Senator Larry Craig, who will soon be just Larry Craig, is filing papers to have his guilty plea overturned. According to this article, "He said he was under stress and pleaded guilty only to put the matter behind him."
My friend Len Wein sends this amazing bit of synchronicity...or whatever it is...
Under the category of "Truth is inevitably stranger than fiction", I went to check out the New York Times article you linked to today with the slide show showing us all the places where Stan Lee has lived in his life, and I was astonished to discover that the apartment building he and brother Larry lived in as teens, specifically 1720 University Avenue in the Bronx, was also the same building where I lived for the first seven years of my life.
Now what are the odds of that?
Better than even money, I'll tell you that. What an amazing coinky-dink. (For those of you who don't know, Len is a writer-editor who followed in Stan's footsteps to the point of writing many of the same characters — like Spider-Man, Thor and The Hulk — and serving for a time as editor-in-chief of Marvel.) Len writes a longer account of the above on his weblog.
And you're probably thinking what I was thinking...and the answer is that I called and asked him and we don't know if it was the same apartment. The Weins moved when Len was seven and he doesn't even recall what floor they lived on. But he's going to ask an aged relative and maybe we'll find out. That would be just too weird, even for comic book writers.
I agree that it's always good policy to download your email to your hard drive. This ensures you have your own copy of emails sent to you (as well as copies of what you have sent! also important!) But I have found it a good policy as well to leave copies of mail on the server as well. I have had to change/upgrade/repair many a PC and hard drive over the years, and if you don't have backups of your mail, a lot of important attachments, letters, etc, go bye bye.
Curtis suggests that you engage the option that most offline e-mail programs have that allows you to download your mail and leave a copy on the server. I have what I think is a better idea. Get yourself a free e-mail account with a service like GMail. In fact, GMail works great for this. You would use this account only for e-mail backups.
With many Internet Service Providers, there's an option to have your e-mail go into a "box" on their server but to also be forwarded or copied to another e-mail address. Set this option to copy every incoming e-mail to this special GMail account and just let the backups pile up there. They may come in handy for obvious reasons if your hard drive crashes. They may come in real handy if you accidentally delete a message you need. And there will probably even be a moment when you're out and you need some information from a recent e-mail but you can't access it since it's on your computer at hand. You can log into the GMail account and read it there. It's a nice safety precaution and it doesn't cost you a cent.
About once a month, someone writes to ask me if there's a great piece of software for writing comic book scripts. My stock answer, which I've been cutting 'n' pasting into replies for many a year now goes something like this...
No, I'm afraid there's no software out there I can recommend for the writing of comic book scripts. I work in Microsoft Word using a set of macros that I wrote for myself years ago. They're not perfect (neither are my scripts) and I don't give them out to anyone because I'd have to write a long set of instructions on how to use them and you still wouldn't find them to be ideal.
I answered the question again tonight and it got me to wondering: Am I outta date on this? Is there great software that will automate the task of funnybook scripting? And if there isn't, why isn't there? I don't think it would be a hard thing to craft, especially if you did it as a Word template and knew how they work. Movie Magic Screenwriter, which is what I use for the writing of TV and movie scripts, has a comic book script template but it's not very useful for that purpose. It doesn't automatically number pages or panels, for instance.
Oddly enough, in all the years I've been writing comics and hanging around with others who do this, I can't recall a lot of discussion about software...and none at all in the last fifteen years or so. Anyone have a thought on this?
As I occasionally mention here, I feed a veritable zoo of stray creatures in my backyard. Above is a photo I snapped a little while ago of two of the four cats who turn up nightly to enjoy the complementary offering of Friskies.
The cat on the right is a slow-moving, elderly animal who seems to have trouble seeing and who somehow got an awful gash on the side of his/her head. It seems to be healing but the cat has a heightened sense of danger. If I so much as cough within earshot, it sprints for the hills. It has never been particularly friendly but I don't think it was that nervous before the injury.
The kitten on the left was equally antsy when it began showing up in my yard around the end of June. It was tiny then. As it's grown larger, it's gotten a bit more friendly and actually allowed a bit of petting one night last week. For the most part though, it acts terrified of everyone and everything.
Two months ago, the kitten had quite an ordeal. The morning my friend Carolyn and I left for the Comic-Con in San Diego, I was loading my car in the garage when the kitten wandered in. It saw me, panicked and ran for a hiding place behind some debris in a corner. I chased it out, continued loading the car and then when we left, of course, the garage door was closed and locked. I was unaware that at some point, the kitten snuck back into the garage and hid. When we left, I was unaware I was trapping the kitten inside.
That was on Wednesday morning. Sunday evening when we returned and put the car back in the garage, we noticed that a bottle of water I'd left on a counter was now on the floor and empty. There was also cat excrement about. The kitten had been in there for about four and a half days.
There was no food available to it in my garage — actually, there were sacks of grub but they were in the packaging and in a cabinet — but fortunately, I'd left a bottle of drinking water out with the top loose and the kitten managed to knock it off the counter and dislodge the cap. In spite of a lack of chow, the little cat did not seem harmed by the experience. It was panicked when we found it in the same hiding place it had used on Wednesday and it ran madly around the garage, eventually finding the open door. We immediately put out a large dish of food which was quickly devoured.
The kitten — we won't be able to call it that much longer — still comes around every night and some evenings, it seems to be acting as a kind of Honor Guard or Protector to the older cat. I don't see any family resemblance between the felines. I think it's just a cat thing.
One of the New York Times magazine sections is featuring a "slide show" of past residences of Stan Lee. Of special note is Photo #7, which is of Stan writing in his backyard. The caption says he's about 30, which would make this photo 1951, which I don't think is right. Looks later to me. Anyway, thanks to Tom Galloway for letting me know about this.
The 2007 Chabad "To Life" Telethon airs this evening in Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Las Vegas, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and on this website, where I bet the streaming video won't stream so well. Chabad Telethons aren't the same without Jan Murray as host but they still put on a darn good show for a worthy cause. Here's a two minute commercial for tonight's extravaganza...