Happy New Year!
NOTE: No relation to Tich of Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich
Not connected with NYU Tich School of the Arts
Thanks, Boot Sale Sounds
Labels: 2008
Labels: 2008
Tom Snyder always seemed to get a kick out of Harlan Ellison, who here looks amazingly good for a guy only seven weeks past open-heart surgery in April 1996. Ellison has always been as outspoken as he is talented... and he's very talented, which makes him an ideal talk show guest.
His lawsuits are written with the same gusto that infuses his books - a recent one described Ellison as "...a famous author, screenwriter, commentator and public speaker. He is the winner of countless literary awards..." and described the person he was suing as "...a scheming pathological liar and little more than an obsessively vindictive and petty man trying to be a mover and shaker."
If you ever need to sue someone, try to get Harlan and his team on retainer. (He usually wins).
Alas, the Edgeworks series promoted in this appearance, which promised to be for Ellison what the Atlantic Edition is for H.G. Wells, ceased publication after only four volumes. But here is the highly entertaining Late Late Show appearance (30m), smacked and cracked into three bite-sized chunks.
Labels: Harlan Ellison, Tom Snyder
Scorsese: We... met a couple of times, I think, inadvertently.
Allen: I remember years ago meeting you at a video store on Broadway.
Scorsese: That was very funny. I was behind the counter looking for ''It's in the Bag'' -- Jack Benny and Fred Allen.
Allen: I remember that. Why were you looking for ''It's in the Bag''?
Scorsese: Oh, I love that film. I like Fred Allen a lot. And, of course, Jack Benny.
Allen: But it was not a successful movie, I don't think.
Scorsese: No, no.
Allen: It was a chance to see Jack Benny and Fred Allen.
Labels: Fred Allen, It's In The Bag, Robert Benchley
This post started out as a Bob and Ray video clip.
It's an entertaining segment in which Messrs. Elliott and Goulding have a chat with Dick Cavett about two comedy heroes shared by all three men - Robert Benchley (in the white suit) and Fred Allen. The discussion is followed by a terrific Wally Ballou interview with one of Bob and Ray's lesser-known characters, Mr. Wwqlcw.
Watching this clip sent me back to my Benchley books. My White Suit is a piece collected in My Ten Years In A Quandary And How They Grew (1936). I also pulled Fred Allen's Treadmill to Oblivion (1956) off the shelf and started reading bits and pieces at random. This led me to change my mind about... well, I don't want to get ahead of myself. First, enjoy the clip:
Whether he knows it or not, the comedian is on a treadmill to oblivion. When a radio comedian's program is finally finished it slinks down Memory Lane into the limbo of yesteryear's happy hours. All the comedian has to show for his years of work and aggravation is the echo of forgotten laughter.Like Benchley's man in a white suit who can't help feeling ill at ease in non-threatening situations... like the law-abiding citizen worried about the security guard's suspicions... there's no good reason to feel bad for comedians and other successful entertainers who connected strongly with the audience of their day but are now largely forgotten. Neither should we feel sorry for those who can't, today, appreciate an old Fred Allen radio show or Robert Benchley short. Few can. And we should never, under any circumstances, make it our mission to convert the heathens who will not acknowledge, let alone bow down before, the old gods some of us still worship.
Labels: Bob and Ray, Dick Cavett, Fred Allen, Robert Benchley
Here's why I like Tom Snyder, right here.
The hour he spends with Bonnie Hunt.
Tom Snyder falls head over heels in love with Bonnie Hunt right on the air. You can hear it happen. It can't be anything else.
And, of course, why not? Bonnie's beautiful, funny, talented, easy-going... and Tom means no harm; he just lets himself fall completely under her spell, and it's lovely. Tom and Bonnie recall their respective strict Catholic upbringings, and Tom makes a couple of remarkably intimate and revealing statements about his life and philosophy.
First up is a segment with Norman Lear, followed by some "open phones" calls. The Lear show is from May 29, 1991 and the Hunt show is from April 19, 1992. And no, we never do get to hear how Norman Lear got through to Danny Thomas.
Two shows, both a little incomplete (The Lear segment is joined in progress, as is the Bonnie Hunt interview), but still a treat. Just under an hour and a half in total; commercials have been painstakingly removed. This program will stream in Box.net's audio player, or you can download it.
Link
Labels: Bonnie Hunt, Norman Lear, radio, Tom Snyder
He won't accept your check.
He was the victim of a Y2K error at his bank that moved a decimal point and made a $2,000.00 check into a $20.00 check. The mistake was so difficult to correct that he vowed to never touch a check again. "Checks will be silently ignored."
He doesn't have a computer.
He does the typesetting work for his magazine, The Mystery and Adventure Series Review, himself. "No computer equipment is ever used here for any purpose whatsoever."
You can't buy a subscription, anyway.
If you have a sincere interest in series books (Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, Rick Brant, Tom Quest, et al) he'll send you his magazine without charge, trusting that if you like it, you'll send him a contribution.
Can't find that Tom Quest you remember so fondly?
He'll loan you a copy from the magazine's own Tom Quest lending library.
