Monthly Archives: March 2017

How automation will impact jobs: the optimistic version Quartz – Quartz

Posted: March 10, 2017 at 3:07 am

Machines, you may have heard, are coming for all the jobs.

Robots flip burgers and work warehouses. Artificial intelligence handles insurance claims and basic bookkeeping, manages investment portfolios, does legal research, and performs basic HR tasks. Human labor doesnt stand a chance against themafter the automation apocalypse, only those with spectacular abilities and the owners of the robots will thrive.

Or at least, thats one plausible and completely valid theory. But before you start campaigning for a universal basic income and set up a bunker, you might want to also familiarize yourself with the competing theory: In the long run, were going to be just fine.

Our modern fear that robots will steal all the jobs fits a classic script. Nearly 500 years ago, Queen Elizabeth I cited the same fear when she denied an English inventor named William Lee a patent for an automated knitting contraption. I have too much regard for the poor women and unprotected young maidens who obtain their daily bread by knitting to forward an invention which, by depriving them of employment, would reduce them to starvation, she told Lee, according to one account of the incident. The lack of patent didnt ultimately stop factories from adopting the machine.

Two hundred years later, Lees invention, still being vilified as a jobs killer, was among the machines destroyed by protestors during the Luddite movement in Britain. More than 100 hundred years after that, though computers had replaced knitting machines as the latest threat to jobs, the fear of technologys impact on employment was the same. A group of high-profile economists warned President Lyndon Johnson of a cybernation revolution that would result in massive unemployment. Johnsons labor secretary had recently commented that new machines had skills equivalent to a high school diploma (though then, and now, machines have trouble doing simple things like recognizing objects in photos or packing a box), and the economists were worried that machines would soon take over service industry jobs. Their recommendation: a universal basic income, in which the government pays everyone a low salary to put a floor on poverty.

Todays version of this scenario isnt much different. This time, were warned of the Rise of Robots and the End of Work. Thought leaders such as Elon Musk have once again turned to a universal basic income as a possible response.

But widespread unemployment due to technology has never materialized before. Why, argue the optimists, should this time be any different?

Though Queen Elizabeth I had feared for jobs when she denied Lees patent, weaving technology ended up creating more jobs for weavers. By the end of the 19th century, there were four times as many factory weavers as there had been in 1830, according James Bessen, the author of Learning by Doing: The Real Connection between Innovation, Wages, and Wealth.

Each human could make more than 20 times the amount of cloth that she could have 100 years earlier. So how could more textile workers be needed?

According to the optimists viewpoint, a factory that saves money on labor through automation will either:

Amazon offers a more modern example of this phenomena. The company has over the last three years increased the number of robots working in its warehouses from 1,400 to 45,000. Over the same period, the rate at which it hires workers hasnt changed.

The optimists take on this trend is that robots help Amazon keep prices low, which means people buy more stuff, which means the company needs more people to man its warehouses even though it needs fewer human hours of labor per package. Bruce Welty, the founder of a fulfillment company that ships more than $1 billion of ecommerce orders each year and another company called Locus Robotics that sells warehouse robots, says he thinks the threat to jobs from the latter is overblownespecially as the rise of ecommerce creates more demand for warehouse workers. His fulfillment company has 200 job openings at its warehouse.

A handful of modern studies have noted that theres often a positive relationship between new technology and increasing employmentin manufacturing firms, across all sectors, and specifically in firms that adopted computers.

How automation impacts wages is a separate question. Warehouse jobs, for instance, have a reputation as grueling and low-paying. Will automation make them better or worse? In the case of the loom workers, wages went up when parts of their jobs became automated. According to Bessen, by the end of the 19th century, weavers at the famous Lowell factory earned more than twice what they earned per hour in 1830. Thats because a labor market had built up around the new skill (working the machines) and employers competed for skilled labor.

That, of course, is not the only option, but it is an outcome embraced by the optimist crowd. Similarly positive results of automation: If companies can make more money with the same number of workers, they can theoretically pay those workers better. If the price of goods drops, those workers can buy more without a raise.

As the Industrial Revolution ended, about half of American workers were still employed in agriculture jobs, and almost all of those jobs were about to be lost to machines.

If nothing else had changed, the decrease in agriculture jobs could have led to a largely unemployed society. But thats not what happened. Instead, as agricultural employment dwindled to less than 2% of American workers, jobs in other sectors grew during the same period. They involved working in factories, yes, but also working with computers, flying airplanes, and driving cargo across the countryoccupations that werent feasible in 1900.

Todays optimists believe that the latest automation technologies will create new jobs as well.

What kind of jobs, they really cant say (this is where the optimism comes in handy). About a third of new jobs created in the United States over the past 25 years didnt exist (or just barely existed) at the beginning of that period, and predicting what jobs might be created in the next 25 years is just guessing. In a report on artificial intelligence and the economy, the Obama White House suggested that automation might create jobs in supervising AI, repairing and maintaining new systems, and in reshaping infrastructure for developments like self-driving cars. But, the reports authors note, Predicting future job growth is extremely difficult, as it depends on technologies that do not exist today.

In 2013, researchers at Oxford sparked fear of the robot revolution when they estimated that almost half of US occupations were likely to be automated. But three years later, McKinsey arrived at a very different number. After analyzing 830 occupations, it concluded that just 5% of them could be completely automated.

The two studies obviously counted differently. The Oxford researchers assessed the probability that occupations would be fully automated within a decade or two. But automation is more likely to replace part of a job than an entire job. When Amazon installs warehouse robots, they currently dont replace full workers, but rather, the part of the job that involves fetching products from different shelves. Similarly, when my colleague used artificial intelligence to transcribe an interview, we didnt fire him; he just worked on the other parts of his job. McKinseys researchers model didnt attempt to sort jobs into replaceable and not replaceable, but rather to place them on a spectrum of automation potential.

Almost every occupation that McKinsey looked at had some aspect that could be automated. Even 25% of tasks inside of a CEO job, the analysis found, could be automated. But very few jobs could be entirely automated.

McKinseys conclusion was not that machines will take all of these jobs, but rather, more occupations will change than will be automated away. Our CEO, for example, wont spend time analyzing reports if artificial intelligence can draw conclusions more efficiently, so he can spend more time coaching his team.

This part of the optimists theory argues that if humans arent bogged down by routine tasks, they will find something better to do. The weavers will learn the new job of operating the machines. My coworker will write more articles because hes not transcribing interviews. The warehouse workers will each pack more boxes because theyre not running between shelves collecting each item to be packed.

