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Got A Noise Problem? Call Barry Manilow, The Man From Bland!

Posted Tue Mar 3, 2009 1:55pm PST by Billy Altman in Stop The Presses!

It was all the way back in the late 1600s that English playwright and poet William Congreve famously noted that "music hath charm to soothe a savage breast, to soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak."

While there is yet to be any serious study of his effect on boulders or trees, strong evidence is finally emerging that songster Barry Manilow, the man famous for warbling "I Write The Songs," can rightfully lay claim to having his picture in the Bartlett's Book Of Quotations under Congreve's words. That's because Manilow has now officially displaced elevator kings Muzak as the undisputed leader in music that lulls people to sleep--or at least into peaceful submission.

Just a few months ago, a judge in Colorado decided to "try something new" in order to cut down on the number of repeat noise offenders whose blaring stereos or high-decibel band rehearsals were driving their neighbors crazy. Since fines weren't working as a deterrent, Judge Paul Sacco of Fort Lupton Municipal Court opted for a different form of punishment: He sentenced the guilty parties to an uninterrupted hour of loudly played music by--you guessed it--Barry Manilow. And it worked: Most of Judge Sacco's lawbreakers chose to turn down their own music rather than face another harrowing 60-minute aural onslaught of the likes of "Mandy," "Copacabana," and "Looks Like We Made It."

As if this wasn't enough (can't you just envision some hardened Colorado headbanger throwing himself on the mercy of the court, crying, "No! Not 'I Can't Smile Without You' again! Anything but that! Please, I'm begging you!"), more soothing Manilow news came today--and from the other side of the world, no less. The town of Christchurch, New Zealand is looking to stem the tide of unruly behavior by teenagers in its mall district by piping in (to quote the head of the local merchant's association) "nice, easy listening music--like Barry Manilow" in the hopes that The Man From Bland's music might pacify the loitering hooligans. Or at very least get them to congregate somewhere else.

Of course, teens interviewed by the Associated Press claimed that hearing "It's A Miracle" wouldn't result in any miraculous change. "We would just bring a stereo and play it louder," said one of the kids. To which Central Central City Business Association manager Paul Lonsdale replied that the city would then hit them with anti-noise laws.

And if they keep doing it, maybe they'll ship them to Colorado for trial.

 

99 Comments

1. Anne -
Metal Machine Music would be a good punishment too. I can only take 10 minutes of that album before I want to puncture my eardrums.

2. DUDE -
Isn't sentencing someone to Manilow considered cruel and unusual punishment??

3. Sean -
"Isn't sentencing someone to Manilow considered cruel and unusual punishment??"

Ask Tom Jones...

4. Bla -
the horror!

5. kevin -
would rather listen to Manilow than some of the crap out there today....

6. __A_YAHOO_USER__ -
barry manilow is a great singer i can listen to the music for along time

7. Kiwi -
lmao! nice!

8. Newsjunkie356 -
You gotta love this judge. Absolutely perfect. When I was a teenager, I'd have swallowed cyanide before listening to Manilow. (Come to think of it, the cyanide sounds pretty good even now...at the ancient age of 38.)

My wife, bizarrely enough a Manilow fan, has suggested making the miscreants listen to Pat Boone. (Good idea, honey.)

Or maybe, Slim Pickens (look up an old B movie called "Mars Attacks!").

Can we clone this judge and ship him here?!?

9. Yahoo! Music User -
I wonder if there will be lawsuits alledging that this "punishment" is hurting Manilow's image. Like a government official saying he is boring enough to make teens listen to as a punishment.

Or teens with mental disorders who now here Manilow singing over and over all day and night in their head.

If I was a teen in this neighborhood that supported these kids, I'd stage a city event where the teens turned on this music very loud all over the city, especially where the judge lives. I would get a bunch of teens and supporting adults to go in front of the judge's house and sing along in a very loud and roudy way. Hey, teens have freedom of speech too. I don't know of the constitution saying teens don't have a 1st amendment right to speech and peaceful assembly.

10. Newsjunkie356 -
kevin has a point (having to choose between Cold Play and Manilow...like choosing between thumbscrews and bamboo slivers...)

And Frank W:

You obviously have an incredible pain threshold...

11. Steve -
I like Barry Manilow. He's got a great voice and has been around a long time. And now he's just gonna be around even longer... I wonder what Mr. Manilow thinks of this? Is he getting a paycheck from Colorado now?

12. Newsjunkie356 -
Yeah, that should've been the LIVING Slim WHITMAN instead of the deceased Slim Pickens (of "Dr Stranglelove" & "Blazing Saddles" fame).

Pickens died in 1983. The 85 yr old Whitman is still with us (tho' hopefully still not singing...)

13. denise -
i've been listening to barry since i'm 15 i'm 46 now. i don't like what their doing but maybe it will work frank your right he's still a wonderful singer

14. ff f -
Yes...this happens once a year...noone cares anymore.

15. Monica -
I have also been listening to Barry Manilow for years. I grew up listening to Barry. This could be some cruel punishment for naughty loud repeat noise offenders. Why not just simple elevator music? Barry still rocks on my ipod!!!!

16. Tiffany L -
oh god that is funny.

17. Mohamed M -
I love Barry Manilow. He has a great voice, I do not care what anyone says. His voice should be a reward; not a punishment.

18. denise -
i have every cd from beginning to resent on my ipod and mp3

19. Mohamed M -
I love Barry Manilow no matter what anyone think. His voice should be a reward and not a punishment. Barry, keep on singing.

20. Corinth -
Exactly, Monica.........the morons in the malls apparently don't realize that teens these days have access to personal MP3 players. These 'punishments' would be easily shrugged off by most people.
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