Daniel Green

Profile

Graduate Student, Josef Korbel School of International Studies
International Affairs | Greater Denver Area, US

Experience

  • Oct 2011 - Present
    Graduate Assistant / Center for the Study of Europe and the World
    - Provided administrative and technical support for 2011 conference on European banking/debt crisis - Assisted with hosting CSEW speakers, ranging from visiting academics to sitting heads of government
  • Sept 2011 - Present
    Marketing Assistant / Office of Communications, Josef Korbel School of International Studies
    - Manage the official Korbel School website using OmniUpdate content management system - Maintain consistency in design and compliance with Korbel School and University of Denver media standards - Coordinate updates and news releases for social media with Korbel School Director of Communications - Created and regularly update Korbel podcast series, currently has 2500,000+ listens; series highlights student activities and features one-on-one interviews with distinguished guests and accomplished faculty
  • Sept 2011 - Present
    Administrative Assistant / Denver Council on Foreign Relations
    - Increased associate membership through recruitment drives at the University of Denver - Manage membership affairs such as creating renewal notifications and negotiating with the Council on Foreign - Relations on membership subscriptions to Foreign Affairs - Lead public outreach efforts by contacting chargé d’affaires at Denver-area consulates and press offices - Coordinated research committee meetings tasked with promoting sustainable macroeconomic development policies for Colorado
  • Sept 2011 - Present
    Graduate Research Assistant / Josef Korbel School of International Studies
    Under Dr. Paul Viotti: - Conducted comparative research into defense expenditures, currency exchange rates and sovereign debt between Eurozone states, India, China, Russia and the United States over a 15 year period - Edit and analyze manuscripts for upcoming publication as book Under Dr. Rachel Epstein: - Conducted quantitative research into the relationship between Austrian banks and postcommunist European states following 2008 financial crisis


  • May 2012 - Present
    Public Affairs Intern / United States Mission to NATO
    - Informed the Ambassador of previous day’s news and official guidance from Washington via daily morning reports for staff meetings and allied conferences - Distributed written analysis of breaking news stories to update senior military and diplomatic staff - Connected American universities to NATO by planning and executing tours and classroom videoconferences - Created standardized procedure handbook for hosting dignitaries, politicians, academics and university groups for use by the Public Affairs Advisor and event staff - Prepared itinerary for future three-day visit of NATO by Serbian parliamentarians and ministerial officials
  • Sept 2010 - Present
    Founder, Managing Editor / Arkansas:Abroad
    - Created independent media outlet for Arkansas-centric analysis of foreign policy and world events - Conducted twice-monthly podcast series with international guests; averaged 3,000+ listens per episode - Forged partnerships with like-minded organizations such as the Encyclopedia of Arkansas, ipadio and Heifer International for unique content creation - Live coverage of Arab Spring in Cairo featured in international (The Telegraph, www.amnesty.org) and domestic media (KARK, KBHS/KHOG, KUAR, Arkansas Times, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Good Morning America)


  • Dec 2008 - Present
    Administrative Specialist / Arkansas Academic Partnership in Public Child Welfare - University of Arkansas Office
    - Created, maintained and updated highly-secure, state-wide knowledge Management Systems to store, sort and analyze results from training incoming children welfare social workers from eight IV-E partner locations - Secured locations, prepared itineraries and arranged for hospitality services for quarterly and annual meetings of the entire IV-E partnership - Compiled and checked data for contractually-obligated monthly reports to the Department of Human Services’ Division of Children and Family Services, annual reports to Arkansas General Assembly - Pioneered use of H.323 videoconferencing technology for cost-savings intrastate high-definition videoconferences between six satellite locations simultaneously

  • Oct 2008 - Present
    Campaign Worker / Young Democrats of America
    - Generated publicity for local, state and federal-level Democratic candidates. - Canvassed polling precincts, distributed literature and led street teams, - Informed Washington County voters about Democratic candidates, polling locations and early voting rules
  • Oct 2007 - Present
    Customer Service Representative / Dillards
  • May 2003 - Present
    General Labor / Lion Oil Trading & Transportation
    - Part time job held during enrollment at University of Central Arkansas. - Responsible for construction, pipeline maintenance and upkeep, groundskeeping, basic automotive maintenance, cathodic protection surveys, data entry and electrical work - Assisted Vice President for Domestic Crude Supplies with creating maps with the locations of producing oil wells, trucking depots and pumping stations. - Tasked with managing field crews of no more than five workers with little oversight from superiors. - Required to know OSHA, Department of Transportation, EPA, Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality, Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department, Texas Department of Safety regulations.

