Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Important Election Results from Southeastern Massachusetts

Senate Race — Incumbent senator Elizabeth Warren (D) faced Geoff Diehl (R) and Shiva Ayyadurai (I) and won with 61% of the vote. Hanson was the reddest town in the state, Cambridge the bluest. Diehl won Plymouth County; Warren won all the others. Ayyadurai managed to earn 3.4% of the total vote.

Gubernatorial Race — Governor Charlie Baker (R), who was challenged by Jay Gonzalez (D), won every county in the state and earned 67% of the total vote. The only towns in the eastern half of the state won by Gonzalez were Boston, Brookline, Cambridge, Somerville, Chelsea, Provincetown, Aquinnah, Chilmark, and West Tisbury.

House Races — In District 9, which includes much of the South Shore, the Cape, and the Islands, incumbent representative Bill Keating (D) won against challenger Peter Tedeschi (R), collecting 60% of the vote. Incumbent Stephen Lynch (D) of District 8 and Joseph P. Kennedy, III (D) of District 4 ran unopposed.

Ballot Questions — Question 1, asked to decide whether or not the state can mandate nurse-patient ratios, did not pass. 70% of voters chose “No.” Question 2, a campaign to create a citizens commission that will work to end corporation sponsorship of political candidates, passed with 72% of the vote. Question 3, a measure to uphold gender identity discrimination laws, passed with 68%.

Attorney General Race — Incumbent Maura Healey (D), who earned 70% of the vote, beat challenger James McMahon (R). In Eastern MA, McMahon only won Berkley, Lakeville, Rochester, and Halifax.

State Senate — The Democrats won 30 seats, including Norfolk & Plymouth and Cape & Islands, both of which were contested. Feeney (D) is currently leading with 61% in Bristol & Norfolk. The Republicans won 4 seats, including Plymouth & Barnstable and are currently leading in Norfolk, Bristol, & Middlesex and Plymouth & Norfolk.

State House — Plymouth County has voted in 4 Republicans and 5 Democrats. Three races are still undecided: 2 Democrats are leading; 1 Republican is leading. Bristol County has elected 5 Republicans and 9 Democrats.

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Contested House Races in Massachusetts (2018)

There are contested seats in the U.S. House of Representatives in Districts 2, 3, 5, 6, and 9 in Massachusetts. Candidates include five Republicans, five Democrats, and three Independents.

District 9 — Incumbent congressman Bill Keating (D) of Norwood is facing off against challenger Peter Tedeschi (R) of Norwell. 

Keating has served in office since 2011. According to his website, he has received a 100% rating from Planned Parenthood for his pro-choice values, and he “supports Cape Wind, the first commercial-scale wind facility in the country,” which would provide electricity to Cape Cod and Island residents and “create over 1000 regional jobs.” 

Tedeschi is the former CEO of Tedeschi Food Shops and currently is an executive director of Friendship Home, which supports young adults with developmental disabilities. He is focused on “building a highly educated and competitive workforce,” “investing in infrastructure,” “overcoming the opioid crisis,” and providing “staff, equipment, and training” to first responders according to his website.

District 9 includes the South Shore, Cape Cod, and the Islands.

District 5 — John Hugo (R) of Woburn is challenging incumbent congresswoman Katherine Clark (D) of Melrose, who has served in office since 2013. According to his website, Hugo supports social security reform, privacy rights in relation to modern technology, and the legalization of marijuana. District 5 contains many northern and western suburbs of Boston.

District 6 — Incumbent representative Seth Moulton (D) of Salem, a former Marine Corps officer, faces challengers Joseph Schneider (R) of Beverly and Mary Jean Charbonneau (I) of Rockport. 

Schneider, who grew up in communist Romania and served in the U.S. Army, claimed his “social views are in line with the libertarian party” in an interview with Wicked Local Beverly.

Charbonneau, a former real estate broker, has ran many unsuccessful campaigns for local, state, and federal offices. She is a self-described Trump supporter, according to Metro West Daily News, and her House campaign has raised only $128—as opposed to Schneider’s $95,000 and Moulton’s $2 million.

District 6 includes most of Essex County.

