Ebola Enters Liberian Slums

Liberian officials fear the Ebola virus may soon spread through the West Point slum in Monrovia, after residents looted a quarantine center for patients suspected of being infected with Ebola, and removed items including bloody sheets and mattresses.

Violence erupted there after residents became upset that patients from other parts of Monrovia, the capital of Liberia, were being brought to the West Point quarantine center. Up to 30 patients were staying at the center before fleeing prior to the raid. Officials are hoping to locate those patients again so they may be transferred to the Ebola center at Monrovia’s largest hospital.

It was reported that people were seen fleeing the quarantine center location with looted items including medical equipment, mattresses and sheets that were visibly stained with blood, vomit and excrement, and those items were being dragged through the streets and alleyways of the West Point slum.

I can comprehend the idea of fear, and appreciate how that fear could spill out in the form of violence from panic-stricken residents in countries currently battling this Ebola outbreak. It’s hard to imagine how stressful and frightening it must be to live in a place like West Point, the largest slum in Monrovia, with no recourse for getting out, and knowing that Ebola has set up shop in your neighborhood.

I get why people might want to act out as a form of protest, and choose to loot businesses or government agencies, but why would you go anywhere near a quarantine clinic. You could picket outside it to show solidarity. You could even burn the place to the ground, but who loots a deserted quarantine clinic of materials stained with Ebola contaminated secretions. Even in sheer panic I can’t grasp who would go inside such a place, much less touch anything there when it is widely known that Ebola is spread through bodily fluids, including blood, vomit, feces and sweat.

It’s like running into a lab and injecting yourself with the Ebola virus. Who does that? This act follows no logic. In fact either the population is so rife with panic that looting the quarantine center was the act of a hysterical population nearing bedlam, or this population follows a more tribal culture, and lacks first world exposure to norms and education that would generally instill a sense of self-preservation to preclude looting such a location as a course of action. No doubt Liberia is off the beaten path, but I hate to think about the likely consequences of dragging blood stained mattresses and bed sheets through the cramped quarters of the West Point slum.

That area is home to 50,000 or more people, and while order was restored to the West Point neighborhood Sunday by authorities, imagine what happens when people become symptomatic. It could spread like wildfire. Liberian officials already are struggling to contain the outbreak. If the residents of West Point aren’t contained, those with symptoms could spread this across Monrovia, which has a population of nearly 1 million.

Ebola is one of the great global killers, with no cure available. It often claims 90 percent of those victims infected. Thus far Ebola has killed 1,145 people in West Africa during the current outbreak.

Posted in News | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Grimes and McConnell Trade Body Blows at Fancy Farm

Fancy Farm 1It was a record-setting day last Saturday in Graves County, Kentucky, as the 134th annual Fancy Farm political picnic broke attendance marks with upwards of 20,000 people on hand to eat barbecue, support their candidates and jeer the opposition.

The main attraction was Kentucky’s U.S. Senate race. Republican Mitch McConnell is a 30-year incumbent and the architect of the GOP’s partisan gridlock strategy. Meanwhile his opponent, Alison Lundergan Grimes, is running on a change platform, and emphasizes that Kentucky is no longer Sen. McConnell’s focus, he is a Washington insider and the time has come to put somebody back in Washington who will look after Kentucky’s true best interests.

It’s likely $100 million will be spent in this race before it’s over. With that kind of cash there is no shortage of shots being traded by these candidates, but with the stakes so high both have been hesitant to schedule any debates. Fancy Farm put them on the same stage together only a few feet apart, where each had to sit and listen to their opponent skewer the other’s candidacy.

Fancy Farm 3With numerous other candidates also speaking, it wasn’t until midway through the two-hour program that Grimes and McConnell were called. Each rose and faced the other as a coin was tossed. Grimes went first. With the vocal crowd evenly split, red t-shirts on one side for Team Mitch, and blue on the other for Grimes, the Democrat shouted over the boisterous crowd, “What a great crowd for Sen. McConnell’s retirement party.”

Fancy Farm is equal parts a church barbecue, a political convention, and a tent revival all under one open-air rooftop. Even with all the media, the event maintains a feel of barnstorming politics from the 1800s. Candidates have eight minutes to speak, so there is little room for the eloquent table-setting that usual goes with political speeches. Instead the messages are prepared with blood dripping, ready to serve to this hungry crowd.

“Thirty-five is my age,” Grimes roared. “That’s also Senator McConnell’s approval rating.”

