POVonline

Saturday, January 22, 2005

Scrappy Days Are Here Again!

Our pal Harry McCracken has filled a shameful void on the Internet by erecting Scrappyland, the best place to learn about the long-forgotten (by most) Charles Mintz/Columbia cartoon character. It's also just about the only place but, hey, you gotta start somewhere. You sure can't go out and watch a lot of Scrappy cartoons, as the output of that particular studio isn't exactly exhibited with any frequency. One of these days, the boys at Sony will wise up and release piles of DVDs but right now, you're going to have to be content with Harry's site, plus artifacts like the Big Little Book cover at left and the poster at right. (You can see a much bigger version of said poster by clicking on it. Go ahead. Try it.) I don't quite share Harry's enthusiasm for the cartoons but they're quite watchable and it's a shame that anything like that is not available.

• Posted at 12:26 PM · LINK

The Fools of April

This is not an early April Fool's Day joke. Turner Classic Movies is devoting much of the month of April to comedy movies and they're running a lot of goodies. On April 1, they have a 20-hour marathon of Laurel and Hardy movies. This is a good thing. As you can see from our Laurel and Hardy Filmography, we really like Laurel and Hardy movies. Then...on April 4, they've scheduled a 24-hour marathon of flms starring Charley Chase, Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle and Harold Lloyd. Also a good thing. And on April 8, they're running a marathon of eleven Marx Brothers movies, which is almost all of them, and on April 11, we get a full day of films starring Charlie Chaplin or Buster Keaton. April 15 brings a mess of Abbott and Costello pictures and...well, just peruse the schedule. Many fun things in there.

• Posted at 9:36 AM · LINK

Hang Loose!

Tom Spurgeon gives you the chance to read or download the judge's opinion in the case of Stan Lee vs. Marvel Enterprises.

• Posted at 9:11 AM · LINK

Down the Old Plank Road

On a happier note, my friend Carolyn and I went last evening to see The Chieftains performing at the Cerritos Center for the Performing Arts, a beautiful hall located a hellish freeway commute from L.A. in Cerritos, California. I wish I could communicate to you how much I hated the drive so you might understand how wonderful it would have to be to hear The Chieftains perform their unique interpretation of (mostly) traditional Irish music. (That sentence doesn't make sense but it's late and you know what I mean.) Here's a fan website that will give you some history of the group and here's their current tour schedule, which may well include a venue near you. If it does, go. They put on a wonderful show that leaves the audience yearning for more. It's almost quarter-to-three in the morning as I write this...but if they were still playing, we'd still be in Cerritos, listening to 'em.

• Posted at 2:41 AM · LINK

Discount Parenting

Maybe it's because my parents were so good at it, but I have lately found myself around a number of really inept mommies and daddies. At least four or five times in as many months, I have been in a public place and seen some small child either injure him or herself or come close to injury because his/her parents had the I.Q. of a drill press and no concern for keeping an eye on their offspring. The latest occurred this afternoon when I was in a Costco, not shopping for an original Picasso.

I had loaded my cart full of mass quantities and I'd dined on Costco Dim Sum, which is what I call all the free samples of food you can get if you shop before around 3:00 in the afternoon. I assume they do this because the store sells such large packages of most items and you can't purchase a "small" to try something new that intrigues you. So all over the warehouse, they have these women in shower caps and aprons cooking up things in microwaves and on hot plates...and for some reason, a lot of frozen and canned food items prepared that way taste really good, at least for a bite or two. (The tricky part of Costco Dim Sum is planning your route. Like today, the first free sample giver-outter I came upon had little creme puffs and I didn't want to start my dining experience that way. So I skipped her, went on to the lady with the chunky potato soup and the one with the microwave lasagna and the one with the chicken strips...then I circled back to the Creme Puff Lady and had dessert.)

I finally made it to the check-out line where, in the line next to the one I was in, a kid of about six years of age (I'm guessing) was acting like he'd just ingested the entirety of a Costco-sized sack of sugar. He was standing up in the cart and waving his arms and dancing about...and I just knew he was about to topple out of that cart and land on his head. Somehow, his parents didn't know or care. They were arguing over whether the caseload of Planter's Dry Roasted Peanuts they were purchasing could be completely consumed by the expiration date, which was some time in '08. I interrupted them, pointed to their young'un and said, "Better watch out for the kid."

They looked at me like I'd just spoken Swahili, then went back to discussing goober consumption. Sure enough, about a minute later, the kid lost his balance and fell out of the cart, landing head-first on slab concrete. Looked to me like he was hurt bad...and the parents still didn't have a clue. Too bad Costco doesn't sell them because these folks were in dire need.

Store employees had to come over and administer first aid to the child as Mom and Dad did zero to help. Instead, they announced to everyone around that it wasn't their fault — "You can't watch them every minute" — then resumed the Great Peanut Debate. When I left, the boy was sitting up, crying in pain and starting to grow a bump the size of the Costco 24-pack of Bounty Paper Towels.

I don't know why I told you this story except to wonder aloud if parents in this world are getting more irresponsible or if I'm just running into the bottom end of the species. I don't know what's going to happen to that kid of theirs but I have a hunch it won't be pretty.

• Posted at 2:28 AM · LINK

Recommended Reading

Over on Salon, they have a good interview, mostly about politics, with Terry Jones who is described as a "founding member of Monty Python." For some reason, that phrase is often used to describe Mssrs. Jones, Cleese, Idle, Chapman, Gilliam and Palin, as if there were a lot of non-founding members of Monty Python. Anyway, here's the link but if you're not a subscriber, I think they make you watch an episode of Fear Factor or the editor's vacation slides or something.

• Posted at 1:01 AM · LINK

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