MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
I think that I shall never see
A poem as lovely as Paula Deen
A Southern Lady with real taste
Who cooks the entire pig eschewing waste
A Southern Belle with the temerity
To respond to critics with alacrity
All the while keeping her faculties
In order to deal with inacuracies
Concerning her plantation in Dixie!
Oh the wonders of the Old South
Oh the majesty of that Old South
Well sometimes the 'N' word slips out of the mouth
Referring to servants of this grand ole house
Whilst thinking of those Northern louse
Who only wish to continually espouse
Their contemptuous hatred for Dixie
Paula recalls the Grand Ole Balls
Recalling speeches had in those Grand Ole Halls
Speeches from real heroes with real big balls
Heroes like John C & Strom & Helms & all
The South will rise again from ashes after the fall
I shall never forget the fall of Dixie
I shall smile & laugh with relish
As I prepare my plates with relish
And it is my wont to sometimes embellish
My recipes with butter & salt & sugar for deepdish
With lard & corn meal & white flour, nutritionless
Cause these ingredients are pure Dixie!
Behind the scenes I am my real self
I refuse to hide my Southern Pride on some shelf
And you Northern Folks don't know the half
As you refuse to grasp the importance of half-n-half
We in the South know how to sacrifice the calf
We stay deep deep deep in the Heart of Dixie!
Julia Childs went all the way to France
Northern Communists play a European Dance
Us Southern Belles will never countenance
Some anti-American Muslim influence
Tea Partiers and Southern Patriots keep romance
We stay deep deep down in the Heart of Dixie!
People like Matt Lauer would have me cower
Like some entre that somehow became sour
Like we should apologize for Senator Tower
Well we Southerners still hold some power
Just look at the US House and glower
My plantation still stands deep in the Heart of Dixie!
I refuse to ever apologize
For what I am, Just try to realize
I know y'all attack with Northern guise
But the secret of all you Mason guys
Is that you do not love those Negroes—surprise!
We are just more honest in the Heart of Dixie!
I will try to keep my show on cable tv
I will ignore my own diabetes
If you Northerners keep my recipes
Whilst your failing hearts atrophy
The South shall rise again
Deep, deep, deep down in the Heart of Dixie!
Comments
Gawd! You are so frigging predictable.
Nevermind waiting for the trial to decide whether or not she, or more accurately her brother, is guilty of sexual harassment and discrimination, yankee lawyer. This is a white woman who admits she has in her life used the n-word and she employs blacks to cook and serve in her restaurants. Of course, she's guilty! Hang her high! Lynch her in the court of public opinion.
[Deep sigh.]*
I am not a fan of Paula Deen. Her eyes freak me out every time I go through the check out line at the grocers. Nor am I impressed with her cooking. Not enough to buy any of her cookbooks anyway. It is too much like my mother's and just about all the mothers in my childhood community and I already have those recipes. However, after reading what has been written so far, the racist charge the usual suspects are so self-righteously and schadenfreudenly leaping on is bogus. For example:
* I still have a lot residual anger from your prom hit piece and the despicable photo you included with it. I did not express it then because I did not want to say anything that might increase its reads.
by EmmaZahn on Fri, 06/21/2013 - 8:16pm
This is a fascinating response. At least to me.
Now Paula is done, fried, over!
by Richard Day on Sat, 06/22/2013 - 12:13am
So because Georgia only voted 45.5% for Obama and some school asked for a segregated prom, that prompted a picture of a lynched black man? What a smug self-satisfied ass.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 06/24/2013 - 12:43pm
I have to admit that I only have 3 of her recipes. Butter, cream cheese and light cream only fits into my special occasions budget. I have watched her only a few times at a friend's house and found her show interesting. I see this more of a back lash because of the harsh unfair politics that some of us has had to suffer and cope with. People are just plain fed up with all the racial dog whistles and the public disrespect for our first African American President and his family. Paula Dean is the product of her deep southern roots. She is in the national spot light and we see her picture all over the retail shops. Along comes a sexual harassment and discrimination suit against her brother and her restaurants. Then there is a growing segment of our population that is ready to grab torches and pitchforks out of frustration. Paula and her southern roots becomes the whipping post. Bubba probably don't have the money that Paula has so her deep pockets is added to the suit. She suffers from panic attacks in the past that kept her home bound until she started making sandwiches to support herself and her boys. She may not weather this as well as Martha did.
by trkingmomoe on Sat, 06/22/2013 - 1:45am
I know a lot of food bloggers who really like her and follow her. Some have included having a meal in her family business when they are on vacation and blog about the food. Her facebook fans page exploded tonight in support of her. She has a large following and food network is going to lose too. Why didn't she settle quickly with this suit before it got out of hand? Settling these suits like this is the cost of being a high profile TV personality.
by trkingmomoe on Sat, 06/22/2013 - 1:44am
I hadn't paid much attention to the Paula Dean story, but was inclined to give her the benefit of the doubt. She used a racial slur after being held up during bank robbery.A gun was pointed to her head. The remark was forgivable in that context, then we heard about her great-grandfather who committed suicide rather than face a life without slaves. That was a factual review of family history. Next we had her introducing her Black personal aid, Hollis Johnson as so black that you could not see him if he stood next to a blackboard. That statement either meant that she was very good friends with Hollis Johnson, or a bigot tolerated because she was rich. We heard of her ideal wedding with older Black men all dressed in white tuxedos. Now, minority employees are telling stories of discrimination. The overall picture is not very pretty.
Don Imus got booted off MSNBC after racializing the Rutgers women's basketball team. He made the mistake of thinking that everyone should share in his humor. To be honest, not enough Black people actually watched Imus to be very upset. It was Black employees within NBC and MSNBC who complained about Imus. The insider complaints were a large part of his demise.
If the people employed by Paula Deen are complaining, she may be at the Imus tipping point. I know that the Food Network fired her, by tipping point I meant that her next cooking show may be on the Rural Television Network with Imus.
by rmrd0000 on Mon, 06/24/2013 - 9:26am
Another Black employee at Bubba's restaurant says that he had to work parties for no pay at the risk of losing his job. Drip, drip, drip.......
by rmrd0000 on Mon, 06/24/2013 - 11:36am
Ta-Nehisi Coates renders his view on Paula's accidental racism.
by rmrd0000 on Tue, 06/25/2013 - 7:49am
TNC's remarks in the comments section are much more interesting.
by PeraclesPlease on Tue, 06/25/2013 - 9:30am
We have been through this argument before. There were race riots in NYC because Whites objected to fighting in a war to free Blacks. Don Imus is from California, but got booted because he offended Blacks who worked at MSNBC with the commentary on the Rutgers women's basketball team.
Paula brought the South into the discussion about her because she talked about her great grandfather sense of loss after Slavery ended. She chose her wording and she imaged Black guys in White tuxedos plantation style.
if it makes you feel good to say that there was/ is racism across the US, knock yourself out. Paula Deen still has to deal with what she said, just like the Californian, Don Imus.
So what should be done about Paula Deen?
by rmrd0000 on Tue, 06/25/2013 - 4:42pm
Yeah, I write bad poems from time to time.
But I don't get it either! hahahah
I really don't care what happens to Paula. Not at all.
It is just I know she is a repub and always has been since '69, I know that she champions the wonders of the old South, I know she feels herself superior as a Southern Plantation Owner, I know that she longs for the good ole days, and I know that I could never agree with her on any issue relating to culinary delights or politics. hahahahahah
I really don't care!
by Richard Day on Tue, 06/25/2013 - 5:12pm