Grimes hammered McConnell with the issue of pay equity for women, which Republicans filibustered this year. “If Mitch McConnell was a TV show, he’d be ‘Mad Men,’ treating women unfairly, stuck in 1968 and ending next season,” Grimes shouted.

This brief stump speech opened a new window into how this campaign is going to go moving forward. Grimes may be short on national policy experience, but she is smart, articulate and energized. She has a passion and is prepared to smack McConnell with his record and is certainly no empty dress.

Looking at her opponent, Grimes said, “Thirty years is long enough. Gridlock has consequences.”

Fancy Farm 4Grimes hit on several core populist Democratic issues including the minimum wage, supporting equal-pay-for-equal-work legislation and protecting labor organizing rights. It also was a chance to announce an endorsement from the United Mine Workers, a clear shot that shows unions and miners both think she has the best interest of coal workers at heart in Kentucky, the third-most coal producing state in the country.

“One of us represents the Washington establishment; one of us represents Kentucky,” Grimes said. “One of us represents the past; one of us represents the future. One of us just wants six more years, yet another term, while one of us knows Kentucky deserves better.”

While the speech Grimes delivered was little more than a string of rapid fire one-liners, and came off as heavily scripted and rehearsed, she did manage to deliver it on cue and under adverse conditions without a mistake. She is getting more comfortable under the big lights. Grimes still seems to fair better in scripted opportunities as opposed to a debate format, but the Democrats have a real candidate.

The Republicans on the other hand find themselves in a strange position. McConnell very easily could become the next Senate Majority Leader, but at the same time it would not be remotely surprising to see him sent home in defeat. Those two plausible plot lines don’t usually go together so easily in the same campaign, especially for a guy like McConnell.

There is no getting around he is vulnerable. His job approval numbers continue to hover around 35 percent. Coal jobs are dwindling, and there’s that interview where he uncharacteristically spoke off-the-cuff and stated that it wasn’t his job to create employment opportunities for out-of-work Kentuckians.

It didn’t appear McConnell’s pulse changed one beat from when he was sitting in his chair on stage to taking the microphone before this boisterous crowd. True, he has been here many times before, but it was more than that. McConnell appears physically tired these days and less than excited about dealing with a re-election campaign. That obstructionism is hateful work, and it shows.

McConnell’s speech was also telling as he barely acknowledged his opponent. It was all President Obama and Harry Reid, the current Senate Majority Leader for the Democrats, and how Grimes is their surrogate. Reid would have been amused with so much notoriety. He’s a pretty invisible guy. I wondered how many in this crowd even knew who Reid was. All the same, both Reid and Obama poll poorly in Kentucky, and McConnell is going with a strategy of saying a vote for Grimes is a vote for Obama.

“Kentucky is under attack from Barack Obama’s administration, and we need to fight back,” McConnell said. “There’s only one thing Barack Obama needs to keep his grip on power. He needs the U.S. Senate.”

McConnell jumped on his regular rant about Obama’s “War on Coal,” and how stringent EPA regulations are killing jobs in Kentucky’s coal fields. He told his supporters there is only one way to stop them, “That’s to change the Senate and to make me majority leader.”

Even McConnell recognized he couldn’t go it alone against the zeal and enthusiasm of Grimes. It required placing junior Sen. Rand Paul in the speaking slot just after McConnell’s speech, to offer a more colorful recitation of the same “a vote for Grimes is a vote for the Obama/Reid agenda” rhetoric already presented.

That’s the best McConnell had to offer. No solutions, no fixes, no positive vision for the future. Just tired ideas about wanting to take Kentucky backwards to a place without the Affordable Care Act, taking away quality health insurance from over 500,000 people – and dreaming that the coal seams in Kentucky’ mines could magically be transformed to appear as wide as a mountainside, instead of the 30 inches routinely found today.

It’s the same crap Mitt Romney and George Bush tried to spin. The Republicans want to play on peoples’ fears for all the rapid changes that are occurring in the modern world – and try to sell this image that they can return things to the 1930s, where white America ruled, the U.S. was number one in everything and life was less complicated.

The problem with selling this Fantasy Island, as Romney found out and W’s poll numbers showed on his exit, is that reality is so far past that point of reference that the mirage falls apart. There are real problems with finding enough energy to go around, water is becoming a commodity, the weather is unpredictable, immigration is messy, contagious viruses are getting closer, and America’s rank amongst other world countries is no longer in the Top 10.