Any time in history weve seen automation occur, people dont all of the sudden stop being creative and wanting to do interesting new things, says Aaron Levie, the CEO of enterprise software company Box and an automation optimist. We just dont do a lot of the redundant, obsolete work. He points to potential examples like automatically scheduled calendar appointments or automated research services. Why wont we make up that time with doing the next set of activities that we would have been doing? he says. What I think it does is make the world move faster.

What might that look like? Sodexos CEO of corporate services, Sylvia Metayer, offers one example. She says the outsourcing companys building maintenance crew has started using drones to survey roofs for maintenance needs in three locations. Before the drones arrived, a human climbed onto the roof to check things out. Now, that human stays on the ground, which is safer. The service hasnt changed, the clients still need someone to help maintain the roof, she says. If we do it with drones, the people who would have been going up on the roof have more value, talking with clients about what needs to be done.

Examples also exist in back office automation. From what weve actually seen on the ground, in real business operations, weve seen almost zero job loss, says Alastair Bathgate, CEO of Blue Prism, a software company that helps automate tasks within customer service, accounting, and other jobs. One of his clients, a bank, trained the automation software to react when a customer overdrew an account by checking to see if there were a balance in another account that could be transferred to cover it. This was a process that had never been done by humans, because it would be too tedious and expensive. Another bank used the software to allow customer service representatives to direct customers who had a credit card stolen to an automated system that would input their information and close the account. What do they do now? It allows them to take another call, Bathgate says. On-hold time, not head count, went down.

As the birthrate in many countries declines, the share of the working age population will shrink. To maintain todays GDP, those workers will each need to be more productive than workers today, and theyll need to improve at a faster rate than they have in the past. Even if productivity continued to improve at the same rate that it has throughout the last 50 yearswithin which the computer and the internet both became mainstream toolsit wouldnt be enough of an improvement to sustain GDP. Automation technology could be the answer. According to a McKinsey analysis, it could raise global productivity by as much as 0.8% to 1.4% annuallybut only if humans keep working, as well.

The Industrial Revolution eventually led to an unprecedented high standard of living for ordinary workers.

But this prosperity didnt immediately materialize. There was a period in which life inside of factories was miserable for the laboring class. It included paltry wages, terrible working conditions, and child labor.

Today, during what the World Economic Forum has dubbed the fourth industrial revolution, even optimists expect short-term labor displacement, wage depression, and, for some workers, pain. To take just one sector, the Obama White House estimated that nearly 3.1 million people could lose their job to the autonomous car. New jobs in other sectors could be created as these jobs disappear, but the people who are losing driving jobs wont necessarily have the skills to fill the new ones. This is a big deal.

What separates the optimists from the pessimists is that they tend to believe that the economy as a whole will recover from this short-term adjustment period.

Pessimists argue that not everyone will benefit from this industrial revolution in the same way that the standard of living for ordinary workers rose after the last industrial revolution. Over the last two decades, most gains in productivity have gone to the owners of businesses rather than people who work for them. Global inequality has for the last several decades soared.

But theres a lot of stuff going on outside of technological developments, argue the automation optimists, like the decline of unions, weakening of labor laws, tax laws that benefit rich people, and education policies that havent adapted to a changing worldthese are policy problems, and we should fix them rather than blaming technology.

There is, however, one point that cannot be easily brushed aside. Pessimists point to the pace of innovation as a reason that, this time, advances in technology will impact jobs more brutally than they have in the past. In the past, when you had disruption, the economy adjusted and jobs were created elsewhere, says Ethan Pollack, an economist at the Aspen Institute who says he wavers between optimism and pessimism on automation. What happens if [in the near future], each period of disruption comes so quickly, that it never recovers?

There will be fewer and fewer jobs that a robot cannot do better, Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk recently mused at the World Government Summit in Dubai, before suggesting that a universal basic income would be necessary. But even as he talked of the threat to jobs, he also spoke of positive impacts of automation technology. With automation, there will come abundance, he said. Almost everything will get very cheap.

The optimism camp tends to have similarly mixed feelings about automations impact. AI can seem dystopian, tweeted Box CEO Levie, because its easier to describe existing jobs disappearing than to imagine industries that never existed appearing. He doesnt deny that automated technology will make some labor obsoletehe just focuses on the long-term, big-picture opportunity for potential benefits.

Both sides generally agree that there should be measures in place to reduce the impact of labor displacement from automation, like education programs for re-skilling workers who will lose their jobs. One side just tends to have a more darker view of what happens after that.

So which side is right? If history is any guide, both.

In the 1930s, economist John Maynard Keynes famously coined the term technological unemployment. Less famous is the argument he was making at the time. His case wasnt that impending technology doomed society to prolonged massive unemployment, but rather that a reaction to new technology should neither assume the end of the world or refuse to recognize that world had changed. From his essay, Economic Possibilities For Our Grandchildren:

The prevailing world depression, the enormous anomaly of unemployment in a world full of wants, the disastrous mistakes we have made, blind us to what is going on under the surface to the true interpretation, of the trend of things. For I predict that both of the two opposed errors of pessimism which now make so much noise in the world will be proved wrong in our own time-the pessimism of the revolutionaries who think that things are so bad that nothing can save us but violent change, and the pessimism of the reactionaries who consider the balance of our economic and social life so precarious that we must risk no experiments.

The Obama White House, in a report about how automation may impact jobs, recommended responding to automation by investing in education; creating training programs for workers, like drivers, who will be displaced by automation technology; and strengthening the social safety net. Bill Gates has suggested that we tax robots productivity similar to how we tax humans income in order to finance retraining programs and jobs for which humans are well-suited, like care-taking. Others have suggested wage subsidies and direct government employment programs. These proposed solutions are not so dissimilar to those provided to President Johnson in 1964, which included a massive program to build up our educational system and a major revision of our tax structure.

Even so, little progress has been made since then in making the US more resilient to job displacement caused by automation. The cost of college education has never been higher. As a society, the US has not shown a commitment in building effective, equal-opportunity re-skilling programs. Inequality continues to increase. And the Trump Administration has so far focused on preventing companies from hiring people into manufacturing jobs overseas rather than preparing the economy for the impact of automation. This is an insufficient approach.

As MITs Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee put it more recently than Keynes in their 2014 book about automations economic impact, The Second Machine Age: Our generation has inherited more opportunities to transform the world than any other. Thats a cause for optimism, but only if were mindful of our choices.