Education

  • 2011 - 2013
    University of Denver
    MA in International Studies
    Activities: Center for the Study of Europe and the World; Denver Council on Foreign Relations; Global Colorado; Korbel Graduate Student Association - Vice President
  • 2003 - 2007
    University of Central Arkansas
    BA in History
    Activities: Arkansas Model UN; Honors College; National Society of Collegiate Scholars; Phi Alpha Theta; Sigma Alpha Lambda; United Nations Association of the United States of America

Additional Information

Honors:
Vice President, Josef Korbel School of International Studies Graduate Student Association - 2012-2013 Petry Endowed Scholarship, Josef Korbel School of International Studies - 2012-2013 Faculty Scholarship, Josef Korbel School of International Studies - 2011-2013 Presidential Scholarship, University of Central Arkansas - 2003-2007 Honors College, University of Central Arkansas - 2003-2007 National Society of Collegiate Scholars - 2004-2007 Phi Alpha Theta - 2005-2007 Arkansas Model UN - Co-Chair Special Political Committee (2006), Chair Special Political Committee (2007) Sigma Alpha Lambda - Charter Member 2004-2007
Interests:
Reading, music, writing, travel, art, debate, politics, philosophy, history (American/ Byzantine/ diplomatic/ European/ military), macroeconomics, post-modernism, architecture, comparative religious studies, ethics, technology, community dynamics, social media, international political economy, American foreign relations, public diplomacy, alliances, mutual defense organizations, intergovernmental organizations, supranational organizations,

Posts

GRAD SCHOOL PEP TALK

whatshouldwecallgradschool:

collab: pony-oh and WSWCgradschool

Absolutely. Without a doubt.

In Which Karen and I discuss China and Africa and iPhones
  • Karen: who did you interview this week?
  • Me: Maj. Gen. Chenghu of the PLA, Amb. (ret.) David Shinn, some student group
  • Karen: PLA?
  • Me: People's Liberation Army - China
  • Karen: What was he doing in [Colorado]?
  • Me: Annual conference held by the Center for China-US Cooperation. Which is run, ironically, by a Taiwanese professor. He was talking on China's growing role in Africa.
  • Karen: Oh wow. How was that? What's at stake for them in the motherland? I have a book abt that I need to read!
  • Me: Resources. Resources, resources, resources. They love them some oil and rare earth metals. They'll get in bed with Mugabe and al-Bashir for it, too. And it's seriously undercutting our efforts to promote good governance and human rights, too. Why should Malawi get a loan from us if it's conditional on government transparency and anti-corruption measures if they can go to Beijing and get the same package with no questions asked?
  • Karen: Ding ding. Good job, China.
  • Me: Ding ding. Ironically, that's the sound my phone makes when you send me a message. And that phone was made in China. Probably with rare earth metals from a conflict zone in Africa.
  • Karen: CIRCLE OF LIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIFE

God, yes. Tell me bout it.

