Showing posts with label John Lennon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Lennon. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2025

Vagle Brothers – "When We All Get to Heaven" (2008)


Soon the pearly gates will open

We shall tread the streets of gold


When the late Jimmy Carter ran for president in 1976, he was asked if he was a born-again Christian.  “Yes,” he answered.


When reporters asked him about his faith, he told them that he prayed “about 25 times a day, maybe more” and read the Bible every day.  After leaving Washington, the former president not only regularly attended a Baptist church in his hometown, but also taught Sunday school there.

Jimmy Carter teaching Sunday school in 2010 

President Biden touched on Carter’s devoutness when he eulogized him yesterday:

Jimmy held a deep Christian faith in God.  [H]is candidacy spoke and wrote about faith as a substance of things hoped for, and evidence of the things not seen.  Faith founded on commandments of scripture.  Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and all thy mind and all thy soul.

*     *     *     *     *


Given that, it seemed odd when Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood sang John Lennon’s “Imagine” at Carter’s funeral.   After all, that song has been described as “purposely and powerfully irreligious.”  


Here’s how one writer described “Imagine”:


“Imagine” is unabashedly utopian and deeply moral, calling on people to live, as one humanity, in peace.  It is also purposely and powerfully irreligious.  From its opening lyric, “Imagine there’s no heaven,” to the refrain, “And no religion too,” Lennon sets out what is, to many, a clear atheistic message. . . . “Imagine” is explicitly secularist. In Lennon’s telling, religion is an impediment to human flourishing – something to be overcome, transcended.


Despite that, it’s been widely reported that “Imagine” was Carter’s favorite song – which is why it was performed at his funeral. 


“Imagine” famously begins with this line: “Imagine there’s no heaven.”  But this is what the late president’s grandson said when he spoke about his grandfather and his grandmother Rosalynn – who died last year – at the service: “Rest assured that in these last weeks, he told us that he was ready to see her again.”


Does that sound like someone who would prefer a world where there’s no heaven?


*     *     *     *     *


It turns out that Carter never said that “Imagine” was his favorite song.  But he was quoted as saying in 2007 that it was his favorite Beatles song:


I hate to nitpick, but “Imagine” is not a Beatles song, of course – it was a John Lennon song that was written and recorded after the Beatles had broken up.


John Lennon and Muhammad Ali
at Jimmy Carter’s inauguration

Actually, it may not be accurate to characterize it as a John Lennon song either.  Lennon later acknowledged that the lyrics for “Imagine” were largely inspired by Yoko Ono’s poetry.  


In 1980, he told the BBC that the composition should be credited as a Lennon/Ono song:  


A lot of it – the lyric and the concept – came from Yoko, but in those days I was a bit more selfish, a bit more macho, and I sort of omitted her contribution, but it was right out of Grapefruit.  


(Grapefruit was the title of a poetry collection that Yoko published in 1964.)


In 2017, the songwriting credit for “Imagine” was officially changed to recognize both John Lennon and Yoko Ono. 


*     *     *     *     *  


I know many of you feel differently, but I am not a fan of “Imagine.” 


So today 2 or 3 lines is featuring “When We All Get to Heaven,” which was written in 1898 by Eliza Edmunds Hewitt, a Philadelphia schoolteacher.  According to the pianist at the church where Jimmy Carter taught Sunday school, that hymn – not “Imagine” – was Carter’s favorite song.


Click here to listen to a 2008 recording of “When We All Get to Heaven” by the four Vagle Brothers, who grew up in Karlstad, Minnesota – a town of 710 souls in extreme northwestern Minnesota that’s just a few miles south of the Canadian border.  (All four attended Evangel University in Springfield, Missouri, which is affiliated with the Assembly of God denomination.)


Click here to buy the Vagle Brothers album In the Spirit of the Lord, which includes “When We All Get to Heaven.”  (That song is titled “When We All Get Together” on that album, but it’s the same hymn.) 


Sunday, December 8, 2024

John Lennon – "Nobody Told Me" (1984)


Well, everybody’s talking

And no one says a word

Nobody told me there’d be days like these



I have to disagree with John.  I feel like a lot of people told us there’d be days like these – we just didn’t listen to them.


