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Connecting During Four Years of Chaos
Randy Fertel Randy Fertel

Connecting During Four Years of Chaos

This at once darkest and most festive time of year, too, is a time of connection. And disconnection. A lot of ink has been spilled of late about how to deal with the Woke or MAGA devotee Uncle Benny around the Thanksgiving or Christmas holiday table. Get beyond politics, we are advised. Only connect, we are advised. But how?

The trauma of COVID’s forced isolation not yet behind us, we long for connection. For reasons I can’t explain I tend to avoid the telephone. But at the beginning of the lockdown, I reached out to a friend and had a long, lovely chat. Afterwards, I wisely announced to myself — drumroll — that the remedy for this prolonged isolation would depend on staying in touch with friends. Full of that wisdom, I returned to composing Winging It: Improv’s Power and Peril in the Time of Trump, and the wisdom was all but lost. I hope it was worth it, but who can say? It depends upon my success in connecting to readers.

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A Deeper Dive on Tribalism: On the Eve of the 2024 U.S. Election
Randy Fertel Randy Fertel

A Deeper Dive on Tribalism: On the Eve of the 2024 U.S. Election

Political discourse now echoes the darkest moments before the Civil War. If we haven’t seen an event on the Senate floor like the 1856 caning of Charles Sumner, when Representative Preston Brooks, a pro-slavery Democrat from South Carolina, used a walking cane to attack an abolitionist Republican from Massachusetts, the January 6th perpetrators did far worse in order to get into the Senate Chamber.

Call it Trump Derangement Syndrome if you must but count me among the less surprised at the caning of Mookie Betts in the Dodgers-Yankees World Series. Yankees fan Austin Capobianco grabbed Betts’s glove with both hands and pulled the ball out. Capobianco’s friend, John Peter, grabbed Betts’s non-glove hand.

Sign of the times? You bet.

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