Go here to read the rest:

How automation will impact jobs: the optimistic version Quartz - Quartz

Posted in Automation | Comments Off on How automation will impact jobs: the optimistic version Quartz – Quartz

Swedish economist says half of all jobs will be gone to automation in two decades – and 98 percent of photo models – Business Insider Nordic

Posted: at 3:07 am

A robot will replace one in two of your colleagues within 20 years.

In the past five years, almost half a million jobs have vanished due to automation in Sweden, says Stefan Flster, head of the libertarian think thank Reforminstitutet.

The pace is accelerating faster than many economists could expect.

According to a report, carried out by the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Science, this would imply that more than half, or around 2,5 million jobs, will vanish form the labour market in Sweden - arguably a representative picture of any given developing nation. No wonder then, that robot taxes are already a hot topic (and a bad idea according to Flster, as it would in effect be a tax on exports).

It seems like todays professionals are underestimating the approaching revolution. A post, published on the Bank of Englands staff blog, cited by Bloomberg, concludes that the risks associated with the fourth industrial revolution likely are being dismissed too lightly.

Its a common perception that machines are likely to keep on replacing jobs in manufacturing, warehouses and agriculture. But what's become clear through recent years' technological advancements, is that robots will be replacing a lot of human traits.

Also Read:With the rise of automation, women in tech is no longer a nice-to-have but a need-to-have

Jobs within health care and retail are especially endangered; hundreds of thousands of them are to vanish in Sweden in the next two decades. A close second is accounting assistants, whereas high-skilled jobs like economists and lawyers may see up to 46 percent of their jobs computerized. People working within fields that requires originality, artistic qualities, social skills, negotiating, persuasion, and emotional intelligence are the least likely to find themselves replaced by machines.

The risk for being replaced by a digital technology in the next 20 years: - Photo Model: 98 percent - Accountancy assistant: 97 percent - Engineer: 56 percent - Economist/Businessman: 46 percent

Don't Miss:Heres how to keep your job from being stolen by a robot

Read this article:

Swedish economist says half of all jobs will be gone to automation in two decades - and 98 percent of photo models - Business Insider Nordic

Posted in Automation | Comments Off on Swedish economist says half of all jobs will be gone to automation in two decades – and 98 percent of photo models – Business Insider Nordic

Michael Hicks: We need better planning for automation – Kokomo Tribune

Posted: at 3:07 am

There is remarkable angst growing over the role of machines in the production of goods and services. While we are right to be concerned over the labor market effects of automation, most folks worry about the wrong things. That can lead to some stunningly wasteful, if not outright hurtful, public policies. Heres why.

All technological change, from the shovel to the microcomputer, is designed to save labor. At the same time and only in market-based economies new work continues to materialize and business endeavors to hire more workers. For all of recorded history, automation and productivity improvement creates demand for workers while making some tasks unneeded.

Productivity growth is the very essence of economic growth, and we should not fear it. Very real worries come not from the automation itself, but from our inability to adapt to it. It is clearly true that the new jobs created by automation are oftentimes not in the same location, or do not require the same skills as those that automation destroys. This leaves large numbers of people with redundant skills living in clusters of other people with the same skills. Thus, today the antipode of any Rust Belt city is Palo Alto.

This fear of job losses and the obvious distress it causes leads us to ill-considered policy interventions. This is especially true because the labor market signals of supply and demand are hard to read from a state capital or Washington office. Lets consider the example of todays businesses clamoring for more, better-trained, young workers. As I write this column, a search for truck drivers in Muncie yields dozens of jobs, with pay exceeding $50,000 a year.

Naturally, Indianas regional workforce officials are eager to help fill those jobs and subsidize training for truck drivers. Indeed, truck driver ranks third out of 50 "Hot Jobs" for Indiana. I personally know many employers desperate for more truck drivers, but the apparent excess demand for workers might well be a signal of something else. Impending automation.

On the labor demand side, there is nothing like a labor shortfall to incentivize automation. As anyone who pays any attention knows, tests of driverless vehicles are underway on public roads. I predict that by 2030, commercial trucks will no longer be built for drivers. Oh, sure, theyll still have steering wheels and a place to sit, but that will be incidental to the automation. While the Teamsters Union will fight tooth and nail to keep a driver in the seat, it will ultimately fail.

On the labor supply side, workers know this all too well. Many workers will find other things to do in anticipation of technologies that will shake up many common jobs. Workers typically understand that the future of employment requires skills that are not substitutes for machines. Government is a lot worse at figuring this out, and drives some potentially costly mistakes in public policy.

Workers of the future will increasingly need skills that are complemented by automation and technology. These sorts of skills come directly from math, science and liberal arts. Without enduring aptitude in these areas, most of todays young workers will be displaced by automation long before they hit middle age. Policies that lose sight of the imminent role of automation on workers is destined to fail, at a heavy and enduring cost.

Michael J. Hicks, Ph.D., is director of the Center for Business and Economic Research and professor of economics at Ball State University. Contact him at cberdirector@bsu.edu.

Visit link:

Michael Hicks: We need better planning for automation - Kokomo Tribune

Posted in Automation | Comments Off on Michael Hicks: We need better planning for automation – Kokomo Tribune

Daily Reads: Trump Fills Government with Lobbyists; It’s Been a Hot Winter, Blame Climate Change – BillMoyers.com

Posted: at 3:06 am

A roundup of stories we're reading at BillMoyers.com HQ...

Daily Reads: Trump Fills Government [...]

President Donald Trump enters the Oval Office on March 5, 2017. (Photo by Erik S. Lesser-Pool/Getty Images)

We produce this news digest every weekday. You can sign up to receive these updates as an email newsletter each morning.

Whos who > Although there are still tons of government jobs to fill, Donald Trump has been at workinstalling loyalistswithin federal agencies to serve as his eyes and ears. Hundreds are now on the job, and someone leaked a partial list to ProPublica.The list is striking for how many former lobbyists it contains, Justin Elliott, Derek Kravitz and Al Shaw note. We found at least 36, spanning industries from health insurance and pharmaceuticals to construction, energy and finance. Many of them lobbied in the same areas that are regulated by the agencies they have now joined.

Blame climate change > Weve got another two weeks until spring officially starts, but the weather doesnt seem to know that. It once was risky to tie unseasonable temperatures to climate change; climate change research had not progressed enough that scientists definitively could make a clear link. But Brian Kahn writes for Climate Central that the freakishly warm February in the US was at least three times more likely than it was around 120 years ago, according to the analysis by scientists working on the World Weather Attribution team. While it was a month to remember, by mid-century that type of heat could occur every three years unless carbon pollution is curtailed.