*     *     *     *     *


Click here to listen to “Nobody Told Me,” which was released in 1984 on the Milk and Honey album:  


It was Lennon’s third and last posthumous top 10 single, peaking at #5 on the Billboard “Hot 100.”


Click here to buy “Nobody Told Me” from Amazon.



Friday, November 12, 2021

John Lennon – "How Do You Sleep?" (1971)


The only thing you done was “Yesterday”

You probably pinched that b*tch anyway



[NOTE: This is the third and final part of our 12th anniversary 2 or 3 lines interview with 2 or 3 lines.  If you missed parts one and two, scroll down – the three parts appear in reverse order.]


*     *     *     *     *


2 or 3 lines: Did you read the recent New Yorker interview of Paul McCartney?  The one where he dismissed the Rolling Stones are “a blues cover band,” and went on to say that he thought the Beatles’ “net was cast a bit wider than theirs”?


2 or 3 lines: Saying that is such a d*ck move on McCartney’s part.  He’s out pimping his new book and the new The Beatles: Get Back documentary, and I guess he figured that ripping the Stones – who had just started their “No Filter” tour – would get him some attention.  


Q: The new McCartney book you’re referring to is titled The Lyrics: 1956 to the Present.  Have you had a chance to peruse it yet?


A: No, I haven’t.  It was only published about a week ago, and it will be some time before it makes its way into my local public library.  I’m sure as hell not going to spend my own money on that b*tch, so I’ll have to wait until then.


Q: Here’s how the publisher has described the book, which is 960 pages long:


“A work of unparalleled candor and splendorous beauty, The Lyrics celebrates the creative life and the musical genius of Paul McCartney through 154 of his most meaningful songs. . . . The Lyrics pairs the definitive texts of 154 Paul McCartney songs with first-person commentaries on his life and music. Spanning two alphabetically arranged volumes, these commentaries reveal how the songs came to be and the people who inspired them . . . Here are the origins of “Let It Be,” “Lovely Rita,” “Yesterday,” and “Mull of Kintyre,” as well as McCartney’s literary influences, including Shakespeare, Lewis Carroll, and Alan Durband, his high-school English teacher.


What do you think?


A: Shakespeare was one of McCartney’s literary influences?  Spare me.  But I’m curious to see the book because it is inconceivable to me that anyone could fill up 960 pages talking about Paul McCartney’s song lyrics – even McCartney himself.  That would be true even if he stuck to his Beatles songs – with a few exceptions, his post-Beatles body of work is a total waste of time.


Q:  So you’re not a fan of “Mull of Kintyre”?


A.  I’ve never heard it.  But give me a second and I’ll take a quick look at the lyrics.  [Silence.]  OK, I just pulled up the lyrics to that song online.  It seems that the Mull of Kintyre is a place in Scotland where McCartney has owned a farm for some time, and the song is about how much he loves being there.  The song’s lyrics are all about “sunsets on fire” and “deer in the glen” and “mist rolling in from the sea.”  It is utterly forgettable – it reads like something an 80-year-old widow living in a Scottish village might have written and submitted to her local weekly newspaper.


*     *     *     *     *


Q: Let’s go back to what Sir Paul said about the Stones.  The Stones certainly started out as a blues cover band.  I’m looking at one of their early Crawdaddy Club setlists, which includes covers of songs by Bo Diddly, Willie Dixon, John Lee Hooker, and Jimmy Reed.


A: They also covered a lot of Chuck Berry songs, and songs like “Poison Ivy” and “Love Potion No. 9,” which aren’t really blues songs – but if you’re defining “blues” to include “rhythm and blues,” I won’t argue with that description.  


Q: If the Stones started out as a blues cover band, what did the Beatles start out as?


A: Before they became the world’s most successful boy band, the Beatles were a band that mostly played covers of songs suitable for drunken sailors and prostitutes to dance to.


(Stop blaming Yoko!  It was PAUL!)
Q: I assume you’re referring to the Hamburg-era Beatles?


