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Posts Tagged ‘Plato’

Schumpeter: The tussle for talent

The best companies are obsessed by “the vital few”

PLATO believed that men are divided into three classes: gold, silver and bronze. Vilfredo Pareto, an Italian economist, argued that “the vital few” account for most progress. Such sentiments are taboo today in public life. Politicians talk of a “leadership class” or “the vital few” at their peril. Schools abhor picking winners. Universities welcome the masses: more people now teach at British ones than attended them in the 1950s.

In the private sector things could hardly be more different. The world’s best companies struggle relentlessly to find and keep the vital few. They offer them fat pay packets, extra training, powerful mentors and more challenging assignments. If anything, businesses are becoming more obsessed with ability. …

14 of the Most Likable Anti-Heroes

Examples of anti-heroes can be found in works stretching all the way back to Homer and Shakespeare, but it’s perhaps Hollywood that has done the greatest job in satisfying our craving for these flawed, fascinating and scene-stealing characters.

10 Hot Babes Dressed in Star Wars Outfits

One of the greatest things about Star Wars are the hot women it has inspired to wear skimpy costumes. Here are 10 of the ladies you’re looking for!

Gary Coleman Dead; Gary Coleman Dies After Intracranial Hemorrhage

Gary Coleman died Friday, days after suffering an intracranial hemorrhage, a rep for the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center confirmed to The Associated Press. He was 42. There really are no words. It’s just too sad. Coleman’s death comes at the end of a decades-long road of sorrow for the diminutive former child star we once lovingly [...]

Dana Plato Son Tyler Lambert Commits Suicide

The so-called Diff’rent Strokes Curse has struck again…. The son of late ’80s child star Dana Plato has taken his own life in a tragic repeat of history almost 11 years to the day of the death of his mother, The National Enquirer has learned.Tyler Lambert, who had a history of substance abuse and depression, died [...]

Eagles | 05.01 | San Jose

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Tracy Nunnery

Eagles :: 05.01.10 :: HP Pavilion :: San Jose, CA

The Eagles :: 05.01 :: San Jose

From the shiver inducing, tight harmonies of opener “Seven Bridges Road” to the raucous finisher “Life In The Fast Lane,” the Eagles proved one of the sturdiest vintage rock acts still stomping it out after just shy of 40 years. While it’d be easy for them to sleepwalk through shows and simply collect wheelbarrows of cash, the level of musicianship and showmanship of this nearly three-hour concert – not to mention their clear pleasure and affection for the tunes and one another – marks the Eagles as a rare exception in the classic rock camp, where today’s performances hold up admirably when compared to yesteryear.

While decades of mega-sized concerts have made performing to massive numbers of people seem normal, the Eagles were one of the pioneers of stadium filling rock in the 1970s, epitomized by 1976′s zeitgeist capturing Hotel California and its ensuing omnipresence. They’d already sold a mountain of vinyl before that but Hotel cemented them as one of the voices of the Baby Boom generation. There is a deep, powerful connection with their music for multitudes of folks, which has made them one of the most lucrative veterans out there since reforming in 1994. They handily filled HP Pavilion with close to 20,000 people twice during this two-night run, and showed no signs that this was the last time they’d be hitting the road despite Glenn Frey‘s crack about it being “The Assisted Living Tour” by “those darn Eagles, the band that time forgot.” To the contrary, their enthusiasm for the new material off 2007′s Long Road Out of Eden, their first studio full-length since 1979′s The Long Run, not to mention the greater impact of these new songs live – the simmering, melancholy “Waiting In The Weeds” is primo Eagles smoldering mope and the title track is the closest they’ve ever come to capturing another “Hotel California” style epic – indicates that there’s more life left to this band than many might suspect, especially given their golden years status – Don Henley, Timothy B. Schmidt and Joe Walsh are all 62-years-old and Frey is right behind them at 61.

Nostalgia is strong onstage – and in the stalls – but that should come as no surprise from guys who recorded a melancholy theme album about being Old West desperados while still young men. There’s always been a strong sense of backward glancing and blue rumination to their music, and that’s only intensified with age, right down the to sepia tone images of windswept rural scenes and “regular folks” lost in thought projected on the massive half-circle screen behind them. The Eagles have this shit figured out, building on their rep and guiding their audience through a ridiculously satisfying experience. “We may lose and we may win though we will never be here again” may not be Plato but it works as a philosophy for modern man, and going a bit deeper, fits in nicely with the American Romantics like Thoreau and Walt Whitman that have long fueled Henley’s pen, in particular.