On a tight budget?
The M&A bookstore has copies of series books they'll give away.
Have you sold series books to other collectors at inflated prices?
You can't ever get a copy of M&A Review. Ever. You're already banned for life.
"He" is Fred Woodworth, and the arrival of an issue of his irregularly published, gorgeous hand-produced magazine, is always an event.
Fred writes about his eclectic interests: series books, of course, but also typography. And in the current issue, perpetual calendars, libraries that discard old books, found photographs, and the Antikythera Mechanism. He is iconoclastic and inspirational. Here's a quote from the current issue:
I believe that the topics we concern ourselves with here, though usually ignored or at best smiled at by today's cultural arbiters, deserve no less than these high aims. While I have to admit that on top of declining interest in old series-type books, the internet is rapidly removing readers from the world of the small magazine (and postal policies seem deliberately aimed at stopping small publications), I myself remain committed to supplying - as long as there are any readers at all - a product that reaches for the highest possible level.
Labels: Fred Woodworth, Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, Rick Brant, The Mystery and Adventure Series Review, Tom Quest
Let me share just a bit of a favorite video with you... one that features "extraordinary, fantastic, stunning, colorful, rare and beautiful little gems" floating in an icy limbo.
Dannny Turner describes his lots in a honeyed voice soothing and smooth as wet-mint glass. Nine is 'nahn,' bright is 'braht,' wild is 'wahlled,' white is 'waht.' When the spheres spin and reveal imperfections, there is comfort in knowing they are 'as made.' The evocative language is not one you and I speak, since it describes worlds we do not know - worlds of tri-color flames, cyclones and rapid twists, and divided Laticcino ribbon core swirls.
Danny's finger moves marbles as if they were living. It's the hand of God exploring new and unknown worlds, strange planets with ground pontils.
And it's always summer for Danny's marbles. Crickets and tree frogs, even birds, for lower-number lots, provide subtle accompaniment for the presentation.
Mesmerizing videos. I've never seen their equal.
Labels: marbles
The Great Gatsby isn't just the great American novel; it's a cottage industry. There's no lack of odd and unusual editions and companion volumes out there.
There's the original first printing, published on April Tenth of 1925, identifiable by errors such as the one on page 205, lines 5 and 6 - "sick in tired" instead of Fitzgerald's preferred "sickantired."
Thank goodness the printers screwed up, otherwise how would we be able to recognize a first edition of the first printing? In addition to the in famous "sick in tired," you can also check for:
If youth, throughout all history, had had a champion to stand up for it; to show a doubting world that a child can think; and, possibly, do it practically; you wouldn’t constantly run across folks today who claim that “a child don’t know anything.” A child’s brain starts functioning at birth; and has, amongst its many infant convolutions, thousands of dormant atoms, into which God has put a mystic possibility for noticing an adult’s act, and figuring out its purport.
A glorious full moon sails across a sky without a cloud. A crisp night air has folks turning up coat collars and kids hopping up and down for warmth. And that giant star, Sirius, winking slyly, knows that soon, now, that light up in His Honor’s room window will go out. Fttt! It is out! So, as Sirius and Luna hold an all-night vigil, I’ll say a soft “Good-night” to all our happy bunch, and to John Gadsby — Youth’s Champion.
Labels: Ernest Vincent Wright, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Gadsby, Gatsby
A brief clip (about 30 seconds) from some home movies shot at Disneyland.
Of interest because Walt is accompanying Hayley Mills on a tour of the park, taking her for a spin in the teacups and a ride on a Matterhorn bobsled.
Labels: Disneyland, Hayley Mills, Walt Disney
Tough stain on a piece of clothing. I take it to a dry cleaner. After a couple of days, I go pick the item up, and the stain is still there, but they've attached the cute little tag seen above. They want me to know that they didn't forget what I asked them to do... just that they couldn't do it.
They do, however, send an invoice.
No problem. I respond in kind.
Labels: dry cleaning
On second thought, maybe I'll post this another time.
Labels: cowardice
Now, why would a lovely teenage girl with a delicious Good Humor be staring angrily at her friendly Good Humor Man?
I don't know. I'm just putting the question out there.
The two of them look like they want to punch each other. And surely fistfights were a rare thing in proximity to Good Humor trucks.
That's not a movie still. It's some kind of news or promotional photo. If only we had a caption; something like "Even Juvenile Delinquents love Good Humors" would explain things.
Of course, if this was Glasgow instead of suburban America, and it was the 1980's instead of the 1940's, we'd know that the Glasgow Ice Cream Truck Turf Wars were to blame. But this probably does not represent a drug deal gone bad.
More likely, the teen-ager is simply fed up with all the damn advice the Good Humor Man is dispensing with his ice cream.
Labels: Frank Tashlin, Good Humor, ice cream, ice cream truck, Michael Hearst, Twink
In case you thought product placement was a relatively new phenomenon, check out this Fawcett comic.
In a movie that is itself an eighty-minute paean to Dubl-stix, Humorettes, I-sticks, Regular cups, Large cups, and Sundaes, another sponsor bought in to the proceedings - Fawcett Comics, home of The Big Red Cheese (Captain Marvel to those of you who haven't had the good sense to follow his adventures).
DC comics had filed a lawsuit against Fawcett in 1941 claiming that Captain Marvel was nothing but a crass rip-off of Superman. This took two tons of chutzpah, because Superman was himself a blatant rip-off of the pulps' Doc Savage, whose "Man of Bronze" had been transformed into the "Man of Steel." Savage also had something called a Fortress of Solitude in the arctic, and oh, by the way, Doc's real first name was Clark. DC eventually prevailed, however, shutting Captain Marvel down in 1953. One can only imagine the collective wail that went up when the Captain suddenly disappeared. (If anybody should have sued Captain Marvel, it was Fred MacMurray, whose face had been appropriated by the Fawcett artists and given to Captain Marvel).
Given the fact that Captain Marvel and Superman were locked in a battle to the death for newsstand survival, some of you may well be aware of perhaps the greatest irony in the history of the cinema, which takes place when when we meet Mr. Nagel, the villain of The Good Humor Man (and the rival for girlfriend Margie's affections). He's introduced to us in his office at the Peerless Insurance Company...
Labels: Captain Marvel, Fred MacMurray, Good Humor, lawsuits
Labels: Disney, Dumbo, Frank Tashlin, Good Humor, Sonovox
Consider the old Good Humor logo. It's perfect.
The bite out of the bar. The little square cutouts that not only draw your eye to the bar, but also present the opportunity for additional, strategically-placed icicles. The white reflections on the bar suggest it's shown actual size. A happy, open, simple upper- and lower-case font presents the company name; a company name that doesn't mind at all if the stick and the bar partially obscure it; they are that easy-going. Then... the all-caps "brick" of ice cream at the bottom. I'm not a designer, but is this not brilliant?
And the sheer brilliance of the name itself, suggesting that no problem exists that cannot be solved by a little ice cream and a smile. From Unilver, who now owns the brand:
In 1920, Harry Burt, a Youngstown, Ohio candy maker, created a special treat called the Jolly Boy Sucker - a lollypop on a stick. The same year, while working at his ice cream parlor, Burt created a smooth chocolate coating that was compatible with ice cream. It tasted great, but the new combination was too messy to eat. So, Burt’s son Harry Jr. suggested freezing the wooden sticks that were used for Jolly Boy Suckers into the ice cream. Burt called his creation the Good Humor Bar, capitalizing on the then widely held belief that a person’s "humor," or temperament, was related to the humor of the palate (the sense of taste).
Labels: design, Good Humor, ice cream, logo, truck
Watch the following 11 second video clip, and pay no attention to what Davy Jones says. Focus on the fine print.
Labels: Davy Jones, Don Kirshner, Ron Dante, The Archies
Chuck Jones:
At Warner Brothers, we were very fortunate in that we had terrible men we worked for... Leon Schlesinger and Eddie Selzer were two of the most abysmal human beings that I could possibly get, outside of a decadent zoo. We had an advantage of Leon because Leon... he was lazy. And that's really what got us starting doing good pictures.
Labels: interview, Warner Brothers
...and equally how enjoyable it is while floating weightless in space.
I have always been a fan of The Little Rascals & Laurel and Hardy, and have always searched for recordings of their music, but never came across any until a few years ago, when my brother told me about the Beau Hunks.
The level of work and concentration aboard the space shuttle are pretty intense during the flights. So the relaxation of listening to music during short breaks or before sleep are priceless. I listened to The Beau Hunks on many occasions during [April 1997 and July 1997] flights, usually during an hour break when I was able to float in front of a window and watch the world go by."
- NASA Astroanaut Don Thomas, who sent his shuttle-flown Beau Hunks CD ("still in good shape after traveling over 11 million kilometers") to the Beau Hunks in July 1998.
I've posted this link before, but neglected to mention the great Beau Hunks DVD, a live, pro-shot concert performance that includes a complete showing of Laurel and Hardy's Their Purple Moment with live BH accompaniment.
Labels: Beau Hunks, Laurel and Hardy, Little Rascals, space shuttle
I currently protect all privileged correspondence with an End User License Agreement.
Labels: EULA
NPR ran a piece on Weekend Edition about Laurel and Hardy's Music Box steps that answers the question, "What does NPR do when they have an extra couple of minutes to fill and they can't come up with an idea?" 3m, with Kiefer Sutherland as Ollie, Dame Helen Mirren as Stan, and Scott Simon as the rear portion of Susie.
Link
Labels: Laurel and Hardy, radio
Continuing our series on poorly conceptualized toys:
Revell was quite successful with its model kits "Visible Man" and "Visible Woman." As I recall, "The Visible Woman" (below) had a snap-on pregnancy accessory kit which confused an entire generation of impressionable boys about the mechanics of reproduction.
Far less successful was "The Visible Popeye," since, traditionally, all Fleischer characters were drawn without internal organs.
For all the progress we've made, there are still unsolvable challenges:
Labels: Disney, Donald Duck, Mysteries of three-dimensional design, toys