Saturday, October 30, 2021

Oingo Boingo Lives!

Many Original Members of Quirky, Angry, Funny, Edgy, Underrated 80's Band Return!

 If you attended college in Southern California in the early-to-mid 1980's, you must remember Oingo Boingo, the quirky, hard-rocking band whose concerts were dance-and-sweat events. 

As a child of the 1970's, well, I had never seen or heard anything quite like them. I wasn't sure what to make of the band at first. But they grew on me.

When I was working part time as a coach and camp counselor at the Montecito YMCA in college, about half the kids on my sports teams were listening to Oingo Boingo on their Sony Walkmans.
 
One afternoon, I just had to borrow a kid's headset and listen in to see what all the fuss was about. It was immediately engaging, and also a bit disturbing and dangerous. I started dancing, and the kids on my team started laughing. 
 
They were happy to initiate their coach into the Boingo Universe. When you listen to Oingo Boingo, I realized that day, it's impossible to stay still.
 
The more I listened, the more I liked the creativity, the edginess, the reckless abandon, the just-plain fun. They were so different than anything else we heard on the radio in the early 80's.
 
They were punk-ish, but not punk. They were new wave-ish, but not new wave. They were alternative-ish, but not alternative. They were art rock-ish, but not art rock. They were ska-ish, but not ska . 
 
The band, which has been under-appreciated since the first record, created its own genre. Some call them Halloween Rock, 'cuz they had more than a small amount of anxious, scary/creepy themes and vibes, with references to nightmares and monsters and juvenile delinquents and insects underground.

Oingo Boingo did enjoy its 15 or perhaps 20 minutes of fame. I first saw them live at the US Festival in 1983 with my fellow 300,000 music fans. The band that day stole the show. 
 
They were funny, frenetic, obstinate, wacky, angry and musically gifted. They were jesters from Hell. I loved every minute of it. Of course, many of my fellow classic rock buddies thought they were lame and still do to this day. To each his own. 

I love those 70's arena rock bands. But I embraced the music of the 80's, too, and still do. I loved my MTV.
 
Oingo Boingo became hugely and deservedly popular in Southern California, if not quite as much so nationwide. The band had a great reputation as a superb live act. 
 
The band's biggest national moments came when they appeared in the Rodney Dangerfield comedy “Back to School” singing their hit "Dead Man's Party,' and when they recorded the title track of the movie comedy "Weird Science," and when they got their song "Goodbye" placed at the end of "Fast Times at Ridgemont High." 

Well, the good news is that most the original members of Oingo Boingo are back in a band called "Oingo Boingo Former Members." The band has a phenomenally talented new lead singer, but of course co-founder and undeniable genius Danny Elfman is still nowhere to be found.

Danny became a celebrated film composer, as many of you know, and never looked back. He's consistently, stubbornly refused to give the other original members of his former band the name, and he doesn't have any plans to resurrect the band. It kind of sucks. 
 
The good news is that seeing this band is a total Oingo Boingo experience. The new lead singer, Brendon McCreary, who is decades younger than his bandmates, is billed as an Oingo Boingo "superfan." He is a phenomenal talent. 
 
Arguably a better all-around and more versatile vocalist than even Danny, Brandon's command of the subtleties of the Oingo Bongo canon is remarkable.
 
So....  tonight we're gonna party like it's 1983! It's not too late for you to join us and re-live those college parties that you don't fully remember but you know we were there. The show doesn't start until 7:3o p.m. at Humphrey's By the Bay on Shelter Island.  There are still a few tickets available at Ticketmaster.

See you there!

PS -- Here's a partial list of songs by Oingo Boingo, if we missed some, let us know:
 
Acapella Ditty
Ain't This The Life
Bachelor Party
Ballad Of The Caveman
Better Luck Next Time
Burn Me Up
California Girls
Can't See (useless)
Change
Cinderella Undercover
Clowns Of Death
Controller
Cool City
Cry Of Vatos
Dead Man's Party
Dead Or Alive
Dream Somehow
Everybody Needs
Flesh 'n' Blood
Go Away
Goodbye 
Good For Your Soul
Grey Matter
Heard Somebody Cry
Helpless
Hey!
I Am The Walrus
I'm So Bad
Insanity
Insects
Is This
Just Another Day
Little Girls
Lost Like This
Mary
Nasty Habits
No One Lives Forever
No Spill Blood
Nothing Bad Ever Happens (To Me)
Nothing To Fear (but Fear Itself)
On The Outside
Only A Lad
Piggies
Reptiles And Samurai
Run Away (the Escape Song)
Stay
Take Your Medicine
The Cat Is Dead
Tough As Nails
Water
We Close Our Eyes
When The Lights Go Out
Where Do All My Friends Go
Who Do You Want To Be?
Whole Day Off
Why'd We Come (all This Way)
Wild Sex (in The Working Class)
You Got Your Baby Back


Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Exclusive: Will the Microbiome Save us All?

Innovative San Diego biotech company is showing that microbes, which can now be identified in a blood test, can detect cancer at early stages 

Micronoma co-founders: Greg Poore, Sandrine Miller-Montgomery and Rob Knight

One of the newest and most promising developments in cancer research is the use of state-of-the-art blood tests to detect cancer.


It may sound counter-intuitive, but blood tests have never been especially helpful in detecting cancer. Ironically, not even blood cancers.


I speak from experience. 


As a three-time survivor of stage IV non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, my initial blood tests were virtually normal. More invasive tests, including surgical biopsies, revealed widespread cancer.


But that scenario is beginning to change.

Companies such as StageZero Life Sciences, Cleveland Diagnostics, Exact Sciences, GRAIL and others are showing in multiple trials and in the clinic that cancer can be detected in its early stages via biomarkers found in the blood.

This is potentially game-changing for patients, for multiple reasons. It will likely mean earlier and far less invasive detection, as well as far less invasive treatment. Or perhaps no treatment at all besides potentially a localized surgery.

This could have an especially profound impact on adolescents and young adults who are most often diagnosed with later stages of cancer than any other age group.

Among the most interesting and promising of these companies is Micronoma. Originating at the University of California San Diego, Micronoma is the only company that is leveraging the body’s microbiome to detect early-stage cancer.

Most companies in the so-called liquid biopsy space seek a molecular signature coming from within the cancer or some fragment of its DNA in the blood.

But Micronoma is focused on the microbiome, the vast collection of microbes -- bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and viruses – mostly beneficial, that live inside your body and mine.

While initially known to be found primarily in our gut and on our skin, these microbes can also be found in our mouths, tissues, stools and, yes, the blood -- even when we’re healthy. And in each of these locations, even within one individual the composition of these communities will differ.

Sandrine Miller-Montgomery, Micronoma’s CEO, told The Reno Dispatch that microbes in the blood can be used to detect cancer thanks to microbial biomarkers, which are characteristics of the tumor that you can utilize to identify the progress of a condition or disease.

When analyzed properly, she said, these microbial biomarkers can reveal cancer, even at stage I of the disease.

I’m not a scientist, but this feels to me like a no-brainer. Why wouldn't there be clues about cancer in the microbiome? After all, the gut has been called the “center of the human body’s immune system.”

Two years ago, Newsweek reported that the gut contains “60 to 70 percent” of the body's immune cells.

There’s been a growing interest in the link between circulating microbiome signatures and early cancer detection since Micronoma’s publication last year in Nature.

“Our team came together at a time when computer science, microbiome knowledge and sequencing were all reaching a peak, while costs were going down,” said Miller-Montgomery.

“There was a clear clinical need and we had a validated hypothesis, so the time was right for us to harness the tumor-associated circulating microbiome to make a difference in the lives of many.”

Margaret McFall-Ngai, director of the pacific biosciences research center at the University of Hawaii at Manda, noted at the 1st Microbiome Center Consortium in June 2019 that microbes were on the planet millions of years before us.

“The same way that knowledge of the universe moved from geocentric to heliocentric, it may be time for the scientific community to realize that microbiome is not something that should be put on the back burner to better understand our health and diseases,” she said.

Micronoma recently announced a collaboration with University of New South Wales, Sydney (UNSW) on a $4 million grant from the Australian Government to fund research into hepatocellular carcinoma, the most common type of primary liver cancer.

The collaboration, led by associate professor Amany Zekry and professor Emad El-Omar from UNSW medicine & health, will enable the development of microbial-based biomarkers powered by artificial intelligence for early detection of liver cancer.

Micronoma's chief scientific officer, Eddie Adams, joins the UNSW project as a co-principal investigator on the grant.

This research will use machine learning to examine thousands of microbiome plasma features to discover, validate, and translate microbial-derived biomarkers for the early detection of HCC.

“Micronoma is currently the only cancer diagnostic company in the world that uses microbial DNA signatures in the blood (mb-DNA) to detect early-stage cancer," Zekry said in a press statement.

"Their minimally invasive microbiome-driven liquid biopsy approach is focused on detecting early-stage lung cancer and will provide valuable expertise in establishing an HCC-related microbiome platform.”

The diagnostic implications of microbiome markers in liquid and tissue biopsies are extensive.

“It has the great potential to prevent unnecessary suffering caused by later-stage cancer diagnosis, as well as potentially enabling personalized and less invasive treatments at the earliest stages of cancer,” said Miller-Montgomery.

“Cancer is a disease that is affecting all of us either directly or indirectly through a family member. The team is working relentlessly to ensure that we can help reduce the burden of this disease on all of our loved ones.”