I tracked down a verbatim transcript of the "speech" and here's the relevant passage:
Relatives from Canada, too. We have the foundation of the Palin family, one grandfather was born in Manitoba, this was a farming family there. And then another one born in Saskatchewan and we were some pretty funny stories of our relatives who were bootleggers I guess. This was many, many years ago. Don’t blame me. There’s never a boring story when it comes to the Palins. So much exciting stories that you would hear about how they would live in Canada and Alaska, back and forth.
So maybe the press reports of her grandfathers actually being bootleggers were garbled. You can be forgiven for mis-hearing a phrase like:
we were some pretty funny stories of our relatives who were bootleggers I guess.
But it's still worth clarifying who these grandfathers are, and where they were born.
It has turned the British election into a three-way race, which means (if the newest results are translated nationally on election day) that Labour could win back power – with a mere 29 percent of the vote. More worrying for the Tories: this poll was taken before the last debate.
The speech was scattered at times, as Palin mentioned briefly that both her grandfathers were from Saskatchewan and Manitoba, and that her family took many trips back and forth across the border from Alaska in her childhood.
They weren't just from Canada, they were bootleggers:
From her bootlegger grandfathers in Saskatchewan and Alberta, to the five children we know so much about.
This is news, it seems to me. In her novel, Going Rogue, she mentions her father's
"hometown of North Hollywood, California. He was born in 1938 to the celebrity photographer Charlie Heath, who specialized in shooting famous prizefighters."
Was Charlie Heath also a part-time Canadian bootlegger from Saskatchewan? And she writes that her mother
"was born into a large, educated Irish Catholic family in Utah. Her father, Clement James Sheeran–everyone called him 'Clem' or 'CJ–was a mediator for General Electric and was wild about Notre Dame."
Was CJ also illegally smuggling liquor in Alberta – via his work for GE? Or did she have two other grandfathers who were in the Canadian bootlegging business? Could she provide their names? Is she referring perhaps to Todd's grandfathers?
Or are we in Palin's alternate reality here? Maybe a reporter could ask her. (See update here.)
Musicians have long known that in order to make real money, they'd either have to be U2 big, or tour. However, it's very interesting to note that in the new, digital era, artists actually make more off of their album sales in iTunes than they did in the old, physical world. And selling albums digitally through cdbaby, without a label, stands to bring in much, much more money for the artist — and frees them from the headache of distributing a physical product. The band Pomplamoose, for example, is making a perfectly good living doing just that. […]
So, while at first glance, this infographic may seem pessimistic, digging a little deeper into the data gives the real story. Exciting opportunities still abound in the world of music for those creative enough to seize them.
E.D. Kain shares similar sentiments. A reader writes:
The traditional gatekeepers of the creative economy — publishers, record companies, studios — haven't realized that they're irrelevant.
In the old model, you waited for a gatekeeper to choose you, and in return they put their immense production, distribution and marketing power behind you. Now, production and distribution is available to anyone — so all the gatekeepers offer is marketing. If you're willing to do that work, you can reap your own rewards.
The sad thing is, when I attended SXSW (the film, music and interactive conference), the representatives of these old gatekeeper companies all said that they were looking for creatives who, in the buzzword of the moment, "Come With Tribe" — have a pre-existing audience that they bring with them. The amount of denial on display was staggering; not a single one of these Brahmins of culture seemed to understand that if we already have that, we've don't need them at all. We've already taken care of the last thing that they might be able to offer us — marketing. At this point, it makes more sense for us to concentrate on growing that "Tribe" to 1000 (or more), and make our living.
You should check out Kevin Kelly's essay "1000 True Fans." In it, he posits that this should be the goal of any creative (musicians, writers, artists) in the digital age. He defines a "True Fan" as somebody who is willing to spend $100 a year on your output (CDs, merchandise, print-on-demand publishing, live appearances, etc). Any creative who can reach that point (and really, it's not that difficult — most of the creatives I know have managed to reach the 300-400 True Fan stage without really trying at all) has an annual income of $100,000 — a comfortable living by any standard.
Pat Wingert and Barbara Kantrowitz keep the discussion going:
[W]hat has gotten scant attention is the fact that the female victims of sexual abuse by Catholic priests tended to be younger than the males. Data analyzed by John Jay researchers, including Smith, shows that even though there were many more boy victims than girls overall, the number and proportion of sexual misconduct directed at girls under 8 years old was higher than that experienced by boys the same age. Specifically, between 1950 and 2002, there were 246 girls younger than 8 who were sexually abused by priests (representing 14 percent of all girl victims), compared with 236 boys (3 percent of all boy victims).
Today on the Dish, Andrew voiced measured praise for the president’s new policy on hospital visitation. A reader dissented. Sullivan also elucidated his view on the Tea Party movement. The day after the first debate, Nick Clegg surged into the spotlighted and Massie put Cameron in third place. NPR updated us on priest sexuality.
Musings On Iraq kept tabs on the violence there, Yglesias added his perspective to Ambinder’s obesity piece, and we checked in on the situation of Icelandic strippers. Continetti offered some good advice to the GOP, a reader piled on Thiessen, and the Dish capped off the discussion on “epistemic closure” among conservatives. TNC continued his slavery thread.
A reader illuminated a long history of Jesus phallus in art, another sent in another rock remix, and a homeschool mom shared her relationship with pot. Beard blogging here. Yglesias award here, Malkin here, and Hewitt here. Hathos here and creepy ad here. And this kid is so effing awesome.
Nantucket, Massachusetts, 1 pm
Thursday on the Dish we were all over the first debate of the British election. Andrew live-blogged the event and summed up his reaction. Reax here and here. We also highlighted the Tories’ approach to marriage.
Bloggers discussed the intellectual state of conservatism (we spotted another depressing sign) and Friedersdorf went another round with Thiessen. Andrew reasserted his fear of a Palin nomination while Brooks and Dickerson wanted everyone to focus their attention elsewhere. A Christian singer came out.
In other coverage, Niraj Chokshi told us about people are killing their TVs, McWhorter talked cussing, and Milbank got pareened. More women confessed their love of weed and Bolivia took it up a notch. Ta-Nehisi examined the horrors of slavery.
Beard blogging here. Crowdsourced art here, speed art here, and phallic Jesus art here. Urinating dildos here and porn for the blind here. Hewitt nod here, FNC hijinks here, and a frightening face of the day here. Also, we explained how we’re trying to improve the Dish a bit.
Wednesday on the Dish, Hitchens kept up his campaign to arrest Benedict, theocon Mark Stricherz turned on the pontiff, and Austen Ivereigh discussed pedophilia and homosexuality. In election coverage, we checked in on the polls, Renard Sexton accused Cameron of failing to unite the Tories, and Wife In The North vouched for Cameron and Brown to discuss their deceased kids.
Ambinder’s Atlantic cover story addressed American obesity. Ezra chimed in. Ambers also updated us on detainee policy. Torture defender Steve Kappes quit the CIA, Friedersdorf fisked Thiessen’s response to Jane Mayer, and Jonathan Bernstein preferred to pardon Bush. Andrew highlighted the disconnect between Congress and Jewish-Americans on Israel.
In other coverage, Brian Doherty profiled the pot capital of the US, Evgeny Morozov and Clay Shirky talked Twitter and Iran, Nick Baumann and Freddie DeBoer discussed Colbert’s WikiLeak interview, and Janelle Weaver reported on kids who can’t see race. Joe Carter complained of a bias towards covering white, politicized evangelicals.
Gabe and Max taught you a little something about filing taxes. More gendered cannabis commentary here and canine coverage here. RNC hathos here and Yglesias nod here. Another rock remix here, a cool app here, and kick-ass kangaroos here.
Tuesday on the Dish, Jason Berry continued to expose the evil of Marcial Maciel just as we caught wind of another case out of San Antonio. A reader dissented over Andrew’s approach to the scandal, Julian Sanchez jumped in the debate, and a female blogger explained why now is the best time to be Catholic. Meanwhile, the Internet continued to lampoon the Church.
In election coverage, the Tories released their own manifesto. Massie scrutinized its approach to civil liberties and Drum demurred over its view of referendums. The Conservatives targeted Brown’s supposed smugness and Paul Waugh figured Cameron will win by default.
In other news, Palin raked in $12 million, Medvedev flattered Obama, and Massa got creepier. Colbert grilled the co-founder of WikiLeaks, Larison tackled Jackson Diehl over the “snubbing” meme, and a new book in Israel targeted the settlers. Kristol approved of Elena Kagan, Andrew Bacevich compared Al-Qaeda to the mob, and Andrew articulated his South Park doctrine. More Kyrgyz commentary here.
Colin Dayan confronted canine profiling, readers sounded off on women getting high, and others recommended some smooth remixes. Hewitt Award here and Malkin here. Cool ad here.
Monday on the Dish we collectedfallout over the pontiff’s latest scandal. Andrew confronted the laicization canard and tweaked Ross over his semi-defense of Benedict. Richard Dawkins clarified his calling for the pope’s arrest in the UK and Dietrich Bonhoeffer contemplated the Church’s decline. More cases were bubbling beneath the surface in Canada, church authorities tried to block reform in Connecticut, the deputy pope blamed the gays, and the Internet keptup its mockery of the priesthood.
In election coverage, Gordon Brown presented his party’s manifesto and putout a handful of ads. A British blogger in the north reported on the BNP. In Palin coverage, Exum wonders why she <3 Karzai, Scott Brown seemed to want nothing to do with her, and Tina Fey reprised her role. Sara Rubin tackled Bristol’s new abstinence ad.
Lawrence Wilkerson drilled into the deepest and darkest corruption of Cheney. Greenwald eulogized the nomination of Dawn Johnsen, Kinsley talked conservatism and the Court, Bernstein discussed the politics of debt, and Lisa Hymas pushed birth control to curb global warming. Commentary on the economy here and here. Readers from Quebec sounded off on the veil controversy. Huckabee garnered a Malkin and Ron Paul got an Yglesias.