An official excerpt from today's State Department press conference about Andrew WK's Middle East party mission
  • Q: And then secondly -- and this is a really kind of bizarre -- there's an entertainer who goes by the name of Andrew W.K. who says that he has been named or appointed by the State Department to be a cultural ambassador to appear at some event in Bahrain. Do you know anything about this?
  • MS. NULAND: And here I thought we were going to get through this whole briefing without that point coming up.
  • Q: Oh, you do -- you do. Is it -- is it true? You have something?
  • MS. NULAND: I do have a little something on this. So we had a Bahraini entity that approached the embassy about co-sponsoring a visit by this guy, who I take it is pretty popular there in Bahrain. That was initially approved, and then when more senior management at the embassy took a look at this, the conclusion was that this was not an appropriate use of U.S. government funds.
  • Q: Is that -- is that -- did -- would they -- the government would have paid for his trip over there had it -- (inaudible) --
  • MS. NULAND: I don't know what the details of our sponsorship were -- (inaudible) --
  • Q: Can you explain why it was -- was it -- I mean, his -- (chuckles) -- that the -- was it -- was the -- it was decided that it was inappropriate to send someone over there to Bahrain to represent the United States whose hits include, you know, "Party 'Til You Puke" and things like that? (Laughter.) Is that -- is that why it was -- is that why it was decided it was inappropriate?
  • MS. NULAND: Thank you for sharing that. I think --
  • Q: No, is that -- is that why?
  • MS. NULAND: I think the conclusion was when they looked at the body of his work that we didn't need to be part of this invitation. I'll leave --
  • Q: (Inaudible) -- and just hold on -- just to make clear, it was -- the invitation was actually never extended to him?
  • MS. NULAND: Frankly, I don't have the details. There may have been some preliminary conversations with him. But he is not going to be going to Bahrain on the U.S. government's dime.
  • Q: All right.

section9:

hollye83:

Slick Willy would very much like to see a binder full of women.

Never. Gets. Old.

You should see the one he has. No one else’s comes close.

Mongol Rally Postmortem

My brother did the Mongol Rally, a race from London to Mongolia this summer. Here’s a write-up on him in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette:

— The farthest Little Rock resident Michael Buckner had ever ventured from home was Seattle. The last time he went camping, he broke the poles to his borrowed tent. Driving a car with a manual transmission was as foreign to him as, say, Kazakhstan.

Yet, Buckner found himself with three other Arkansans traveling across Europe and Asia - including Kazakhstan - in July and August this summer, camping most nights and, yes, taking his turn at the wheel of a car with no automatic transmission. It was all part of Mongol Rally 2012, a car rally that begins in England and - about 10,000 miles later - ends in Mongolia and which organizers bill as the “greatest adventure in the world.”

Buckner joined the team of Chase Green of Fayetteville, Joseph Vance of Sheridan and Alyx VanNess of Little Rock, who dubbed themselves The Arkansas Chuggabugs and laid claim to being the first Arkansans to enter and complete the competition, all the while raising $2,000 for a couple of charities.

Buckner and friends went through 16 countries, ruined three tires, wore out the aforementioned transmission and changed it out in Kazakhstan for $100 and were almost jailed after refusing to pay a $500 bribe to clear a speeding ticket. Not all say they would do it again, but Buckner would.

“When you get to the finish line, you say, ‘Man, I would love to go back and do all of that,’” he said.

The Mongol Rally is an annual event that began in 2004 with six teams. By this year it had grown to 297 teams from 39 countries. Requirements for entry are few: Teams must use a very small vehicle with an engine displacement of no more than 1,200 cubic centimeters, which makes crossing about a third of the planet all the more challenging. Teams choose their own routes for the roughly 10,000-mile journey from England to Mongolia.

The teams also must raise at least $1,000 for charity. Team Arkansas Chuggabugs members said they raised about $1,000 for Heifer International and a like amount for Lotus Children’s Center in Mongolia, which cares for abandoned children.

Green was the driving force behind the Arkansas team. Now 25, he became enchanted with Mongolia in high school when thumbing through atlases trying to imagine what the maps of countries on the page looked like in real life. He went on to study geography in college.

“I had fallen in love with the idea [of going to Mongolia] my sophomore year of high school,” Green said. “It’s one of the least populated places on earth and everywhere was gorgeous.”

The population density of the nation is about 3.27 people per square mile compared with the United States, which has a population density of 51 people per square mile.

Mongolia didn’t disappoint.

“It blew my expectations out of the water,” Green said. “Every 30 kilometers is the most beautiful scenery you’ve ever seen in a completely new way.”

Green learned of the Mongol Rally when he was a senior in high school in 2004, and figured that would be his ticket to Mongolia. “If you Google Mongolia enough, there’s only so many things that pop up.”

It wasn’t until a little over a year ago that Green began planning in earnest for the Mongol Rally 2012 when he had enough money to pay the entrance fee, which is about $1,600.

