“The art of progress is to preserve order amid change, and to preserve change amid order.”—English philosopher Alfred North Whitehead (1861-1947), Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology (1929)
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Monday, June 29, 2026
Flashback, June 1961: Elvis Flops on Film, Flies in Studio
As June 1961 moved towards its conclusion, Elvis Presley and manager “Colonel” Tom Parker tried to recover from a rare career misstep by the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll.
Earlier in the month, the latest Elvis movie, Wild in the Country, had divided critics while leaving loyal fans in little to no doubt about its lack of value.
Not only was it his only film to lose money during its initial
release, but the title song, rushed out to boost its prospects, only peaked at #26
on the US Billboard Hot 100—hardly up to his lofty commercial standards.
It all
turned around on a long session at RCA Studio B in Nashville. True Elvis fans
might enjoy “Kiss Me Quick,” “That’s Someone You Never Forget,” and “I’m Yours,”
but the two that scored solidly with the public were “(Marie’s The Name) His
Latest Flame” and “Little Sister,” which were released as a double single.
Both tunes
came from the songwriting team of Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman. The
duo, who managed to get hold of his attention in 1959 by sending a demo for “A
Mess of Blues” while still on his Army stint in Germany, went on to write 16
songs for The King. Amazingly, though, they never met the singer who turned
their compositions into hits.
Elvis tweaked “Little Sister” slightly, cutting the tempo in half and slowing it down, according to Paul Simpson’s The Rough Guide to Elvis. By the third take, he liked the groove so much that he told his backup musicians to “burn” on the next take.
That was the one that turned out to be a keeper,
confirming Pomus’ hunch that, while Bobby Darin had decided it wasn’t for him,
it would be the kind of nasty blues that Elvis did so well.
“His Latest Flame” proved a harder nut to crack. Elvis and his musicians were floundering in the studio, uncertain how to proceed.
None of the attempts to
start it on different instruments seemed to click, until someone called Pomus
to see what he would play the piano portion. The songwriter was surprised to
hear that his intro was three bars long rather than four.
From that
realization sprang the eventual solution: a Latin flavor with a Bo Diddley
beat. Tom Petty, asked by Rolling Stone Magazine for the Elvis tunes that most influenced him, described how this one came together from what
originally had been “kind of a mess”:
“An
acoustic guitar and a snare drum played with brushes carry the rhythm, but when
the six-string bass comes in and the piano goes up to the high register, the
whole thing jumps out of the speaker.”
I don’t
have the technical knowledge to explain this process remotely as well as Petty
did. All I know is that I never grow tired of hearing this, and it is easily
among my half-dozen favorite songs by The King.
(Five of
those musicians, by the way, were participating at the same time and in the
same RCA studio in another recording session of a classic: Roy Orbison’s
“Cryin’.” Talk about catching lightning in a bottle!)
Technically, Presley’s was a cover version of this Pomus-Shuman composition: Del Shannon had already released it as a single and cut from his debut album, Runaway With Del Shannon.
But Presley’s interpretation is the one that, more likely than
not, you’ll hear on your favorite oldies station, because once the “His Latest
Flame/Little Sister” double single was released in August, it shot into the top
5 in the Billboard charts and all the way up to #1 in the UK.
The
following year, Elvis lured his fans back to the movies with Blue Hawaii,
another formulaic profit-maker that generated additional soundtrack
sales. By now, he was tiring of plots that sidetracked him from his ambition
to become another James Dean.
But he
felt no such ambivalence about “His Latest Flame.” Even while making it, he
noted, “It’s a good song. I like it even if it takes us 32 hours.” He had no
reason to revise that opinion in the years to come.
Movie Quote of the Day (‘Murder by Death,’ With a Character Who Resembles His Actor)
Lionel Twain [played by Truman Capote, pictured]: “That drives me crazy!”
Sam
Diamond [played
by Peter Falk]: “Sounds like a short ride to me.”— Murder by Death (1976), screenplay by Neil Simon,
directed by Robert Moore
The murder
mystery spoof Murder by Death premiered 50 years ago today, featuring a
cast of highly accomplished film veterans like David Niven, Maggie Smith, Peter
Falk, Alec Guinness, Peter Sellers, Elsa Lanchester, and James Coco.
But
wouldn’t you know it, a mere tyro caught most of the attention of the public: In
Cold Blood author Truman Capote, in the only film where he played
someone other than himself. (He provided voiceover narration of his stories “The
Thanksgiving Visitor” and “A Christmas Memory,” and played the Capote
look-alike in Woody Allen’s Annie Hall.)
I bet that
you were as surprised as I was to learn that for his performance, Capote was
nominated for a Golden Globe in Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture. But
remember, these were the awards that notoriously handed Pia Zadora a statuette
as “New Star of the Year” for the 1982 bomb Butterfly. In other words,
you have to wonder which Hollywood powerbroker influenced such ridiculous
recognition.
I doubt
that Neil Simon thought that Capote turned in a noteworthy performance, though
I have read a couple of versions of his reaction. When interviewed for George
Plimpton’s 1997 oral biography Truman Capote, the
playwright-screenwriter, while admitting that hiring the author was more
producer Ray Stark’s idea than his own, said that he “had no problem with him.”
Well,
except for two: Capote was “very ill at ease with the dialogue” and “didn’t
know how to move,” as he was always looking for his marks.
On the
other hand, in commentary for a 1999 DVD release of the movie, Simon said he
and director Robert Moore wanted to replace Capote as Lionel Twain, the rich
eccentric who invites the world’s greatest detectives to his home for a contest
to solve a murder. In the end, that desire didn’t come to pass.
Two rather
different reactions, as I say. But when you think about it, both were united in
one belief: Capote was making mistakes that professional actors would not have
committed, and it was deeply frustrating.
Besides
lack of experience, there was another reason why the creators of Murder by
Death should have thought better of hiring Capote in the first place: he
was already well along in the drink-and-pills spiral that led to his death by
liver cancer in 1984.
A couple
of years before, he had been in such terrible condition when commissioned to
write the screenplay for The Great Gatsby remake that he had to be
replaced before he could finish. Gossip spreads fast in Hollywood, and nobody
involved with Murder by Death should have been surprised that he would
be a handful.
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Flashback, June 2001: Early Alarm Sounds About Enron
Too bad
that others didn’t perform proper due diligence on Enron, which six
months later collapsed, in the largest bankruptcy filing to that point in U.S.
corporate history.
The
initial outsized expectations about Enron’s stock reminded me of a phrase
coined by the otherwise colorless former Fed chair Alan Greenspan (who also
died this month): “irrational exuberance.” Though Greenspan was discussing
speculative market bubbles as a group, I think it applies just as much, maybe
even more so, to individual stocks today.
Take a
bow, Elon Musk.
You heard
about that guy, right? World’s richest person. World’s first trillionaire,
courtesy of a very generous compensation plan approved by shareholders
of his company, Tesla.
More about
him in a minute. But first, a refresher on Enron:
Through
much of the Nineties, Enron was a Wall Street darling for advancing from a
natural-gas provider to an energy-trading colossus. It reported incredible
returns, reaching $90.75 per share on August 23, 2000 with a market
capitalization of more than $70 billion, making it the seventh-largest publicly
traded corporation in the U.S.
Who
wouldn’t want to invest after a management guru like Gary Hamel had praised it
for creating “a capacity for perpetual innovation” with an organization
consisting of “potential revolutionaries”? Even pundits across the political
spectrum like Bill Kristol and Paul Krugman took fees to serve on the company’s
advisory committee.
Wall
Street was particularly enamored of Enron head Kenneth Lay, a corporate
leader used to being listened to. That respect derived not only from the
eye-popping numbers he produced but from his cozy relationship with George W.
Bush, a rising politico so grateful for the $122,500 contributed to his Texas
gubernatorial campaigns that he nicknamed the gray-haired businessman “Kenny
Boy.”
In March
2001, Lay and his successor as Enron president, Jeffrey Skilling, were annoyed
when a young financial journalist, Bethany McLean, wondering how the company
made its money, asked, in a Fortune Magazine article, if Enron was
overpriced.
But they really
grew incensed when Olson—a local analyst with long experience monitoring the
energy industry—told U.S. News and World Report three months later that
Enron was "not very forthcoming about how they make their money" and
said no "analyst worth his salt . . . can seriously analyze Enron."
Olson chuckled
over a misspelled handwritten note that Lay dashed off to his boss in the wake
of that interview. The analyst’s equanimity was justified: other observers were
soon pursuing the hard questions that he and MacLean had posed about Enron’s
operations.
By year’s
end, it had all unraveled in a massive bankruptcy and corporate scandal. In May
2006, Lay and Skilling were convicted of fraud and conspiracy charges.
So now you
may be wondering, how could Lay possibly relate to Elon Musk?
Some of
you reading this might see my eyebrow lifted derisively in his direction because
of my distaste for his involvement with the Department of Government Efficiency
(DOGE) at the behest of Donald Trump.
Or you
might argue that, unlike Enron, Musk built something that can be seen—rockets,
an AI startup fueling data centers, and, through Tesla, the EV, the most
significant contribution to the American auto industry since Henry Ford’s
assembly line.
You can
even accept (as analyst Jeff Sommer does here, before swatting it
down) that Tesla can build a successful colony on Mars and reap a bonanza from
its military contracts.
But there’s
a simpler yardstick for measuring how close Musk comes to the now-infamous Kenneth
Lay: What did his prior financial reports promise investors, and did he achieve
those goals?
That’s
where matters become slippery. A New York Times analysis from earlier
this month found that Musk was late or did not deliver on his company deadlines
roughly 35 percent of the time. In 33 percent of his more than 600 claims, his
companies did not provide a public update—or the plans were too vague to know
if he succeeded.
And five
years ago, Consumer Reports compiled a telling timeline of his
continuous claims that Tesla models would shortly become fully autonomous,
along with deaths of people who accepted these assurances that turned out to
be—well, let’s just say premature.
In other
words, if Musk were a musical, it would be Promises, Promises.
Unlike
with Enron, nobody has yet proven that Tesla’s accounting practices are
fraudulent. But it would be enormously difficult to decipher even if anyone
tried to do so. Now with Vanity Fair, Bethany MacLean has questioned the
ethics and governance behind his complicated 2019 acquisition of Solar City.
Testifying
before Congress in 2002, Olson cautioned that “It is axiomatic on Wall Street
that if a stock price is rising arithmetically, management egos tend to rise
exponentially.”
That was the case as Lay pressured editors and analysts for better press coverage, and
maybe even more so with Musk. He was only half-joking when he said, while
hosting Saturday Night Live in 2021, “To anyone I’ve offended, I
reinvented electric cars and I’m sending people to Mars in a rocket ship. Did
you think I was also going to be a chill, normal dude?”
Put that together
with his use of ketamine, a dissociative drug, and you’ll understand why in The
Atlantic last year, Shayla Love wrote that Musk’s “cognitive and
psychological health is of concern not only to shareholders of his companies’
stocks but to all Americans.”
One last
resemblance between Lay and Musk: each backed a successful
candidate who then followed through on the ballyhooed businessman’s policy
prescriptions. Lay, for instance, influenced Bush’s gubernatorial policies on
electricity deregulation, taxes and tort reform.
Musk’s
Presidential beneficiary-patron has permitted him even more latitude. Past
robber barons were content to bribe and sway officeholders, but in taking his
position with DOGE, Musk joined the government, if briefly.
That
takeover was so swift and audacious that observers could hardly rouse
themselves to ask if self-interest might be the principal reason for his
lightning strike against the agencies that regulated his enterprises. Were he
alive today, Kenny Boy might be asking, “Why didn’t I think of that?”
Quote of the Day (Mel Brooks, on a Source of Jewish Humor)
“When the tall, blond Teutons have been nipping at your heels for thousands of years, you find it enervating to keep wailing. So you make jokes. If your enemy is laughing, how can he bludgeon you to death?”—Oscar- and Tony-winning American comic actor-writer-director Mel Brooks, Playboy interview, October 1966
Happy birthday to Mel Brooks, born 100 years ago today
in Brooklyn!
Spiritual Quote of the Day (St. Titus Brandsma, on Love Over Neo-Paganism)
“Neo-paganism may reject love, but history teaches us that, despite everything, we will be victorious over this neo-paganism through love. We will not abandon love. Love will win back the hearts of these pagans. Nature is stronger than philosophy. Let a philosophy reject and condemn love and call it weakness, the living testimony of love will always renew its power to conquer and captivate the hearts of men.”—Carmelite priest, professor and journalist St. Titus Brandsma (1881-1942), Spiritual Itinerary of Carmel (1936)
Saturday, June 27, 2026
Exhibit Review: "‘Born To Run' at 50," Passaic County Arts Center, Hawthorne NJ
Fifty-one years ago this month, when Eric Meola came to photograph Bruce Springsteen for the upcoming song collection, Born To Run, the Columbia Records singer-songwriter had two albums under his belt that attracted little interest. It was a real question how long the label would retain this young musician whose talent hadn’t yet registered with the public.
That sense
of everything riding on the present moment permeated the studio where
Springsteen had been reworking his songs for months. Not surprisingly, Meola
found “someone who had put his soul on the wire for the better part of a year
to make eight songs.”
The
intensity of one artist was matched by the one viewing and capturing his image.
“I had a sense of the history unfolding in front of my camera,” Meola
remembered. “I wanted to photograph that history more than anything I have ever
worked on.”
The
product of that session featuring Springsteen and saxophonist and onstage foil
Clarence Clemons is at the heart of “Born To Run at 50,” an exhibition at the Passaic County Arts Center (PCAC) in Hawthorne, NJ, containing a sampling of items
from the recently opened Bruce Springsteen Center for American Music at
Monmouth University.
Three
months ago, at the time the exhibit opened, I clipped an article out of my
local paper, The Bergen Record, about this commemoration of that
landmark album’s cultural impact and the aftermath of its success. The other day, picking up that piece again, I wondered
when I should see it.
At that
point, a lyric from another Springsteen LP went through my mind:
“Summer’s here and the time is right.” There was no doubt that I had to see
this.
One photo
plucked out of the Meola session, folded in half and wrapped around, ended up
on the cover of Born To Run and found their way, Springsteen noted, in
“the windows of every record store in America”: the one with him leaning on the
cover of Clemons—“the big man with the big smile,” in Meola’s words.
But in
truth, almost any of the more than two dozen outtakes displayed on the walls of
the PCAC would have made for a compelling visual image of this turning point in
The Boss’s life.
My
favorite shows the same Springsteen attire (black leather jacket, tweed cap) as
the album cover, but with sneakers hanging off the guitar and an “Elvis Fan
Club of NYC” button on his jacket.
In
addition to the evocative Meola photos, the exhibit contains other artifacts
documenting Springsteen’s time in New Jersey in the two-year period between Born
To Run and Darkness on the Edge of Town, such as:
*A
handwritten note addressed to the “landlordess” of the cottage where he
composed Born To Run, apologizing for a later payment of a water bill
(two humorous postscripts ask, “Do you like my classy writin’ paper?” and “I’m
practicing my autograph. Whadya think?”
*An
artistic recreation of the customized guitar featured on the cover of the
album;
*A video
from his acclaimed 1978 performances at the now-defunct Capitol Theatre in
Passaic;
*A
now-ragged sweater worn by The Boss thrown into the audience at one of these
shows, then caught—and now displayed, like a precious relic, all these years
later.
For
longtime fans like myself, the exhibition (which runs through July 19 at the
PCAC (in the John W. Rea House, 675 Goffle Road, Hawthorne) offers the
opportunity to relive when the New Jersey rock ‘n’ roll scene (including good
friend Southside Johnny) burst with vitality and the seemingly endless promise
of being young and alive.
For later
generations, it tells a story of how music was recorded, promoted, and
performed long before the digital era utterly transformed how the industry reached
millions of listeners worldwide.
The exhibit
has whetted my interest in seeing what other events may be sponsored by PCAC.
And, at some point, I’ll have to drive down to Monmouth County and spend a few
hours at the Bruce Springsteen Center for American Music.






