains blocked a direct view of the action around the observatory.

Preview of the LB Playhouse’s The Glass Menagerie

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By John Farrell

The Glass Menagerie is great American playwright, Tennessee Williams, first play and the Long Beach Playhouse will give it more than just a respectable revival through the middle of next month. But perhaps the key word should actually be “respectful” instead.

Phyllis B. Gitlin directs the play and though she uses her stage effectively, Glass Menagerie is treated as the classic it is. It may take another century before we get to see Williams done innovatively.

Scream Queens the Musical Preview

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By John Farrell

If the title, Scream Queens The Musical,doesn’t tell you what you are going to get, then you probably have been watching nothing but Face the Nation and Wall Street Week, and probably wouldn’t get it anyway.

But if you are a child of the last forty years of television and movies; if you even like or just know about Hollywood horror films, especially the cheap ones, you’ll love this camp musical presented with a little style by the Kentwood Players.

New Plan Highlights Proven Path To Broad-based Growth

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By Paul Rosenberg, Senior Editor

“Instead of the austerity agenda that we have now, focused on debt, this growth agenda is focused, really, on restoring broad-based economic growth and our democracy,” said Yale political scientist Jacob Hacker in a late-August teleconference.

Hacker was explaining the rationale behind a new economic approach laid out in “Prosperity Economics: Building an Economy for All,” a report he co-authored with Yale Law School student Nate Loewentheil.

Aimed at changing the political debate this election season and beyond, the report has already gained significant support from labor, civil rights and community organizations, including the AFL-CIO, SEIU, the Center for Community Change, the Economic Policy Institute, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and the National Council of La Raza.

“The current debate is focused on how severely to cut not whether to cut,” Hacker said. “That’s diametrically at odds with dealing with the two great challenges we face today, which are not the deficit, but rather the jobs crises, and the long-term stagnation and decline of the middle class.”

With the debate framed this way, Hacker warned, “there is a real risk that even if President Obama wins, we could end up with a kinder, gentler version of austerity economics — tax cuts that are slightly less skewed, cuts in public investment, cuts in economic security that are only slightly less draconian than those in the leading budget blueprints on the right.”

The problem is that a clear alternative exists, based on plenty of empirical evidence, old and new, but that it hasn’t been clearly and forcefully articulated as part of the debate. Hence the need for their report, Hacker explained.

“Our goal was really to lay out an alternative that’s both realistic, in the sense of capable of producing ends we want—that is, immediate job growth and broad-based shared prosperity over the long term—and is supported by evidence, by economic research and theory, by the experience of our past and the best examples we find in other countries.”

In the report the authors explain:

“Prosperity doesn’t just “trickle down” from the top. It depends on the common investments and sources of security we agree on as members of a democracy, on institutions—especially unions—that ensure that gains are broadly shared, and on a healthy democracy that can sustain sound economic policies and prevent today’s economic winners from undermining the openness and dynamism of the economy.”

There is nothing new or radical in this. This is how the multi-generational prosperity of Europe and America were built in the first place, with the first large-scale middle classes in human history. More specifically, Hacker and Lowentheil point to the work of economist Daron Acemoglu and political scientist James Robinson in their book, Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty. As Hacker summarized in an article published by Politico, they found that, “Where government is responsive to the broad citizenry, countries are far better at doing the things that create long-term growth, like investing in education and infrastructure, and ensuring that economic gains translate into a better quality of life for all citizens.”

They listed the United States “as one of the most successful of these inclusive democracies,” Hacker wrote. But in a more recent paper, this past November, “Is This Time Different? Capture and Anti-Capture of US Politics” they point to ways “we are losing our edge,” as Hacker put it: “We increasingly display elements found in less successful societies, including runaway inequality, influence-buying, corporate and financial lobbies that tilt government and the market in their favor,” along with “under-investment in our human capital, infrastructure and basic research and development.”

In that paper, Acemoglu and Robinson wrote, “The US case in fact illustrates a more general principle. Countries which have created egalitarian, economically dynamic societies have done so because they have forged inclusive political institutions which then led to inclusive economic institutions. This is precisely what happened after the 1688 Glorious Revolution in England and what resulted from the French Revolution in large parts of Western Europe. In contradistinction to this, societies with extractive institutions have remained poor and inegalitarian.”

“Once created there is a natural tendency for inclusive institutions to persist – a virtuous circle. Unfortunately in the same way… extractive institutions generate their own vicious circle….. [T]hough such positive feedbacks existed in the US, the system faced continual challenges, most obviously from the Southern states.”

Regarding the South, they wrote, “The slave economy in the US South epitomizes the nature of extractive economic institutions. Instead of opening economic institutions to everyone or allowing social mobility, extractive institutions restrict opportunities to a powerful few and block social mobility. The children of slaves were also slaves, slaves could not own property, had no opportunity for social mobility.”

Thus, it’s no accident that the Southern-dominated GOP and its Tea Party wing is once again pushing an exclusionary agenda focused on debt, which doesn’t even attempt to address the short-term employment crisis or the long-term need for growth.

In contrast to the historical successes of Europe and North America, the austerity economics that’s been dominating the debate so far has already been tried, and has repeatedly failed—most recently in Great Britain, which is now in the throes of a second recession, and is doing worse now that it was at a comparable period during the Great Recession.

A one-page conceptual summary, at the Prosperity For All website puts it like this:

Prosperity economics is built on three pillars: growth, security and democracy. These pillars reinforce one another and are intertwined politically and economically.

Dynamic, innovation‐led growth, grounded in job creation, public investment and broad opportunity

We must take immediate action to jumpstart our sagging economy. In the future, we need to invest in people and productivity that will lead to good jobs and rising wages. Growth alone is not sufficient to sustain our nation. We need long‐term growth that is broadly enjoyed, sustainable in light of our resource and energy constraints and driven by investments in our workforce and strong collective bargaining rules that raise our standard of living.

Security for workers and their families, the environment and government finances

Markets work better when working families feel a basic security for their futures. A dynamic and competitive market requires a strong foundation that is reinforced by programs like Social Security and Medicare that guarantee a secure retirement and access to health care. Markets also work better when governments have the resources to operate smoothly far into the future. These resources are best raised through a progressive tax structure that supports the middle class; no more tax giveaways for corporations and super rich.

Democratic voice, inclusivity and accountability in Washington and the workplace

Money is increasingly corrupting and corroding democracy. When economic winners are allowed to write the economic rules, the rest of America becomes poorer and our political system weaker. For democracy to thrive, strong Unions, and empowered citizens and community organizations are needed to ensure that workers and the broader public have an organized, effective voice in our politics.

Leading liberal blogger Digby (Heather Parton) also participated in the teleconference.

“What we have needed up to now is a broader prosperity vision, that Jacob has just talked about… to offer as a counterpoint.” she said. “If we don’t do that, the debate is going to be limited to this very narrow little difference between the Obama balanced approach and the Simpson-Bowles approach and the Romney-Ryan dystopian hellscape.”

“The take-away message is that jobs and growth have to be at the center of the fight,” Hacker said, as he concluded his presentation. “That means growth now, through immediate investments in our decaying infrastructure, help to struggling state and local governments that continue to slash their workforces, and substantial mortgage debt relief. But also growth over the long term. so everything we do now should be aimed at investments in people and productivity, from college education to clean energy, guarantees of basic economic security that allows people to innovate and take risks in a rapid-change economy, and rebuilding our money-driven system so it responds to the priorities of the middle class, not just the priorities of corporations and the affluent.”

Or, as Digby put it, “We can all prosper together, that’s a different way to look at it.”

Faith Takes on Violence

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By Zamná Ávila, Assistant Editor

In 2005, filmmaker and entrepreneur Constance Jackson made a documentary film, Blitz Attack: The Andrea Hines Story. The 14 year old Hines died after being stabbed 74 times by a 13 year old male playmate.

[The story was updated to include the correct year in which the filmBlitz Attack: The Andrea Hines Story premiered]

Vegan Fusion: Mediterranean Salsa–Tapenade

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Christine Rodriguez, Contributing Writer

You may have heard or read about the Mediterranean diet and how the Mediterraneans are much healthier overall in comparison to the average American.

As I’ve said before our Standard American Diet is S.A.D.

In fact, according to the USDA and their American Dietary Guidelines report, it is stated that “a traditional Mediterranean diet is associated with one of the lowest risks of coronary heart disease in the world.”