A: Yes.  When they were in Hamburg, the Beatles covered everything from fifties toe-tappers (like “Sweet Little Sixteen” and “Hippy Hippy Shake”) to show tunes (“A Taste of Honey” and “Till There Was You” from The Music Man) to ancient pop standards (“Bésame Mucho” and “Red Sails in the Sunset”) that were perfect for slow dancing, which allowed the drunken sailors to feel up the prostitutes and allowed the prostitutes to pick the pockets of the drunken sailors.


Q: I suppose the real question isn’t whether the Stones were a blues cover band at the beginning of their career, but whether it’s fair to characterize the Stones of the late sixties and early seventies – when they were at their peak – as a blues cover band.


A: The question answers itself, doesn’t it?  Songs like “Satisfaction” and “Paint It, Black” and “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” and “Gimme Shelter” aren’t blues songs, or even R&B songs – although they were influenced by blues music and R&B.  


*     *     *     *     *


Q: What about McCartney’s other comment – that the Beatles’ “net was cast a bit wider” than that of the Rolling Stones?


A: The Beatles’ net was not cast very wide at all at first – the original songs on the first few albums are stylistically and thematically very similar.  As I’ve said before, Lennon and especially McCartney were very good at coming up with catchy little musical “songlets” – their usual modus operandi was to turn one songlet into the verse or verse/refrain, take another songlet and use it as the bridge (despite the fact that the second songlet might be musically quite different from the fist songlet), and repeat everything until the song was long enough to be released as a single or used as filler on an album.  As for the lyrics to those songs, the less said the better.


Q: Now, you don’t really mean that – I’m sure you have a lot you want to say about Lennon and McCartney’s lyrics.


A: Actually, I do.  Starting with quoting what many people would agree is the best book ever written about the Beatles’ music – the late Ian MacDonald’s Revolution in the Head, which discusses each and every song the Beatles ever recorded.  MacDonald was a fan of the Beatles, but even he acknowledged that the Beatles’ lyrics were “casual” and “slipshod” compared to those of many other songwriters.  The Beatles weren’t writing songs for adults, so they didn’t need to worry much about the lyrics – after all, their early records were pitched at 13-year-old girls, so there was no point in writing sophisticated lyrics. 


Q: MacDonald wrote, “As verse, little of the Beatles’ word-output coheres, except by way of mood and style.  Is this a serious criticism of their work?  Yes.” 


A: Even Lennon and McCartney admitted that they put very little thought into the lyrics of the songs on the first several Beatles records.  Those songs are very easy to sing along to, but when it comes to the lyrics, there’s not much there.  The boys and girls who populate those songs are indistinguishable – they’re utterly generic.  They don’t have names, and they don’t have backstories – we don’t even know if the girls are blondes, brunettes, or redheads.  Look at the lyrics to “I Want to Hold Your Hold Hand” and “Can’t Buy Me Love” and “Please Please Me” and “P.S. I Love You” and “I Saw Her Standing There.”  There’s nothing real about them – they’re assemblages of trite expressions and romantic clichés pitched to middle-school-aged girls.  I’m talking about middle-school-aged girls in the sixties, of course – middle-school girls today are infinitely more mature and sophisticated, and would likely laugh at these songs as hopelessly out of it.


Q: To be fair, didn’t most of the hit pop singles of that era have very simple lyrics?


A: Many of them did.  But look at some of the Beatles’ contemporaries.  Look at “I Get Around” by the Beach Boys, which was released at about the same time as the Beatles’ records I just mentioned.  “I Get Around” is not only much more musically sophisticated than those Beatles records, it also features lyrics that tell a real story about real characters.  I’m not saying those lyrics are especially profound – it’s a song written for teenagers, after all – but it’s not as generic and two-dimensional as the typical Lennon-McCartney song of that era.  


Q: What you are saying may be true of the lyrics for the songs on the early Beatles albums – the “Beatlemania” era.  Wouldn’t you admit that the lyrical sophistication of the Beatles records increased significantly over the years?