District 3 — Rick Green (R) of Pepperell, Mike Mullen (I) of Maynard, and Lori Trahan (D) of Lowell are vying for congresswoman Niki Tsongas’ house seat. Trahan’s goals are to “stand up for working class families, seniors, and women and root out the corruptive influence of corporate money” according to her website. Green, the co-founder and CEO of 1A Auto, is focused on creating jobs and tackling the opioid crisis according to his website. Mullen is an IT director for a managed care company and believes in “comprehensive immigration reform,” “environmental stewardship,” and “common sense gun safety laws” according to his website. District 3 is made up of the Merrimack Valley, including Lowell and Lawrence.


District 2 — Tracy Lovvorn (R) of Grafton and Paul V. Grady (I) of Holden are challenging incumbent congressman Jim McGovern (D) of Worcester, who has held office since 2013. Lovvorn is an operational manager of a healthcare provider and small business owner. Grady holds centrist views and is a supporter of the working class according to his website. District 2 consists of much of midwestern Massachusetts, including Worcester.

Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Nurses Debate Ballot Question 1: Patient Limits

Massachusetts nurses are currently debating Ballot Question 1—whether or not the state should establish patient limits in hospitals. The debate has divided the nursing community in half and could result in a narrow vote..

If passed, the limits will vary between different types of nurses and care facilities. According to the full text of the referendum (available on the Secretary of the Commonwealth’s website), the law will require facilities to adhere to the limits without cutting staff. The law will also mandate the creation of “written patient acuity tool[s],” which will allow nurses to decide whether or not patient limits should be lower at any point.

“It is not fair to the nurse to be expected to…safely care for 8-10 patients,” said Kerri Nixon, a labor and delivery nurse from Bridgewater. She believes that heavy workloads negatively affect nurses’ mental and physical health.

“I’ve worked in situations where there’s too many patients,” hospice nurse Kristen Vu of Easton described. “Nursing homes are understaffed. It’s not safe.” Other nurses like Nixon and Vu agree with the “Nurses Say Yes on 1” campaign, which is paid for and authorized by the Committee to Ensure Safe Patient Care according to their website.

Many nurses, however, oppose the bill.

“I believe that the bill will drastically negatively affect patient safety,” claimed Catherine Eaton, a neurosciences ICU nurse from Wellesley. “Nursing is a very delicate science and we are highly trained to triage, delegate, and provide care to our patients. This bill proposes an extremely rigid and inflexible mandate, and anyone who works in healthcare knows that it is in no way rigid.” According to their website, the “Nurses Say No on 1” campaign is funded by the Coalition to Protect Patient Safety.

Massachusetts is one of fourteen states to enact some form of patient limits. California was the first to do so, and Vu stated that California has since experienced “decreased mortality and [increased] nurse retention rates.” A study conducted by Health Services Research validates her claim. Eaton argued, however, that California’s patient safety and overall hospital ratings are lower than Massachusetts’. According to the Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade, Massachusetts ranks fourth in the nation while California sits at twenty-fifth.

Nurse retention is a concern for supporters of a yes vote. “When nurses feel they’re overworked and in unsafe conditions, they leave,” Vu explained. “[They] have to have malpractice insurance, because the hospital will blame them [for mistakes].” She believes that the passage of this law will lead to “fewer medical errors and lawsuits.”

Cost is an issue for many opposers. “Small community hospitals will be unable to afford the specified number of staff and will be forced to close,” Eaton stated. “Above and beyond taking nursing judgement out of our hands, this bill will negatively impact citizens across the state and be extremely detrimental financially.” Nixon argued that the paychecks of upper management, such as CEOs and CFOs, could be cut to help fund the change.

Limits include three patients per nurse in intermediate care units, one patient under anesthesia and two post-anesthesia, one critical or intensive care patient, one mother and baby per nurse for up to two hours after birth, five psychiatric or rehabilitation patients, and more.

Eaton described how she would incur a 25,000-dollar fine for taking on another nurse’s patient if she had to leave in an emergency. Without patient limits, she said, “What would happen is [the other nurse] would discharge her patient and I would happily absorb her transfer patient so she could leave…Patient safety is in no way compromised and we used our nursing judgement to fill a unit need.”

