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Open letter to readers: Today and tomorrow

By Lynda Waddington | 11.17.11

Wednesday was a difficult day for The American Independent News Network, which is the larger entity that operates The Iowa Independent. Our chief executive and founder announced two of our sister sites would close and their content would be moved to The American Independent.

ACS lockout continues; plan emerges to repeal sugar protections

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By Virginia Chamlee | 11.15.11

A recently introduced bill could have far-reaching impact on the U.S. sugar industry, including American Crystal Sugar, a farmer-owned cooperative that locked out 1,300 Midwest workers on Aug. 1.

Cain campaign: Farmers know more about regulations than EPA

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By Andrew Duffelmeyer | 11.15.11

The chairman for Herman Cain’s Iowa effort says the campaign “relied more on the word of farmers than Washington regulators” in deciding to run an ad containing claims the Environmental Protection Agency says are false.

Mathis wins, Democrats maintain Senate control

Liz Mathis
By Lynda Waddington | 11.08.11

The Iowa Senate will remain under the control of a slim 26-25 Democratic majority when it reconvenes in January 2012.

Press Release

PR: Nation should work to address veterans’ challenges

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

BRUCE BRALEY RELEASE — As US involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan ends, it’s more important than ever that our nation works to address the challenges faced by the men and women who fought there.

PR: Honoring veterans, help in hiring

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

CHUCK GRASSLEY RELEASE — A difficult job market is challenging the soldiers, sailors and airmen who have protected America’s interests by serving in the Armed Forces.

PR: In honor of America’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

TOM LATHAM RELEASE — No one has done more to secure the freedom enjoyed by every single American than our veterans and those currently serving in the armed services.

PR: Honoring and supporting our nation’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

DAVE LOEBSACK RELEASE — Veterans Day is an opportunity to reflect on the service of generations of veterans and to honor the sacrifices they and their families have made so that we may live in peace and freedom here at home.

The iPod Fairy Sabotages My Otherwise Super Cool Playlist

By Douglas Burns | 03.04.08 | 10:30 am

(Commentary) In each man’s relationship with his iPod, the frightening truth one day emerges, stares you straight down and snort-laughs.

You, Mr. Burns, say members of the Manhood Inquisition, have some, well, fairly embarrassing items on that 2,000-song iPod playlist you’ve been collecting over the last four years.

Sure, you can write off the conspicuous presence of the band Asia as just “a 1980s thing.” And, OK, we’ll even give you Barry Manilow’s “Copacabana” because it is one of those songs that seems to creep on to everyone’s iPod, no matter how cool or uncool the owner.

But Chaka Kahn’s “Through The Fire,” Doug? Really.

There is just no way in the world I put that song in my iPod.

No way. No how. No mas.

The culprit for this monstrous cheesiness is not thee.

But I have an explanation.

I am now fully convinced that there is an iPod fairy that sneaks into your hard drive late in the night and inserts ridiculous, even humiliating, songs like a dirty cop planting drugs in someone’s couch. What? No! That’s not my marijuana or my Enrique Iglesias. It’s a setup, man.How else but for this elusive and yet unseen iPod fairy does one explain the presence of some music so bubble-gummy, so Pet Shop Boys, that you wonder each time one of the ditties pops off the shuffle mode if a resurrected Frank Sinatra is suddenly going to appear and punch you in the face — or delete all of his songs from your iPod at the very least?

In one of the more magisterial magazine essays in American history, Esquire opened a 1966 piece on the Chairman of the Board with the following line: “Frank Sinatra, holding a glass of bourbon in one hand and a cigarette in the other, stood in a dark corner of the bar between two attractive but fading blondes who sat waiting for him to say something.”

Now that’s the kind of cat daddy I want represented on my playlist. But he has company, thanks to the iPod fairy.

I mean, come on. What self-respecting, 38-year-old man has 24 songs from the Euro-trash group a-ha on his iPod? (Remember the song from the 1980s, “Take On Me”?) I plead guilty to felony lack of taste, but I will make a case that the band’s recent CD, “Analogue,” is actually quite good. What’s more, I will endeavor to defend the listing of the group “Tears For Fears” on my Apple music device because I have the old stuff, from the album, “The Hurting” — back before the “Everybody Wants To Rule The World” days.

Of course the prosecution in this trial of my music bona fides would no doubt present as Exhibit A the fact that Cyndi Lauper’s “Change of Heart” is jammed right in there on the iPod, like a big, red-sucked thumb, with all the music I cobbled together searching out hip bands in places like Seattle and Vancouver with which to impress my friends and would-be love interests.

Scroll down the iPod playlist and the evidence mounts against you, Mr. Burns.
Someone (say, my Carroll High School Class of 1987 friend Brian Broich, who pointed to the “Pretty In Pink” movie soundtrack on a shelf during a party at my house this past fall) would surely get a fronch-porching-hollering hoot out of the cataloging of Olivia Newton John’s “Magic” and Hall And Oates’ “Adult Education” on that sleek, white, music maker of mine.

Please, please, stop with this. It keeps getting worse. One Justin Timberlake (yes, that dude) makes an appearance on this columnist’s iPod, albeit a brief one with the recent hit, “What Goes Around.” (Hey, Timberlake is pretty good in the film “Alpha Dog,” which is definitely a guy movie.)

For the sake of mercy, I stopped counting the number of Neil Diamond songs on my iPod at 15. Everyone, it seems, has a story behind the inclusion of Mr. Diamond in his digital-music library. Was it a good party or a good laugh or just a cry in Mr. Manilow’s rain?

My bright shining Neil Diamond moment came in the winter of 1991 in Peru, Ill., that town off Interstate 80 so many of you drive through but never stop in on the way to Chicago. My friend Paul and I were marooned in the snow there for a full day and night. Being college students, we naturally found our way to a bar attached to the Days Inn motel, where, to our delight, a Neil Diamond impersonator was the headliner for our evening’s entertainment.

After our failed attempts to woo the waitresses with lines that seemed to work at fraternity-sorority mixer parties back at Northwestern University, we settled in and yelled out our “favorite” Diamond hits for this guy. Soon the Diamond double was at our table, drinking White Russians and knocking back a brand of cigarettes that may or may not have been Parliaments.

At 2 a.m., it ain’t no surprise that Diamond’s “Love On The Rocks” sounds like about the most insightful song ever written.

But fire up that tune at 7 a.m. for your drive to work, and you’ll be thinking: That iPod fairy. Somebody ought to get him.

Where is Frank Sinatra when you need him?

Comments

  • Anonymous

    Three words, Doug Rock me, Amadeus.

  • Anonymous

    Three words, Doug Rock me, Amadeus.

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