Ragsdale's 'Kosovo' Jingle Luring Businesses from Knox
"Giant sucking sound" is county mayor siphoning Knox citizens to BalkansFrom APB reports. KNOXVILLE - Four months ago, Knox County Mayor Mike Ragsdale returned from a trip to Eastern Europe humming "Kosovo," a song he claimed he himself wrote (rumors to the contrary notwithstanding). Based on the Beach Boys' 1988 #1 hit, "Kokomo," at the time, the ditty seemed an innocuous paean to a pleasant tour of the Balkan area. However, subsequent events suggest a more subversive purpose: Marketing Kosovo to local businesses to lure them away from Knox County.
When Ragsdale returned from Kosovo, he claimed he was exploring a program of swapping Knox Countians for Kosovars. In August, the mayor explained the proposed exchange program by saying that Kosovars were "warm, good-hearted folk." He contrasted Knox Countians as "ungrateful and always ready to jump on every picayune $39,000 in questionable P-card charges you have, every little hidden hospitality slush fund, every slightly less-than-accurate accounting procedure, every tiny bit of laxness in community grants oversight," and other characterizations.
Now, however, with the relocation of local contractor Atlas Electric Co. to Kosovo, it appears there is no exchange forthcoming, only a one-way funnel to the land of flija, mućkalica and veal kabobs. And Ragsdale's tune appears to be a major reason for the move.
When asked why he was moving his company to Kosovo, Harry Sherrod, president of Atlas, shrugged.
"Mayor Ragsdale's song, 'Kosovo,' just made Eastern Europe sound so mysterious and alluring, all about kielbasas, goulashes and walks by the Danube on moonlit nights," explained Sherrod. "It was simply irresistible."
The song, harmless enough at first blush, runs as follows:
Mamusha, Pristina, ooo, I'm torn between ya,
My babushka, ch-tchotchke, oh, I really gotcha
Kielbasa, goulash-a, baby, I'm-a boss ya
Off the Adriatic Sea
There's a place called Kosovo
That's where you wanna go to get away from it all
Job didn't go as planned
Myopical finks trying to get me canned.
They'll be getting a shove
To the nation of tamboura bands
Down in Kosovo
Croatia, Albania, ooo I wanna take ya
Baklava, kabobas, that's what's waiting on ya
Sarajevo, Montenegro, baby, why don't they go
Ooo I wanna send 'em down to Kosovo
They'll get there fast
And then I'll take it slow
That's where they're gonna go
Way down to Kosovo
In ancient Greek, we'll try to learn to speak
Not near the sea
But we'll perfect our spinistry
By and by we'll defy a little bit of sanity
Taking in the sights
Blue Danube on moonlit nights
That scheming look in their eyes
Gives me an economical contract high
Way down in Kosovo
Mamusha, Pristina, ooo, I'm torn between ya,
My babushka, ch-tchotchke, oh, I really gotcha
Kielbasa, goulash-a, baby, I'm-a boss ya
Ooo I wanna send 'em down to Kosovo
They'll get there fast
And then I'll take it slow
That's where they're gonna go
Way down to Kosovo
Torts in Linz, I wanna make some cents
Everybody knows
A little place like Kosovo
Now if you wanna go
And get away from it all
Go down to Kosovo
Croatia, Albania, ooo I wanna take ya
Baklava, kabobas, that's what's waiting on ya
Sarajevo, Montenegro, baby, why don't they go
Ooo I wanna send 'em down to Kosovo
They'll get there fast
And then I'll take it slow
That's where they're gonna go
Way down to Kosovo
Yet, even a superficial examination of the lyrics reveals...
12/03
Henley to Become 'Bridge to Nowhere' (Part I)
You can't get there from here on "nowhere bridge"From APB reports. KNOXVILLE - The City of Knoxville will hold a public meeting at a time to be determined at a location yet to be revealed to discuss the closing of the Henley Bridge at some undefined point in the future.
The City's chief traffic engineer will present a project overview and recommendations on how travelers to and from South Knoxville deal with any "minor inconveniences" arising from closing for 3 years the main traffic artery to south Knox County. Officials of the Transferring of Dinero to the Order of Thoroughfare Constructors (TDOTC) group also will be on hand to obfuscate questions.
Rod Hodster, chief traffic engineer for the City of Knoxville, will provide the project overview as well as his recommendations for not getting there from here anymore. Among his recommendations is a proposal that "the area of South Knox severe all ties with the rest of Knoxville proper, declare itself an independent territory and threaten to protect itself by force from any encroachments on its sovereignty, examples of which include finger annexations and so-called representation on Knox County Commission."
The Henley Bridge carried an average 38,813 vehicles per day in 2008 over Fort Loudoun Lake, according to the city. Traffic will be diverted to the areas like Far Rockaway and Timbuktu, but most traffic will just turn around and go back where it came from rather than risk not getting there from here.