Question 1 will appear on the ballot this November alongside Question 2, regarding campaign spending, and Question 3, which addresses gender identity discrimination in places of public accommodation.

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

The Virtue of Selfishness by Ayn Rand: Why It's Still Relevant

On Goodreads.com, I noticed that this book is shelved under "Books I Have No Intention Of Reading," "1001 Books I'd Rather Die Than Read," "Dealbreakers: If You Like This Book, We Won't Get Along," and "Books I Wish I Had Never Read"—but also "Best Non-Fiction," "Books That Everyone Should Read At Least Once," "Best Books Ever," and "Best Books Of The 20th Century." I think the shelf that best sums this all up is "Controversial Books," which also includes titles such as Lolita, 1984, The Communist Manifesto, and—you guessed it—The Constitution of the United States of America.

But "controversial" means "fascinating," "enjoyable," and "thought-provoking" in my dictionary (Rand wouldn't like that statement because it goes against the idea of one objective truth), so I highly enjoyed The Virtue of Selfishness: A New Concept of Egoism.


This book isn't just about selfishness; its core idea is rooted in the concept that putting one's own interests above all else allows a society to thrive, but it discusses this in relation to human rights, laizzez-faire capitalism, identity politics, religion, and ethics. It is an incredibly eye-opening read and provides a factual, detailed description of the often-misrepresented concepts of individualism, objectivism, secularism, and libertarianism (though she doesn't use that particular term).


But all of this has little relevance in today's world, right? Because this book is almost sixty years old? While reading, I discovered the answer is exactly the opposite. Despite being penned in 1961, the real-life examples and "current events" issues discussed share a shocking, eery resemblance to many of 2018's hot-button topics. Rand speaks on socialism during the time of Soviet Russia (where she was born):
"What had once been an alleged ideal is now a ragged skeleton rattling like a scarecrow in the wind over the whole world...Fifty years ago, there might have been some excuse (though not justification) for the widespread belief that socialism is a political theory motivated by benevolence and aimed at the achievement of men's well-being. Today, that belief can no longer be regarded as an innocent error. Socialism has been tried on every continent of the globe. In light of its results, it is time to question the motives of socialism's advocates" (Rand 112).
Today, we face a similar situation. There are candidates running for office—even that of the President—who call themselves "Democratic Socialists." Socialism has swept the millennial generation up like a tsunami, and while some young people are managing to swim away, the majority are hypocritical ideologues whose role models are people like Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. History is being forgotten as we speak; statistics from socialist-leaning nations are being swept under the rug; college classrooms are being led by professors who claim that "real socialism has yet to be tried." Rand sums up the truth quite eloquently in one brief statement:
"The essential characteristic of socialism is the denial of individual property rights...No human rights can exist without property rights. Since material goods are produced by the mind and effort of individual men, and are needed to sustain their lives, if the producer does not own the result of his effort, he does not own his life" (Rand 113).
 Most disturbingly similar to the present day is her thoughts on college professors:
"Many professors use the Argument from Intimidation to stifle independent thinking among the students, to evade questions they cannot answer, to discourage any critical analysis of their arbitrary assumptions or any departure from the intellectual status quo" (Rand 192).
She then provides a list of common phrases used by "intellectuals" who believe themselves to be superior to all others of a different ideology—phrases such as "only EVIL people would think that..." and "if you believe X, I don't even want to TRY to explain Y"—you know, the everyday stuff you read from blue-checked Buzzfeed journalists on Twitter.

Rand also discusses racism, which—while it was obviously far more prevalent in her time period—is still a hugely touchy subject today. She condemns racism in ALL of its forms—even taking pride in one's race, because it is an immutable characteristic that does not determine anything in regards to one's achievements, talents, or intelligence. She speaks out against the harsh disadvantages faced by minorities in the 60s while also warning her readers of the detriments of the Civil Rights bill, which forces private business owners to not discriminate against customers based on race. This reminded me immediately of the Colorado wedding cake case—if Rand lived in 2018, I'm confident she would side with the Supreme Court on that one. She would agree with those who say that of course the couple has the right to purchase a cake offered to them, and of course it is rather irrational of that baker to deny customers a service that would benefit him financially, but he has a right as an individual to choose to not offer that service.
"The 'civil rights' bill...is another example of a gross infringement of individual rights. It is proper to forbid all discrimination in government-owned facilities and establishments: the government has no right to discriminate against any citizens. And by the very same principle, the government has no right to discriminate for some citizens at the expense of others. It has no right to violate the right of private property by forbidding discrimination in privately owned establishments...Racism is an evil, irrational and morally contemptible doctrine—but doctrines cannot be forbidden or prescribed by law." (Rand 184).
That's how the free market works—you find another baker.

