Showing posts with label MONEY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MONEY. Show all posts

MILK - HERE Arts Center: New York, NY (5/1/2010)

Directed by Jessica Bauman

Emily DeVoti’s provocative two-act play, MILK, opens in a spare farmhouse kitchen. It’s 1984. Ronald Reagan has just been elected US president and local newscasters seem to have nothing good to report. Meg (played by Jordan Baker), a former mathematician who loves precision and order, and her husband Ben (Jon Krupp), a former investigative reporter, are sitting at the table and talking, but it’s the kind of tense conversation that can quickly turn from controlled anger to fierce argument.

Things are bad, very bad. A drought has made dairy production virtually impossible, and land that’s been in Meg’s family for centuries is now on the cusp of foreclosure. On top of this, their college-aged daughter—who is never seen but is referenced at key moments in the play—wants to be an actress and their fourteen-year-old son Matt (Noah Robbins) wants material things his parents cannot possibly afford: name-brand sneakers, CDs, a bedside color TV, and stylish clothes, among them. Worse, there’s a city slicker on the prowl, and he’s made no bones about wanting to “help” Meg and Ben ease their financial woes. Ben thinks it’s good idea, "a gift from God"; Meg doesn’t.

Ben wins.

By the time businessman James (Peter Bradbury) and his teenaged daughter, Veronica (Anna Kull), arrive on the scene—in a private plane, no less—things have deteriorated even further. But James couldn't care less about the family’s personal difficulties. Instead, he’s turning his managerial acumen to improving the farm’s productivity. Although he knows nothing about cows, he hatches a plan that, on paper, will foster unprecedented growth and save the day: importing “wild, hairy, horned” bulls to impregnate the many heifers dotting the pastoral landscape.

As you have probably guessed, things don’t pan out as James—or Ben or a reluctant Meg—expect. While the second act of the play is far weaker than the first, the excellent cast, including Caroline Baeumler as Auroch, a talking bovine the Program Notes describe as “quite possibly the last living wild cow,” briefly explore a number of evocative themes including monetary pressures; urban versus rural lifestyles; marital fidelity; self-sacrifice; coming of age; and the festering ache that often accompanies keeping silent about things that matter.

In fact, by the time Veronica tearfully confides her father’s secrets to Matt, the pathos is so intense that James instantly morphs into someone less repugnant. In the end, while we may revile Matt politically, DeVoti renders him a multidimensional personality who is deserving of compassion.

There are no easy answers in MILK. Indeed, as the world changes, some customs and practices inevitably become obsolete and are replaced by newer rituals and activities. The key is figuring out which pieces of cultural and personal history to retain and which to let go.

At one point, Meg looks into a bucket of unpasteurized milk and declares that “the pure stuff, it corrupts so easily.” Maybe so. MILK asks its viewers to think about what’s negotiable and what isn’t. Regardless of what is ultimately decided, one thing is certain: after watching this well-executed play, urban audiences will think about cows in a whole new way.

Review by Eleanor J. Bader

**MILK will be performed at the HERE Arts Center through May 22nd.

Photo of Jordan Baker and Carolyn Baeumler by Jim Baldassare

Big Winners of Superbowl XLIII

SuperBowl MVP Santonio Holmes




Office SuperBowl Pool Winner !!!


Wing Bowl champion John “Super Squibb” Squibb celebrates after winning the 17th annual chicken wing eating contest in Philadelphia,





but the big winner is Canabis:


Niles Lesh says - Remember kids don't smoke dope because you will never amount to anything...except for Superbowl MVP,14-time Olympic champion or President of the United
States


GORDON BROWN - Saves The World ?

Gordon Brown has attempted to play down a slip of the tongue in which he said the government had "saved the world".

I only wish The US Congress could mock the President the way the UK parliament mocks it's prime minister !

Zimbabwean's to print 100 Trillion Dollar Bank Notes !






This guy is going out to get a pack of smokes and a newspaper !


Zimbabwe's hyperinflation has become so extreme that the treasury there is set to print 100 trillion, 50 trillion, 20 trillion and 10 trillion notes. 100 trillion Zimbabwean dollars are worth about US$300.

Even vegetable vendors prefer the U.S. dollar, South African rand or Botswanan pula, and most workers now demand their salaries in foreign currency. Doctors and nurses have been on strike since last September, demanding salaries in U.S. dollars. The strike coincided with a cholera epidemic that now has claimed more than 2,000 lives.

Last week, the state media reported that most teachers had left their jobs. As a result, the end-of-year examinations taken in November are yet to be graded after the markers demanded their wages in foreign currency. Schools are yet to re-open this year awaiting the examination results


Zimbabwe had issued 10 billion dollar notes in January 2008. They went to 100 billion dollar notes by July 2008 and now 100 trillion dollar notes...That is 100,000% inflation !...but don't worry that could never happen here...Right ?

GUY RITCHIE - $ 76 Million Plus Settlement !

WELCOME TO THE MIENFOKS HALL OF FAME !



From Bitten & Bound

Madonna has settled her divorce with director Guy Richie to the hefty tune of $76 million, according to the singers spokeswoman. Liz Rosenberg actually said the figure is between $76 million and $92 million. Besides cash assets, Richie will keep their country home Ashcombe House and the couple’s west London pub, the Punchbowl. Who knew they owned a bar?

Madonna’s fortune is said to be worth $525 million. Her payout to Richie will hardly made a dent. Even so, Guy reaped twice what Sir Paul McCartney settled upon Heather Mills.

Madonna and Guy were married in December 2000 at Skibo Castle in the Scottish Highlands. Reports indicate that turning over the two British properties was a no-brainer for the ‘Material Girl’, who has no intention of living in the UK following their split, preferring her New York digs.

The couple will share custody of sons Rocco Richie and David Banda, though custodial arrangements are not yet worked out.