Joe's Road Trip

Road Trip Day 6 (Prospectively): Crowd-Sourcing Austin City Limits

OK, it’s one thing for me to have you, dear readers, determine my itinerary for this road trip. It’s a bit more risky to crowd-source my choices for the first day of the Austin City Limits festival. But let’s take a shot. Here’s the schedule. No guarantees that I’ll follow your advice–I have pretty strong opinions about music–but it’ll be fun to see what you think. And I promise to tell you what I actually saw, and how they were, Saturday morning.

ps-Swampfrau Victoria Klein materialized at the airport this evening. I took her straight to Guero’s for some top-notch Mexican food. Devoted road trip followers will remember that she has some views about music as well. She will make them known, I expect.

Related Topics: Joe's Road Trip
  • Latest on Swampland

    Pete Souza / The White House via Getty Images

    Political Picures of the Week, May 18-25

    TIME’s photo editors bring you the best pictures of the past week from the Beltway and beyond.

    Obama Administration Blocks Global Health Fund To Fight Disease In Developing NationsHuffPost Politics

    From left: AP; ABACAUSA

    The Phony War: Obama and Romney Are Debating Character, Not Policy

    More than five months from Election Day, the back-and-forth about Mitt Romney’s record at Bain already feels played out. Unfortunately, there’s good reason to expect the campaign continues in this vein indefinitely. Neither Barack Obama nor Mitt Romney are terribly interested in dwelling on policy platforms. Romney’s plan to slash spending and keep taxes low on the wealthy isn’t especially popular, at least not at any level of detail beyond a blithe promise to shrink the deficit. Meanwhile, Obama’s signature first-term achievements, like health care, the stimulus and Wall Street reform, are all unpopular or tricky to sell. (The Dodd-Frank bill is the most popular of these, but hyping it means offending wealthy donors.) So what we’re getting instead is a superficial duel about character–and, worse, one that’s based on the largely false premise that the better man can better “manage” the economy back to health.

blog comments powered by Disqus