Rand also deeply opposes what is now dubbed "identity politics"—the mentality that places people in groups by their immutable characteristics and assumes unrelated characteristics based on a collectivist mentality. She quotes the New York Times, which states:
"The question must not be whether a group recognizable in color, features or culture has its rights as a group. No, the question is whether any American individual, regardless of color, features or culture, is deprived of his rights as an American. If the individual has all the rights and privileges due him under the laws and the Constitution, we need not worry about groups and masses—those do not, in fact, exist, except as figures of speech" (New York Times).
Additionally, she defends freedom of speech, a concept currently under attack by the left, who have devised the idea of "hate speech." While it is just a moral principle to some, an increasing number of people (again, young people in particular, and I say this as a young person) are beginning to believe that certain speech should be criminalized. Whatever happened to "sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me?" Oh, I guess that's probably considered "racist" or something nowadays. Rand, while still condemning hateful, irrational discrimination, consistently supports the First Amendment:
"Just as we have to protect a communist's freedom of speech, even though his doctrines are evil, so we have to protect a racist's right to the use and disposal of his own property. Private racism is not a legal, but a moral issue—and can be fought only by private means, such as economic boycott or social ostracism" (Rand 184).

Whether you label yourself liberal or conservative (Rand criticizes both sides), religious or atheist (Rand uses neither to describe herself directly, but she is critical of those she calls "mystics" while still defending freedom of religion)—The Virtue of Selfishness is certainly worth reading. Personally, I found myself agreeing with much of her ideas while disagreeing with some as well, but I could still understand her reasoning and arguments for those topics and found them even more fascinating. Her secular, culturally progressive (for her time, at least), economically right-wing, viewpoint is one that is often missing from our present-day dialogue.

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

The Australian Gun Buyback: A Necessary Evil or Just...Evil?

The concept of placing limitations on the availability of guns versus the civil right to bear arms is one of the most intensely debated topics in the modern world. Everyday citizens and lawmakers alike constantly point fingers at countries other than their own, citing examples of gun laws in these places in order to make a case for their own. Australia is a nation frequently discussed, and one of the most prominent arguments revolves around its infamous “gun buyback.” The facts of this event are often muddled with false claims, emotional responses, and deceitful statistics, however; the true effects of Australia’s gun control laws appear positive on the surface but have actually created issues surpassing the ones that incited their institution.

After a mass shooting in 1996, the Australian government “banned and confiscated guns” (Bader). The program, which is often called a “buyback,” was not voluntary but rather a “mandatory confiscation of firearms, for which citizens were given compensation by the government” (Bader). In other words, gun-owning citizens had no legal choice but to turn over their property, though they did receive monetary recompense. This was finished by 1998, at which time approximately 700,000 weapons had been surrendered (Sarre 4). Accompanying this buyback were new laws regarding gun licensing, registration, storage, and training (Sarre 4). Following the end of the confiscation period, however, over one million new firearms were legally imported (Vendelago et al.).

The 1996 laws were not the last. In November of 2002, the National Handgun Control Agreement was passed, which “limit[ed] the classes of handguns that [could] be imported or possessed for sporting purposes, chang[ed] licensing requirements, and explor[ed] options for a buyback program for those guns now deemed illegal” (Sarre 4). Only months later, the National Handgun Buyback Act of 2003 was ratified by Australia’s federal Parliament (Sarre 4). This law was similar to the 1996 buyback in that it provided financial benefit to those who turned in handguns that had recently become illegal under the Control Agreement (Sarre 4). Approximately 70,000 handguns along with nearly 300,000 parts and accessories were surrendered as a result (Sarre 4).