Those who should know oppose GOP health care> It only took two days: hospitals (and the American Medical Association) already have come out against the Republican Obamacare replacement. In a letter to Congress, Richard Pollack, head of the American Hospital Association, writes, We look forward to continuing to work with the Congress and the Administration on ACA reform, but we cannot support The American Health Care Act in its current form. The group is particularly concerned about the part of the bill that scales back the Medicaid expansion, effectively blocking access to health care for millions of the poor.

The AARP also quickly cut an ad coming out against the bill for effectively hiking prices for older Americans which the talking squirrel in their ad calls an age tax. Patrick Caldwall writes for Mother Jones that Obamacare said that health insurers could not charge their older clients more than three times as much as the youngest consumers. The GOPs plan would bump that ratio up to 5-to-1.

Better late than never? > It turns out that from August until November 2016, former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn was paid half a million dollars to lobby the US government on behalf of the Turkish government. That could explain why he published an op-ed on Election Day calling for the US government to kick Fethullah Glen, the cleric who Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan considers an enemy, out of the country (Glen lives in Pennsylvania). Flynn just filed forms with the Justice Department, declaring himself a foreign agent.

What a coincidence > Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner are renting a house in a fancy DC neighborhood from a Chilean billionaire. Interesting. More interesting: The Chilean billionaire owns a mine in Minnesota, and is suing the US government over Obama-era policies that he thinks will cut into his mines profits. Hes currently lobbying Donald Trump to reverse those policies.

Lucky break? > Secretary of State Rex Tillerson may have still owned millions of dollars of ExxonMobil stock at the time President Trump made praising the oil giant a matter of White House policy, Claudia Koerner reports for Buzzfeed. Before becoming secretary of state, Tillerson owned 600,000 shares of Exxon stock. He pledged to divest them by May 2.

Its good to be king > According to the AP, China has granted preliminary approval for 38 new Trump trademarks, paving the way for President Donald Trump and his family to develop a host of branded businesses from hotels to insurance to bodyguard and escort services.

Pay to stay > In jail with money to burn? Some California jails will let you upgrade to a nicer cell, or stay in a nicer jail, The Marshall Project reports.

Artists and writers interrogated > In addition to stories of deportation under the Trump administration, PEN America notes that more and more reports are emerging of travelers including US citizens returning home being subjected to aggressive interrogations at the border that leave them humiliated, angry, and bewildered. Several prominent writers have spoken out in recent weeks about such experiences, which have altered their views of the United States and what it stands for.

Working-class roots > In more than 50 countries, women protested and went on strike in observance of International Womens Day. At In These Times, Kate Aronoff digs into the history of working-class women fomenting change in America. And at Jacobin, Cintia Frencia & Daniel Gaido write about the holidays socialist origins:

Simply put, International Womens Day was, from the very beginning, a Working Womens Day. While its immediate objective was to win universal female suffrage, its aspirations were much grander: the overthrow of capitalism and the triumph of socialism, abolishing both the wage slavery of workers and the domestic slavery of women through the socialization of education and care work.

Morning Reads was compiled by John Light and edited by Michael Winship.

We produce this news digest every weekday. You can sign up to receive these updates as an email.

The Sleep of Reason

Gutting EPAs Budget and Staff Would Endanger the Health of Millions of Americans

Link:

Daily Reads: Trump Fills Government with Lobbyists; It's Been a Hot Winter, Blame Climate Change - BillMoyers.com

Posted in Wage Slavery | Comments Off on Daily Reads: Trump Fills Government with Lobbyists; It’s Been a Hot Winter, Blame Climate Change – BillMoyers.com

10 Ways American Crime Season 3 Exposes Modern Slavery – Rotten Tomatoes

Posted: at 3:06 am

The crime in American Crimes third season transcends the averagecourtroom-drama plotline, delving into the murky and dangerous world of 21st century slavery, includingimmigrants held prisoner and forced to work for less than minimum wage and a teen trapped inlife on the streets by bureaucracy.

In the first example, Luis Salazar (Benito Martinez) discovers the deplorable conditions under which the Hesby tomato farms migrant workers are forced to live and toil when he goes to work there. When a bunk full of workers burns down, Jeanette Hesby (Felicity Huffman) wants to help and is surprised her husband (Tim DeKay) covers it up.

In season 3s other tale, Shae Reese (Ana Mulvoy-Ten) has been working for a pimp since she ran away from home. A social worker (Regina King) tries to get her off the streets, but the legal system works against her.

Rotten Tomatoes spoke to American Crime creator John Ridley(12 Years a Slave) and cast member Lili Taylor(The Conjuring), who appears in the season starting in episode four, and also caught a panel discussion with more of the cast at the Paley Center for Media in Los Angeles.

Here are 10 ways American Crime exposes the modern slavery happening in America.

If a farm can get inexpensive labor by hiring undocumented workers, what makes them go the extra mile to treat them badly? Couldnt a farm owner mitigate the low pay by offering pleasant conditions? Ridley says theyre motivated to break the workers spirit.

The essence of human nature is to move towards freedom, liberty, and self-determination, Ridley told Rotten Tomatoes. When people come here, how do you keep them? You keep them through financial subjugation, through physical subjugation, through intimidation. Thats the only way to keep the human spirit down. They do it because they can do it. They do it because they have to do it. It is not our nature to be oppressed.

Richard Cabral plays a manager on the tomato farm. His character was a migrant worker himself, so why would he help perpetuate slave conditions?

He feels no remorse for what hes inflicting because he, too, went through this as a child, Cabral said during thePaley Center panel. Everything that hes asking from everybody, hes done himself. This is all he knows so thats his driving force that keeps on moving forward. The job needs to get done. Those are his survival instincts.

When Jeanette realizes something is wrong on the farm, her husband makes sure she cant change the system his family has in place.

She finds herself in a circumstance where she doesnt have a voice, where she doesnt have stature, where she needs to find out what shes about, Ridley told Rotten Tomatoes.

Playing someone with little agency or power was new for Huffman, and she embraced the challenge.

When she sees whats happening with the immigrant workers, she goes, Oh, Id like to help them, and Im sure you want to help them too. Huffman said on the panel. Its heartbreaking when she [realizes] oh, you dont want to help them?

Taylor and Timothy Hutton play parents Clair and Nicholas who hire Gabrielle Durand (Mickalle X. Bizet) as an au pair from Haiti.

