POVonline

Saturday, December 30, 2006

Recommended Reading

Dahlia Lithwick lists the top ten abuses of Civil Rights of 2006. They all have two things in common. One is that they're all a matter of the Bush administration deciding it could do any damn thing it wanted and that they were accountable to no one. The other is that one of these days, some Democratic president is going to try one of these and all the people who've excused the current leadership will be talking impeachment.

• Posted at 10:12 PM · LINK

Last Chance This Year!

Yes, this weekend is your last chance before 2007 to show your appreciation for this website by sending a tip. I wouldn't ask but I just won a couple of auctions on eBay and I need to replenish my PayPal account to pay for some really weird stuff I'm buying. So if you've been thinking of giving, now would be a great time.

• Posted at 7:52 PM · LINK

Balloon Payments

The best fonts of a comic book nature come from Richard Starkings and his company, Comicraft. If you have any desire for any of these fine specimens of lettering, have it on January 1. That's when they're having their annual New Year Sale and the fonts are $20.07 each. Yes, that's a substantial increase from the last New Year Sale when they were only $20.06 each but these are inflationary times. Every so often, they also have a sale during the Comic-Con International but you don't want to wait until then. Make up your shopping list now and order on Monday.

• Posted at 6:41 PM · LINK

Not the Happiest Place on Earth

One reason I don't travel more is that I keep encountering nightmare stories like the one I'm going to link you to. Will Allen III is an experienced traveller but he recently blogged about a dreadful experience he had, taking his family to Disney World in Florida. Here's Part One of his report, here's Part Two and here's Part Three. Hope this kind of thing never happens to you and I really hope it never happens to me. In fact, given the choice, I'd much rather it happened to you than to me.

• Posted at 3:23 PM · LINK

Today's Bonus Video Links

Before we leave the subject of Nathan Lane in our video linkage, I want to send you to two more clips, neither of which are embeddable here. This one is from the TV series, Norm Crosby's Comedy Shop, which was syndicated in 1978. It's an appearance by Stack and Lane, a comedy team of the day. Before the lovely Shelly Goldstein sent me this link, I was wholly unware that Nathan was ever part of a comedy team. The performance, which runs a little under four minutes, will tell you why they were so obscure.

Then I shouldn't link to this because I don't want to give even tacit approval to the secret and illegal videotaping of live performances but it's just too good, and I have to make up for the previous clip. This is seven minutes from the recent Broadway production of The Odd Couple starring Mr. Lane and Matthew Broderick. It's shot poorly and unethically from the balcony but it's still funny. This is the top of Act Three, where Oscar and Felix aren't speaking because the latter refused to go with the former to the apartment of the Pigeon Sisters and...well, you know the storyline. You know how this goes. You even know that it's not spaghetti, it's linguini. The last line of this clip is the line that Neil Simon says consistently receives the longest laugh of anything he's ever written. Every time I've seen the show, it sure has.

• Posted at 2:44 PM · LINK

Saturday Afternoon Musing

Just saw someone on a cable news channel — one of the CNNs, I think — cheering the death of Saddam Hussein...and this wasn't an enslaved Iraqi who was happy about this. I could understand and maybe even enjoy the glee of someone who suffered actual damage under the Hussein rule. This was some lady who lived in Ohio or something, and she just thought hanging ol' Saddam was the greatest thing in the whole world. After all, a very bad man got executed. She was so happy about this that, just for a moment, you could forget that there are still plenty of other very bad men out there. Some of them have the potential to be more destructive to Ohio, if not the entire world, than Saddam ever was.

She repeated at least twice, the oft-heard line that "Saddam gassed his own people." I always thought that was an odd way of arguing that he was a murdering dictator...like it wouldn't have been so bad if he'd only gassed someone else's people. That, we could forgive and maybe even respect.

It's when you gas your own people that someone's got to put a stop to you. Eventually. The alleged gassing of his own people took place in March of 1988 and this country did a lot of friendly business with Hussein after that. (Incidentally, I said "alleged" because some pretty strong arguments have been made that the story isn't true. I don't know if it is or it isn't; only that it wouldn't make him any less of a monster if it turned out to be a bogus report.)