Eleven years later, a 2014 terrorist attack in Sydney, during which the terrorist “used an illegally held shotgun,” prompted a “gun amnesty” that caused “normal penalties for holding an unlicensed weapon…[to be] waived, as part of an effort to reduce the pool of weapons available to criminals” (“Why Australians”). This program was not a buyback as it did not provide compensation, but it allowed Australian citizens in possession of unregistered, illegal guns to surrender them without criminal punishment. It resulted in Australians “hand[ing] over more than 26,000 illegally held firearms to police” (“Why Australians”). Today, Australian citizens are allowed certain weapons, but the carriers must be licensed, the guns must be registered, and the storage must be approved by the police.

The Prime Minister at the time of the 2003 buyback, John Howard, made choices based on the idea that he could “send a decisive message about the place of guns in a modern civilized society” (Sarre 4). Australians as a whole were mostly supportive of the 2002 and 2003 laws; the main exceptions were a few protesting sport shooters (Sarre 4). In modern Australia, citizens are overwhelmingly in favor of strong gun control, and the majority of politicians have achieved “bipartisan…consensus” (Sarre 4). Most Australians believe that these laws are of the utmost benefit to their country—and with good reason. Researchers have found “reductions in both gun homicide and gun suicide rates that are statistically significant” in correlation with the most recent buyback (Neill and Leigh). Some estimate that the buyback “has saved between 128 and 282 lives per year” (Neill and Leigh). Gun death rates have been falling regularly in Australia for about twenty years; this matches the timeline that began with the initial buyback (Sarre 5). Though the consistent annual decline in total homicide rates, which began before this legislation, has appeared seemingly unaffected by gun control laws, “the share of murders committed with firearms has dropped sharply” (Sarre 5). Australia claims that, unlike other nations, it is “fortunate that the numbers of legal guns in the community [are] manageable, and that authorities have implemented many policies that guard against the risk posed by illegal guns” (Sarre 10). What, then, is the issue?

The statistics not shown by most mainstream media are the numbers that clearly demonstrate that while gun-specific violence has decreased, violence “of every other variety” has escalated (Kirchoff). Critics of Australia’s gun laws believe that this is because “tak[ing] away people’s means of self-defense” means “they can’t defend themselves” (Kirchoff). Reporters, again, state that gun homicide rates have decreased sharply since the changes. However, total homicide rates have declined slowly in the same way they have been for decades (Sarre 5). With basic logic, it is not hard to conclude that because there has been no statistically significant decrease in total homicide rates, some other forms of homicide must be replacing what gun homicides have been lost. As one percentage drops, another percentage grows to fill the gap. 

While it is difficult to find precise data to substantiate what these other causes of homicide might be, it can be assumed that they are occurring because former gun owners now have little to no means of self-protection while criminals still find other ways to attack. Also, “despite Australia’s strict gun control regime, criminals are now better armed than at any time since…[the] buyback scheme” of 1996—many of them with guns, because they, oppositions argue, “have always been available to criminals determined to get them” (Vedelago et al.). This is why Australia has made a grave mistake in disarming its law-abiding citizens.

While homicide has continued to decline normally despite these gun control policies, violent crime has been on the rise. According to data published in 2001 by the Dutch Ministry of Justice, Australia’s contact crime victimization rate in 1999 was 4.1%; this number is higher than the sixteen other “industrialized” countries included in the data, including England, Canada, France, the U.S., and others (Kirchoff). The U.S. sat at only 1.9%—the fourth-lowest on the list, despite the claims of many that it ranks much higher (Kirchoff). Robbery rates in particular spiked after both the 1996 and 2003 buybacks, and interestingly, sexual assault rates also saw a sharp increase after 1996 (Kirchoff). Both numbers have steadily declined since the slow reintroduction of legal firearms into the country (Kirchoff). The rates still remain higher than they should be, however, and this could be due in part to the fact that most types of guns are still illegal. Women in particular might find self-defense in cases of sexual assault much easier if they were simply allowed to carry a handgun in public. Non-fatal shootings, despite the guns’ illegality, “have become almost a weekly occurrence,” and “more than 125 people, mostly young men” were wounded by gunshot during a span of just five years (Vedelago et al.). Violent crime “associated with firearm possession” has increased to more than double its previous rates and has been “driven by the easy availability of [guns] that are smuggled into the country or stolen” (Vedelago et al.). These guns “have been used in dozens of…drive-by shootings of homes and businesses, as well as targeted and random attacks in parks, shopping cent[er]s, and roads” (Vedelago et al.). From January 2015 to August 2016, there were ninety-nine shootings, and most of the weapons used in these crimes were “illicit guns that were not turned over during the 1996 gun buyback—a source known as the ‘gray market’” (Vedelago et al.). As of 2017, “police believe there may be as many as 260,000 more unregistered weapons still at large in the country,” despite the efforts by lawmakers to control them (“Why Australians”). These illicit guns are “fueling a wave of violent crime” particularly in the city of Melbourne, which has seen an influx of robberies and drive-by shootings (Vedelago et al.). In the state of New South Wales, on the other hand, legal gun ownership, which requires license and a tedious registry process, has recently increased by 10%, and this has not resulted in any increase in gun-related crime in the region (Kirchoff). All of these statistics stand to prove the argument that the 1996, 2002, 2003, and 2014 gun control laws have done little but harm to Australia.