Green recruited two friends who later got jobs and had to resign from the team. Joseph Vance, a friend from Green’s days at the Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts in Hot Springs, signed on.

“If you have the stomach for it, I recommend it,” Vance said.

Buckner and VanNess signed on earlier this year. Buckner, who obtained a degree in digital film making from the University of Central Arkansas last December, said he was won over by the chance to use the trip to make a documentary. Buckner, with the help of the other team members, hopes that it will be finished early next year for entry into film festivals and for sale to the general public.

As part of the planning, Green had to locate a small, affordable car. Through rally connections, the team obtained a 2003 Suzuki Ignis, a four-door subcompact for about $1,600.

They also found a roof rack that came from a Mercedes van. It hung over the roof line by several inches, causing team members to bump their heads getting out of the car, Vance said.

That, however, wasn’t as problematic as getting used to not only the manual transmission but, at least starting out in England, driving on the opposite side of the road. Vance was the only one with experience driving a manual, but even he was unprepared not only for driving on the left side of the road but sitting on the right side of the car as well.

“It was real scary,” Vance said.

On a lighter note, because the instruments were reversed, team members spent much of the trip turning on the windshield wipers when they wanted to turn on the headlights, he said.

The four spares they carried came in handy because they ended up using three of them, Buckner said.

The clutch was unable to hold up under the misuse of four drivers and gave out in Kazakhstan. It was the one time Vance thought they wouldn’t make it. It didn’t help matters that a spare Suzuki clutch was unavailable. But Kazakhstan ingenuity won the day.

Mechanics fitted an Opel clutch into the Suzuki and the team was on its way, only $100 lighter for the trouble.

“It was amazing,” Buckner said.

Green and Vance miss the Suzuki, which they were required to leave with organizers who turned it over to Mongolian authorities to re-sell in Mongolia.

“That little guy, he went through everything,” Vance said. “We treated him so bad, and he still took care of us.”

Not everything went smoothly. VanNess dropped out in Georgia about a month into the trip, fearing the misery she felt would be a bane to her teammates.

“Everyone had a different experience,” she said. “I had gotten to the point where I learned what I wanted and grew as a person.”

Besides, VanNess said, her teammates could use the extra space they gained with her departure. “Our car was incredibly tiny and cramped. I knew they would appreciate the extra space.”

Indeed, on the last three weeks of the trip, the remaining teammates took turns sleeping in the back seat.

Both VanNess and Vance were struck by the friendliness of the people they encountered.

All described chance encounters with people who invited them into their homes, introduced them to family and friends, and shared their food.

“It blew me away how generous everyone was,” VanNess said.

Their least favorite country was Azerbaijan, where a speeding ticket could only go away with a $700 charge, that included a bribe, they refused to pay, the team recalled. The police didn’t jail anyone but did hold Green’s visa and other travel documents before finally relenting.

Buckner missed having ready access to the Internet as well as the concept of free drink refills that is regular part of life in the United States. The cash economy took some adjustment for people used to debit cards. Eating food on a budget was interesting. Pickled tomatoes, for instance, became a breakfast staple.

Showering was an infrequent relief.

Green liked that the adventure had higher aspirations than just completing a journey.

“That’s the idea that stuck with me, that you also were raising money for charity,” Green said, adding that fundraising was the most difficult part of the planning. “That money wouldn’t have been raised otherwise. People don’t raise money to go to Costa Rica and donate to a charity.”

Vance said it would be difficult for him to travel anywhere as a tourist now. “Full immersion is the only way to go.”

Teacher’s strike in Chicago just got real.

All I heard when I was in Brussels was that a day trip to Cologne wasn’t worth it, that there wasn’t enough to see or do and the city has no life.

I found exactly the opposite. Fantastic museums, a city that is well-managed and clean, with a history both amazing and tragic. I absolutely loved it. Wish I had enough time to visit again.

One of the things I love about being in Brussels is its connections to international rail. Being one of the smaller countries in Europe helps, as does its location. Since Belgium was a little slow to develop its own connections with neighbors, the Dutch, Germans and French basically pitched in to connect their networks via Belgium. Thalys, the Belgian high speed equivalent of the French TGV or the German ICE, has only 10% of it owned by the Belgians.