Would anyone really think it’s a good idea to have Andy Griffith and Barney Fife out there trying to quell the drug epidemic, attempting to apprehend gang members or working border patrol. Republicans are having a difficult time coming to terms with the fact that their party numbers are dropping, as there are fewer and fewer white males that follow this revisionist line of thinking.

This time around it appears McConnell would just prefer to hurry things up, and dispense with the inconvenience of a re-election campaign, so he could get back to the regal halls of Congress, where he is more comfortable and worshiped. McConnell is a cagey politician, and knows better than to promise any of this revisionist fantasy. As they say, the horse has already left the barn, and these kinds of promises can’t be delivered. It’s only window dressing, but this leaves tenure as his only argument for re-election. Do the people of Kentucky really want to go back to the end of the line with Grimes from a seniority standpoint, who will only vote the way Obama tells her to vote.

It would be one thing if McConnell was using his position to take care of Kentucky, but he hasn’t really done anything of significance for years now. He likes to gloss over the fact that he too held office during this period of time that has seen the largest decline in the coal economy. That is because coal is a business, not a right of employment. The folks who own these coal companies have a bottom line, and the fact of the matter is the coal left in Kentucky is in narrower seams and in harder to reach locations. This isn’t about Obama or any “War on Coal.” It’s a cover story for the fact that it’s now too expensive to get Kentucky coal out of the ground. This career choice of being a miner is evaporating, and its exit is being hastened by the plentiful and cheap substitution of natural gas.

So while I get Obama may not be popular in the Bluegrass for several reasons, with the color of his skin being a more likely culprit than his politics, and McConnell being within breathing distance of his dream job as Senate Majority Leader – there remains nothing tangible being offered by McConnell in terms of how he might make life better for those living in Kentucky. He basically is putting his obstructionist policies in play for the campaign. He lacks the vigor or conviction to explain why Grimes would be a poor choice, so he puts a smokescreen up of Obama and coal for the rubes who watch Fox News to latch onto as they continue to live their disadvantaged lives in a world of poverty.

The crux of this campaign comes down to whether Grimes can make the election about the merits of each candidate currently, and what plans they have for Kentucky going forward, versus this battleground Senate race turning into a referendum on the Obama administration.

“This race,” Grimes said, turning to McConnell, “is between you and me and the people of Kentucky.”

Posted in Events, News, Politics, Reviews | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Working Cassette Player Makes Van Ride A Pleasure

Van 1I went north to Williamstown, KY, this past week, near Falmouth, driving a State of Kentucky half-ton cargo van, the ones that look like prisoner transport vehicles, so I could haul some equipment back to Frankfort. The one I drove the week before had 96,000 miles and the side view mirrors collapsed repeatedly inward from road vibrations until each rested against the driver’s side and passenger’s side windows, rendering my rear visibility to nil.

Van 2My van this week was a spring chicken in comparison at 66,000 miles, and came with an actual working cassette player. I still have a significant tape collection, with the majority on durable Maxell XLII-S cassettes. I pulled a mix I made that was full of late 1970s and early 1980s tunes, in honor of finding a functioning cassette player in a vehicle. There was stuff like The Greg Kihn Band, the Atlanta Rhythm Section, Elvis Costello and Bob Marley. This classic live version of “Use Me,” from Bill Withers, and “Love is Like Oxygen,” from British glam rockers Sweet, particularly jumped out. Nice to hear all this music while out driving about again through Kentucky’s beautiful countryside.

BILL WITHERS | USE ME (Live at Carnegie Hall 1973)

SWEET | LOVE IS LIKE OXYGEN (1978)

Posted in Music, Travel | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Fancy Farm Political Picnic Kicks Off Election Season

MitchAll sports have their seasons of play and politics is no different. Today the preseason concludes for the mid-term U.S. Senate race in Kentucky, as the 134th annual St. Jerome Parish Catholic Picnic, better known as Fancy Farm, offers up its unique brand of barnstorm politics, guaranteed to fill the air with cheers, jeers and boos a plenty.

The event is known for its barbecue lunch with all the trimmings, fun atmosphere, and most of all for the political stump speaking that attracts Kentucky’s elected officials and candidates. Don’t look for major policy speeches, or deep substance – this is red meat partisan jabs delivered from a hot microphone to hungry loyalists waiting to lap it up and give opponents some rough business.