Former U.S. President Barack Obama and many other American politicians have recently used Australia’s “buyback”—in reality, confiscation—programs as an example for legislation they could implement in their own country (Bader). However, these men and women “almost never mention that the program was compulsory,” which is one of the main reasons that this would not work in a country that honors its citizens’ constitutional right to bear arms (Bader). Today, there is still an enormous amount of firearms in the hands of criminals, but there are also more legally-owned guns in Australia than there were before the 1996 shooting that catalyzed the first buyback—and homicide rates are still on a steady decline (Vedelago et al.; Kirchoff). Australian citizens and lawmakers alike “tout gun control as an achievement,” but the statistics prove otherwise (“New Report”). Strict gun control, these numbers expose, does not “make people safer” but instead, “in most instances…makes people less safe” (“New Report”). Without a doubt, any amount of gun violence, no matter how large or small the number, is a serious issue anywhere. It is clear, however, that the potential “solution” most frequently campaigned by Australians, Americans, and others alike do not and will not create positive change.

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Sources:


Bader, Jerry. "Debunking the Australia Gun 'Buyback' Narrative, Again." MediaTrackers, Media Trackers, 5 Oct. 2017.

Kirchoff, Courtney. "Australia's Gun Ban Results in More Guns Than Ever...New Findings." Louder With Crowder, Louder With Crowder, 9 Sept. 2015.

Neill, Christine and Andrew Leigh. "Weak Tests and Strong Conclusions: A Re-Analysis of Gun Deaths and the Australian Firearms Buyback." Australian National University Open Research Library, Australian National University, 2007.

"New Report Reveals Just How Badly Australia's Gun Ban Failed." Louder With Crowder, Louder With Crowder, 16 Sept. 2016.

Sarre, Rick. "Gun Control in Australia: A Criminological Perspective." Sales Journal, vol. 3, no. 3, 2015.

Vedelago, Chris, et al. "Gun City: Young, Dumb and Armed." Edited by Patrick O'Neil and Mex Cooper, The Age, Fairfax Media, 2016.

"Why Australians Handed in 26,000 Guns to the Government." PRI's The World, 12 Sept. 2017.


Saturday, April 7, 2018

Dear Evan Hansen: A Theatrical Review

Dear Evan Hansen is a musical production written by playwright Steven Levenson featuring music by lyricists and composers Justin Paul and Benj Pasek with orchestrations by Alex Lacamoire. It premiered on July 10, 2015, and is currently running on Broadway at the Music Box Theatre under the direction of  Michael Greif. David Korins worked as the show’s scenic designer, Japhy Weideman as the lighting designer, Nevin Sternberg as the sound designer, Peter Nigrini as the projection designer, and Emily Rebholz as the costume designer. At the 2017 Tony Awards, it received the award for Best Musical along with five others and three nominations. At the Sunday, March 18th matinee, Taylor Trensch starred as Evan Hansen, and the rest of the cast consisted of Rachel Bay Jones, Laura Dreyfuss, Jennifer Laura Thompson, Michael Park, Ben Levi Ross, Kristolyn Lloyd, and Will Roland.

This play follows the story of high school senior Evan Hansen, who struggles with anxiety, depression, and living with a single mother. To counter this, his therapist asks him to write letters to himself, explaining why each day is “going to be a good day.” One of his letters is stolen by Connor Murphy, another student who, like Evan, does not have any supportive friends at school and also deals with a drug addiction. The next day, Connor commits suicide, and because he was found with Evan’s letter, his parents mistakenly believe that he and Evan were friends. Though he tries to deny this at first, Evan eventually is caught in a spiral of lies that revolves around his and Connor’s “friendship,” fake emails, and a charity fund called the Connor Project. He begins spending more time with Connor’s family, especially his sister Zoe, than he does with his own mother, and they grow to accept him virtually as a replacement for their son, relying on his fabricated stories and presence as their only source of happiness. After a few of his new friends begin to realize some of his stories don’t quite match up, he spills the truth to Connor’s family and his mother.

The designing of this show, in every aspect of the word, was exquisite. From the ceiling hung various thin panels, upstage and downstage, onto which social media posts, emails and words relevant to each scene were projected. I appreciated the way they integrated the Internet and the media into the story as well as the appearance of the play—for example, in instances during which Evan felt overwhelmed, the words and pictures would scroll more quickly, flash brightly, and change rapidly. When he was writing emails, his words would slowly appear on the screens as if they were being typed. These words were also projected onto the stage itself; I had never seen any technique like this used before, and I found it to be a unique and interesting addition. The sound design also played with these same themes—ringtones, dings of text messages, and other sounds of modern technology were employed throughout the show to match the visual effects. At times it was overwhelming, but in a positive way, because the audience was able to experience the effects of constant social media influence along with the characters.

The costume design, particularly pertaining to Evan and Conner, was also tactful and reflected the plot well. At the beginning of the show, Evan wore light colors. Throughout the course of the story, however, as Evan began to take on the role of the Murphy’s son and became more invested in Connor’s life, he began to dress in darker colors. At one point, he wore Connor’s tie, and by the climax, he wore the same gray sweatshirt as Connor. The rest of the characters’ costumes were aesthetically well-designed but did not hold the same significance.

Even without these choices of design, however, this production still would have been incredible—and that is because the performance quality of each and every actor surpassed every expectation one could hold. I will forever remember the face and voice of each of these performers; it would be impossible for me to not, because they all played their characters flawlessly and each adapted an unforgettable persona of specific mannerisms, postures, and inflections. Evan, for example, is a character dealing with anxiety, and there is a scene onstage during which he gives a speech to his school and panics for a few moments. These brief, silent few seconds somehow have become the most memorable seconds of the entire two-hour show, because Trensch took on the role so well. Every audience member held their breath as he fell to the ground and fumbled with his note cards. It felt so incredibly raw and real. Laura Dreyfuss as Zoe Murphy also stood out to me. She played her character in a way that felt so different from a typical female Broadway star. Her voice was constantly raw and full of emotion, and she never sang to simply show off her vocal range—she sang in a very narrative way that worked well for the show compared to some of the other voices. Rachel Bay Jones as Heidi Hansen shared these traits.


Overall, this production was extremely successful in telling a heartbreaking story. It incorporated humor and positive messages into dark themes and never came off as corny, inappropriate, or too depressing. The music mixes more modern sound, such as the acoustic guitar in “Requiem,” with classic show tune pieces such as “Sincerely, Me.” This musical will surely become a well-regarded classic and is certainly one to which audiences will and should continue to flock.

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Seventeen (A Poem)

In less than five minutes I’ll be seventeen
Many changes this year have been unforeseen
My alliances have shifted to contravene
This world that now functions like a faulty machine

I feel I’ve become a sort of Constantine
Constant peril like Caesar but by guillotine
Cast out from both armies, I’m in quarantine
Makes me cower away from the projection screen

These narcicissized hypocrites gripe and preen
Though my own words are admittedly labyrinthine
But each one of them disgustingly philistine
Each day catalyzing more internecine

Issues hyperbolized, dubbed elephantine
All concern placed on one’s moral hygiene
What we need now is a falsehood vaccine
But how would I know when I’m just seventeen?