Joshua Micah Marshall, over on Talking Points Memo, made the following comment about Hussein's execution and the whole Iraq War in general...

This whole endeavor, from the very start, has been about taking tawdry, cheap acts and dressing them up in a papier-mache grandeur — phony victory celebrations, ersatz democratization, reconstruction headed up by toadies, con artists and grifters. And this is no different. Hanging Saddam is easy. It's a job, for once, that these folks can actually see through to completion. So this execution, ironically and pathetically, becomes a stand-in for the failures, incompetence and general betrayal of country on every other front that President Bush has brought us.

Probably true. The news out of Iraq lately has been awful, just awful. 106 American soldiers are dead in December, making it the bloodiest month of the year...and you have to remind yourself that that number doesn't reflect all the pain and loss. It doesn't include dead non-soldiers, for one thing, and there are a lot of those. It doesn't measure arms blown off or the inevitable lasting emotional scars that come in any war. It also doesn't measure dollar cost or the fading of worldwide honor or any number of other downsides which must be weighed against whatever good we think we're achieving. This situation continues while Bush remains at his ranch, reading My Pet Goat or whatever he's doing while he decides on a new Iraq strategy one of these days.

I mean, it's just like with Katrina: What's the hurry? We can take our time. We're getting things accomplished. Why, just the other night, we killed a guy who'd gassed his own people.

• Posted at 2:19 PM · LINK

Friendly Warning

I probably don't have to post this but better safe than sorry. The end of the year is a special holiday for those who send out virus-laden attachments. If you get a message that says "Happy new year" or "Enjoy the fireworks celebration" and it has any sort of file embedded or attached, beware. I've gotten about a dozen in the last twenty-four hours, all safely deflected by my e-mail screener, virus checker and a bit of common sense.

Actually, you need more than a bit of common sense. The one time I got a real, life-disrupting virus on my computer, it was in spite of all those protections. Someone — and I'm pretty sure I know who it was — sent me a nasty one and I saw it unopened, recognized it for what it was and moved to delete it. As sometimes happens, the mouse hand did not do what the brain told it to do and I clicked on the file, thereby opening it and triggering its payload, instead of right-clicking for a deletion. Big mistake. I not only had a virus in my computer, I had one that was so new that none of the virus-nuking companies — Norton, McAfee, etc. — had heard of it yet. A week later, my virus checker (I think I had McAfee then) would have stopped it or removed it but the day I got it, it was uncharted territory. So keep an eye out for booby traps. What I went through that time would be a lousy way to start your year.

• Posted at 12:35 PM · LINK

Today's Video Link

Here's seven minutes from a vintage episode of The Soupy Sales Show, including a lip-sync to his recording of "The Mouse," which I never thought was much of a tune or dance. The off-camera voice you hear heckling him at the end is that of Frank Nastasi, who was the foil when the Soupman did his show in New York.

The stuff that comes before the song is the kind of material that endeared Soupy to many of us. He was just out there, ad-libbing on live TV with no idea what he was going to say or do, enjoying the hell out of his own predicament. As I wrote in this article, I used to watch him, wishing I could be one of those people in the studio you always heard laughing. I can't think of anyone who has a TV show today who would have the guts to go out there so unprepared and to just wing it. He was a brave man, that Soupy.

• Posted at 2:02 AM · LINK

Recommended Reading

In the interest of airing both sides, I thought I'd link to an article that argues that Gerald Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon was right and proper. The author is Richard Ben-Veniste, who was a member of the Watergate Special Prosecutor's Office at the time. I don't think I agree but his view is worth considering.

• Posted at 2:00 AM · LINK

Front Page

NEWS from me

NEWS Archives

NOTES from me

Hollywood

Broadway

Las Vegas

Animation

Comics

TV & Movies

Comedy

Miscellaneous

I.A.Q.

Links

ABOUT me

BUY me

Info/E-MAIL me

SEARCH

© 2008 Mark Evanier

Hosted by Dreamhost