For about 20 years, Ray Keating wrote a weekly column - a short time with the New York City Tribune, more than 11 years with Newsday, another seven years with Long Island Business News, plus another year-and-a-half with RealClearMarkets.com. As an economist, Keating also pens an assortment of analyses each week. With the Keating Files, he decided to expand his efforts with regular commentary touching on a broad range of issues, written by himself and an assortment of talented contributors and columnists. So, here goes...
Showing posts with label Paul McCartney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul McCartney. Show all posts

Monday, June 6, 2022

Paul McCartney in Concert and “Top Gun: Maverick” – Much More Than Nostalgia

 by Ray Keating

The Keating Files – June 6, 2022

 

I don’t particularly like when people talk about “the good old days.” Were they really that good?

 

I’ve also become less of a fan of the word “nostalgia,” coming to see a sentimental longing for the past as kind of sad.

 

Yet, at the same time, I’m fascinated by the past, by history. Heck, I just published a piece of historical fiction – Cathedral: An Alliance of Saint Michael Novel – set in the early 1930s.



So, what’s the deal? Specifically, I love learning from the past; finding people, moments and things from history offering insights and value; and informing people today so that they too can learn and gain appreciation.

 

Having said this, rare moments occur when someone or something great from the past builds on those experiences to raise something current to a higher level in certain ways. I had that happen twice over the past week and a half. 

 

First, I saw Paul McCartney at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida, on May 28. While I was excited to see one of the true greats of rock ‘n’ roll, I didn’t really know what to expect with the “Got Back” tour. After all, the former Beatle is 79 years old. So, I lowered my expectations heading to the concert. No matter what, just seeing McCartney live in concert would be enough.

 

It turned out that I was completely blown away. The music was awesome largely because of McCartney’s abilities, again, at 79. His voice was strong. His guitar and piano playing were spot on. The entire show was a sensation. And then throw into the mix his history as a great songwriter and Beatle, as well as the fact that he skillfully sprinkled in some wonderful stories and bows to the likes of John Lennon and George Harrison. There also was a humbleness communicated from McCartney that was in no way contrived. 

 

This ranked as a celebration of McCartney’s entire career, a recognition of his past and current skills, and very much a top-notch concert (indeed, one of the best I’ve ever attended).

 

For all of my life, I’ve loved songs like “Junior’s Farm,” “Love Me Do,” “Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da,” and “Band on the Run.” And McCartney and his current band played those superbly, as they did with the rest of their lengthy playlist for more than two-and-half hours that night. 

 

And then there was the three-song close to their main setlist – a beautiful rendition of “Let It Be,” followed by a major shift of gears to “Live and Let Die” amidst fire and fireworks, and then cellphone lights filling the stadium to “Hey Jude.” Toss in an excellent encore, and this Paul McCartney concert was sublime.



Could there be more? A few nights later, I had a different, yet similar experience in a movie theater.

 

While I enjoyed Top Gun when it hit movie theaters in 1986, it was never a big favorite of mine. For some reason, however, the trailers for Top Gun: Maverick, a sequel coming 36 years later, captured my imagination, and my anticipation was only further fueled by what I had read about the film. 

 

Top Gun: Maverick wasn’t going to be a green screen, CGI escapade. This was going to be actors in the cockpits of jet fighters (along with actual pilots), real aircraft carriers, and so on. And it in no way disappointed. The flight scenes were nothing less than breathtaking. I’ve come to expect a great deal visually from a Tom Cruise movie in recent years, and this did more than deliver, it surpassed those expectations.

 

But, yes, there was still more. While this was first and foremost an action movie, it had real characters. It was evident that the director, Joseph Kosinski, writers and actors cared about the story. It had heart. It made sense (never a given today). And there was real weight to the decisions and actions taken by the characters. And it dealt with such values as honor and sacrifice.

 

Do you have to see Top Gun to fully appreciate Top Gun: Maverick? It certainly helps, but it isn’t a hard requirement. While taking much from that 1986 film, this new movie moves beyond it in most ways – from the characters to the action.

 

Tom Cruise, Kosinski and the rest of the cast and crew have achieved what few others have in Hollywood. They took something from the past that was beloved by many, and improved upon it. In fact, Top Gun: Maverick is an action movie that not only blows past many other recent action films, but it’s far superior to the original Top Gun.

 

Yeah, from Paul McCartney belting out “Get Back” to Tom Cruise skimming the treetops in jet fighter, this was far more than mere nostalgia, it was current-day greatness with a tip of the hat to the past.

 

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Ray Keating is a columnist, novelist, economist, podcaster and entrepreneur. The views expressed here are his own – after all, no one else should be held responsible for this stuff, right?

 

Two great ways to pre-order Cathedral: An Alliance of Saint Michael Novel, which is Ray’s sixteenth work of fiction, and the first in the Alliance of Saint Michael series. Signed paperbacks here and the Kindle edition here

 

Two great ways to order Ray Keating’s new nonfiction book – The Weekly Economist: 52 Quick Reads to Help You Think Like an Economist. Signed paperbacks here, and paperbacks, hardcovers and Kindle editions here.  

