You-review-it Monday

For me, it was Tara Donovan at the IMA. And you?

April 4, 2010
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For me, the weekend included two trips to the Indianapolis Museum of Art to see the Tara Donovan exhibition. More on that in an upcoming column. I also watched a few films on DVD to prep for a trip to Nashville, TN, where I'll be serving on a jury for the Nashville Film Festival later this month.

And you? Did you get to one of the Final Four concerts on the Lawn at White River State Park? Hear some Classic Soul at the Athenaeum? Stay closer to home and catch up on movies? Watch Biblical epics on cable?

What did you see, hear or do this weekend?

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  • STP at White River
    I went to see Stone Temple Pilots at The Lawn at White River State Park. I was really disappointed.

    STP became popular while I was in high school. Although I haven't followed them much past high school, I decided it was a great night to attend an outdoor concert, and it was free, so why not.

    Scott Weiland clearly has not beat his addiction demons. He was slurring his words and most of the time making no sense in-between songs. Even the drummer seemed to start songs in the middle of Weiland's talking out of embarrassment or just to shut him up. I was really hoping that Scott was sober as has been reported in the past, but it's clear he is not. So sad.

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  1. "And the success of the Indiana GOP to not allow an expansion of Medicaid had nothing to do with Indiana hospitals' financial woes? Fixed that for you; editorial bias rebalanced. Seriously, there are so many things wrong with Obamacare that the only way one can view it as a success is to assume that it was designed to fail our way into a government single payor healthcare system. The system is complex, creates huge regulatory burdens and overhead and yet still does not have adequate means to control escalating health care costs. But then when you elect a 10th grade math drop out with no quantitative reasoning skills to be President of one of the world's most important economies in troubled times, you can't really be surprised by blatant stupidity.

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