Friday, November 28, 2025

Interview with writer John Green

The following is a very interesting interview, for the New York Times's Sunday magazine, with writer John Green, who is no doubt best known for his YA novel The Fault in Our Stars. The book was published in 2012, and has sold more than twenty million copies.

Mr. Green is also the author of the 2025 non-fiction work, Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection.

The interviewer is The Times's David Marchese, who is one of the two alternating hosts of the paper's regular feature "The Interview"; the transcripts of the interviews appear, along with videos of the conversations. 

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/22/magazine/john-green-interview.html?smid=url-share

The videos are also available as podcasts, on various platforms (including YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts).

Lulu Garcia-Navarro is The Interview's other host. 

While I have read a number of "The Interview" features, this is the first time I have watched the video version--a video, for what it is worth, that I found to be particularly vivid, and absorbing.  Some of the most compelling aspects of the interview concern Mr. Green's experiences with anxiety, and the several months he spent, as a young man, working as a chaplain at a hospital for severely sick children--and the effect that working at the hospital had on the course of his life.

Here is the link to the YouTube page for "The Interview"series:

https://www.youtube.com/@theinterviewpodcast

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Ken Burns's "The American Revolution," on PBS

I'm very much looking forward to watching the new film from Ken Burns, The American Revolution. It is a six-part film, twelve hours in length, beginning tonight and continuing through Friday, on PBS. Work on the documentary began in 2015.

Tonight's episode airs from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. (Eastern time).  It can also be streamed at pbs.org, and via various apps and platforms (see link below).

The film is directed by Mr. Burns, Sarah Botstein and David Schmidt. 

https://www.pbs.org/kenburns/the-american-revolution/about-the-film

Thursday, November 13, 2025

John Cleary, and Kent State

On November 7th, an obituary appeared in The New York Times about John Cleary, whose name I was not familiar with (though I remembered, distinctly, a well-known--and grim--picture of him, from the cover of an issue of Life magazine in May of 1970).  Mr. Cleary died on October 25th at age 74. 

When I read about his death, I looked in my apartment for the 1970 Life magazine issue (an image of which appeared in the Times obituary).

I have perhaps fifteen or twenty issues of Life that I saved, from the 1960s and early 1970s--and thought I had the issue with Mr. Cleary on the cover.  I did have it (image at left); it was stored with other old magazines in a closet. 

The magazine's cover photograph, taken by Kent State University student Howard Ruffner, is riveting. It shows Mr. Cleary, on his back, after having been shot in the chest, when Ohio National Guard troops began firing at Kent State students. It was May 4th of 1970. Students were protesting the American incursion into Cambodia, an expansion of the Vietnam War; they were also protesting the presence of the National Guard on the Kent State campus. 

Mr. Cleary was not taking part in the protest. As seen in the photo on Life's cover, he is being given aid by other students.

There had been protests at the university, during the daytime, on May 1st. Near midnight, and after midnight, vandalism and confrontations with police took place in the city of Kent.  Wikipedia indicates those involved "appeared to be a mix of bikers, students, and transient people." Five police officers, according to the website, were injured by thrown beer bottles. Later, on May 2nd, local police were told by an informant that the campus R.O.T.C. building would be destroyed. At the request of the city's Mayor, Ohio's Governor sent the National Guard to the university. By the time the Guard arrived, the night of May 2nd, the R.O.T.C. building was burning.

Two days later, on May 4th, four students were shot and killed by Guardsmen at Kent State. One of the students, Sandra Lee Scheuer, was shot while walking to class.  Another of those killed was Bill Schroeder. A close friend was quoted in Life: "He wasn't a participant [in the protest] and he wasn't just a bystander. He was open-minded.  He went there to observe." Of Jeffrey Miller, who was also killed, his father said: "Jeff stood up for what he believed and he didn't believe in violence."  The father of student Allison Krause, also killed, said:  "She spoke her mind, because we taught her to...She felt the war in Cambodia was wrong.  Is this dissent a crime?  Is this a reason for killing her?"

Nine other students were injured that day.  One of them, Dean Kahler, was shot in the back, and paralyzed from the waist down.  

A 2024 story about Mr. Kahler is featured on the Kent State University website.  The story includes the following, about Mr. Kahler, and May 4th:

He’d never been to [a protest] and wanted to see what it was all about. So, he and some fellow students residing in Wright Hall decided to go. Soon after they arrived, National Guardsmen and campus security told the students they were illegally gathered and they needed to disperse.

“It didn’t make a lot of sense,” Dean explained. “We all thought we had the right to assemble on our own campus and to redress our grievances with our government. If I could lend my voice to the disagreement with the policy of invading Cambodia, I would do that.”

With John Cleary's death, on October 25th, five of those injured--including Dean Kahler--survive him.

The New York Times obituary about Mr. Cleary included his recollections about the shootings, from an oral history undertaken in 2010 by Kent State. Times reporter Michael S. Rosenwald wrote:

On May 4, a Monday, a large protest was scheduled for noon on the university commons. After attending his morning classes, Mr. Cleary borrowed a camera from a classmate and headed over.

“I went to kind of just see what was going on and observe the protesters,” he said.

After students ignored an order to disperse, the guardsmen launched canisters of tear gas. Mr. Cleary snapped some photos, then decided to head to a nearby building for his next class.

The guardsmen moved in.

“I wanted to get one last picture of them before they went over the crest of the hill, so I was kind of getting my camera, I was winding it, getting ready to take another shot and suddenly, they just turned and fired,” he said. “It was like this volley of gunshots.”

A bullet struck him in the chest.