 

Get all of Ray Keating Pastor Stephen Grant thrillers and mysteries in paperback and for the Kindle at Amazon.com and signed books at www.RayKeatingOnline.com.

 

Some of Keating’s best columns and essays are available in Behind Enemy Lines: Conservative Communiques from Left-Wing New YorkAnd his other recent nonfiction book is Free Trade Rocks! 10 Points on International Trade Everyone Should Know. Again, signed books at www.RayKeatingOnline.com.

 

Also, check out Ray’s podcasts – the Daily Dose of DisneyFree Enterprise in Three Minutes, and the PRESS CLUB C Podcast.

 

Check out Ray Keating’s Disney news and entertainment site at www.DisneyBizJournal.com.

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

I’ve Been Granted 7 Pop Culture Wishes

by Ray Keating
The Keating Files – June 16, 2020

Everybody seems to have a list of things they’d like to see happen on the entertainment front. A pop culture wish list, if you will. And if you don’t, well, you should if you’re any fun at all.

And my wish list isn’t about things that I wish never happened – well, not really. These are things that I wish for, and if people would just listen, each could happen. So, let’s go, pay attention entertainment executives.


First, Paul McCartney and Brian Wilson need to get together and cut an album. Think about having one of the musical geniuses behind the Beatles and the creative force of the Beach Boys – the two greatest rock ‘n’ roll bands of all time (yes, I wrote it!) – get together to make an album during their later years. Make it happen!

Second, and this verges on wishing-it-never-happened, but in reality is a fix-it wish: Bring William Shatner back for one more turn as Captain James T. Kirk. Shatner, Kirk and Star Trek fans deserved a heck of a lot more than that ridiculous death in Star Trek: Generations. If you can bring Patrick Stewart back as Captain Picard for a full season (and apparently two more) of Picard, then get Shatner back in the captain’s chair for something ... anything! And so what if he can’t get into a good fistfight or land the sexy alien woman any more (Is that PC? Will someone get upset?) – after all, the dude is 89 (and looks great) – he can still speak in commanding Shatner-esque fashion on the bridge of the Enterprise.

Third, the Nerd Herder in me wishes – no, he demands – that Chuck return. For those who don’t know what Chuck was or is, my response is: What the hell is wrong with you? Chuck ran on NBC from 2007 to 2012. It was an hour-long comedy about an underachieving tech guy, played by Zachary Levi, who works at the Buy More (think Best Buy), but suddenly gets government secrets implanted in his head. What follows is a delightful five seasons of nerds, spies, silly bad guys, nerd humor, romance, and action, along with wonderful and weird characters who are irresistible. Along the way, the show was kept alive by fan campaigns. To many of those fans, though, the two-hour finale came up short. There’s been lots of talk about a Chuck movie, with Levi making clear he’s in favor of it. 

Now, follow this: HBO Max now ranks among streaming options seeking content, and it’s owned by AT&T. In turn, AT&T also owns Warner Brothers Studio, which controls Chuck (I think). Therefore, it’s time for the return of Chuck courtesy of HBO Max streaming, and I say it should be either a series of movies or, preferably, a few eight-episode seasons.

Incidentally, I wrote a book titled“Chuck” vs. the Business World: Business Tips on TV, which offers all kinds of career and business tips based on the show.

Fourth, I might regret this wish: But even with Steven Spielberg dropping out, the movie getting pushed back time and again due to assorted delays, and Harrison Ford getting up there in years, I still wish to see another Indiana Jones movie. Let’s hope that director James Mangold and Harrison Ford can pull off some Indy magic one more time.

Fifth, after this next James Bond movie is released, it is presumed to be the last one for Daniel Craig. He has been the best Bond thus far, so who could succeed him in the role? It obviously should be Henry Cavill. Don’t argue.

Sixth, in the next season of Magnum P.I., the original Magnum, Tom Selleck, needs to guest star in a two-part episode playing a detective from the mainland – preferably, Detroit – who was an old friend of the new Magnum’s (Jay Hernandez) father. Give me a call, CBS, I can pen a fun script.

Seventh, I wish that Warner Brothers would give the green light for Zack Snyder to finish his version of the Justice League movie, so we can... What? Oh, that’s happening? It’s supposed to be coming to HBO Max in 2021. Well, great. Mission accomplished. Wish fulfilled. I guess I’ll stop there then.

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Ray Keating is a columnist, economist, podcaster and entrepreneur.  You can order his new book Behind Enemy Lines: Conservative Communiques from Left-Wing New York from Amazon or signed books at RayKeatingOnline.com. His other recent nonfiction book is Free Trade Rocks! 10 Points on International Trade Everyone Should Know. Keating also is a novelist. His latest novels are  The Traitor: A Pastor Stephen Grant Novel, which is the 12th book in the series, and the second edition of Root of All Evil? A Pastor Stephen Grant Novel with a new Author Introduction. The views expressed here are his own – after all, no one else should be held responsible for this stuff, right?

Also, tune in to Ray Keating’s podcasts – the PRESS CLUB C Podcastand the Free Enterprise in Three Minutes Podcast