Its not so usual that its a Caucasian woman whos hiring in a domestic like that, and it starts to get into problematic stuff, Taylor told Rotten Tomatoes. I hire this nanny to try and solve some of the problems in our marriage hoping that maybe it can give us some time alone, hoping it can take away the burden that he feels from the child. It doesnt answer our problems at all. In fact, I think it makes things worse.

On the tomato farm, slave labor conditions are part of their business model. Hutton and TaylorsNicholas and Clair Coates did not set out to be slave drivers. They just project their personal frustrations ontotheir au pair.

Part of what happens is Nicholas is very mean to Clair, and then I end up being very mean to the nanny, Taylor said. When we dont deal with our own stuff, it becomes an ethical situation where it gets put onto other things and other people when we dont deal with our unconscious.

When someone comes to America and doesnt speak English, they rely on people who speak their language to translate for them. As people on the farm, or the au pair in a suburban house find out, they can be misrepresented by English speakers. The season captures that experience by presenting some dialogue without subtitles.

We have a character who, by and large, through the first two episodes, his language is Spanish, Ridley said. You have to give credit to the network. When we present them with scripts and we tell them that large portions of that script are going to be in Spanish or in French or in Haitian or French Creole, they dont shy away from that. In fact, they support it.

Some scenes do have subtitles for the English-speaking viewers. Ridley decided when the information being discussed was too integral to leave ambiguous.

If the show can thrive on its emotionality, those are spaces where we will not have subtitles, he said.

Bizet herself speaks French and English, but she understands how vulnerable she could be if she were not bilingual.

Shes this woman who comes to a country and literally has no voice because she doesnt speak English, and she doesnt know anybody who speaks her language, Bizet said on the panel. She realizes that the American dream comes at a really high price that she wasnt expecting at all.

Clair enjoys France and speaking French. She got excited about bringing a Haitian into her home, but starts treating her like a new toy, not as a person.

I think some of its that Claire is a francophile, Taylor told Rotten Tomatoes. She spent time in France, just loves things French. Clair thought thatd be a great way for me to work on my French, a way to teach [her son] French. Thats a setup for things going wrong.

Taylor herself did take a crash course in French.

I knew in July and we were going to start filming in September, she said. So I started on my own, just 30 minutes a day every day. Then I found a great French helper who translated and coached me on sound. I realized what I needed to do was to not learn the lines with the meaning at all, which I dont do anyway. I try to just learn lines by rote and then start translating after Id gotten it down perfectly.

Shae turned to the streets to escape her abusive family. For her, prostitution was an improvement.

Her family is definitely more dangerous to her than the environment shes in, Mulvoy-Ten told Rotten Tomatoes on the red carpet before the panel. She actually thinks that where shes at now, living in a bedroom with six other people run by her pimp, that is better than what her family situation was. You can imagine what that was like. She thinks shes upgraded.

Shae needs an abortion because she was impregnated on the job. The law in North Carolina requires a teen under 18 to get her parents consent. Now Shae is caught between her abusive mother and going back to her pimp.

It just seemed completely unfair that her parents abused her and the whole reason she was on the streets doing the job she was doing was because of her parents, and then she cant even get an abortion, Mulvoy-Ten told Rotten Tomatoes on the red carpet. She has no money, she has no means to make money. The only way she makes money is through prostitution, and she doesnt even get most of it. Her pimp gets most of it. The whole thing is brutal.

Jeanette fights for justice but it may be too little too late. She realizes that this is not the first incident of the Hesbys mistreating workers

Shes been asleep for 30 or 40 years, Huffman told Rotten Tomatoes on the red carpet. Shes been married a good 30 years into that family, but she does wake up and wants to take action and wants to be a part of the solution and finds that she doesnt count. I think there have been things that have happened in that family. I think there were incidents that they kept from her and she chose not to investigate.

American Crime returns March 12 at 10/9 Con ABC

Continued here:

10 Ways American Crime Season 3 Exposes Modern Slavery - Rotten Tomatoes

Posted in Wage Slavery | Comments Off on 10 Ways American Crime Season 3 Exposes Modern Slavery – Rotten Tomatoes

Decisive action is needed to prevent a retirement crisis – New Statesman

Posted: at 3:06 am

After years of slogging away at work, even those who love their jobs have days where they cant wait for that magical period of retirement. But for a generation of the UK population, daydreams of holidays, rest and relaxation are being clouded by worries about whether they will ever be able to afford not to work.

Last summer, Theresa May promised to build an economy that works for every one of us, and the government established an Inclusive Economy Unit. But intergenerational inequality has continued to grow, due to the longterm shift in the pensions landscape.

There is now an entire generation those aged 30-45, the in-betweeners of people who are at a huge risk of under-saving for retirement. The previous generation has been provided for through a combination of funded pension provision and home ownership, and the generation after was introduced to auto-enrolment from a younger age, which should help to ensure that their income in retirement is at least adequate.

A closer look confirms our suspicions. The ONS recently found that while household incomes have increased for retirees in recent years, non-retired households still have less money, on average, than before the 2008 crash. At the same time, it released data showing overall income inequality had shrunk to levels comparable with the 1980s. This means that the gap between high and low earners has decreased, but the gap between the young and old has widened.

The generation following these in-betweeners has time on its side. Modelling by the Pension Policy Institute in 2015 showed that a median earner would need to contribute between 11 and 14 per cent of their earnings from age 22 to the State Pension age to maintain their living standards. Even then, this isnt certain these people only have a two-thirds probability of maintaining their standard of living.

For people who begin contributing later, the PPI says contribution levels to replicate working life living standards could be as high as 27 per cent. The average in-betweener would have been in their 30s when auto-enrolment was introduced, meaning they face a colossal challenge to make up the shortfall. Furthermore, the PPI report shows average employer contribution levels into defined contribution schemes were below four per cent of salary in 2014. While the minimum contribution levels are due to rise in 2018, the scale of the challenge for this generation is clear.

This growing intergenerational inequality has not gone unnoticed. Labour MP Frank Field has launched a select committee review of intergenerational fairness. In its preliminary report, the committee recommended the government undertake a forward-looking assessment of intergenerational income and wealth. Old Mutual Wealth has already embarked on the same process.

We recently conducted research with YouGov to better understand this generation who they are, what their savings habits are, and how they feel about their retirement. Of the more than 3,000 respondents, almost nine out of 10 agree it is important to save/ invest for the future. But 22 percent save 100 or less per month. Why? After they fork out each month for childcare costs, student debts and rent or mortgage payments, they simply dont have enough money left at the end of the month. The Bank of England says this trend is set to worsen: it predicts on record as households dig into savings to fuel spending.