The race between Republican incumbent Sen. Mitch McConnell and Democrat Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes has been simmering since last summer – Fancy Farm should provide the kindling to bring it to a boil from now until Election Day.

A contentious atmosphere is already in the air, as McConnell seeks to paint Grimes as Obama’s candidate, and Grimes goes after the Senate Minority Leader’s recent claim that it’s not his job to find work for unemployed Kentuckians.

McConnell continues to appear vulnerable to attack, as 43 percent of those surveyed in a recent Bluegrass Poll viewed him unfavorably. After six years of leading the Republican strategy of partisan gridlock in Washington, many political observers are wondering aloud if McConnell has finally lost a step. He doesn’t appear to have the same zest or blood in the water ferocity his campaigns usually possess, especially when challenged like how Grimes is taking him to task.

Watch for McConnell to try to dispel any rumored staleness by feeding his faithful exactly what they seek. He is a veteran of the Fancy Farm atmosphere, and knows to keep it light. It’s better to leave this crowd laughing if possible and let the newspapers do the heavy lifting. Grimes meanwhile needs to make a strong showing as undecided voters start to give her a look.

GrimesA record crowd is expected as the Grimes/McConnell race is the hottest contest in the nation. Located in far western Kentucky, in the “Jackson Purchase” region, Fancy Farm usually draws near 10,000 folks, but organizers are expecting 15,000 to 20,000.

Also on the speaking menu today will be term-limited Democratic Gov. Steve Beshear, who will no doubt be singing the praises of the Affordable Care Act and how well Kentucky’s version, kynect, has done with its over 400,000 enrollees. In the green room waiting to run for governor next year is Democrat Jack Conway, Kentucky’s current attorney general, and likely opposing him is Agriculture Secretary James Comer on the Republican side.

The other big speech of the day will come from Kentucky’s junior Senator Rand Paul. Fancy Farm may be his official jump into the 2016 GOP Presidential primary.

Mark Wilson, chairman of Fancy Farm’s political committee, is hoping some semblance of decorum is maintained by the crowds as the political speeches commence. He has noticed more recently a steady increase of choreographed “scream fests” staged by fans from both parties.

“We understand there may be some boos here and there,” said Wilson. “They might jump up and down with some standing ovations, but the constant screaming is what we’re trying to curtail.”

With this much action on tap, there is tons of national media on the scene in Graves County including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times and Politico. C-SPAN, and KET will be providing coverage of the political speeches that begin at 2PM CT. It’s also being shown online at KET.org/live.

Posted in Events, Food, News, Politics, Reviews, Travel | Tagged | Leave a comment

Copper & Kings Brandy Distillery Enters Bourbon Country

CopperTwo words come to mind when checking out Copper & Kings, the new brandy distillery that opened production in the Butchertown neighborhood of Louisville this year, vintage and craft.

The distillery has been making small-batch brandy for months rather quietly, but in July Copper & Kings opened its doors to the public. The scene-stealer here is the enormous copper pot-stills, which were manufactured in Louisville by the distillery’s Butchertown neighbors, Vendome Copper and Brassworks. These handcrafted and hand-hammered pot-stills were designed specifically for the distillation of brandy, and maximize the copper contact with the beverage to ensure the aromatics of the brandy flavors remain uncorrupted.

The idea to build this craft distillery, and locate it in Louisville in the heart of bourbon country, is that of Joe Heron and his wife Lesley’s, who hail from South Africa. They have spent millions turning an old warehouse in Butchertown into a modern distillery with the belief that bourbon drinkers will make room in their liquor selections for brandy.

This is the American dream distilled to life. They have taken a love for brandy and an ambitious idea – and from nothing have created a neighborhood attraction where their dream has come to life. The distillery also has a basement maturation cellar, art gallery event space, office suite and third floor tasting room with sky deck. The final phase of construction should be completed by late summer and will outfit the outdoor courtyard with a fire pit, pig roast, catering prep kitchen and lush landscaping.

Copper 2Their brandies are batch distilled exclusively in copper pot-stills, and are non-chill filtered with no added sugar, boise (powdered oak, shavings or infusion) other flavors, synthetic chemicals or caramel colorants for an uncorrupted, authentic, natural flavor, nose and color. They’ve adopted a ‘low & slow’ distillation philosophy – relatively low distillation temperature for a longer, slower distillation, maximum copper contact, and a distillation batch ceiling of 135 degrees to express concentrated flavors, aromas, and smoothness.