Long story short, I can get to Lille from Brussels in 30 minutes for only 14€, each way. BAM!

My girlfriend is spending her summer working at an NGO in Vienna that documents the stories of trafficked women, and helps them gain working skills and learn German so they can gain legal residency in Austria. This isn’t a notice from her NGO, but from one out there that is working on same of the issues. I like it.

DIA Conspiracy Theories = Sigh of Relief
  • French EU Worker: Ah, you are from Denver?
  • Me: (Please, please, please don't ask about the shooting) Yes.
  • French EU Worker: You have a, uh, what you call it? Cursed airport?
  • Me: This is the first time I've ever been glad to hear someone bring up those crazy conspiracy theories.
  • French EU Worker: Quoi?
  • Me: Nothing. So, yeah. About DIA...
Hello. I was perusing the Colorado tag and happened upon your post. I'm from the Denver-metro area and while reading, your second point resonated with me. I grew up very near Columbine and my father was one of the first police officers called to the scene. I've felt irked all day by the dredging up of past memories that help little with the tragedy at hand. I thought your simple statement (and post) summed it up well and it's nice to think someone else noticed. Thank you. That's all.

I’ll be the first to admit, I’m still a mile high newbie. But it’s telling that no one talks about Columbine in Denver. It’s a trauma that’s still very real and visceral, and it’s rubbed off on me in a lot of ways. The fact that news organizations and people with personal agendas try to make that connection is shameless and with done utter disregard for the emotions and memories of people in Denver and Colorado overall.

They should know better.

I’ve been living in Denver for the past year or so of my life, and it is one of the most gorgeous, wonderful places I’ve ever lived. The people are kind, the weather is amazing and it is impossible to have a bad day when every time you look to the west you see towering mountains with snowcapped summits.

What happened in Aurora is shocking. There’s simply no other word for it. I could barely get any work done today, trying to track down my friends and family to make sure they were okay. Now that I know they are, I’ve had some time to think about what people are saying and how they’re reacting to the news out of Aurora:

  1. Colorado has open-carry laws. This means that anyone who isn’t banned from owning a gun can have one on their hip or under their am, so long as it is visible. Guns are a part of Colorado culture, regardless of whether you believe that to be good or bad.
  2. Stop with Columbine. It is still within living memory of nearly everyone in that city, and the comparison serves no purpose beyond sensationalism, some cheap pull for boosted readership or emotional responses.
  3. When you take an event that has resulted in the death of others and politicize it for your own selfish, short-sighted reasons, you’re doing nothing less than making your stand on the corpse of someone’s dearly departed.
The first issue is with the nature of the project – as I infer from the title on page one (the cover page) of your research design, you are interested in the ‘GEEK-TURKISH’ conflict. Those Geeks are creating some dreadful problems for the Turks, as well as for NATO, so this is a worthy topic for research, but I don’t know how you are going to get at all of their nefarious activities without going undercover and penetrating their networks. Although I can imagine that you could do so easily without too much disguise (I’d say you were a natural for undercover work in Geekdom) it may not be possible within the limits of an MA thesis.

- Unnamed MA Social Science Methodology Professor.

I don’t think I’ve ever laughed this hard at myself before. One friggin’ typo, and this is what I got in return (Plus an A!)

I’m back.

So, my friend Megan is participating in the Cherry Blossom 10-mile run to raise funds for Run for Congo Women. A 501(c)(3) organization, funds raised will help women in the DRC who have lost everything with direct financial assistance, job skills training, rights awareness education, and the resources to find the stability and self-sufficiency they need to get back on their feet. The smallest contribution will help. If you can’t contribute, at least reblog.

A Conversation About Reagan At The Berlin Wall
  • Me: I have to interview the guy who wrote "Mr Gorbachev, tear down this wall" tomorrow. PRESSURE
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV TEAR DA CLUB UP
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV WATCH THE THRONE
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV GO SUPER SAIYAN
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV DIE DIE DIE MY DARLING
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV RELEASE THE KRAKEN
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV SO MANY PEOPLE IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV HOW'S ABOUT A PIECE OF PIE DING DONG DING DONG
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV SHE WON'T LIVE FOREVER BUT THEN AGAIN WHO DOES
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV COME WITH ME IF YOU WANT TO LIVE
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV HAVE YOU EVER DANCED WITH THE DEVIL IN THE PALE MOONLIGHT
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV I DRIVE A DODGE STRATUS
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV IT'S CLOBBERIN TIME
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV THEY PEED ON YOUR RUG DUDE
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV ATTICA ATTICA ATTICA
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV AS FAR BACK AS I COULD REMEMBER I WANTED TO BE A GANGSTER
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV THATS LIKE YOUR OPINION MAN
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV DOES MARCELLUS WALLACE LOOK LIKE A BITCH
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV COME IN HERE DEAR BOY HAVE A CIGAR YOU'RE GOING TO GO FAR
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV DID YOU EVER KNOW THAT YOU'RE MY HERO
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV JUMP AROUND JUMP JUMP JUMP JUMP JUMP
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV LIVE FROM NEW YORK IT'S SATURDAY NIIIIIIIIIIGHT
  • Me: MR GORBACHEV C C C COMBO BREAKER
  • Drew: MR GORBACHEV ITS-A ME MARIO

What he said.