The Eagles :: 05.01 :: San Jose

The new songs were spaced between blocks of pleasure button hits, a nice push/pull that created a sense of seamless continuity between today and the still crazy good numbers like “One of These Nights,” “Witchy Woman” and “Peaceful Easy Feeling” – music, that despite its ubiquitous nature still hits home in a big way. Despite my natural cynicism towards most arena rock acts, I was belting out the words to “Take It Easy” and “Heartache Tonight” with my running partner, awash in rock show sweetness and happy to share in this wide communal evening. The Eagles have soundtracked countless moments in countless lives, and that generated an intense feeling of connection in the Pavilion, which the band obviously vibed on and used to fuel a number of fun, rowdy jams – often fueled by guitarist Stuart Smith, who overall outshined Walsh and Frey, though neither vet were any slouch – particularly on a swell, horn-bolstered version of James Gang staple “Funk #49″ and surprise standout “Dirty Laundry.”

These blue jean millionaires are a living example of how the ’70s California mindset can sometimes turn out, and that workingman-with-a-bankroll thing is also part of their continuing appeal. This was a lovely experience, but definitely a high end affair, the musical equivalent of a big budget Hollywood film. There are few accidents in their production but there are far worse things than being reliably excellent and wisely playing to the sensibilities of one’s fans, especially when the focus remains on the music. Every one of them can still play their instruments and sing with real power, and the classy supplementary musicians smooth out any rough edges and add some nice twists to familiar fare. With nods to their solo work and a strong sense of engagement with the entire Eagles catalog, there’s really nothing bad to say about this gig. Based on this night, I’d gladly see the Eagles again in a heartbeat, and with far more enthusiasm than most of their Golden State peers still humping it from stage to stage.

Eagles :: 05.01.10 :: HP Pavilion :: San Jose, CA
Set I: Seven Bridges Road, How Long, Busy Being Fabulous, I Don’t Want to Hear Anymore, Guilty of the Crime, Hotel California, Peaceful Easy Feeling, I Can’t Tell You Why, Witchy Woman, Lyin’ Eyes, The Boys of Summer, In The City, The Long Run

Set II: No More Walks in the Wood, Waiting In the Weeds, Love Will Keep Us Alive, Take It to the Limit, Long Road Out of Eden, Walk Away, One of These Nights, Life’s Been Good, Dirty Laundry, Funk #49, Heartache Tonight, Life in the Fast Lane

E: Take It Easy, Rocky Mountain Way, Desperado

Eagles Tour Dates :: Eagles News :: Eagles Concert Reviews

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The Case for Buying Foreign Bonds from Low-Deficit Countries

Bill Gross is recommending that investors buy the debt of low-deficit countries. Via Business Week:As Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Gross, manager of the world’s biggest bond fund, said yesterday in an interview with Tom Keene on Bloomberg…

Governments From Around the World ADMIT That They Carry Out False Flag Terror

Preface: Please skip to the end of this essay (entitled “Why Should I Care?”) if you want to see why this issue is important to the economy, civil rights, and the political causes which are most important to you.Governments from around the world admit …

Nine Months Before Operation Northwoods, Government Leaders Suggested False Flag Terror in the Dominican Republic

Everyone knows about Operation Northwoods, where the American Joint Chiefs of Staff signed off on a plan to blow up AMERICAN airplanes (using an elaborate plan involving the switching of airplanes), and also to commit terrorist acts on American soil, a…

Price fixing

Why it is important to put a price on nature

THE insight that nature provides services to mankind is not a new one. In 360BC Plato remarked on the helpful role that forests play in preserving fertile soil; in their absence, he noted, the land was turned into desert, like the bones of a wasted body. The idea that the value provided by such “ecosystem services” can be represented by ecologists in a way that economists can get to grips with, though, is rather newer. A number of the thinkers who have made it a hot topic in the past decade gathered at a meeting on biodiversity and ecosystem services held by the Royal Society, in London, on January 13th and 14th. They looked at the progress and prospects of their attempts to argue for the preservation of nature by better capturing the value of the things – such as pollination, air quality and carbon storage – that it seemingly does for free.

Environmental valuations aim to solve a problem that troubles both economists and ecologists: the misallocation of resources. Take mangrove swamps. Over the past two decades around a third of the world’s mangrove swamps have been converted for human use, with many turned into valuable shrimp farms. In 2007 an economic study of such shrimp farms in Thailand showed that the commercial profits per hectare were $9,632. If that were the only factor, conversion would seem an excellent idea. …

Given Everything That’s Happened, Shouldn’t We At Least ASK?

Given that Cheney is apparently at least partly responsible for creating the terror problem in Yemen …And that one of the most highly decorated soldiers of all time says that “war is a racket” …Given that FBI agents and CIA intelligence officials,…