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John Lennon Defended Attica Prison Inmates in 1972 — Years Before His Killer Was Sent There

John Lennon Defended Attica Prison Inmates in 1972 — Years Before His Killer Was Sent There

Yahoo28-04-2025
In January 1972, John Lennon and Yoko Ono performed their protest song 'Attica State' on , sparking a rare live debate with the studio audience.
The historic exchange, centered on the 1971 Attica prison uprising, is now featured in the first episode of MSNBC's new docuseries .
In a chilling twist, Lennon's assassin would later be incarcerated at Attica for more than 30 years following the musician's 1980 murder.
In September 1971, the Attica Correctional Facility in upstate New York became the site of the largest prison uprising in U.S. history. After years of brutal living conditions, overcrowding and racial discrimination, more than 1,200 inmates seized control of the maximum-security compound, taking guards and staff hostage and demanding sweeping reforms. The four-day standoff ended in devastating violence when law enforcement stormed the facility — leaving 43 people dead, including both inmates and prison employees. The bloodshed shocked the world, and the word "Attica" became a rallying cry for justice amid systemic brutality in the police system.
Four months later, on Jan. 13, 1972, John Lennon and Yoko Ono appeared on The David Frost Show, where they performed a new song mourning the deaths on both sides of the conflict. 'What a waste of human power, what a waste of human lives,' Lennon sang as he furiously strummed a bluesy riff on his acoustic guitar. 'Shoot the prisoners in the towers, 43 poor widowed wives.'
Related: How John Lennon's Accidental LSD Trip During a Beatles Recording Session Strengthened His Bond with Paul McCartney
The song fell in line with many other protest anthems Lennon had written during the period that tackled hot-button issues head on. That same year, he would address the conflict in Northern Ireland with "Sunday Bloody Sunday" and 'The Luck of the Irish,' decry the imprisonment of Black Panther activist Angela Davis with 'Angela' and object to draconian drugs charges with 'John Sinclair.'
Performing 'Attica State' ruffled some feathers in Frost's New York City television studio, leading to an impromptu debate between the famous couple and members of the audience. 'We're like newspaper men, you know?' Lennon explained. 'Only we sing about what's going on instead of writing about it. We're just reporters.'
The historic exchange is featured in "David Frost Vs The Beatles," the first episode of MSNBC's new docuseries, David Frost Vs, which began airing on April 27. The six-part series chronicles Frost's most famous interviews from throughout his 50-year career, during which he sat down with the likes of Muhammad Ali, Mikhail Gorbachev, Margaret Thatcher, Elton John, Jane Fonda and — most famously — Richard Nixon. The debut episode spotlights his numerous interviews with members of the Beatles, but none were as fraught as Lennon's 1972 appearance.
Related: John Lennon and George Harrison Explain Why They Traded LSD for Meditation: 'It Had Done All It Could Do' (Exclusive)
Tensions in the studio rose after Lennon and Ono, backed by members of their new band Elephant's Memory, finished the song. One woman shouted her objections from her seat in the balcony. While most hosts might have had the dissenter escorted out for disrupting the taping, Frost instead invited her to the front row to 'join the chat' and engage directly with his guests. He then extended the same offer to anyone else who wanted to join the debate.
'I love ad-libbed situations,' Frost says via voiceover in an archival interview featured in the docuseries, 'because you never know what people are going to ask. And you never really know what you're going to say in reply, either. It's an extension of something I enjoy, namely: coping with the unpredictable.'
Settling into her new seat, the woman boldly criticized Lennon and Ono's stance on the uprising. 'I agree that Attica State was a tragedy,' she said. 'But you're making it sound as if the only worthwhile people in the world are people who committed crimes.' Another man added, 'If they hadn't done something wrong in the first place, they wouldn't have been there!'
Lennon calmly replies that his song is mourning the human loss on both sides. 'When we say '43 poor widowed wives,' we're not talking about just prisoners' wives,' he says. 'You see, there's going to be a rally for Attica prisoners. We've been invited to play the song there, and it's just to show that people like us care, and we're not just living in ivory towers in Hollywood watching movies about ourselves. We care about what's going on in New York, in Harlem, in Ireland, in England, in Vietnam, in China — everywhere!'
The man in the audience rolled his eyes at Lennon's earnestness. 'Walk through one of those neighborhoods at two in the morning to go home," he said. "You wouldn't be singing about the people locked up in jail for mugging you!'
Related: John Lennon and Yoko Ono Doc Shows a 'Different' Side of Ono, Says Director: 'A Mother in Pain' (Exclusive)
Frost intervened by posing a question to Lennon and Ono: 'Don't you agree that there are people who have just destroyed another life, and ought, in some way, to be restrained from destroying yet another life?'
'I'm not sure about that, but let's make it human for them while they're in there,' Lennon responded, eliciting a spontaneous ovation from the studio audience. 'Apathy doesn't count. Even singing is better than doing nothing.' He then launched into a second performance of 'Attica State,' taking extra care to enunciate every syllable to ensure his message is heard.
This would be Lennon's final interview with Frost. Nearly nine years later, on Dec. 8, 1980, the music icon was murdered on the streets of New York while returning home from a late-night recording session. Ironically, his assassin, Mark David Chapman, was incarcerated at Attica State Prison for more than 30 years, before being transferred to nearby Wende Correctional Facility in 2012. Though the prison system does not disclose reasons for inmate transfers, it's been widely theorized that he faced threats from other prisoners and was moved for safety reasons. It was an eerie full-circle moment, binding Lennon's fate to the troubled legacy of Attica.
David Frost Vs airs Sundays on MSNBC.
Read the original article on People
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Michael Peregrine: 60 years ago, the Beatles invaded Comiskey Park
Michael Peregrine: 60 years ago, the Beatles invaded Comiskey Park

