Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Pop History Moment: Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock



On this day in 1969 the Woodstock Festival ended with a searing rendition of The Star-Spangled Banner by one of the rock era's most electrifying performers, Jimi Hendrix; although attendance at Woodstock peaked around 500,000 only about 180,000 die-hards remained to witness Hendrix's two hour performance, which culminated in this number.
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Happy Birthday Andy Samberg

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What do you get when you put a dork inside the body of a frat boy? Why, you get Andy Samberg, of course; lusciously cute, yes, but a total geek besides. It's the most irresistible combination since chocolate and peanut butter!

Currently one of the resident hot guys in the cast of Saturday Night Live*, I'm sure it won't be long now before he's out on his own, making crappy movies like the rest of his fellow alumni; in the meantime he can keep himself busy working with Jorma Taccone and Akiva Schaffer in the comedy troupe The Lonely Island and going viral on the Internet by adding to a string of hits which already includes Dick in a Box, Jizz in My Pants, I'm on a Boat, and Motherlover...

*Although having actually seen Seth Meyers in person, I can no longer consider Samberg either the only or the hottest male cast member!
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POPnews - August 18th

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[The misshapen lump of rock orbiting Mars now known as Phobos also has a more tragic moniker - the 'doomed moon'... Thought to be an asteroid trapped by Martian gravity, in about eleven million years or so the same pull that brought them together will either a) send Phobos careening into the so-called Red Planet or else b) shatter it into rubble - which debris will then give Mars one of those snazzy rings like Saturn has; at least for awhile, that is, until those rings begin raining down onto the planet below. Hopefully by then the human settlers of the place will have long since blasted Phobos into oblivion to give themselves a clearer view of the Crab Nebula!]

1201 - The Latvian capital of Riga was founded.

1572 - Henry of Navarre - the future Huguenot King of France, Henri IV - married Marguerite de Valois in a supposed attempt to reconcile Protestants and Catholics in a country badly riven by sectarian strife; nevertheless, Henri IV ended up converting to Catholicism in July 1593 at the behest of his mistress, Gabrielle d'Estrées. Even that wasn't enough to avert disaster for long... His Majesty would be assassinated by the rabidly Catholic François Ravaillac in May 1610.

1587 - The first British child native to America, Virginia Dare, was born in the Roanoke Colony.

1634 - Urbain Grandier, accused and convicted of sorcery, was burned alive in the French town of Loudun.

1838 - The Wilkes Expedition - which would explore the Puget Sound and Antarctica - weighed anchor at Hampton Roads, Virginia.

1848 - Camila O'Gorman and Ladislao Gutierrez were executed by firing squad on the orders of Argentine dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas - an action so shocking given that the 20-year-old socialite was at the time heavily pregnant it hastened the collapse of the de Rosas Regime. The fact that it was Gutierrez' child she was carrying (let alone that the child had been conceived out of wedlock) was shocking enough in those days in and of itself, but the fact that he was a priest also upset a few delicate sensibilities. The story later inspired the two films: Mario Gallo's 1910 work Camila O'Gorman, starring Blanca Podestá (itself one of the first films ever made in Argentina and now considered lost), and Camila; directed by María Luisa Bemberg and starring Susú Pecoraro in the title role - with Imanol Arias and Héctor Alterio - it became Argentina's second-ever entry into consideration for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film*.

*It lost to Switzerland's first-ever winner in the category, La diagonale du fou.

1862 - Trader Andrew Myrick was killed at the Battle of Lower Sioux Agency; when his body was found days later his mouth stuffed with grass. Myrick had earlier refused to aid in the alleviation of famine in the area by suggesting the local First Nations 'eat grass' to survive.

1868 - French astronomer Pierre Jules César Janssen discovered helium.

1877 - Asaph Hall discovered the Martian moon Phobos, having already discovered Mars' other moon Deimos a week earlier.

1904 - Chris Watson resigned as Prime Minister of Australia, only to be succeeded by George Reid.

Photobucket1920 - The 19th Amendment to the US Constitution was ratified by the state of Tennessee, thus ensuring American women the right to vote. Despite the fact that the measure had the vocal support of President Woodrow Wilson as early as January 1918, the Senate repeatedly held up the measure - at one point defeating it by a mere three votes. The Senate's recalcitrance inspired the National Woman's Party to call for the defeat of those Senators who'd gone on record as opposed to it in the 1918 midterm election - an action which was seen as effective, since after the Senate's next vote the tally was 56 to 25 in favour! Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby certified the amendment's adoption on August 26th, and in February 1922 the US Supreme Court ruled in Leser v. Garnett that the 19th Amendment had been properly adopted.

1938 - The Thousand Islands Bridge was dedicated by US President Franklin D. Roosevelt; more correctly called a causeway, it links Upstate New York with Ontario between Kingston and Cornwall at the scenic Thousand Islands region, where the St. Lawrence River flows into Lake Ontario.

1958 - Vladimir Nabokov's controversial novel Lolita was published in the US, having already published in France in 1955.

1964 - South Africa was barred from sending any athletes to the 18th Olympic Summer Games (held in Tokyo) due to its horrendous record on human rights; these days, of course, any country with a dire attitude towards its own citizens and their liberty would be hosting the games.

1976 - In the Korean Demilitarized Zone at Panmunjeom, the Axe Murder Incident resulted in the death of two US soldiers, Captain Arthur Bonifas and First Lieutenant Mark Barrett, at the hands of North Korean soldiers.

1977 - Anti-apartheid activist Steven Biko was arrested in King William's Town, South Africa.

1989 - Leading Colombian presidential hopeful Luis Carlos Galán was assassinated near Bogotá.

1992 - Wang Laboratories filed for bankruptcy.

2005 - Dennis Rader was sentenced to serve 10 consecutive life sentences in prison for his having committed the BTK serial killings in and around Wichita between 1974 and 1991; his earliest eligibility for parole will be in 2180, after having served 175 years.
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