Audio

  • Jonathon Coulton - IKEA I’ve spent $180 there on furniture over the last month, and I’m not ashamed in the least.
    10 plays
  • David Bowie - Cat People (Putting Out Fire) Started off my day by accidentally setting a towel on fire on my stove. I was going to boil some water to make coffee, and ended up turning on the wrong burner that I had left a towel a little too close to on top of. Today in Metaphors For One’s Life.
    650 plays
  • Jello Biafra & Mojo Nixon - Are You Drinkin’ With Me Jesus
    30 plays
  • Full version of “Commin’ Home” the themesong to Superjail!
    10 plays
  • The Beastie Boys - Shambala
    0 plays
  • Iggy & The Stooges - Raw Power
    0 plays
  • Daft Punk - Derezzed
    20 plays
  • Spokey Dokey - The Seatbelts Some of the best blues harp I’ve ever heard.
    0 plays
  • Pierre Henry - Psyche Rock Sound familiar?
    0 plays
  • The Clash - Julie’s Been Working for the Drug Squad
    110 plays
  • The Black Keys - I’ll Be Your Man
    0 plays
  • Elvis Costello & Brodsky Quartet - Damnation’s Cellar When any form of deity that you might enjoy Can be conjured with a test-tube and a flame If it’s out there then science can explain it Or at least remove the blame And if theres is anyone you’d like to see again The speak up quickly Send us back Da Vinci then we don’t have to ponder The maddening smile of “La Giaconda” The critics say Nijinsky, the dancer, of course While the punters would probably prefer the horse You’ll find it’s quicker than history, cheaper than divorce Bring back Liberace or Ollie and Stan Shakespeare will have to wait his turn Elvis Presley and Puccini shall return I suppose we live and learn, though it’s hard to believe as we cheerfully burn It’s curious Some will call for justice. There are murders to solve What about Hitler? Or at least Lee Harvey Oswald Give us this day and everything we squander Anyone beautiful Somebody blonder They’ll never please mankind, so lie back and enjoy it Stop press: They’ve just decided to destroy it
    20 plays
  • unnamed band - The Good, The Bad And The Queen It’s the blessed routine For The Good, The Bad And The Queen Just moving out of dreams with no physical wounds at all Don’t kick the crack heads of the green They are a political party And the kids are never going to be tired ‘Cause everything has ever so slightly come
    0 plays
  • ekstasis: Titus Andronicus - A More Perfect Union …Since the enemy is rustling around in the trees Oh, I thought I had gotten away, but they followed me to 02143 Woe, woe is me! No one knows the trouble I see. When they hang Jeff Davis from a sour apple tree, I sit beneath the leaves and weep. Oh, none of us shall be saved, every man will be a slave. For John Brown’s body lies moldering in the grave, And there’s rumblings down in the cave. So if it’s time to choose your sides, And to show this dirty city how we do the Jersey slide. Oh if it deserves a better class of criminal, Then I’m-a give it to them tonight. So we’ll rally around the flag, Rally around the flag, Rally ‘round the flag boys, rally once again, shouting the battle cry of freedom!… …This track (in fact, the whole album) is wonderfully absurd. In the first 2 minutes we get: a quote from Lincoln (used in Ken Burns’ documentary The Civil War), a mention of the Fung Wah bus, and back-to-back references to Billy Bragg and Springsteen. For all the references and fife-and-drum backbeats, something becomes incredibly clear when listening to these folks…they’re absolutely sincere. This isn’t ironic reference, no matter how silly it looks. They made a concept album vaguly about the Civil War and they laced it with politics, pop culture references, parochial pride for the North-east corridor and a surprisingly deep knowledge of literature/history. The lead singer wrote, a while back, about playing at the VICE 15th anniversary party: …For every person drinking a beer or snorting coke in the bathroom, there were five people taking his or her picture, and they seemed to all be dressed as characters from Pulp Fiction. Okay, fair enough. It is fun, like, for Facebook and stuff, right? Something like that? Okay, fine… He goes on to describe multiple people getting assaulted by security and a room full of truly awful sounding hipsters (i’m using that term in the most prejoritive sense possible) and concludes with this: …Kids, we are blowing it. Everything they say about us is true. They’re absolutely sincere and it’s sometimes difficult to listen to…they’re not exactly subtle and we’re not used to people making statements without some implicit qualification or distance. But punk was never good at subtly or “distance” and though most people might peg this “Emo” I’m willing to go out on a limb; this is the best punk music made in a long time. It’s weird, Gen Y punk to be sure…but it’s punk nonetheless. If you want further evidence for this assertion, listen to another cut from the album “Four Score and Seven.” They’re doing something new here and for all its absurdity and my distancing…I really like it. Right on.
    50 plays
  • Eels - Novocaine for the Soul Favorites, yes.
    20 plays
  • Todd Snider - Talking Seattle Grunge Rock Blues Well we spread the word through the undergroundThat we were the hottest new thing in townThe record guy came out to see us one dayAnd just like always we didn’t playIt knocked him outHe said he loved our workHe said he loved our work but he wasn’t sure if he could sell a record with nothing on it.I said “Man, you’ve been doing that all year.”
    0 plays
  • Hayes Carll - She Left Me For Jesus God, I love this song. Not for the religious or those with no sense of humor.
    0 plays
  • Titus Andronicus - Richard III And we can no longer affordWaiting for someone to lift this terrible swift swordIn our basements, we all look so boredWe’ve never seen the glory of the coming of the LordThere will be parties, there will be funThere’ll be tall gallows for everyoneAnd we will all be sleeping easyUpon the sinking of the sunBut there’s only one dream that I keep close,And it’s the one of my hand at your throat
    0 plays
  • Elvis Costello & The Attractions - You’ll Never Be A Man
    0 plays
  • Babyshambles - There She Goes
    30 plays

Recent tracks

  • Under the God by {'mbid': '39dfc059-93b1-41a1-af27-3a753c0711d3', '#text': 'Tin Machine'}
    8 weeks ago
  • My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue) by {'mbid': '0f3515b0-75c9-46c9-b26c-4cd05d26eae7', '#text': 'Neil Young & Crazy Horse'}
    8 weeks ago
  • If There Is Something by {'mbid': '331ce348-1b08-40b9-8ed7-0763b92bd003', '#text': 'Roxy Music'}
    8 weeks ago
  • Rise by {'mbid': '68950696-ee9a-49b2-a8c2-d1d6c19355cc', '#text': 'Public Image Ltd.'}
    8 weeks ago
  • Wild Child by {'mbid': '9d1ebcfe-4c15-4d18-95d3-d919898638a1', '#text': 'Lou Reed'}
    8 weeks ago
  • Nightclubbing by {'mbid': 'f37b3f31-b1f8-4b88-8cb5-b34f709b17d7', '#text': 'Iggy Pop'}
    8 weeks ago
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