Few jurists have auditioned more brazenly than Aileen Cannon, the Trump-appointed federal judge who will oversee special counsel Jack Smith’s prosecution of the former president. Cannon has already proved that she’s more radical and less principled than Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, or Barrett by running interference for Trump to an astonishing degree in an earlier phase of the case. She is now in a perfect position to sabotage Smith’s prosecution—more successfully than when she tried to sabotage the investigation—in yet another display of fealty to the man who appointed her. But she faces formidable rivals in her quest to become a leading candidate for the Supreme Court.
"Mime Time" parody segment from Ready, Steady, Go!, in which all members of The Rolling Stones and Cathy McGowan mime to Sonny and Cher's I Got You Babe.
Brian Epstein and John Lennon
Andrew Loog Oldham and Mick Jagger
Malcolm McLaren and Johnny Rotten
Bernie Rhodes and Joe Strummer
"There was a sense that it was a given that the only people who could see the true erotic sexuality of a pop performer, and nurture it past the point of the amusement of teenage girls, would be a really good manager who was sexually attracted to to his protégé- even if he didn't act on it."
- Pete Townshend, The Secret Public
all four lead singers shown here have written at least one song about their managers
You've Got To Hide Your Love Away - The Beatles
how could she say to me / "love will find a way"?
Andrew's Blues - The Rolling Stones
well, well i let you keep it tonight / if you hold me, hold it real tight / oh, oh Andrew
Liar - Sex Pistols
and i know now i wanna know / why you never look me in the face
Bankrobber - The Clash
my daddy was a bank robber / but he never hurt nobody
Andrew Loog Oldham talks about Brian Jones' work on "She Smiled Sweetly." Plus a photo from the Monterey Festival I haven't seen before. (from the book 1967: A Complete Rock Music History of the Summer of Love by Harvey Kubernik)
"I ran into Jack on the staircase of the Speakeasy in 1974 when I was producing Donovan. I hadn’t seen him since ’66, and Jack’s opening words to me were: "Andrew! How are you? Do I have to be bisexual to make it?" And I went, "Uh oh, you’ve been hanging around with Mick too long, honey."
Mick has this habit of playing with people who haven’t actually got a head for it. Like Mick Taylor. Mick Taylor’s a perfect example—turned him into Humpty Dumpty inside of two years."