August 2007


Saint Louis31 Aug 2007 10:57 pm

Noah’s Ark Restaurant - St Charles, MO - 1967-2007To be honest, I never ate at Noah’s Ark. I never stayed in the adjacent motel, either. The Noah’s Ark Restaurant, though, was my childhood landmark that we were close to St. Louis, only four hours from my grandparents home, when we’d drive from New Jersey. I always wanted to go there. It was quite a site, and only second to the arch as a St. Louis icon.

Now closed for the past seven years, it finally met the wrecking ball –so to Noah’s Ark Restaurant Animals - St Charles, MO - 1967-2007speak- this week. Now, I know I’ll never go there.

Read more in the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch.

Music19 Aug 2007 06:20 pm

Jonathan Ramsey Live at Borders Fairview Heights, IL by Rusty MathisAs usual, I had a lot of fun at the Borders in Fairview Heights, IL. It’s amazing how many bookstores have become part of a town’s nightlife. Borders all over are full of interesting people on Friday and Saturday evenings, before and after movies, on dates, out with family, or hanging out with friends. I believe Borders’ commitment to local and independent music doesn’t hurt. Many of them have rock, folk, classical, and all sorts of music every weekend.

So, while some were rockin’ out with Reverend Horton Heat at Pop’s in Sauget, others were at my show in Fairview Heights. I would have loved to have seen RHH’s show. I haven’t seen him live for almost 15 years. Anyway, I’m not so certain he’s blogging about missing Jonathan Ramsey on Saturday night. Then again, he might not know just how close he was.

Recordings and mp311 Aug 2007 04:44 pm

Paris HiltonLast month, I was riding the Metrolink, and it struck me that I hadn’t heard anything about Paris Hilton for a few weeks. That’s no longer true, since Granddad Hilton announced the inheritance amendments, a week or so ago.

Anyway, I wrote this song, a followup to a song I wrote during the Paris/Sheriff/Judge fiasco.

I’m publishing this under the Creative Commons non-commercial, attribution, share-alike license, so play around with it, if you like. You can also freely share it, as long as you freely share it for free.

Cheers!

Paris in July Play Song

free+mp3 paris+hilton free+music creative+commons

Kansas City and Photos and Shows10 Aug 2007 03:44 pm

KC Fringe Rocked Hard by Jonathan Ramsey and His Devilish and Sweaty Orange ShirtOkay. This is nice. I received an email from my friend Valerie, of the Missouri Valley Folklife Society. She sent me a link to the Kansas City Star Community Faces Page, and noted that the Star used my performance photo as the cover photo.

I’m a bit amazed. Everyone else there was quite glamorous, professional, the picture of the bold and beautiful. That friday evening, when this photo was taken, I felt like a sweaty mess. Perhaps, sweaty, messy Jonathan is the new face of “the approachable rock star”. I’m, at the very least, certain that my children will ridicule me for using “Jonathan” and “rock star” in the same sentence, even more, the same clause.

Well, rock on sweaty, KC Fringe, MVFS, and the Kansas City Star. Jonathan is right here with you.

calendar08 Aug 2007 07:36 pm

Join me at the Country Club Plaza Art Fair!

calendar08 Aug 2007 05:34 am

Come to O’Malley’s, just miles north of the Kansas City International Airport.

Kansas City and Music and Shows03 Aug 2007 12:59 am

If you missed it, or just want to relive the glory that is KC Fringe 2007, here you go:

Check out this video: KC Fringe Festival 2007 Photos

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Kansas City and Mania that Pervades Jonathan's Soul02 Aug 2007 07:05 pm

It’s just like Reaganomics (”Voodoo Economics” George H. W. Bush, 1980), but different. So, follow me on this one. I realized the other day how my shows at KC Fringe displayed a trickling down to Jonathan Ramsey.

Missouri Valley Folklife Society sponsored a stage. For that stage, they’d arranged a band, an incarnation of Uncle Dirtytoes from Lawrence, KS. Maria, singer and fiddler for the band, was to have hand surgery, so they might have had to bow out. My friend Gordon’s band was put on standby. The crew each said that would work, and all was set. Sometime later, as the time to call up Gordon’s band came, one band mate realized he had a Belgium trip. Another had a conflict. So, they weren’t going to be able to do KC Fringe.

So, MVFS called Jonathan (uh… me). I was able to do it. I may be number three, but I’m certain MVFS may call on me again, if disaster ever strikes a couple other performers.

On with the show. I discovered that many of the fine folk who came to my Friday and Saturday evening shows in 412 Delaware Street were, in fact, there only after they had been turned away from the sold out Naughty Knickers burlesque show in 412-A Delaware Street. They got there too late for nudity and coarse social and political banter. So, they came into the next hottest venue they found, and lucked upon my coarse social and political banter. My absence of nudity must not have been too disappointing, since many signed up on my mailing list. Indeed, I must point out that these folks were not the bare skin show seekers of the River Quay run by the mafia days of the 70s and 80s. They were well dressed, literate folk who had, in fact, come for cerebral stimulation, not the other kind of stimulation found in the River Quay’s “all girl show” establishments. The area now called The River Market has, indeed, improved.

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Diabetes02 Aug 2007 06:16 am

Paradigm Insulin Pump with Continuous Glucose MonitoringThis morning, my check up at the endocrinologist turned into a discussion of our out of control healthcare system and its costs. He looked a little surprised when I told him that I personally had to pay $2500 for a new pump. My insurance has a $2500 cap on DME (Durable Medical Equipment). So, of the $5500 cost of a new insulin pump, United Health Care will pay $2500, Minimed will give me $500 trade-in on my current pump, leaving me $2500 to pay.

Imagine, if you will, a single parent earning a modest living. Imagine, also, a family of 4 dealing with high rents or a variable mortgage, school, clothing, food, and the like, on a modest income. I complain about these costs, but I know that many people are trying to deal with these on less income than I am.

When I got my current pump, in 2002, I had Cigna. Cigna and Medtronic-Minimed had a negotiated price of $4500, and I had to pay 10% of all DME. So, my out-of-pocket was $450. Every 3 months, I paid 10% of the cost for the insertion sets and insulin reservoirs that you change every three days. That came to around $45, every three months.

In the past 3 years, though, with Blue Cross Blue Shield, and now United Health Care, I have had a deductible to meet before they start paying. Currently, I have a $750/family member deductible. So, my first two boxes of pump supplies, each year, are mostly out-of-pocket. Luckily, I still only have to pay $10 copay each for my monthly supply of glucose test strips and insulin.

So, let’s return to our exemplary family. For the first half of each year, someone with a child on a pump, with insurance like mine, would pay $20 each month at the druggist, then $125 each month for pump supplies ($750/6). The second half of the year, once the deductible is paid, requires $15 per month; assuming that copay is still %10 for durables. For the pump itself, Medtronic-Minimed can put you on monthly payments of $50 to pay off the $2500. Doctor copays of $20 every three months would work out to almost $7 per month ($6.67, roughly, actually.) So, for six months, the family would pay $202 monthly. Then, for six months, they would pay $92 per month.

Add to this the cost of any other care the child may need, and this adds up to an enormous cost for many families. If you’d like to find out more, or about organizations that help families dealing with the cost of a child’s diabetes care, check out Islets of Hope, and iPump are so important. If you have a child with diabetes, check out these sites, as well as Children with Diabetes, an online community for kids, families, and adults with diabetes.

I’ll post some info on the continuous glucose monitoring systems, now available, but not covered by any major insurance carriers.

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