A: John Lennon’s lyrics certainly grew in sophistication – think “Strawberry Fields Forever” and “I Am the Walrus” and especially the parts of “A Day in the Life” that he was responsible for.  Those are songs for grown-ups – as were the songs that Bob Dylan and the Who and the Kinks and the Stones were writing in that era.  Look at Stones songs like “Satisfaction’ and “Paint It Black” and “Jumpin’ Jack Flash” and “Sympathy for the Devil” and “Gimme Shelter” and “Monkey Man” and “Dead Flowers” and so many others – compare the lyrics of those songs with McCartney’s lyrics for not only childish twaddle like “When I’m Sixty-Four” and “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da” and “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” but also his more serious songs – which were mostly sentimental, pseudo-profound crap.  Think “Yesterday” and “Let It Be” and “Hey Jude.”  The guy had an incredibly fertile mind when it came to musical ideas, but he was just hopeless as a lyricist – either because he didn’t think lyrics were important, or because he simply didn’t have the brains or the heart to write better ones.


*     *     *     *     *


Q: You’ve identified a number of what you consider McCartney’s worst songs with the Beatles.  What were McCartney’s best songs?


A: He made important contributions to “A Day in the Life” and the Abbey Road side-two medley – but those were really more songlets rather than fully-developed songs.  I have a lot of affection for “Get Back,” but it’s not much more than a songlet as well.  The one truly great, fully-realized Beatles song that McCartney is apparently wholly responsible for is “Helter Skelter.”  I find it mind-blowing that “Helter Skelter” is a McCartney song – it would make perfect sense as a John Lennon song, but has absolutely nothing in common with any of Sir Paul’s other creations.  I can’t overstate how awesome a record I think “Helter Skelter” is, and it’s all McCartney.  Go figure . . .


Q: Circling back to the subject of the Rolling Stones, and McCartney’s comment that the Beatles “net was cast a bit wider” than the Stones, isn’t it true that the later Beatles albums incorporate a much more diverse palette of musical styles than what the Stones were recording at the same time?  


A: Maybe.  But that certainly doesn’t say anything about the relative quality of their music.  That “diverse palette” was due in large part to the fact that the Beatles had three very different songwriters who were operating quite independently at the end.  Lennon and McCartney worked together closely in the early days but by the time of Revolver and Sgt. Pepper and especially The White Album and Abbey Road, John and Paul and George were on their own – there was little no collaboration between them, and little or no consistency as a result.


Q: By contrast, Jagger and Richards had their ups and downs, but they never stopped collaborating – they never went their own separate ways.


A: That’s right.  Generally speaking, it was Keith who came up with the riffs and Mick who came up with the lyrics.  That doesn’t mean all their songs sounded alike – if we look at Beggars Banquet, for example, “Sympathy for the Devil” and “Street Fighting Man” are very different from “No Expectations” and “Factory Girl.”  But there’s much more of a family resemblance between Jagger-Richards songs than they are between Lennon and McCartney and Harrison songs.


Q: So you would admit that McCartney was right when he said that the Beatles cast their net wider when it came to diversity of musical styles – but you wouldn’t admit that was necessarily a good thing.  


A: That’s right.  Just because your net covers a larger surface area doesn’t mean you catch more fish.  The Stones clearly caught a lot more fish – their musical net went a lot deeper instead of just skimming the surface. 


*     *     *     *     *


Q: David Remnick, who interviewed McCartney for the New Yorker, wrote in that piece that “[s]ongs are emotionally charged and brief, so we remember them whole: the melody, the hook, the lyrics, where we were, what we felt. And they are emotionally adhesive, especially when they’re encountered in our youth.”


A: The Beatles were such an overpowering pop-culture phenomenon when my friends and I were impressionable young teenagers that it’s no surprise that their music left an indelible mark on our psyches.  I rarely change stations when a Beatles song comes on the radio.  But when I look at their songs objectively – when I break down their musical structure and read the lyrics with a critical eye – there’s no there there.  That’s especially true of McCartney’s songs.  


Q:  Do you think of McCartney’s songs as sort of the musical equivalent of fast food?  Fast food can be very satisfying while you’re eating the stuff, but intellectually you know it’s not good for you.  


