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Message
We are the World (Greatest Night in Pop) but only Steve Perry and Kenny Loggins
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:32 pm
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:32 pm
The Greatest Night in Pop , featuring behind the scenes footage of the filming of We are the World, is one of the best documentaries ive ever seen .. this is three minutes featuring two iconic singers from that era
.
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Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:35 pm to BK Lounge
I misread that as Katie Perry and Kenny Rodgers.
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:37 pm to BK Lounge
We are the world
We are the children
We are the ones who make a brighter day
So, let's start giving
There's a choice we're making
We're saving our own lives
It's true we'll make a better day
Just you and me
We are the children
We are the ones who make a brighter day
So, let's start giving
There's a choice we're making
We're saving our own lives
It's true we'll make a better day
Just you and me
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:47 pm to BK Lounge

quote:
`REDNECK` NEWSPAPER COLUMN HAS DALLAS HOT UNDER COLLAR
Apr 28, 1985
DALLAS — Joe Bob Briggs, the redneck newspaper columnist people loved to hate, for years referred to women as ''bimbos,'' Mexican Americans as ''Meskins'' and blacks as ''stupid Negroes.''
But when Joe Bob, a fictitious Archie Bunker-type character, used his weekly column in the Dallas Times Herald to lampoon starving children in Africa and the hit song ''We Are the World,'' which was recorded to raise money for famine relief, it triggered such an uproar in the minority community that the newspaper knuckled under.
''Joe Bob Goes to the Drive-In,'' a satirical column that critiqued films in direct proportion to their content of ''blood, breasts and beasts,'' was ordered to hit the road by the paper`s editor. It also was canceled by the Los Angeles Times Syndicate, which had distributed Joe Bob to 57 other newspapers.
But the obituary was premature. Universal Press Syndicate immediately picked up the column and 55 of those 57 newspapers, primarily in the South and West, will continue to receive it.
Its cancellation touched off another debate over the 1st Amendment and whether the paper and the Times syndicate had acted too hastily in abandoning Joe Bob, whom they once showcased.
''Poking fun at all people, all causes, that`s the bottom line,'' said John Bloom, who wrote the Joe Bob feature for three years along with other Times Herald columns under his own name.
''It was very literally a place where nothing was sacred--literally nothing,'' he explained after his resignation from the paper and the editor`s decision to kill a new sports column he had been writing titled ''Jock Talk with Joe Bob.''
''One woman once wrote in and said, `Of all people, how could you make fun of handicapped people?` And Joe Bob wrote back, `We`re all handicapped, honey, ever` last one of us,` '' said Bloom, who denies he is Joe Bob and describes himself instead as a friend and spokesman of the fictitious columnist.
Though Bloom frequently champions liberal causes when writing under his own name, Joe Bob is a bigoted reactionary who denounces communists, wimps and just about any ethnic group.
quote:
What touched off the whole brouhaha was a column April 12 in which Joe Bob said he had written a song ''for the benefit of minority groups in Africa and the United Negro College Fund in the United States, cause I think we should be sending as many Negroes to college as we can, specially the stupid Negroes.''
His lyrics began: ''We are the weird, We are the starvin, We are the scum of the filthy Earth, So let`s start scarfin. . . . There`s a goat-head bakin, We`re callin it their food, If the Meskins can eat it, They can eat it too.''
Among black leaders angered by the column was Dallas attorney Eric Moye, who called it ''probably the most offensive column that I have seen written under that nom de plume. . . . People decided, not just the minority community, that he just went too far.''
Moye said a newspaper has its own responsibilities ''not to pander'' to bigotry, ignorance and the ''worst impulses of people.''
Moreover, Moye said, since the column was syndicated, for a city that is "image-conscious to the point of being paranoid about it, to permit somebody like this to be associated with Dallas on a nationwide scale is abominable.''
Editor Jarrett said the famine column ''clearly went over the line'' from the usual bad taste to unacceptable ethnic insult. He admitted that the feature should have been killed ''a long time ago'' because it had strayed from its original concept of a self-effacing redneck movie critic.
Many of Joe Bob`s fans wrote in to protest his demise. Howard Feldman of Dallas said he was ''flabbergasted'' the editors would ''kowtow to a group of angry citizens.''