The Heron’s are not new to the beverage industry. After creating a nutrient-enhanced soda called Nutrisoda they sold it to PepsiAmericas, and their hard cider, Crispin Cider, was sold to MillerCoors.

“I think what we try to do for Butchertown is to do something that reflects a culture of sophistication and style with a little bit of edge and a little bit of rock and roll,” says Heron.

The word “brandy” is from the Dutch word “brandewijn” – burnt wine. And they’ve been buying up the best unfiltered wines they can find. The unsulfated wine is distilled at about 135 degrees, until it boils, and then the vapor (which has all the alcohol) is captured and distilled a second time, aged in barrels for two years and then is ready for bottling.

Copper 3“Brandy is not all that far from bourbon, in taste, texture and smoothness,” said Heron. And his brandy will be aged in bourbon barrels. “We’re not making effing French brandy,” he proclaims, “we want a feisty, rambunctious, American product.”

Copper & Kings is aiming for a middle void in the brandy market between Christian Brothers, at $15 and cognac (like Courvoisier) at $50-$75. They hope to see Christian Brothers’ drinkers trade up to something more special but still affordable, along with some cognac drinkers trading down to something more affordable but of similar quality. The Heron’s also intend on luring bourbon drinkers into experimenting with their brandy to add a new flavor to their palates – which is why they chose Kentucky as the home for Copper & Kings.

Copper & Kings Distillery | 1111 E. Washington Street | Louisville, KY | 502-561-0267

Posted in Liquor, News | Tagged , | Leave a comment

New Poll Has McConnell Up 2 Points on Grimes

MitchWith less than 100 days to go before Election Day, the latest poll shows incumbent U.S. Senator Mitch McConnell with a 2 percentage point lead over challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes.

The Bluegrass Poll is based upon a survey taken by Survey USA of 714 registered Kentucky voters, and was sponsored by The Courier-Journal, WHAS-TV, The Lexington Herald-Leader and WKYT-TV. The poll found that if the race were held today, 47 percent of likely voters supported McConnell to 45 percent for Grimes, with 8 percent still undecided.

This is the first time McConnell has led in this poll, which found him trailing Grimes by 4 points in February and 1 point in May. There remains the potential that Libertarian David Patterson will enter this race, but he has not as of yet turned in the required signatures to be placed on the ballot.

In what will likely be a record-setting campaign in terms of money spent – estimates are over $100 million – it’s currently a statistical dead heat, as the plus/minus margin for error on this poll is 3.6 percent.

In reality this race hasn’t actually taken off yet. There are a few ads by each candidate, and some from outside political action committees, but neither campaign has cranked into full election mode.

Likely it will be after this weekend, when the dust settles from the Aug. 2 annual Fancy Farm political picnic in far western Kentucky, that this Senate race begins in earnest.

Various meanings can be drawn from the numbers within this poll. If you are McConnell it’s always a good thing to be leading, but there are two big indicators that spell trouble for the sitting Senate Minority Leader.

One, he still hasn’t garnered 50 percent of the electorate. For a 30-year incumbent not to have at least 50 percent support at this point is concerning. Secondly, McConnell’s personal approval numbers remain dismal. Only 36 percent viewed McConnell as favorable, while 43 percent viewed him as unfavorable.

That kind of number for a guy like Mitch will get you beat. The other issue clearly dogging McConnell is his statement that it is not his job to bring employment to Kentucky. Appearing in Beattyville on April 24, McConnell was asked by The Beattyville Enterprise what he was going to do to bring jobs to Lee County. This was a quick interview in a hallway before the senator was to address a political luncheon, but uncharacteristically for this veteran politician McConnell said, “Economic development is a Frankfort issue. That is not my job. It is the primary responsibility of the state Commerce Cabinet.”

I don’t know what kind of bee was in his bonnet, but that kind of pass-the-buck response in a state where coal jobs are dwindling and unemployment is at 7.7 percent, well above the national average, is hurtful, and Grimes is rightfully beating McConnell over the head with it.

This showed in the poll, as respondents were asked whom they trusted more to create jobs, and Grimes won out with 41 percent to McConnell’s 37 percent.

GrimesFor Grimes, she should feel good that McConnell has spent $30 million thus far and yet remains basically tied. Her favorability is in the positive, and somewhat surprisingly she is on the winning side of the abortion issue, as 43 percent to 39 percent of Kentuckians support leaving the law in its current form. Troubling is that she only leads McConnell by one point with female voters, and that her overall support has declined in each poll after initially leading by 4 points.

