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mahatmakanejeeves

(60,933 posts)
Fri Sep 7, 2018, 10:03 AM Sep 2018

The mean streets of Bethesda

From:

The Daily 202: Kavanaugh won’t even go as far as Gorsuch in defending judges from Trump’s personal attacks

....
Some on Twitter took issue with Kavanaugh's comment that he “grew up in a city plagued by gun violence and gang violence and drug violence.” From a writer for Media Matters:

"I grew up in a city plagued by gun and gang and drug violence." Kavanaugh's high school, Georgetown Prep, literally has an on-campus golf course.



From a Post reporter:

I grew up in Bethesda, too, and live there now. Kavanaugh knows perfectly well that biggest complaint was difficulty finding quality lawn care.



STRAIGHT OUTTA BETHESDA

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The mean streets of Bethesda (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Sep 2018 OP
That is the most ridiculous comment yet from Kavanaugh Pachamama Sep 2018 #1
Right, and DC is not very far, elleng Sep 2018 #3
Something of an exaggeration! elleng Sep 2018 #2
The Psyche Delly? mahatmakanejeeves Sep 2018 #4
Missed it, had just moved to DC! elleng Sep 2018 #5
As a former resident of the D.C. area and having lived in Bethesda packman Sep 2018 #6

Pachamama

(17,013 posts)
1. That is the most ridiculous comment yet from Kavanaugh
Fri Sep 7, 2018, 10:23 AM
Sep 2018

He must have been referring to another city.....and definitely not the neighboring cities of Chevy Chase, Jensington or Potomac.

elleng

(136,043 posts)
3. Right, and DC is not very far,
Fri Sep 7, 2018, 10:54 AM
Sep 2018

but CH CH DC is NOT one of the impoverished neighborhoods; have to go another 15 or so miles for that.

elleng

(136,043 posts)
2. Something of an exaggeration!
Fri Sep 7, 2018, 10:52 AM
Sep 2018

I'll be there next week, so will check things out. WHICH restaurant???

I am partly joking, there are surely less fancy places in Bethesda than the pic of G'Prep depicts, and we all know it.

mahatmakanejeeves

(60,933 posts)
4. The Psyche Delly?
Fri Sep 7, 2018, 11:12 AM
Sep 2018


When Bethesda Was Cool

In the 1970s downtown Bethesda was the center of the local music universe

BY JAMES MICHAEL CAUSEY | Published: 2016-07-25 09:00

It was March 14, 1979, in downtown Bethesda, and radio disc jockey Don Grossinger was sitting shoulder-to-shoulder in the cramped on-air studio of Washington High Fidelity Stereo (WHFS) 102.3 FM with reggae legend Peter Tosh, co-founder of Bob Marley and the Wailers, and Program Director David Einstein. “All of a sudden, Peter decides he wants to play some music, but he doesn’t have a guitar,” says Grossinger, now 64. Not wanting to miss the opportunity to hear one of his idols perform, Grossinger thought quickly.

“I ran across Cordell Avenue to the Psyche Delly and asked Jimmy Thackery if I could borrow his guitar,” Grossinger says. Thackery, a member of the local band the Nighthawks, agreed. Armed with a flashy hollow body Gretsch guitar, Grossinger dashed back into the studio, where Tosh, his distinctive dreadlocks corralled by a woolen cap, started to perform.

Known for being more strident and overtly angry about social injustice than Marley and some of his reggae brethren, Tosh quietly began singing one of his more obscure songs, the gentle, spiritual “Jah Is My Keeper.” ... “It affected all of us,” Grossinger says. “There was a complete stillness in the studio when he performed.” Though Tosh’s unexpected on-air jam session was certainly memorable, Grossinger says he will never forget what happened immediately afterward. “He got out a cannabis plant and rolled a joint about 7 inches long,” Grossinger says. “I had some and almost died…it might have been another night for him, but it was pretty amazing for this white boy.”

For the young people listening that night, WHFS represented more than a cool place to hear new music. “The WHFS ethos was showing me the way to be different, the way to be myself, take chances, overturn rocks, slow down and be subversive,” says actor Daniel Stern, who grew up in Chevy Chase and starred in Home Alone and City Slickers. ... From the late 1960s to the early 1980s, Bethesda’s music scene transformed what had been a quiet Washington, D.C., suburb into one of the nation’s most important rock, bluegrass and new wave hubs—all powered by an anarchic radio station that was so small it didn’t even appear in the Arbitron ratings.

"Straight Outta {blank}" is turning into a meme. Last week I saw two t-shirts with that theme, for two high schools in northern Virginia: "Straight Outta West Springfield," and "Straight Outta T. C. Williams."
 

packman

(16,296 posts)
6. As a former resident of the D.C. area and having lived in Bethesda
Fri Sep 7, 2018, 02:28 PM
Sep 2018

Let me tell you, it was THE most milk-toast, white enclave in the area back in the 60's and 70's. Rich folks, nice homes, no crime and everyone - at that time- wanted the Bethesda experience.

That guy does not know what he is speaking about.

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