“I guess the best way I can describe it is like getting hit in the chest with a sledgehammer,” Mr. Cleary said. “It just really knocked me down.”

The story also said:

As he lay on the ground bleeding, several students rendered first aid. Howard Ruffner, a Kent State student working that day as a freelance photographer for Life, snapped an image of the moment.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/07/us/john-cleary-dead.html?unlocked_article_code=1.0U8.Zdju.ValWE6Yfv02-&smid=url-share

In addition to the cover photograph used by Life, other pictures by Mr. Ruffner from that day appeared inside the magazine.

Another Kent State student, John Filo, took what was no doubt the best-known of the photographs taken that day: a picture of 14 year-old Mary Ann Vecchio, who was at the site of the Kent State protest; she had run away from her home in Florida and was hitchhiking across the country. She had been talking with student Jeffrey Miller.  Moments later, Mr. Miller was shot, and killed instantly, and Ms. Vecchio's anguished reaction, as she crouched next to Mr. Miller's body, was captured by Mr. Filo. The image was seen throughout the world; Mr. Filo was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for the photograph.

Here are two Wikipedia links, about Mary Ann Vecchio, and John Filo.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Ann_Vecchio

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Filo

Here, too, is the 1970 song "Ohio," written by Neil Young and performed by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. The song was released the month after the Kent State shootings.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J9INnMMwvnk&list=RDJ9INnMMwvnk&start_radio=1

(Photo above, © Howard Ruffner, Time Life, and Getty Images.)

Saturday, November 8, 2025

What a surprise

ESPN.com Headline:  "Sources: Trump wants Commanders' new D.C. stadium named for him"

https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/46892115/trump-wants-commanders-stadium-named-him

Thursday, October 30, 2025

White House reporter Sid Davis, and the Kennedy assassination

The link, below, is for an October 26th New York Times obituary of journalist Sid Davis.   Mr. Davis died on October 13th, at age 97.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/26/obituaries/sid-davis-dead.html?smid=url-share

As recounted in the Times obituary:

In 1959, Mr. Davis was hired as a White House correspondent by Westinghouse, which then had a national network of five television stations and seven radio stations in major markets. After a brief turn reporting on President Dwight D. Eisenhower, he covered the Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford and Carter administrations as chief of the 18-member Westinghouse Washington bureau.

He joined NBC News in 1977 as the Washington news director. He was NBC’s Washington bureau chief from 1979 to 1982 (and a vice president from 1980 to 1982), and senior correspondent from 1982 to 1987, covering the Reagan administration.

From 1987 to 1994, Mr. Davis was director of programs for the Voice of America, and until 1998 he directed worldwide Voice of America programming, in charge of 1,500 people working in 46 languages.

Much of the Times obituary, however, concerns his coverage of the 1963 Kennedy assassination.

On November 22nd, Mr. Davis was in a press bus in the presidential motorcade in Dallas. He filed reports, by phone, from Dallas's Parkland Hospital, and was subsequently one of three reporters who witnessed the swearing-in of Lyndon Johnson on Air Force One.  The other journalists were Merriman Smith of UPI--who later was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his reporting on the assassination--and Charles Roberts of Newsweek.  

Mr. Smith and Mr. Roberts then flew to Washington on Air Force One. Yet, as described in the Times obituary, Mr. Davis "stayed in Dallas to brief the press corps on the swearing-in ceremony and his observations aboard Air Force One. He had been chosen as a pool reporter by a White House aide, not by fellow journalists, but he regarded it as a solemn obligation to represent, and report to, the press corps."

From the obituary:

Tom Wicker, who covered the assassination [for the Times], was awed by Davis’s briefing.“It ranks as one of the most generous acts by a reporter that I can remember,” he wrote in Times Talk, a staff publication. “Davis put together a magnificent pool report on the swearing-in, read it off, answered questions and gave a picture that so far as I know was complete, accurate and has not been added to.”

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Diane Keaton (1946-2025)

I loved seeing her, on-screen.  Her talent, at both comedy and drama, was awesome. She was brilliant--so deeply funny, and charming, and serious--in 1977's Annie Hall, with Woody Allen (for which she won a Best Actress Oscar). And superb in so many other roles--including the 2003 romantic comedy Something's Gotta Give, with Jack Nicholson (which earned her a Best Actress Oscar nomination).

There is a significant scene in Annie Hall which I particularly enjoy, and admire.  It is not a comic scene. She sings in a nightclub, for about two and a half minutes, the 1940s song "Seems Like Old Times." Her vocal, at the link below, is really lovely.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p32OEIazBew&list=RDp32OEIazBew&start_radio=1

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

October 7th

Remembering, on the second anniversary of October 7th, the sickening, gruesome attacks which took place in Israel: the twelve hundred people who were murdered by Hamas (aided by such terrorist groups as Palestinian Islamic Jihad). Some civilians, it has been reported, also took part in the attacks.

And, remembering the breathtaking extent of the cruelties, the terror, that day: the burning of homes with their residents inside, the hunting of victims, the rapes (which, it has been reported, included gang rape), the reported acts of mutilation of victims' bodies, the countless other depravities. 

And, of course: the kidnappings of some 250 people--babies, children, adults, and elderly people, taken into Gaza as hostages.

Twenty hostages are believed to still be alive in Gaza; it is also believed that the bodies of twenty-eight others, who were either killed on October 7th or who died afterward, remain held by Hamas.

One prays that the peace deal currently on the table will be agreed to (or at least mostly agreed to), that all of the hostages (living and dead) will be released to their loved ones, that Hamas will lay down its arms and will leave Gaza, and that we will see the beginning of the end of the suffering of the Palestinian civilians.