There is plenty of time yet, and neither candidate has fully staked out their political stands. Folks just aren’t ready to pay close attention quite yet, so there is no reason, especially for Grimes, to turn that heat up quite yet.

Admittedly, there is less chance that core McConnell supporters will change their vote – what Grimes is looking for is a way to make his typical voters stay home on Election Day. Not voting is a vote for Grimes.

I get McConnell’s people want to draw the comparison that Grimes is essentially Obama, but this is kind of like the partisan obstruction strategy chiefly put in place by McConnell for the Republican Party in Congress. It’s not pretty, it’s not popular, and it’s counterproductive. Eventually you have to step up and stand for something. This strategy has failed in two high-profile elections. Ask former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and former Republican Rep. Eric Cantor – obstructionism and just being against everything, without offering viable solutions to problems eventually gets you beat.

What this poll is starting to show is a tightening of core support. Well over 80 percent of the likely electorate appears to have decided how they are going to cast their ballots. This leaves the 3.6 percent margin of error voters, and the 8 percent of undecided or swing voters that still are up for grabs. Somewhere in the neighborhood of $70 million is about to get spent on wooing those votes over the next 98 days.

It’s all about voter turnout. Buckle up folks, this is going to be a tight one.

Posted in News, Politics | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Ebola Making A Break From Its Jungle Home

The Ebola outbreak centered around West Africa is starting to get a bit too interesting. As of July 20, some 1,093 people in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia are believed to have been infected by Ebola since symptoms were first observed four months ago.

Testing confirmed the Ebola virus in 786 of those cases, and 442 of those people died. Of the 1,093 confirmed, probable and suspected cases, 660 of those have died. Since then the number of infected has risen to at least 1,201, and 672 have died according to the World Health Organization.

Now there is potential that the disease could spread to an even wider population, as an air traveler hopped an international flight Tuesday from Monrovia, Liberia to Lagos, Nigeria, Africa’s largest city with 21 million people, via a stopover in Lome, Togo.

Airports in these countries are on alert, but they have weak screening systems in place to prevent possible Ebola victims from traveling, and it’s not often easy to identify a person who is infected. Ebola has a variable incubation period of between two and 21 days, and can’t be diagnosed on the spot. Also it’s a tricky virus, as the initial symptoms, such as fever, headache, sore throat, and fatigue, mask themselves as other more common illnesses, before escalating to vomiting, diarrhea, and internal and external bleeding.

This current outbreak is already the deadliest on record, and concern has increased in Nigeria where many live in cramped conditions, that a disease such as Ebola could spread like wildfire.

There is no known cure for this highly contagious virus, which is one of the world’s deadliest.

The infected air traveler, Patrick Sawyer, was a consultant for the Liberian Ministry of Finance, and reportedly did not show Ebola symptoms when he boarded the plane Tuesday, but by the time he arrived in Nigeria he was vomiting and had diarrhea. He was dead by Friday.

Blood tests from Sawyer confirmed he died of Ebola. The nearly 50 other passengers onboard are being monitored for signs of Ebola but are not being kept in isolation. It was learned that Sawyer’s sister had also died of Ebola in Liberia, but he claimed to have had no contact with her.

Ebola is highly contagious and typically kills 90 percent of the people infected, but with early treatment, this current outbreak has a death rate of roughly 70 percent. Ebola is passed by touching bodily fluids of patients even after they die. Traditional burials in this area of the world can include rubbing the bodies of the dead, which contributes to the spread of the disease.

Ebola isn’t contagious until symptoms appear, but because the incubation period varies and symptoms don’t always appear immediately, the virus can easily spread as people travel around the West African region. Once infected with the virus, many people die in an average of 10 days as the blood fails to clot and hemorrhaging occurs.

Two American aid workers in Monrovia, Liberia have tested positive for Ebola. Nancy Writebol, a Charlotte, NC resident, tested positive Friday, and on Saturday, Dr. Kent Brantly, of Fort Worth, Texas, had a positive result. Both were helping to treat Ebola patients.

Also on Saturday, Dr. Samuel Brisbane died in Liberia after he had previously contracted the disease during his treatment of Ebola patients at John F. Kennedy Memorial Medical Center in Monrovia.

These incidents come on the heels of the confirmation of another doctor, Sheik Umar Khan, who has played a key role in fighting the Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone, was found infected with the disease.