A: Mark Twain had this to say about Richard Wagner’s music: “I understand it is much better than it sounds.”  Paul McCartney’s music is just the opposite – it’s not as good as it sounds.  I would compare the experience of listening to his songs to the experience I often have when I go to the movies.  The overall experience of watching a movie in a theatre can be pretty intense, especially if there’s a lot happening – a lot of action and a complicated plot.  I often walk out of the theater thinking “Wow!” and feeling pretty pumped up.  But if I actually think about the movie on the drive home, or discuss it with someone else, I start to see the flaws I didn’t pick up while I was in the theatre.


*     *     *     *     *


Q: Your press person is giving me dirty looks because I’ve kept you so long – I know you have other interviews to do, so I’ll wrap things up.  


A: Don’t sweat it – it’s been a good conversation.  But my people get a lot of interview requests each time another 2 or 3 lines anniversary rolls around, and I do need to hit the road.


Q: One final thing.  Why have you felt the need to devote so many 2 or 3 lines posts to analyzing and critiquing the Beatles.  You seem more than a little obsessed with the Beatles – specifically, you seem obsessed with cutting the Beatles down to size.  Why do you think that is?


A: The Beatles were the pre-eminent pop music group for my generation – no one compared to them.   There were people who loved Dylan, or the Stones, or Motown, or the Grateful Dead, but almost everyone acknowledged the supremacy of the Beatles – they were numero uno. 


Q: Were you one of the “almost everyone” group?


A: Absolutely.


Q: But you don’t feel that way any more?


A: Well . . . it’s complicated.  For years, I simply accepted as a given that the Beatles were the best.  But I didn’t know why – I didn’t know how to explain the unique phenomenon that was the Beatles.  On the surface, Lennon and McCartney were nothing special – they were typical teenaged boys who showed no particular musical or intellectual gifts growing up.  It was very difficult for me to wrap my head around the scenario that not only were both of them songwriting geniuses, but that they found each other at a very young age and formed a partnership that somehow transcended their considerable individual gifts – their whole was so much greater than the sum of their parts that it seemed too good to be true.  Not only that, but there’s George Harrison to boot – another unremarkable teenager from the same unremarkable locality who may not have the equal of Lennon or McCartney as a songwriter, but who was extraordinary in his own right.  I thought about the whole thing a lot, and tried to come up with a rational explanation for the whole Lennon-McCartney-Harrison phenomenon.  But I couldn’t . . . which made me start to wonder whether they were really that special.


Q: I can’t explain quantum physics.  But that doesn’t mean I question its existence.


A: I’m not sure that’s a good analogy.  In any event, it seems to me that when it comes to the Beatles recorded output – in particular, the portion of their recorded output that Paul McCartney was responsible for – the emperor has no clothes.  Actually, that’s an exaggeration – McCartney has some clothes, but when you get up close and take a really close look at his clothes, they’re just not that impressive.   But I know I’m beating a dead horse here.  


Q: That’s never stopped you before!


A: Mea culpa.


*     *     *     *     *


As noted above, 2 or 3 lines has devoted a number of posts that attempt to shed light on the phenomenon that is the Beatles.


Click here to read why he considers Paul McCartney to be one of the most overrated recording artists of all time.


Click here to read the post that introduced the “songlet” concept.


Click here to read about the song that proves once and for all just have lazy and unimaginative a songwriter Paul McCartney can be.  To be fair, McCartney wrote that song when he was only 16, and the abilities of 16-year-olds are limited.  But why did McCartney feel the need for the Beatles to record the damn thing a few years later?


If you’re in the mood for still more dead-horse-beating on the subject of the Beatles, scroll to the top of this page.  Look for the “blog archive” header on the right side of the page.  Click on the “2021” link, and then click on the “February” link.  Under the name of the month, you’ll find a number of links to posts about early Beatles records.  (Click on the “March” link and you’ll find two more such posts.)


*     *     *     *     *


A “diss” track – “diss” is short for “disrespect – is a track that sh*ts on a rival artist.  “Diss” tracks often inspire replies, which may themselves inspire rebuttals – and so on and so forth.


Rappers have been belittling each other in “diss” tracks since at least 1986, when “The Bridge Wars” broke out between a group of rappers from the Bronx and a rival group from Queens.  (Both sides claimed that their borough was the true birthplace of hip-hop.) 