Said Fred Lusk of Duncanville, Tex.: ''Anyone who took the column seriously was worthy of its attention.''/quote][quote]Bloom termed the decision to kill the column not a 1st Amendment issue,''just a coward issue.''
Paraphrasing Mark Twain, Bloom said, ''I know what Joe Bob would say. As usual, he would say that if anybody could find any redeeming social value in anything he writes, please write in so he can get rid of it.''
Joe Bob`s motto is that ''life is too important to be taken seriously,''
Bloom mused. The first column written for his new syndicate was characteristically irreverent, comparing Joe Bob`s death to the assassination of John F. Kennedy and various conspiracy theories.
''First the National Organization of Bimbos tries to wipe Joe Bob off the face of the Earth for saying I`m opposed to slapping women around like dead mackerels unless it`s necessary to the plot,'' Joe Bob complained.
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:48 pm to Thirty Three
That's pablum. What was the end result of this "saving our own lives"?
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:50 pm to Jake88
quote:
That's pablum. What was the end result of this "saving our own lives"?
I am always open to being corrected, but i believe that USA for Africa raised, and continues to raise, many millions of dollars for famine relief .. What have you done ?
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:55 pm to BK Lounge
quote:I asked the question about where the money went.
What have you done ?
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:55 pm to Jake88
quote:Bro, there comes a time when we heed a certain call, when the world must come together as one. There are people dying. Oh, when it's time to lend a hand to life, the greatest gift of all.
That's pablum. What was the end result of this "saving our own lives"?
We can't go on pretending day by day that someone somewhere will soon make a change. We're all a part of God's great big family. And the truth, you know...Love is all we need.
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:56 pm to Kafka
Eric Moye was eventually elected as a Dallas County District Judge.
Posted on 10/20/25 at 10:59 pm to Thirty Three
quote:
Thirty Three
Why do you keep creating new screen names?
Posted on 10/20/25 at 11:04 pm to BK Lounge
The best story is Waylon walking out when they wanted him to sing in Swahili.
This post was edited on 10/20/25 at 11:07 pm
Posted on 10/20/25 at 11:04 pm to BK Lounge
That song was a terrible attempt of US musicians to match the Europeans' "Do They Know it's Christmas?"
Posted on 10/20/25 at 11:07 pm to BK Lounge
quote:What would a tapeworm tell its kids as a bedtime story?
The Greatest Night in Pop
Posted on 10/20/25 at 11:17 pm to Kafka
Do They Know It;'s Christmas > We Are The World and it's not close. DTKIC was done with feeling. WEATW is typical Quincy Jones overproduced schlock.
Posted on 10/20/25 at 11:27 pm to BK Lounge
I thought you had stopped being such a fig?
Posted on 10/20/25 at 11:42 pm to Jim Rockford
quote:Yacht Pop
We Are The World
Posted on 10/21/25 at 12:29 am to Jim Rockford
Do They Know It’s Christmas?
Does who know??? Africans? Why would they know it’s Christmas, famine or not? They aren’t Christians.
Does who know??? Africans? Why would they know it’s Christmas, famine or not? They aren’t Christians.
Posted on 10/21/25 at 1:09 am to WinnaSez
quote:
Christianity was introduced to Ethiopia in the 4th century, and the Ethiopian Orthodox Church (called Tewahdo in Ethiopia) is one of the oldest organized Christian bodies in the world. The church has long enjoyed a dominant role in the culture and politics of Ethiopia, having served as the official religion of the ruling elite until the demise of the monarchy in 1974. It also has served as the repository of Ethiopia’s literary tradition and its visual arts. The core area of Christianity is in the highlands of northern Ethiopia, but its influence is felt in the entire country. More than two-fifths of Ethiopians follow the teachings of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. An additional one-fifth adhere to other Christian faiths, the vast majority of which are Protestant.
LINK

This post was edited on 10/21/25 at 1:13 am
Posted on 10/21/25 at 1:34 am to WinnaSez
quote:
Why would they know it’s Christmas, famine or not? They aren’t Christians.
What? The song was originally for raising money for Ethiopia. The majority religion of Ethiopia is Christianity.
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