Chicago Tribune

time7 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Michael Peregrine: 60 years ago, the Beatles invaded Comiskey Park

Before Beyoncé and Taylor Swift were John, Paul, George and Ringo. The Fab Four. The spearhead of the British Invasion. Then, and probably still now, the most popular rock 'n' roll band in the world. Wednesday is the 60th anniversary of the Beatles' performance at Comiskey Park. You read that right — the Lads from Liverpool played at the Baseball Palace of the World in Bridgeport, not at the future national historical landmark at Clark and Addison streets. With the band's popularity at global proportions, the event at the time was one of the most anticipated musical performances in Chicago history. The actual performance was the rock 'n' roll equivalent of a day-night doubleheader. The band appeared in the afternoon before a crowd of 25,000 people and again in the evening before 37,000. Note that the White Sox were then averaging only about 14,000 fans per game. The Beatles had arrived in Chicago red-hot, in the middle of a wildly popular national tour that began with the famous concert in New York's Shea Stadium. They were riding the crest of popularity from multiple No. 1 hits, and the release, only a few days earlier, of their second movie, 'Help!' Their journey to the Comiskey concert was typical of the bedlam that accompanied their performances. Band members were flying into Chicago from Houston, the site of their most recent concert. According to news reports, they were not allowed to land at O'Hare airport due to the authorities' concern that their presence, and the associated fan attention, might play havoc on airport operations. They were diverted to Midway and had to make an arduous cross-town drive to their accommodations at the Sahara Inn North at 3939 Mannheim Road, next to O'Hare, where they had stayed during an initial 1964 visit to Chicago. According to news reports, band management had avoided prime downtown hotels for security purposes. Yet their plan was reportedly betrayed by leaks from the hotel staff, which quickly led to pandemonium. Throngs of young fans swarmed the hotel, forcing the band to leave through a back corridor, an ongoing occupational hazard for the Beatles. According to the Beatles' recorded history, the Comiskey Park set list was a familiar one to fans of the band's early years: a short version of 'Twist and Shout,' followed by 'She's a Woman,' 'I Feel Fine.' 'Dizzy Miss Lizzy,' 'Ticket To Ride,' 'Everybody's Trying To Be My Baby,' 'Can't Buy Me Love,' 'Baby's in Black,' 'Act Naturally,' 'A Hard Day's Night,' 'Help!' and 'I'm Down.' It's a fair bet that a large percentage of Chicago baby boomers could sing the lyrics to each of those songs on a moment's notice. In many ways, the summer of 1965 represented the height of Beatlemania and the hair-pulling, foot-stomping, stage-crashing euphoria that it typified. The band would, of course, go on to greater commercial and artistic success and acclaim. But it was changing, the times were changing and the music was changing, too. 'Rubber Soul' and 'Revolver' arrived in late 1965 and early 1966, respectively. 'Sgt. Pepper' and 'Magical Mystery Tour' followed in 1967. The Beatles stopped touring at the end of 1966 and disbanded in 1970, which makes the Comiskey Park concert a unique moment in time. Every generation is entitled to its own form of musical rapture. For the baby boomers, it was — and remains — Beatlemania. And it lives on though films such as Martin Scorsese's 'Beatles '64' and Disney's 'Let it Be'; through documentaries such as 'McCartney 3,2,1'; through two new books about Ringo Starr; and through Ringo and Paul McCartney's constant touring. And the indefatigable McCartney is expected to pack the United Center for his Nov. 24 and 25 concerts. Old Comiskey Park is of course gone now; they paved that paradise and put up a parking lot. But the location of home plate has been preserved in a faithfully created marble marker, inlaid in the surface of the lot just north of the new Rate Field, by Gate 5 in Lot B at the northeast corner of 35th Street and Shields Avenue. So the next time you're at a Sox game, go over and stand in at the home plate marker. Look to the northeast toward an imaginary second base, where the Beatles' stage was once set up and where the band stood in its classic formation. Then close your eyes for a second and believe in yesterday. When you were just 17. You know what I mean.

MSNBC's name change won't help. MS NOW will still peddle the same liberal lies.
MSNBC's name change won't help. MS NOW will still peddle the same liberal lies.

USA Today

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  • USA Today

MSNBC's name change won't help. MS NOW will still peddle the same liberal lies.

MSNBC's new name is the product of a divorce from NBC, but no amount of alimony can save the network from its leftist bias. It might have a new name soon, but it will still be the same nonsense. When I saw that MSNBC is changing its name to MS NOW, which stands for My Source News Opinion World, I had to chuckle. The new acronym is the product of a divorce from NBC, but no amount of alimony can save the news network from its leftist bias. It might have a new name soon, but it will still be the same nonsense. I'm not the only one to see the mainstream media's penchant for obfuscation and gaslighting. "Real Time" host Bill Maher recently made some profound remarks about the media that reinforce what I've seen for years. During his Aug. 15 show on HBO, Maher spoke with a panel of guests about President Donald Trump's meeting earlier that day with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Maher ticked off positive things about Trump, like how effective tariffs have been and how anti-war Trump is. Maher scolds news media about 'zombie lie' Then Maher scolded the media: "But again, let's not have the 'zombie lie' that (Trump) is still backing Putin. Because first of all, he bombed Iran, that was a Putin ally. He didn't get out of NATO. He mended fences with NATO. So, and he put sanctions back on Russia, so, ya know." One of his panelists, County Highway editor-at-large Walter Kirn, remarked, "You're really coming around Bill." "There's no coming around. There's just what's true," Maher said. A zombie lie has been defined as a falsehood that has been repeatedly debunked or proven false, yet continues to be believed and spread, influencing people's thoughts and actions. I can think of several zombie lies that the mainstream media have perpetuated about Trump and conservativism. Take the latest peace talks over Russia's war against Ukraine. Trump didn't persuade Putin on Aug. 15 to agree to a ceasefire, so the meeting was immediately dubbed a failure. Three days later, however, Trump met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and other European leaders to continue discussing how to end a war that has raged for more than three years and that has killed and injured nearly a million for the Russian military and 400,000 for Ukraine. Coverage out of the Aug. 18 meeting was much more positive. So, was Trump's summit with Putin really a failure or was the news media's rush to judgment driven by bias against the president? And has the news media learned nothing from a decade of covering Trump as a political figure? I'd wait before smearing Trump's style of negotiations based on, oh, I don't know, the positive success of the past four months of trade deals and tariffs, but that's me. The 2024 election is another obvious example. In hindsight, we can see that Trump consistently led the presidential race, but thanks to inaccurate polls and partisan news sources who suggested he was behind, the country was flabbergasted when Trump won reelection easily. Trump won all the swing states, the popular vote and the Electoral College, but the tsunami caught the media by surprise because they were so committed to attacking Trump and promoting Democratic nominee Kamala Harris. Zombie lies have had serious consequences for the American people and for our nation's image in the world. A Pew Research Center poll released in June found that America's image had declined among dozens of nations amid "low confidence in Trump." Trump's successes have been underreported That poll was published just days before Trump ordered stealth bombers to cripple Iran's nuclear sites, ending the threat of widespread war in the Middle East. Trump also is attempting to broker peace between Israel and Hamas as well as Ukraine and Russia. He forced NATO allies to pay for more of their self-defense. And he's helped negotiate an end to lower profile conflicts involving India and Pakistan and Cambodia and Thailand. On the domestic side, Trump has secured the southern border, the economy is doing better than many expected, stock markets continue to set record highs and in the second quarter, gross domestic product showed healthy growth. Trump has made more progress in seven months than President Joe Biden did in four years. But most news coverage doesn't reflect that reality. And that is why Maher is scolding the media for telling zombie lies. It's also why a name change won't help MSNBC. The network could rebrand 100 times and still not be any more relevant or truthful. Until the zombie lies are finally put to rest, Americans will be fed a skewed perception of what's actually happening. As Maher said, "There's no coming around. There's just what's true." Hear that MS NOW? Nicole Russell is a columnist at USA TODAY and a mother of four who lives in Texas. Contact her at nrussell@ and follow her on X, formerly Twitter: @russell_nm. Sign up for her weekly newsletter, The Right Track, here.

Today in Chicago History: The Beatles play two shows at Comiskey Park, and scarcely a note was heard
Today in Chicago History: The Beatles play two shows at Comiskey Park, and scarcely a note was heard

Chicago Tribune

time8 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Today in Chicago History: The Beatles play two shows at Comiskey Park, and scarcely a note was heard

Here's a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Aug. 20, according to the Tribune's archives. Is an important event missing from this date? Email us. Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago) How George Halas' columns for the Chicago Tribune, a field goal and a charity game helped the Chicago Bears prove their legitimacy in 19351948: The National League champion Chicago Cardinals beat the College All-Stars 28-0 in front of 101,220 fans at Soldier Field. Chicago White Sox pitchers have thrown 20 no-hitters since 1902 — including 3 perfect games. Relive them all here.1957: Bob Keegan — at 37 — became the oldest player to throw a no-hitter for the Chicago White Sox. The Sox beat the Washington Senators 6-0 in the second game of a doubleheader at Comiskey Park. 1961: The international press called it 'a stunning upset.' Three American teenagers scored a Wightman Cup victory at Saddle & Cycle Club over veteran British tennis stars Ann Haydon, Cristine Truman, Angela Mortimer and Deidre Catt. Billie Jean King on today's tennis, the media and a new play at Chicago Shakespeare about her lifeThe American teens were Karen Hantze and Justina Bricka, both 18, and bouncy 17-year-old Billie Jean Moffitt, who spurred on her own game by muttering 'Come on, baby' to herself. Moffitt later played under her married name, King. The American teens had lost to the same Britons at Wimbledon earlier in the year. They said that playing the established British stars before huge crowds helped them gain experience and confidence for the Wightman matches in Chicago. 1965: After arriving quietly at Chicago's Midway Airport, the Beatles played a day-night doubleheader at Comiskey Park. More than 50,000 incessantly screaming fans drowned out the Beatles during the 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. shows. John Lennon, then 24, was not annoyed. 'They pay good prices to get in (top tickets, $5.50). Who are we to say whether or not they should scream?' A solid line of officers sat shoulder to shoulder, with their backs to the infield, to prevent teens from taking second base, where the Beatles performed on a plywood bandstand. Paul McCartney singing 'I'm Down' pumped up the volume of the screamfest. Based on that alone, Tribune reviewer Will Leonard surmised that this was 'easily the artistic success of the evening.' The take at the Comiskey gate was an estimated $150,000 to $160,000, compared with the year before at the Chicago Amphitheatre, when the Beatles had a reported $30,000 in ticket sales. After the concert the Beatles stopped at Margie's Candies in Bucktown for ice cream, recalled owner Peter Poulos Jr. 'They sat at the back booth and ordered Atomic Busters (banana splits standing up). They began singing, John was standing on the table. The place was packed. They stayed about an hour.' 1976: Polish Cardinal Karol Wojtyla led a group of bishops on a tour of the United States that included Chicago. He returned in October 1979 — then known as Pope John Paul II. 2014: The Chicago Cubs won 2-0 over the San Francisco Giants after 4½ innings and a 4-hour, 34-minute rain delay when the grounds crew mishandled the tarp. The Giants appealed the ruling, won, but lost 2-1 a day later. Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group, stay current with Today in Chicago History and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago's past.

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