The most famous hip-hop rivalry was the East Coast-West Coast feud of the nineties, which reached its zenith in the ne plus ultra of “diss” tracks, Tupac Shakur’s infamous “Hit ‘Em Up,” which insults Notorious B.I.G. up one side and down the other.  (Tupac pulls no punches in that track, not only threatening to use his AK-47 and Glock 15-shot pistol on Biggie and his pals, but also claiming to have slept with his rival’s wife: “That's why I f*cked yo' b*tch, you fat motherf*cker!”)


But there were “diss” tracks long before there was hip-hop – most notably, Paul McCartney’s 1971 anti-John Lennon song, “Too Many People,” and Lennon’s very pointed anti-McCartney reply, “How Do You Sleep?”


The lyrics quoted at the beginning of today’s post are what Lennon originally wrote, but manager Allan Klein was worried by the “You probably pinched that b*tch anyway” line – a reference to McCartney’s concern that he might have unintentionally plagiarized the melody of “Yesterday.”  (After that tune came to him in a dream, McCartney asked his fellow Beatles, producer George Martin, and others if they recognized it.  No one did, so after a few weeks he stopped worrying.)


Klein came up with “And since you're gone you’re just another day,” which alludes to McCartney’s 1971 hit single, “Another Day.” (One reviewer said “Another Day” sounded like an advertising jingle for underarm deodorant, while another dismissed it as “Paulie picking his nose”).


In addition to the line about “Yesterday,” Lennon’s diss track also states that Paul was creatively if not literally dead (“Those freaks was right when they said you was dead”) and characterizes his post-Beatles recordings as elevator music (“The sound you make is Muzak to my ears”).


To add insult to injury, George Harrison – who may have loathed McCartney as much as Lennon did – also played on the record.  (Listen at about 2:40 of the song for Harrison’s guitar solo, which some believe is his best ever.)


Click here to listen to “How Do You Sleep?”


Click on the link below to buy the song from Amazon:


Friday, December 29, 2017

John Lennon – "Gimme Some Truth" (1971)


All I want is the truth
Just give me some truth

Leonard Downie, Jr., at the Washington Post for 44 years.  He was the paper’s Executive Editor when he retired in 2008.  

Downie was so concerned about avoiding bias or the appearance of bias in the Post’s political reporting  that he refrained from voting while he was a Post editor.  

Leonard Downie, Jr.
After he announced his retirement, a Post reader asked him if he planned to start voting.  This was his response:

I’ll have to think about that since I didn’t just stop voting [when I was the Executive Editor], I stopped having even private opinions about politicians or issues so that I would have a completely open mind in supervising our coverage.  It may be hard to change.

That may sound a little extreme, but you have to admire Downie’s integrity.  

*     *     *     *     *

I wonder if there is anyone in the media today who follows Len Downie’s example.

Frankly, I’d be happy if everyone just followed George Orwell’s example.


In his new book, Churchill & Orwell: The Fight for Freedom, author Thomas Ricks said something about George Orwell that distinguishes him from most current-day journalists:

Instead of shaping facts to fit his opinions, [Orwell] was willing to let facts change his opinions.

Let’s face it.  You can't say the same about most newspapers and television networks today.

George Orwell
Instead of weighing all the facts and coming to the appropriate conclusions based on those facts, “agenda journalists” start with a predetermined point of view and downplay any evidence that calls the validity of that point of view into question.

“The general modus operandi is simple,” according to one critic.  “[J]ump to premature conclusions, accept orchestrated events as [coinciding with reality] and interpretation as fact, ignore confuting or problematic data, and suppress or damp down countervailing intel when the truth eventually emerges.”  

*     *     *     *     *

The recently enacted “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act” will reduce federal income taxes for the vast majority of taxpayers.  In fact, the left-leaning Tax Policy Center has estimated that only 5% of Americans will pay more in taxes in 2018 than they would have if the new law had not been passed. 

But a number of polls show that most Americans believe that their taxes will go up – not down – as a result of the new legislation.


For example, a New York Times survey found that only 32% of respondents believed they would get a tax cut in 2018.

How are we to explain this discrepancy between what reality actually is and what Americans believe reality to be?

Could it be the result of the consistently negative reporting about the tax legislation in most of the mainstream media?    

*     *     *     *     *

Earlier this year, Harvard University’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics, and Public Policy reported that 60% of the news coverage of President Clinton’s first 100 days in office were negative, while 40% were positive.

The numbers were almost identical for Clinton’s successor, President Bush – 57% negative, 43% positive.

The press was much nicer to President Obama – only 41% of the stories about his first 100 days in office were negative, while 59% were positive.

President Trump got slammed in 80% of the news stories about his first 100 days.  Only 20% were positive. 


But CNN, NBC, and CBS were negative more than 90% of the time.

Even the Wall Street Journal – which some people believe is a right-wing paper – was negative 70% of the time.

Only Fox News had balanced coverage.  It was negative 52% of the time and positive 48% of the time.

*     *     *     *     *

Some of you will say that those numbers simply reflect reality – that Trump richly deserves every negative story that’s been published about him.

But consider this: according to the Center for Public Integrity, journalists contributed almost 25 times more money to Hillary Clinton’s campaign than Donald Trump’s campaign.  


Journalists as a group clearly feel tremendous fear and loathing for President Trump.  Most of the ones I know don’t apologize for feeling that way – they think he’s earned every bit of that fear and loathing.

*     *     *     *     *

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, most American newspapers were partisan publications.

Party newspapers didn’t apologize for what we call “fake news” today.  “The power of the press,” in the words of one antebellum journalist, “consists not in its logic or eloquence, but in its ability to manufacture facts, or to give coloring to facts that have occurred.”  

Political parties directly or indirectly subsidized newspapers.  In some instances, the relationships between party and publisher were unknown to readers.

Professor James Baughman
As the revered University of Wisconsin journalism professor James Baughman told the Center for Journalism Ethics in 2011, “by the 1950s most newspapers, large and small, as well as the broadcast networks, tried to present the news objectively. . . . [O]ur national news culture, whether print or broadcast, preferred the middle ground.”

But that changed in the 1970s and 1980s.  According to Baughman, 

Reporters were encouraged to add analysis into their stories.  Such analytical reporting more often than not, I think, had a liberal centrist slant.  Not hard liberal.  Not Rachel Maddow liberal.  Maybe “neo-liberal.”

Look at the The New York Times in 1960 vs. 2010.  The reportage is more interpretive.  This is not a problem for me, but it is an issue for my more conservative friends (and I have them).  The more analytical journalism could be off-putting for those on the fringes, left and especially on the right.  One reader’s analysis is another reader’s opinion.  Sixty percent of those surveyed by the Pew Research Center in 2009 believed reporting was politically biased.

There is a related problem that editors note and I encountered when I gave public service talks as director of the journalism school . . . a lot of people can’t distinguish the editorial page from the rest of the paper.  Some assume the worst, that the editorial views of the newspaper inform the rest of the paper.

All too often, that assumption is justified.

*     *     *     *     *

Most of us are far from being experts when it comes to tax reform, immigration policy, and the other political issues of the day.  We rely on newspapers and network news programs to present the facts relevant to those issues so we can make an informed decision concerning which side is right and which side is wrong.

At least that’s the way it used to work.  Nowadays, it’s more likely that we turn to a news source that tells us what we want to hear.  

Occasionally, I’ll come across a story in the Washington Post or another news source that’s on a topic that I actually know quite a bit about.  Almost without exception, those stories are a disappointment.   At best, they are naive or simplistic.  At worst, they are poorly-disguised advocacy pieces that reflect the author’s biases.

That makes me wonder whether the articles on topics that I don’t know anything about are equally flawed. 

*     *     *     *     *

In many cases, you don’t have to know anything about the subject of a newspaper story to know that its  conclusions aren’t worthy of being taken seriously.

For example, the author of the article may base his or her conclusions on anecdotal evidence that is inherently unreliable.  You have to wonder whether that author is too lazy to dig deeper into the facts, or is simply unaware that his or her arguments are illogical, inconsistent, or otherwise flawed.

A good example of this kind of “reporting” is a recent story about a large Utah family that ran on the Washington Post’s front page.  That article clearly implied that the new tax reform legislation would hurt that family, even though it is almost certain that the new law will help them.

