Blog No. 272: San Francisco Bay Podcast, Is the Internet Dying?, Music is a Refuge

‍ ‍The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information

Kate and Mike

Mike Herz

Kate Josephs

I am new to small towns, after living in New York City most of my life. I kind of moved up to mid-coast Maine without realizing I was really making a move and now, as I find myself settled in, I realize here I really am!

Maybe I just got lucky but I seemed to have stumbled on a town and area full of really cool people! So many involved in life in deep ways, enlightened, learned, connected, full of a lifetime of interesting experiences. Maybe Maine just attracts these types and has some kind of special allure...

Today I write about two of these people--my neighbors on Water Street, Mike Herz and Kate Josephs, who split their time between mid-coast Maine and a houseboat (an old trawler) in Point Richmond, California. They are the authors of the newly launched podcast Once Upon A Bay, available on the typical podcast platforms: spotify, apple, etc.

Mike Herz is a passionate guy who doesn't sit still. Environmental causes are one of his many passions and his secret to staying young at the ripe young age of 90! As SF baykeeper (in the tradition of Pete Seeger and the Hudson River), Mike has dedicated much of his time to exploring all the myriad of stories around this large tidal estuary, the second-largest estuary on the Pacific coast. HE has made a significant impact on the protection of many west coast waterways through successful fights against pollution and contamination.

Kate Josephs has worn many hats over the years from venture capital and community development finance to political organization and activism. She can now add podcasts to her list of accomplishments as creator and producer of Once Upon a Bay. In many ways this podcast, being released in segments, is a love letter to the San Francisco Bay. From shipwrecks to the wildlife around the Bay, they share so many fascinating stories that capture the beauty and dynamism of this amazing living body of water...

P.S. And one more important piece of information: Mike and Kate are also the parents of my granddog, Frenchy's best friend, Holly, a beautiful and rambunctious foxhound.

Frenchy and Holly

Is The Internet Dying?

I recently heard a statistic that sent chills up my spine on a Canadian Broadcast Corporation (CBC) podcast called IDEAS: The Internet is Dying. The Internet is Dead. It stated that "slightly more than half the traffic on the internet is non-human activity. Bots. We see the same comments over and over. The same style of response. Near-instant polarization. The humanness of the internet is receding and it's left our online spaces feeling haunted, like a deserted mall where the fountain is still gurgling, the canned music is still playing, but the people are nowhere to be found. When did the internet begin to die? And what will happen to us when it's dead." I can't get that image of the empty shopping mall out of my head...

With all of us here in America asleep at the wheel, being bombarded with all kinds of SH_T from every angle: The Epstein Files, the War in Iran that is rapidly spreading, the abject corruption of the current administration, the attack on our democracy and constitution, ICE, etc. etc. we are being taken over by AI, perhaps the biggest transformation our world will ever experience since the industrial revolution and maybe even bigger... This Canadian Broadcast Corporation IDEAS: The Internet is Dying, The Internet is Dead is a interview between CBC host Nahlah Ayed and Cory Doctorow as they explore what the internet has become and what it could be. Fascinating talk which frames and clarifies a lot of issues that I bet many of us have never even thought about, as seen from a Canadian perspective.

Music as a Refuge

Thank God for music! Here is what I am listening to these days in between activism and trying to run away from the news…

Blues Run the Game Jackson C. Frank

Jersey Girl by Tom Waits

Joan of Arc by Jennifer Warnes

Mr. Tanner by Harry Chapin

Border Reiver by Mark Knopfler

Song for a Winter's Night by Gordon Lightfoot

Painting of the Week

These yoga mats double as kitchen mats. Very high quality, nice and thick, a little pricey due to the fact they are made in America and pass California environmental standards…Worth the price…

Check out the artSHOP on my website for the whole line of products based on my art and that of my late husband, Danish artist Gert Mathiesen.

Charity of the Week:
ACLU

Book of the Week



About The Author

New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.

Source: old-age-young-at-heart-chorus-mark-nepo-no...

Blog No. 271: A Friend of Dorothy Short Film, Creative Uses of Artificial Intelligence, Ky Dickens Interviews

‍ ‍The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information

A Friend of Dorothy Short Film

Alistair Nwachukwu and Miriam Margolyes in A Friend of Dorothy

Miriam Margolyes as Dorothy

This twenty minute Live Action Short Film entitled A Friend of Dorothy, written and directed by Lee Knight, has been nominated for an Oscar. It is a little gem of a movie: light hearted, touching, kind...just what the doctor ordered. Run, don’t walk to see it…It will counter all the negative vibes around us at least for a bit...

Creative Uses of Artificial Intelligence

Courtesy Kelly Boesch www.theknollergroup.com

Click image to see Kelly Boesch’s Instagram. Image courtesy theknollergroup.com

I’m not a fan of Artificial Intelligence—in fact I am terrified of it and worried sick over its repercussions for our world but I can’t help but find some AI generated videos fascinating from a creative and artistic point of view. If only us humans would stick to the good uses of this new technology…

I happened upon these video creations by Kelly Boesch and The Knoller Group and couldn't help but be captivated...You might want to follow them on instagram as well

Bite My Lip- Official AI Music Video - 4K by Kelly Boesch AI Music Video

Born to Start Again by Kelly Boesch Official Music Video (AI) - Born To Start Again

"Betrayal” – A Surreal Journey Through Strange Beauty (AI Animated) by Kelly Boesch

The Genius of Kelly Boesch

Tests of Flying by Kelly Boesch

Courtesy Kelly Boesch https://www.theknollergroup.com/

Courtesy Kelly Boesch www.theknollergroup.com

Courtesy Kelly Boesch https://www.theknollergroup.com/

Two Interviews with Ky Dickens

Illustration of Ky DIckens, Courtesy Tetragrammaton

Jay Shetty Podcast

Here are two powerful interviews with Ky Dickens, award winning filmmaker, director and creator of the podcast The Telepathy Tapes, which I have written about previously on this substack. After listening to both seasons of The Telepathy Tapes, I was curious about Dickens, her background, and where she was coming from since so much of what she reports is “out there.” Turns out her journey into the paranormal took a similar path to my own, after losing loved ones and asking basic questions like “where did they go” and “does consciousness survive death.”

The first interview is with Tami Simon, founder of Sounds True, a multimedia publishing house with a mission to disseminate spiritual wisdom. Listen to that interview here.

The second interview with Jay Shetty on his substack podcast gives a lot of insight into Dickens and how as a documentary filmmaker she stumbled on the work of Diane Hennacy and the subject of telepathy amongst nonverbal autistic children (Season 1 of The Telepathy Tapes). Her curiosity and inquisitive mind lead her onto a longer journey into the paranormal and more extensive psi phenomena (Season 2 of The Telepathy Tapes). Highly recommend the interview and both seasons of The Telepathy Tapes if you haven't listened to them yet...

Product of the Week

These yoga mats double as kitchen mats. Very high quality, nice and thick, a little pricey due to the fact they are made in America and pass California environmental standards…Worth the price…

Check out the artSHOP on my website for the whole line of products based on my art and that of my late husband, Danish artist Gert Mathiesen.

Charity of the Week:
ACLU

Book of the Week



About The Author

New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.

Source: old-age-young-at-heart-chorus-mark-nepo-no...

Blog No. 270: A Lecture We All Need to Hear, For the Love of Animals, Kahil El’Zabar's Ethnic Heritage Ensemble

The underlined words and many of the images in the newsletter are linked to more in depth information so don’t hesitate to click…

For those of you in NYC on Thursday February 26th , my musician friend Tom DiMenna will be back in the City playing Story Songs of the 70’s including covers of Cat Stevens, Harry Chapin, Gordon Lightfoot, and James Taylor at The Cutting Room, 44 E 32nd St, New York, NY 10016. For those who saw him last time at City Winery, he has increased his repertoire to include some new greats and I guarantee an evening of joy—Click here for tickets

Important Message For These Times

Click image to hear an important message

Image courtesy of Ryan Putnam. Click image to purchase

Nobody likes to be lectured but hear me out on this one. I found this from Jean and the Sisters of Charity on instagram and I think it is a message we all need to hear right now. Please spend the few minutes clicking on the image above and listening to it. If you can, please share it with friends and acquaintances--although the message addresses older people, it is something we all need to hear--there is a lot at stake!

For the Love of Animals

Dedicated to my animal loving friend with the huge heart, Tina Carro.

We all need a break sometimes from the news of the day. If you want your heart warmed, take a few minutes to watch this series of uplifting anecdotes—amazing animal stories brought to you by the kind-hearted Steve Hartman of CBS Evening News. It includes segments on an emotional support alligator, a dog that thinks he is human, and a duck called Snowflake who sleds in the winter and goes trick or treating for Halloween…

If you find yourself wanting more (or are procrastinating from a task you "should" be doing), these extra Steve Hartman stories might just be what you need right now.

Kahil El’Zabar's Ethnic Heritage Ensemble

Click image above to hear a conversation with Kahil El’ Zabar who aside from being a musician, is also a clothing designer and fashionista…

Kahil El’Zabar on multi instruments, Corey Wilkes on trumpet, Alex Harding on baritone sax.

Off the beaten track in Waldoboro Maine, I saw a mind expanding concert last night at the Waldo Theatre. Hard to believe and how lucky we were to experience such an amazing musical event in such an unassuming town…Kahil El’Zabar’s music is very hard to classify. It has been described as bebop, Afro-Cuban jazz, free jazz, hypnotic soul—all over the place… When I asked David Kowalski, owner of Brunswick’s premier vinyl shop Deep Groove Records and one of the sponsors of the event how he would describe this type of music, he called it Spiritual Ethno Jazz Groove. No surprise that no one can actually put their finger on how to define it. Which is what makes it so great—it is so innovative that it doesn’t fall into existing categories. Best description I have come across is simply “a wide open vision of the musical concept” and “a higher consciousness of sound and spirt.”

Kahil El’Zabar is primarily a percussionist—he got his first drum when he was four years old—but aside from a normal drum set, in the performance he played the cajón (meaning box in Spanish), the kalimba (part of a family of musical instruments called Mbira, traditional to the Shona people of Zimbabwe), bells around his ankles, and his voice, used in a different way than I have heard before—“everything but the kitchen sink.” He was accompanied on the stage by two amazing musicians: Corey Wilkes on trumpet and Alex Harding on baritone sax and you could tell they had been playing together for a long time and were in total sync.

For someone who has little experience with jazz music and I certainly don’t profess to know anything, what amazed me the most about the Kahil El’Zabar concert was that it forced me to really listen to the sounds coming off that stage in a new way and to appreciate and isolate the sounds that were coming into my ears. (It reminded me of the first time I ate sushi. It was a different experience…making me eat in a different way—savoring every bite rather than just filling my mouth up with food in an unconscious way…).

The concert began with isolated nature sounds, bird whistles, tiny bells, similar sounds to what I had heard on my morning walk that day when the birds were out in full force. I loved that it began so quietly and forced me into a kind of meditative state. What followed was a feast—“blurring the edges of traditional jazz, Afrocentric rhythms and cosmic expanse.” I am sharing some of the songs that stood out to me:

Compared to What, written by American songwriter Eugene McDaniels. Sad to say it was written in 1966 and is still relevant today

Where Do You Want To Go

Full Live Performance at the 2021 Erie Blues and Jazz Festival

The Timeless Maestro: A Conversation with Sir Kahil El’Zabar

And a short documentary

The band is on tour now and the live experience is essential in my opinion to the full appreciation of this music. Here are the tour dates. Hopefully they will be coming to a city near you...

Painting of the Week

Pam Smilow. House in Fog, mixed media on canvas, 60” x 40”

Charity of the Week:
ACLU

Book of the Week



About The Author

New York City based contemporary artist, Pam Smilow, began writing the creative lifestyle blog “things we love” in an effort to foster a sense of community during times of isolation and reflection. To read more about her and her art, visit her website and check out the essay written by Frank Matheis entitled The Sophisticated Innocence of Pam Smilow.

Source: old-age-young-at-heart-chorus-mark-nepo-no...