Representatives of nine South Knoxville neighborhood groups requested the meeting primarily to make a few perfunctory requests that TDOTC representatives explained are impossible to meet. The neighborhood groups then sighed in resignation as TDOTC revealed its plans for not getting there from here during the 3 years the bridge is closed.
As Travers Brickwall, TDOTC regional spokesperson, put it, "We build things that get people from place A to place B, and people from place B to place A, but people at place C - which is where the thing between places A and B will be built - aren't our concern, nor is how 'A' and 'B' people get there from here while we're building the thing."
One neighborhood spokesperson said, "We know the bridge must be closed, but our streets are just neighborhood streets. They're not designed to handle a lot of traffic. We want to give you some input about that."
"And thank you so much for the input," said Brickwall. "We'll get back to you. Buh-bye..."
Henley to Become 'Bridge to Nowhere' (Part II)
You can't get there from here on "nowhere bridge"From APB reports. KNOXVILLE - In Part I of this two-part exposé, Travers Brickwall, regional spokesperson for the Transferring of Dinero to the Order of Thoroughfare Constructors (TDOTC) group, and Rod Hodster, chief traffic engineer for the City of Knoxville, were explaining the fate of Henley Bridge to representatives of South Knox neighborhoods. For 3 years, Henley was to be a bridge to nowhere, meaning that people of South Knox could not get there from here and those of the North could not get here from there. Brickwall had addressed all of the neighborhood reps' requests and questions, explaining, "No."
Hodster then said that, based on his experience, people south of the bridge should prepare to be somewhere other than here for the duration of the repairs.
"I have had some experience with these sorts of projects, and I've heard your murmuring complaints," he said. "I've been there. And you can't there from here. It's all part of life's rich pageant."
When asked if he were quoting R.E.M. lyrics by way of explaining TDOTC's fabled reconstruction projects, Hodster dismissed the idea by looking at his watch a third time, saying, "Wait, even the suggestion's ridiculous. Going to a place that's far, so far away, and yes, that is enough. Going where nobody's way is known, they don't walk with anybody from back home. You'll wind up unsatisfactory, yet full of stealth and nowhere left but back, stalk along twisty roads, circle around behind yourself. I know it might sound strange, but I believe you'll be circling back before too long. Don't go back to Knoxville! Don't go back to Knoxville! Don't go back to Knoxville! ...You can't get there from here..."
12/01
KPD, KSCO Issue Citations for Holiday Violations
Knoxville Poultry Division, Knox County Shopping Office cite 1,213 for holiday gaucherieFrom APB reports. KNOXVILLE - A special joint task force of the Knoxville Poultry Division and the Knox County Shopping Office reported issuing 1,213 citations for various violations of holiday etiquette over the long Thanksgiving weekend.
Senior Shopper Kim Klatch-Kargough was unhappy to report that violent altercations at shopping centers were down this Black Friday.
"It's not that we condone violence, but if retailers are going to jingle all the way to the bank, it's shoppers' patriotic duty to be out there fighting for bargains on Black Friday," explained Klatch-Kargough. "This year, we had some baby-boomer grandmas trying to relive their glory days by hoarding the 2009 edition of the Cabbage Patch Dolls™ and some Generation-Z dads trying to squirrel away all the Zhu Zhu Pets™ Hamsters, but that was about it. Everyone else pretty much behaved themselves and stuck to their shopping lists and went for practical items - and in a consumer-oriented economy, 'practical' is the kiss of death. This holiday season, consumers need to be out fighting tooth and claw for items they don't need for the good of capitalism."
Klatch-Kargough then delivered an impassioned plea for the preservation of conspicuous consumption.
"You consumers who are reading this interview instead of being out consuming, you should be ashamed of yourselves," he lectured. "Seriously. We are at the pinnacle of western culture, and if we're going to stay there, you have to buy things you don't need. In the name of all that's shoddy, to save civilization as we know it, go out and shop!"
However, shoppers seemed indifferent to Klatch-Kargough's inveigling.
"Isn't consumerist shopping - by which I mean shopping at big-box shopping centers like Wal-Mart - contributing to the death of western civilization, by driving out mom 'n' pop shops and concentrating wealth in the hands of a few corporations while simultaneously making us little people more dependent on them?" protested Fredo Peebles. "How is consumerism patriotic? I'm so confused."
"Yeah," agreed Zazu Watts. "Why would I worry about western civ? I got a C- in it. I just gotta get a new Dustbuster and get outta here."
"Let western civilization fall, what do I care?" declaimed Zelda Kvetchsherald. "What is it to me? As long as there is champagne and caviar and chocolate - and chocolate-flavored champagne - and champagne-flavored caviar - and caviar-flavored chocolate - I am content."
Although caviar-flavored chocolate seems gauche in the extreme, Chief Chef Sterling Silverware, the Fork, explained that most of the holiday gaucherie his department deals with is of a more mundane sort. He said his department is mainly concerned with keeping amateur cooks and their guests safe during the intense meal preparation hours from 5 p.m. Wednesday through the drowsy post-dinner period on Thanksgiving Day...
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