The Post article pays lip service to objectivity by acknowledging that “[i]ndependent analysts say most families should get a tax cut” as a result of the new law, but undercuts that statement with quotes from the husband and wife who are the subject of the article.


We just don’t want to have less money than we had before,” says the wife.  In fact, her family won’t have less money – unless there is something very atypical about them.  And if her family is that atypical, why is the Post focusing on them rather than on families that are more representative of all American families?

It doesn’t feel like it’s for the middle class,” the husband says.  “It doesn’t feel genuine to me,” the wife chimes in.  Why should what the legislation “feels like” to one apparently ill-informed couple matter?  

It seems like it might be worse for us,” the husband says.  What are we to make of this statement?  We are reading this article in hopes of learning something about the effects the new tax law will have on Americans generally – and on our family in particular.  Instead, we’re told that one man has concluded that it “seems like” the new law “might” make his family’s situation worse.  SO WHAT??? 

Imagine if that Post reporter was assigned to write a story about a new cancer treatment.  Would he feature one cancer patient who said “It doesn’t feel like this treatment is for me,” or “It seems like I might be worse off” by undergoing that treatment?  Hopefully not.

I’m guessing that it’s news coverage like this story – which should embarrass the powers-that-be at the Post – that is responsible for the divergence between the very large number of Americans who will benefit from the new tax-reform law, and the relatively small number who believe they will benefit from that law.

*     *     *     *     *

I think every Post story about the new tax bill has stated – usually in the headline, subhead, or initial paragraph – that it will primarily help the wealthy.  

The implication is that this is a bad thing – few of us see ourselves as wealthy, after all.  


The new tax law cuts tax rates across the board – almost all taxpayers will benefit.  But the wealthy will benefit more than the poor or middle-class for one simple reason: THE WEALTHY PAY A LOT MORE IN TAXES.

The top-earning 1% of Americans paid roughly 46% of all individual federal income taxes in 2014.  (They earned only 17% of all the income earned by individuals that year.)  

Roughly 45% of Americans pay NO federal income tax.  (That percentage will go up as a result of the new tax law.)  By definition, people who pay zero income tax will not be directly benefitted by a reduction in federal income tax rates.  

Saying that the tax-reform bill primarily benefits the wealthy is about as meaningful as saying that a  law-enforcement initiative against car-theft rings primarily benefit the wealthy.  

But given that the wealthy own more cars, and more expensive cars, any police efforts aimed at car thieves do benefit the wealthy more.    

But would the Washington Post lead off a story about such a law-enforcement effort with a statement that it will primarily benefit the wealthy?  Of course not.

*     *     *     *     *

I don’t agree with the Washington Post when it comes to the tax-reform law.  I happen to think that the new tax legislation is a good thing for the country as a whole.  

But maybe the Post is right.  I’m willing to admit that’s a possibility.  


What I’m not willing to admit is that the Post ever truly had an open mind on the subject.  I would say that nine of out ten stories about the new tax law that have appeared in the Post over the past several weeks represent agenda journalism – not impartial, George Orwell-style reporting.  

I’m not a conspiracy-theory kind of guy, and I’m usually very skeptical of those who make broad generalizations – including those who assert that the mainstream media has a liberal agenda.  

But after reading what the Post has had to say about the new tax law, I have no choice but to conclude that the newspaper has its thumb on the scale.  Rather than keeping an open mind and considering all the relevant facts before coming to a conclusion about that law, the Post let its political point of view drive its “reporting.”

*     *     *     *     *

John Lennon wrote a lot of terrible songs, but “Gimme Some Truth” is not one of them.  In fact, it may be the best song ever released by Lennon as a solo artist.


“Gimme Some Truth” has some things in common with rap songs – Lennon speaks the lyrics more than he sings them, and he hangs a lot of words on a very simple musical framework.  There’s a lot of repetition – “Gimme Some Truth” would be very short if the repetition was eliminated.  (Of course, that’s the case with a lot of Beatles songs.)

Here’s “Gimme Some Truth”:



Click below to buy the song from Amazon: