The 74th annual Emmy Awards will be given out on Monday night and the only thing prognosticators can agree on is that:
a. We desperately need this diversion from the real world, and
b. Michael Keaton will win best actor in a limited series for hauntingly portraying a caring small town doctor who becomes addicted to Oxycontin in Dopesick.
Um, excuse me Chair. #EmmyforTanya
We will be watching and unpacking it all in a very special new episode of Pod From A Chair this week.
Will it be Abbott Elementary over Hacks? Does White Lotus edge out Dopesick? Can Succession take the top honor once again vs. the relentless Squid Game? And how about finally rewarding the last season of Better Call Saul for… something??
More importantly, will The Chair be able to tolerate three plus very full hours of Kennan Thompson as host??
Survey says… unlikely.
Please join us – The Chair and Holly – on Wednesday when we will give you an escape hatch from reality by unpacking the awards, the outfits and the minutia you never knew you needed to hear about until we brought it to your attention.
I like the adage write what you know because I’m not the kind of writer who can make up fictional worlds on the planet Zorch.
Though I might have fun introducing you to a few Zorchian characters and amuse you into believing there is life on other planets. But that’s only because my Zorchians would seem like Earthlings, probably Americans and likely with an attitude since that is my worldview.
We all have attitudes.
Sing it, sister!
In other words, we are more alike than we are different, as I’ve written before and actually stole from a writing mentor, who in turn likely pilfered it from someone else.
That doesn’t make it any less true.
As we watch what looks like World War III beginning to unfold with the unprovoked, slow decimation of Ukraine and its 43 million people at the hands of crazed Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, it’s hard to not feel like we’re on the planet Zorch.
Or Ukraine is the planet Zorch.
OK.. I’m following…
Or planet Zorch is an evil place led by a crazed dictator bent on destroying Ukraine, or daring us and other NATO nations to stand up to it.
It depends on your worldview.
The constant is people are more alike than different.
How does the image I saw this weekend on CNN of an 18-month old baby boy dying in a blood-soaked blanket in a Ukrainian hospital in the city of Mariupol after intense shelling by Russian bombers relate to all this?
It doesn’t.
All I could focus on were his very much still alive Earthling parents.
We must.
How did his father, who carried him in, ever make it to the hospital amid the shelling?
How was that hospital even open?
What will the life of his hysterical mother – and that Dad’s wife – be like if she even manages to make it out of this unprovoked, needless war?
When I think of that little boy who will never grow up… Well, I can’t think of that. I mean, I do but then there comes a point where I walk away or somehow the subject gets changed in my head.
As it does for so many of us.
Click the pic for links!
In my case it made me once again think of the structural engine behind the indestructibleLaw and Order franchise.
We earthlings need to believe that at the end of the day our laws will more time than not give us order. As if real order was possible to ensure and laws were the one imperfect way we had to ensure them.
Well, that might work on Earth but not here (Note: Or there) on Zorch.
There is no Benson and Stabler on Zorch??
Zorchian reality, by contemporary definition, is an environment where the rules don’t apply and our meager laws don’t fix much of anything.
This is especially the case when we don’t have the courage to enforce them or the right logic to forestall impending cataclysmic catastrophe and thus ensure a truly moral order.
Not that we aren’t presently courageous or devoid of any logic whatsoever.
After all, we haven’t reached the end of this episode, or perhaps season arc, quite yet.
What an honor to meet these young men. Both @UDelaware students are roommates. Greg Tarnavskyi, from the Ukraine and Vlad Krylov from Russia. They are both rallying support for Ukraine as Greg wonders if his family will be ok and sanctions are affecting Vlad. On @6abc tonight. pic.twitter.com/lTNnvf2WQ0
Though truly, they’ve been taking place all over the world and are often led by the young.
If you want to know more about what college students, nee our future leaders, think click here and what you might find is the smallest glimmer of hope. It’s a random series of thoughts and responses from them compiled by the NY Times.
Meanwhile, I’ll be the college professor in the corner trying to make some sense of Zorch so I can write about it in a more effective way.