The first case in Sierra Leone, which has posted the highest infection numbers recently, originated in Freetown, the capital, when a hairdresser became ill. Her family forcibly removed her from a government hospital, sparking a frantic search that ended Friday, when it was confirmed she had died while being transported to a treatment center in the east of the country.

The West African outbreak is believed to have begun as far back as January in southeast Guinea, though the first cases weren’t confirmed until March.

Posted in News, Travel | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Forecastle Continues to Forge Kentucky Identity

Forecastle 5The Forecastle music festival in Louisville continues to grow and find its place as one of the signature events Kentucky has to offer. Running since 2002, the three-day music, art and cuisine event this year drew just over 60,000 visitors, slightly up from 2013.

To Forecastle’s credit its organizers place more of a premium on improving the experience for its festivalgoers over simply trying to grow attendance. JK McKnight founded Forecastle, but has transitioned over to handling more of the brand sponsorship angle of the festival, leaving the running of it up to Knoxville-based AC Entertainment, who is associated with the ginormous Bonnaroo event in Manchester, Tenn.

This is the third year of Forecastle’s partnership with AC Entertainment, and there are positive results. The festival is more polished, the field attractions, stages and all the eye-candy atmospherics that 20-somethings are looking for in a festival experience are growing more noticeable. Keep in mind that an event like Forecastle isn’t meant for those much over 30 years of age. If older demographics attend that’s great, they have more disposable income, but the young un’s want a party atmosphere.

I love the increased profile and added innovations in Forecastle’s Bourbon Lodge. It is an excellent way to introduce a new generation of cultural influencers to the native spirit of the Bluegrass, and opens up a different attraction angle for the festival. Likewise, the Kentucky Landing, which debuted this year, offers beer drinkers only Kentucky-brewed options. There also was the strategic use of food trucks to provide a wider perspective of menu options to hungry attendees.

Forecastle 1There were no long waits for food, drinks or bathrooms at the festival, allowing Forecastle to keep its small-community feel from when it began in Louisville’s Tyler Park. My guess is the organizers are looking to get more like 75,000 at Forecastle, and they have a good shot at that going forward, but it will take a stronger musical lineup.

The 2014 headliners were Outkast, who hasn’t done much of anything for seven years, Jack White, and Beck. Don’t even try to sell The Replacements. They were alcoholic no-shows back in the 80’s and we saw what kind of draw they pulled at Coachella, awful. The problem for Forecastle is while it did have a diverse lineup, the undercard featured a bunch of bands that for the most part would only play early afternoon sets at festivals like Lollapalooza or Bonnaroo.

Don’t get me wrong, this lineup is still quality, especially in Kentucky, where getting folks out to individual alt shows is a challenge, so grouping them into a festival format is smart and pulls an audience. But if organizers hope to keep this current level of interest and bring in another 15,000 ticket purchasers, they will need to step their game up and offer a lineup that has more sizzle throughout.

Forecastle 2One winning indicator is that Forecastle recognizes that if it offers a fairly generic festival lineup, one way it can set itself apart from other fests is to brand itself Kentucky-made, by featuring bourbon, local beers, area star chefs, and Hunter S. Thompson.

Forecastle is a great addition to the music scene in Louisville, and with a strong Kentucky identity, it will continue to grow as a travel destination for those outside the Louisville metro area.

If you are interested in checking out Forecastle, I highly recommend getting on their mailing list. They do offer early bird specials that are considerably cheaper than the $184.50 charged for three-day passes this year. Just buy them even though the artists will not be announced. It’s a fun time, it’s local, and live music sounds even better outside in the summer.

Posted in Events, Food, Liquor, Music, News, Reviews, Travel | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Blues Guitarist Johnny Winter Dies at 70

Johnny WinterIt was near impossible not to recognize the albino guitar slinger Johnny Winter. Like stereotypical Texans, the Beaumont native was long and tall, but weighed only 130 pounds, with long stringy white hair, pinkish crossed eyes and pale chalk-colored skin. He was a memorable figure wearing a black cowboy hat and carrying his axe.

Winter was found dead on July 16th at the age of 70 in his Zürich, Switzerland hotel room while on tour in Europe.

While his look added to his notoriety, it was his virtuosic guitar playing that made him such a star performer. Born in 1944, Winter took to music early, and by age 15 had cut his first record. In 1969 he released his first album, entitled simply “Johnny Winter.” He was a high-energy rock performer, with a blues heart. Winter was one of the original white blues players, who recorded a string of successful records, played Woodstock, and translated his abilities into filling arenas for his live performances.

