How do you feel about exclamation marks? Otherwise known as gaspers, screamers, dog's cocks, or shrieks.
Another listing reads simply "Drum Solo": cue for the main man to cleave the air like a Chinook taking off. He can still tear up the joint like he did when he first burst onto the scene, but over time he's absorbed Miles's famous lesson: it's all about the notes you don't play.
‘Wednesday night has been trivia night for as long as Oh Sherri has been open. The pub, tucked away in the corner of a strip mall along the road between the sleepy Alabama towns of Leeds and Moody, is reliably packed for the quiz. Eager teams oflocals crowd round the tables that the owners, Joel Wallace and his wife Diana, made by hand. Last week, though, they had a problem. Oh Sherri also serves as home base for the devoted and size-able football community in this corner of Alabama. On Saturday and Sunday mornings, a few dozen descend to watch the Premier League; over the last few weeks, they have done a roaring trade for the World Cup, too.’ Fans in a State of Fervour - Rory Smith FT
The recent BBC podcast Everything Is Fake (And Nobody Cares) had an episode dedicated to the illusory nature of WWF wrestling in the 1980s and how it formed "an unexpected blueprint for modern American politics". Audiences know that the spectacle is not real, but accept it and play their part in the deception.
Reasonable adjustment
"What does a happy marriage sound like?" the great American philosopher of marriage, Stanley Cavell, once asked. Bickering is the answer. "Bickering that is itself a mark, not of bliss exactly, but say of car-ing". Marriage, he wrote, is a "devotion to repetition, to dailiness".