Another key element of the problem is that this in-between generation keeps putting financial planning on the back burner. On average, those aged 30 said it would take them almost 10 years to start planning. As they moved through their mid-thirties, people began delaying even more.

This planning procrastination has resulted in just 13 per cent of 44- and 45-year-olds reporting to have a plan in place and we believe this is a key contributor to high levels of concern. Over half of the people surveyed feel negatively about their financial future.

The situation these in-betweeners find themselves in is not generally of their own making. The reasons are complex, but things that may have been taken as fairly straightforward by previous generations owning your own home and building up a funded pension are much more challenging for this generation.

At the moment we operate a pay as you go system for state pensions, meaning the national insurance paid today funds the current generation of retirees. While the system has its merits, society has changed and its creating a problem. As society gets greyer, working-age taxpayers face a growing bill to cover the state pension.

Changes to the state pension were introduced, in part, in recognition of this. The package of changes included the triple lock, rising state pension ages and the abolition of the earnings-related part of the state pension. The underlying premise of these three changes was to replace the state pension with a new deal, in which the state pension started later but was of a decent amount, indexed at a reasonable level. The triple lock ensures that the state pension increases each year by either earnings growth, inflation or 2.5 per cent, whichever is highest. The issue with the triple lock is that regardless of what is happening to peoples earnings generally or the state of the economy, the state pension will ratchet up by at least 2.5 per cent. This ratchet effect has been key to rectifying the relative decline in the state pension that occurred between the 80s to the 00s.

However, the scenario has changed again and policy needs to reflect that. There are some options that could ensure the social contract remains in place. For instance, now that the relative decline in the state pension has reversed, the triple lock should be reviewed from 2020 and replaced with an earnings link. In times when earnings fall behind price inflation, an above-earnings increase could kick in until real earnings growth resumes. The government should also consider future policy on universal pensioner benefits. Targeting these benefits more efficiently could help leave something in the pot for younger generations.

Another option for policymakers to consider is increasing auto-enrolment contributions to help this generation make ground more quickly. An agerelated approach to maximum autoenrolment contributions and the use of nudge techniques to minimise opt-outs should be considered.

Doing nothing is not an option. If Theresa May wants to build an economy for all of us, she must not forget that a whole generation currently has little hope of escaping work and spending its days of retirement in the sun.

To view all of Old Mutual Wealths retirement reports, visit: https://www.oldmutualwealth.co.uk/products-and-investments/pensions/pensions2015/retirement-reports/

View original post here:

Decisive action is needed to prevent a retirement crisis - New Statesman

Posted in Abolition Of Work | Comments Off on Decisive action is needed to prevent a retirement crisis – New Statesman

Who’s who in Dutch politics – SBS

Posted: at 3:06 am

In this system of proportional representation, even the smallest parties can play an outsize role as kingmakers in building a 76-seat majority.

Here is a guide for navigating the alphabet soup of Dutch politics:

Liberal party. Led by Prime Minister Mark Rutte, the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy leans towards the right on the economy but is more progressive on social issues. Founded in 1948, it has been the ruling coalition partner in two successive governments since 2010. Rutte is vying for a third term as premier, but has vowed not to work with anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders.

Campaign theme: "Act. Normally." Despite positioning itself as the party of the status quo, Rutte has hardened his tone and recently told immigrants they should respect the country's norms "or leave".

Poll position: 1st, with 23-27 seats

Dutch Prime Minister Rutte.

Far-right, anti-Islam, anti-EU. Led by outspoken MP Geert Wilders, known for his blonde bouffant hair. With his Freedom Party (PVV) topping the polls he is eyeing the premiership but many say they will not work with him. Campaign theme: "Reclaim The Netherlands For Us". He has vowed to bar Muslim immigrants, close mosques, ban sales of the Koran and quit the EU.

The party is officially an association with just one member - Wilders.

Poll position: 2nd, with 21-25 seats

Dutch populist anti-Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders.

The centrist Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA), now led by Sybrand Buma, was founded in 1980. It has long held an important place in Dutch politics but as the country has become more secular, support has waned. Campaign slogan: "Choice for a better Netherlands". Its themes revolve around a strong society and the family.

Poll position: 3rd, with 18-20 seats

Leader of the Christian Democratic Appeal party Sybrand Buma, right, takes the escalator to the news desk of De Telegraaf newspaper.

Progressive and pro-European, D66, led by Alexander Pechthold is the Democracy party founded in 1966. Campaign slogan: "Together Stronger. Chances for Everyone" stressing education and jobs.

Poll position: 4th, with 17-19 seats

Alexander Pechtold of the D66 party stands second from the right for a group picture at De Telegraaf.

Ecologist. Founded in 1990, the "GreenLeft" party is led by Jesse Klaver, at 30 the country's youngest party leader. Amid a certain weariness with traditional politics, it has drawn increasing support, particularly among young voters. Campaign theme: "Time For Change".

Poll position: 5th, with 16-18 seats

Green Left party leader Jesse Klaver.

Founded in 1972, the Socialist Party is anti-EU. Campaign slogan: "Seize the Power". Has called for a fight against poverty, an increase of the minimum wage and the abolition of the European Commission.

Polls position: 6th with 13-15 seats

Socialist Party leader Emile Roemer laughs when talking to firebrand anti Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders.

Labour. Founded in 1946, it is the junior party in the outgoing coalition. Campaign slogan: "Forward Together". It has been campaigning on jobs, better housing, health and education. It has sought to reposition itself on the left, but lacks credibility after four years in government.

Poll position: 7th, with 11-13 seats

Leader of the Dutch Labour party PvdA Lodewijk Asscher.

SGP: Orthodox Protestant Calvinist, the Reformed Political Party was founded in 1918. It did not admit women members until 2006. Is against abortion and euthanasia. Could win three to five seats.

Christian Union (CU): May also take five to seven seats.

50+: The party for the over 50s. Could boost its seats to between four and six.

Animal Party: founded in 2002, works for animal rights. May take four to six seats.

Denk: Founded in 2015 by immigrants. Drawing increasing support from the Turkish and Moroccan communities. May take up to two seats.

Niet-stemmers: The party of non-voters. Has vowed never to vote in parliament.

FVD: Forum for Democracy, led by eurosceptic Thierry Baudet. Helped initiate last year's referendum against the EU-Ukraine treaty.

Artikel 1: The country's newest party launched in December by black TV presenter Sylvana Simons to fight racism.

Jesus Lives: Evangelist, founded in 2013 and says it lives by the commands of Jesus.

Continue reading here:

Who's who in Dutch politics - SBS

Posted in Abolition Of Work | Comments Off on Who’s who in Dutch politics – SBS

How Republicans Might Fudge the Numbers to Make Their Health Care Bill Seem Less Irresponsible – New York Magazine

Posted: at 3:06 am

Ad will collapse in seconds CLOSE March 9, 2017 03/09/2017 10:15 a.m. By Ed Kilgore

Share

There have been a lot of raised eyebrows about congressional Republicans rushing out an Obamacare repeal-and-replace bill before it could be scored that is, evaluated for its impact on federal spending and revenues and health-care coverage by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Generally, CBO scoring would be a foundational step before trying to advance legislation significantly overhauling an industry that constitutes 20 percent of the national economy. One reason for the hastiness is that Republicans wanted to get something out there before its members go home for a long and potentially protest-filled Easter recess and perhaps come back gun-shy. Another is that they are on a self-imposed (and potentially self-imploding) timetable to get health care out of the way so they can deal with other legislative priorities, including a giant tax-cut bill.

But it is the third reason for not waiting on CBO that is looking most compelling right now: Republicans are terrified that CBOs numbers will paint a disastrous picture of the American Health Care Acts impact. The bill has problems enough without being described by Congresss own hirelings as a bill that blows up budget deficits, throws many millions of people out of their health insurance, and, perhaps most importantly, undermines the tax cuts and defense-spending increases Republicans are itching to enact by setting a baseline that already looks bad.

Indeed, as Jennifer Haberkorn reports, there is so much Republican angst over what CBO might say that there is a sudden barrage of advance criticism of the agency, which is likely to reveal its score later this week or early next week:

If you go back to what CBO predicted would be covered on the exchanges today [under the ACA] theyre only off by only a two-to-one ratio, Energy and Commerce Chairman Greg Walden (R-Ore.) told reporters. CBO said 21 million projected would be covered, but only 10 million people are covered.

When former House Speaker Newt Gingrich called for the abolition of CBO back in January, most observers probably chuckled at the old bomb-thrower insisting that an objective assessment of GOP plans would screw everything up. Now thats rapidly becoming the conventional wisdom. Keep in mind that Republicans, after taking control of both congressional chambers in 2014, hired CBOs current director, George W. Bush administration veteran Keith Hall. Its safe to say that Hall hardly resembles Gingrichs description of CBO as a left-wing, corrupt, bureaucratic defender of big government and liberalism.

So whats the solution? Republicans seem to have found an alternative source of authoritative-sounding numbers that is more ideologically reliable: the Office of Management and Budget, which is directly under the control of the president.

This helps explain why Trumps OMB director, Mick Mulvaney, is suddenly being described as a player in the GOPs very crowded health-care-policy arena. As budget maven Stan Collender pointed out when Gingrich proposed eliminating CBO, such a step would quite literally turn the clock back to those pre-1974 days when OMB was the only scoring entity, and Congress had no independent source of information. In the end Congress can use whatever numbers it chooses. But trying to boost the credibility of its agenda by cooking the books is probably not going to be a very persuasive approach.

One would normally think Mulvaney had enough on his plate developing Trumps first budget, for example without having to leap into the middle of the health-care fray. Thats how panicked Republicans have become by the consequences of their shoddy work on repealing and replacing Obamacare. Its one thing to work the refs when you are in danger of losing a game. Its another thing altogether to fire and replace the scorekeeper while the balls in play.

Watch Paul Ryans Adams Apple When Hes Asked Why His Health Plan Cuts Taxes for the Rich

David Letterman on Life After TV, Late Night Today, and the Man He Calls Trumpy

We Salute This Mans Tireless Quest to Roast the Hell Out of Idiots on Twitter During International Womens Day

Pregnant Woman Bestows Trophy Upon First Man to Offer Her His Subway Seat

Why Is the Prince in Beauty and the Beast Always Less Hot Than the Beast?

There Are 3 Kinds of Porn Users

The Owner of a Popular Houston Taco Truck Is Being Deported

The Absolute Best Steakhouses in New York

The Problem With the Democratic Party in One Milquetoast Tweet

What Camille Paglia Understands About the Trump Era

Most Popular Video On Daily Intelligencer

Her ouster following a corruption scandal could have a major impact on how Asia and the U.S. handle North Korea.

Tom Cotton tells CNN that Paul Ryans bill would not solve the problems of our health-care system and would make things probably worse.

A suspect was arrested in the rampage that occurred at the main train station in Dusseldorf. Police have not named a motive.

He appears ready to move from one doomed bill to another.

Low unemployment and minimum-wage increases sparked strong wage growth at the bottom of Americas income ladder in Obamas final year.

The space probe Cassini captured these shots as its mission nears the end.

Police say the person is likely using a spoofer device, which makes it seem as if the threat is coming from the inside.

He also addressed domestic-violence allegations raised against him.

Three states will ask him to rule that his suspension of the first travel ban applies to the second.

Temperatures in the 50s and 60s Thursday, three to five inches of snow Friday.

Even as Trumpcare hemorrhages support, Republicans are working around the clock to get it to the floor.

Landlords also continued offering near-record levels of sweeteners, such as a months free rent.

Once hes done with Obamacare and tax reform, Trump hopes to fund highway renovation, high-speed rail, and, possibly, Elon Musks Hyperloop.

One British paper is reporting that Farage and Assange met at the Ecuadorian embassy.

One of its attorneys tells the Washingtonian that hes clearly using the office to gain an advantage over local businesses.

A decrease of about 40 percent from January, and coyotes have more than doubled their fees since November.

That puts him at odds with NASA and NOAA, among many others.

Gulp.

On the brink of what many fear will be a terrible-looking score of its health-care bill, congressional Republicans may just get a new scorekeeper.

The proposed budget would slash all funding for community development and drastically reduce rental assistance to the poor.

Read the rest here:

How Republicans Might Fudge the Numbers to Make Their Health Care Bill Seem Less Irresponsible - New York Magazine

Posted in Abolition Of Work | Comments Off on How Republicans Might Fudge the Numbers to Make Their Health Care Bill Seem Less Irresponsible – New York Magazine

This Shipping Route Map Shows Why Floating Cities May Make Sense – Inverse

Posted: at 3:05 am

Floating cities are an idea that receive a lot of suspicion, and with good reason. Who wants to live on an isolated platform in the middle of the sea, never seeing an outsider and rarely getting supplies from the outside world? As it turns out, the notion that the ocean is some barren wasteland is a misconception. A large amount of global commerce is conducted on the high seas, making floating cities a less ridiculous idea than they first seem.

A map created by data visualization firm Kiln uses information from the UCL Energy Institute, showing movements of the global merchant fleet over the course of 2012. It reveals the hidden routes that criss-cross the world, forming a complex network of global cargo movements. Although it moves across empty seascapes, cargo liner shipping accounts for about two-thirds of all global trade. Check out the map below, or visit the ShipMap website for an awesome interactive version.

Floating cities have received attention from a number of places. Libertarian billionaires like Peter Thiel are often associated with the concept, which would let people live outside the realms of government interference, living only by the laws on international waters. Thiel pledged $1.25 million to the Seasteading Institute in 2011 to explore the idea.

Youll notice that even in seemingly empty waters, theres a number of points with high amounts of through traffic. Hawaii to San Francisco, for example, has a thick line going between as the quickest route between the two points. Similarly, the southern tip of Africa sees a large number of ships moving through to get to either side. Much like the Panama canal and other through points, floating cities have a chance to become key stop-off points for ships passing through, serving as economic hubs of the high seas. In this version of the map, you can even see individual ships moving around the waters:

Its easy to picture floating cities on this map, as tiny balls of light where many ships congregate in the middle of the ocean. But unfortunately, its unlikely that well be living in Waterworld-like sea stations anytime soon. The Seasteading Institute announced in October that it was nearing a deal for a special economic zone in French Polynesia, allowing residents to visit the nearby mainland for supplies. But Thiel told the New York Times in January that these islands are not quite feasible right now. It may be a while before the dream comes to life, but make no mistake: Thiel et al probably wont be building their island in completely empty waters.

Photos via ShipMap, ShipMap.org

View post:

This Shipping Route Map Shows Why Floating Cities May Make Sense - Inverse

Posted in Seasteading | Comments Off on This Shipping Route Map Shows Why Floating Cities May Make Sense – Inverse

Stevie Nicks, Chrissie Hynde in fine form on double bill – The Commercial Appeal

Posted: at 3:05 am

VIDEOS: STEVIE NICKSStevie Nicks and Chrissie Hynde at FedExForum | 0:34

Stevie Nicks and Chrissie Hynde stopped at FedExForum on Wednesday. Check out commercialappeal.com for photo gallery and full review. Wochit

1 of 3

Stevie Nicks shared her memories of Prince after she made a surprise appearance at Broadway show, 'School of Rock: The Musical.' (April 27) AP

2 of 3

Stevie Nicks talks about recording her album "24 Karat Gold: Songs from the Vault" in Nashville. Juli Thanki / The Tennessean

3 of 3

Stevie Nicks and Chrissie Hynde at FedExForum

Stevie Nicks remembers Prince at surprise show

Stevie Nicks teaches 'Music 101' at Bridgestone

Two of rock music's iconic women, Stevie Nicks and Chrissie Hynde, perform a song together during a concert at the FedExForum on Wednesday night. Hynde and her band The Pretenders opened for Nicks' solo performance on International Women's Day.(Photo: Nikki Boertman/The Commercial Appeal)Buy Photo

It was a fitting close to International Womens Dayas two of rocks iconic female figures, Stevie Nicks and the Chrissie Hynde, took the stage of FedExForum on Wednesday. Appearing with her solo band, Fleetwood Mac star Nicks was the ostensible headliner, but it was Hynde and her group The Pretenderswho stole the show,with both women presenting district and distinctly different visions of musical and personal empowerment.

Resuming her work with the Pretenders last summer after a four-year break, Hynde and the band which includes founding drummer Martin Chambersand new-era additions James Walbourne on guitar, Nick Wilkinson on bass and Eric Heywood on pedal steel sounded sharp and inspired during a 15-song set that covered the expected hits as well as material from the bands recent album, Alone.

Hynde was in classically cantankerous form early on, rightfully berating a couple of audience members down front who were popping off cell phone camera flashes in her face. After apologizing on their behalf Hynde settled down and found both the aggression and nuance of songs like My City Was Gone and Stop Your Sobbing.

Autoplay

Show Thumbnails

Show Captions

Thirty-five years after the implosion of the original Pretenders lineup following the death of guitarist James Honeyman Scott and the firing and subsequent death of bassist Pete Farndon Hynde and Chambers have somehow managed to keep the group acompelling force, with the new members, particularly flash guitarist Walbourne, providing a fresh spark.

One of rocks most stylish singers, Hynde also showed a depth of emotional range on the spare ballad Ill Stand by You, while one of her rare solo songs, Down the Wrong Way, seemed to take on new life in the Pretenders context.

Ohio native Hynde took the opportunity to rave about Memphis, having visited several local haunts Graceland, Shangri-La Records and Imagine VeganCaf on a day off before the concert. She noted that she skipped a return to the local jail, where she stayed during the Pretenders' first tour on disorderly conduct charges after kicking out the windows of a police car. They didnt want me back, she quipped.

After a brief break, Nicks and her big band which included longtime guitarist/musical director Waddy Wachtel on guitaremerged, sounding strong, if somewhat measured during their 18-song performance.

Nicks presented the set as part storytellers session, part deep dive into her catalog. Vocally, she was in fine form, but the somewhat awkward pacing songs broken up by Nicks long narrative interludes meant that musical momentum was hard to sustain.

Still, Nicks tremendous personal charm part girl next door, part witchy woman, part mother figure was hard to resist, and the crowd of devotees were held rapt by her, expressingtheir devotion vocally and visually, with many dressing in homage to her (sartorially speaking, the audience at a Nicks concert could double for a renaissance fair crowd).

The liveliest moment of Nicks' set came during an early version of the Tom Petty-penned Stop Dragging My Heart Around as Hynde emerged from the wings and the women, along with Wachtel, presented the song as a three-way romantic drama.

Ultimately, amid all the stories and banter, Nicks managed to cover all the expected ground, delivering strong versions of her solo hits (Stand Back,Edge of Seventeen) and closing with a flourish of Fleetwood Mac favorites (Rhiannon,Gold Dust Woman,Landslide) that were impossible to resist.

Read or Share this story: http://memne.ws/2m6IQAs

Link:

Stevie Nicks, Chrissie Hynde in fine form on double bill - The Commercial Appeal

Posted in Personal Empowerment | Comments Off on Stevie Nicks, Chrissie Hynde in fine form on double bill – The Commercial Appeal