In the late 1970s, Winter collaborated with Muddy Waters, producing three Grammy Award-winning records for the iconic blues player. His guitar was often sought after and Winter employed his services with the likes of Howlin’ Wolf, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Albert Collins, John Lee Hooker, Willie Dixon, Sonny Terry, Derek Trucks and Warren Haynes.

JOHNNY WINTER – BE CAREFUL WITH A FOOL

Winter was an interesting contrast when you recall that at his peak of popularity in the 1970s, he was competing with the explosion of punk rock, glam rockers like David Bowie and the onslaught of disco. Winter held his own and continued to be a valued collaborator and performance musician until his untimely death. In 1988, he was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame, and in 2003 Rolling Stone magazine ranked him the 63rd greatest guitarist of all time.

Winter is survived by his younger brother Edgar, an occasional band mate, who shares the same albino appearance and is a talented keyboardist and saxophonist.

Keep on rockin’ up there Johnny, and R.I.P.

Posted in Music | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Cash Flows into Kentucky Senate Race

To the left is Senate challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes, and to the right is Sen. Mitch McConnell.

To the left is Senate challenger Alison Lundergan Grimes, and to the right is Sen. Mitch McConnell.

The U.S. Senate race in Kentucky keeps heating up, and it’s looking to be a record setter. Let’s be honest, whether Democrat or Republican, there is no bigger race to watch than incumbent Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell against Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes.

Right now it’s neck and neck. McConnell is up in two of the four most recent public polls, while Grimes is up in the other two, both showing leads within the margin of error. As the end of July approaches, the campaigns are still getting all their chess pieces in place for the fall, with few solid statements coming from either campaign, but the money being raised by both is impressive.

Grimes set a record last Tuesday when she reported raising $4 million in the second quarter of the year, smashing McConnell’s old mark of $2.9 million set leading up to his 2008 re-election. She raised more money in the quarter than any other candidate running for a U.S. Senate seat in America.

McConnell meanwhile set a personal best by raising $3.1 million in the second quarter, pushing his overall fundraising thus far to a record $25 million. This is over double the $11.3 million Grimes has raised thus far.

Conversely, McConnell’s cash-on-hand advantage has dropped from $9.6 million a year ago when Grimes entered the race, to $3.6 million.

Grimes is a formidable opponent. She has contributions from all 120 counties in Kentucky, and is one of the few Senate challengers or incumbents that can claim having received donations from all 50 states.

Grimes trouble is she is a high wire act with no net. McConnell is a fierce campaigner, which belies his mild appearance, who has a penchant for taking characterizations of opponents and distilling them into oversimplified, but humorously damaging campaign ads. Grimes has little to no room for mistakes or equivocation. Kentucky is solidly conservative, and has a strong distaste for President Obama, even though the Affordable Care Act has proved to be extremely successful in the Bluegrass.

This leaves Grimes in the unenviable spot of needing to distance herself from Obama while on some level praising the new health care law, supporting coal and guns, and must also remain attractive to mainline Democratic voters.

Helping her out will be McConnell, who has meticulously crafted his role as “Obstructionist in Chief” by basically refusing to allow any legislative activity to proceed for years. This was part of McConnell’s wider political agenda for the Republican Party, in its failed attempt to deny President Obama a second term.

That is one way to fly, but it didn’t work out so well for former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor. He had designs on becoming Speaker, but was shockingly defeated in his Republican primary last month.

Campaign 2McConnell isn’t exactly popular in Kentucky. He says lots of the right things, but after 30 years in office he is the consummate Washington insider and the face of partisan gridlock. A recent poll found only 32 percent approved of McConnell’s job performance. This was even lower than President Obama’s job approval ratings in Kentucky.

With McConnell, he’s more the devil folks know. He’s also seen as having a leadership position, so supposedly that keeps the interests of Kentucky looked after, but it has been a while since Kentucky was really on top of Mitch’s To-Do list.

It is predicted that north of $100 million will get spent in this race before it’s over. Both candidates will have the cash-on-hand to get their messages out, motivate voters, run ads and all the other tricks and treats. The question is whether this is a “Ditch Mitch” kind of year, or can a solid run by Grimes make the difference.

Regardless, most observers agree that this closely watched Senate race will be the most expensive ever run in Kentucky.

Posted in News, Politics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment