American Graffiti 

Directed by George Lucas

Produced by Francis Ford Coppola

Starring Richard Dreyfuss, Ron Howard, Paul Le Mat, Charles Martin Smith, Candy Clark, Mackenzie Phillips, Cindy Williams, Wolfman Jack, and Harrison Ford

Released (US) Aug. 11, 1973

Available on various streaming services, including Netflix and Amazon Prime

I absolutely loved this movie when I first saw it in 1973. I’ve thought about rewatching it a thousand times since then. But I never did. I think I was afraid that I would be disappointed. Like experiencing again the cuisine of the restaurant where, 20 years ago, you enjoyed the best meal of your life.

American Graffiti takes place in California in the mid-1950s. It is a small town coming-of-age story. And a story about America’s coming-of-age about ten years before the era of Vietnam.

I attended middle school and high school from 1963 to 1968. So, my coevals and I were able to experience the happy, halcyon days depicted in this movie and the transition to the Vietnam/counterculture/hippie era, all in a short span of time.

And that is probably why I think of American Graffiti as a coming-of-age movie about America. As compared, for example, to Lolita, another great movie about American culture, but about the previous era, from the end of WWII to the early 1950s.

As you know, I like to think about good movies in terms of verticality and horizontality, with verticality representing how well they capture an era, and horizontality representing how well they present something deep and true about human nature.

In terms of verticality, American Graffiti is a feast of audio and visual reminders of how teenage life was back then –  the drive-in diner, the school dance, the style of dressing, etc. I remembered it as being true to human nature in some meaningful way, too, but I couldn’t remember exactly how.

I got that when I watched it this time. What makes American Graffiti special in terms of horizontality is the way the relationships between the four main characters are depicted. I saw in them all the primary archetypes of teenage boy-ness that I recognized back then: the alpha guy, the beta nerd, the button-down kid, and the thoughtful, promising one that grows up to make something of himself.

But even more than that, I thought the movie nailed the underlying, complicated, invisible-to-others culture that binds together groups of young boys, who are very different from one another, as they move through adolescence by inventing and participating in their own initiation rites to manhood.

American Graffiti doesn’t present itself as important. It presents itself as a nostalgic romp. But when I saw it in 1973, I felt it was more than that. And, having seen it again, after nearly 50 years, I’m happy to say that I have the same opinion.

The movie doesn’t have much of a plot. It’s a series of anecdotes. More than could ever have happened in a single evening in a single town. But they are held together, as so many coming-of-age movies are, by the beautiful and very believable bond connecting the main characters.

It’s believable and it’s beautiful, but it is also deep. Watch it closely and you will see that all the important relationships – and several of the secondary relationships, too – skate across the fun and funny events of that imaginary evening on a very thin sheet of ice over a deep, dark lake. It is that contrast between the brightness of everything that is going on at the surface and the darkness of what is developing underneath that makes American Graffiti, for me – still, after so many years – great.

You can watch the trailer here.

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The COVID Response: What We Got Wrong.

The Impact of Vaccines on Mortality 

A large meta study of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) reported by vaccine manufacturers found that the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines did not impact overall mortality.

As reported in the latest issue of the journal iScience, the two vaccines, both based on messenger RNA (mRNA) technology, protected against deaths from COVID-19. But that effect was offset by vaccinated trial participants being more likely to die from cardiovascular problems.

“In the RCTs with the longest possible blinded follow-up, mRNA vaccines had no effect on overall mortality despite protecting against some COVID-19 deaths. On the other hand, the adenovirus-vector vaccines were associated with lower overall mortality,” the researchers said.

The researchers compared the overall deaths in the vaccinated groups with the placebo groups. They also broke deaths down into different categories: those attributed to COVID-19, to cardiovascular problems, to other non-COVID-19 causes, to accidents, and to non-accident, non-COVID-19 causes.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, they found, were associated with lower COVID-19 mortality but higher cardiovascular and non-accident, non-COVID-19 mortality. There was no difference in overall mortality between the vaccinated and the placebo groups.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine was associated with lower overall mortality and with lower non-COVID-19 mortality, with no effect on COVID-19 mortality. AstraZeneca’s shot, never authorized in the US but cleared in some other countries, performed well against overall mortality and other categories across several trials, except for one trial where slightly more vaccinated people died from non-COVID causes or non-accident, non-COVID-19 causes.

Interesting: The study was published ahead of peer review in 2022, but the authors struggled to find a journal that would accept the paper. Several rejected it without explaining why, causing a delay in publication.

Read more here.

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So, What’s the Answer? What Should I Do?

I was doing some research yesterday about the changing history of expert medical opinion on canola oil and omega-6 fatty acids (of all things). Over the past several decades, it has fluctuated from positive to negative and back to positive again.

Having been in the natural health publishing industry during much of that time, I knew about those changes. And we reported on them in our publications. But in trying to understand the science behind the shifting views in order to form my own opinion, I realized that it was far too complicated for an amateur like me.

Something similar is true of just about every important issue I care about – from economics, to politics, to sociology, to race and gender relations, to charity, to business, and on and on. These are all complicated subjects. And because the discourse on them is politicized today, the facts and statements purporting to be facts pile up on either side of every argument.

If your doctor/lawyer/nutritionist/teacher can’t be sure, how can you?

Well, I can’t. Yet, decisions have to be made. Big ones. Small ones. Dozens every day.

Do you eat paleo or vegan? Buy or rent? Vote for or against gun control? Have this type of medical treatment or another?

There is only one thing to do. Find people (a) that you feel you can trust, (b) that have not just knowledge but proven experience in the subject, and (c) ask for their advice.

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When I think about racism in the US… 

I don’t think about incarceration data, SAT results, or other “systemic” issues…

I think about this.

And this.

 

A Modern-Day Witch Trial 

There are many good people working in and around the challenge of autism. But somehow, somewhere along the way, an industry for treating it arose. And the people that came to control the industry, the people with money and the people with connections, came to definitive views about what causes autism. Like anything related to COVID and vaccines, in the past decade, it has become verboten to postulate certain theories. Click here for a chilling account of how that came about.

 

Our Government at Work 

Josh Hawley questioning Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm… doing what senators are supposed to do. Click here.

 

The Most Unbelievable Crime Stat Ever! 

What happens when your local DA reduces shoplifting to a misdemeanor…

Click here.

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Another Big Retail Store Bites the Dust! 

From Nellie Bowles (The Free Press) on crime in Portland:

“REI, the do-good outdoor recreation chain, the store where I buy most of my clothes (whoever says they don’t carry black tie clothes isn’t trying hard enough), is closing its big downtown Portland location, citing crime and theft. The company said that the store ‘had its highest number of break-ins and thefts in two decades, despite actions to provide extra security.’ From a local news channel: ‘The company said its theft problem came to a head last November, when a car crashed through the glass front doors on Black Friday. It was the store’s third break-in in a week.’

“I understand that Antifa doesn’t believe in private property and that Portland is their capital. But guys, all you wear are cargo pants and hiking boots. How is this going to work? Who will provide your balaclavas and headlamps?”

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Good News, Bad News

France’s Pompidou Center will close in 2025 for five years, while it spends $300 million fixing itself up. The bad news is that it will still be open till then.

Its architecture, inside and out, has always been controversial. But it shouldn’t have been. Putting all the infrastructure (plumbing, electrical wires, ductwork, etc.) on the outside of the building to free up the inside was always a dumb and impractical idea.

It should be taken down and rebuilt. It’s a monstrosity. I cringe every time I walk by.

Click here.

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Second Sleep? What’s That?

I was surprised to learn this: For most of man’s time on earth, sleep happened in two shifts. The current “normal” of one seven- or eight-hour sleep was something that developed during the Industrial Revolution.

That’s the conclusion of this very interesting short history of the research that led to this discovery. Click here.

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Gloria Alvarez 

A well-known political intellectual in Guatemala, Gloria Alvarez has been speaking out against the growth of socialism in Latin America for years. She’s now running for president of her country – and she’s building a strong following online.

Click here to watch John Stossel’s very informative interview with her.

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