Name Calling

A group on the Republican National Committee is pushing for a resolution that they will henceforth refer to their opposition as "The Democratic Socialist Party." Naturally, Liberal blogs and even middle-o'-the-road ones are erupting with suggestions of names that could be bestowed upon the Republican Party in reprisal. The worst one I can think of is The George W. Bush-Dick Cheney Party. But I wouldn't wish that on anyone…not even The George W. Bush-Dick Cheney Party.

Update, Update

Word around the convention today was that there was no fire at the hotel last night; that a couple of unnamed lunkheads (that was the politest thing I heard them called) started playing around with a fire extinguisher, unaware that it was connected to the fire alarm system. The "smoke" some of us heard or saw was, I was told, fire extinguisher output. Do we believe this? I dunno. But at least it got us all outside at one in the morning, which is always nice, especially when it's one entire degree Centigrade and many folks are in pajamas or bare feet.

The con was a little less crowded today. Then again, it would have to be.

And I'd like to add that this is the first time I've ever blogged while it was snowing outside my window.

Four-Alarm Fun

Well, actually it was more like one or two alarms. About three minutes after I posted the previous dispatch, a buzzer began to go off out in the hallway, signifying that the hotel we're in — Carolyn and I are here for the Calgary Comic & Entertainment Expo, remember — might be on fire or something of the sort. I grabbed up the tangible necessity of my life (this computer) and with Carolyn following, joined the throng of hotel guests walking down the stairwell. We're on the eighth floor so it wasn't that bad a jaunt. There were folks in their jammies and there were dealers from the con lugging down boxes of what I assume were their rarest comics.

At the ground floor, we were directed to wait across the street, which meant dodging and weaving around about a half-dozen fire trucks which had by then arrived. Immediately, people began to ask me, "You're gonna blog about this, right?" So I'm writing this in part so I don't disappoint anyone.

Word on the street was that there was a fire on the second floor. That's where I thought I smelled smoke in passing, and Sergio says he saw smoke there as he made his way down the steps. After about twenty minutes, the firemen emerged and signalled we could go back in. A mob crushed back into the lobby where we were informed that the elevators hadn't yet been reset so we had to either wait a bit to use them or take to the stairwells again. We elected to hike…and that's all I know about it. We're back in the room, everything's fine and it looks like a dandy time to go beddy-bye. Good night.

Bea Arthur, R.I.P.

Sorry…no personal anecdotes about Bea Arthur. Never met the lady, though I liked her in everything I ever saw her in. She had a devastating way of delivering a line…and the instance I recall at the moment was in a salute to Jerry Herman done at the Hollywood Bowl. Ms. Arthur was there to perform a number she'd introduced on Broadway in Mr. Herman's show, Mame. But in introducing it, she referred to it as being from the show, Vera.

Big laugh from the audience. Vera was the name of the character she played in Mame…so of course, the joke was that she was acting as if her supporting role has been the starring part. And as I typed the previous sentence, it has suddenly dawned on me to check YouTube to see if the clip was there. Better you should see and hear it for yourself than make do with my telling you about it. I'll be back in a moment.

Okay, I'm back. And sure enough, there it was so here it is. I don't think much of the song but I love the joke she did about the show's name…or more accurately, I love the way she sold it. If you want to know what they mean when they talk about "timing" in connection with a funny line, here's a perfect example…one of so many in the grand career of Bea Arthur…

Con of Canada

Howdy from the 2009 Calgary Comic & Entertainment Expo, which is (it says right here in the program book) "The largest annual pop-culture event in Western Canada." Given the crowds today in the hall, I can believe it. I must have spent ten minutes just fighting my way through a line of folks queued up to buy autographs from Margot Kidder, who played Lois Lane in some of the Superman movies. Many other media celebs are present, along with a stellar list of comic book creators, artists, writers, sculptors, animators…

…oh, yes. And me. I'm here, doing — you may find this hard to believe — panels. Had three good ones today. Expect to do two more tomorrow.

If you aren't already planning to be here tomorrow, it's probably too late to arrange a trip. But if you are here, you're probably going to have a great time. Everyone I saw in the hall today seemed to be having one.

Stone Strips

The blog of Ger Apeldoorn offers up some nice examples of the Flintstones newspaper strip of the sixties. By way of clarity, it should be noted that while Gene Hazelton was the primary artist and supervisor of this and the Yogi Bear strip, they weren't all drawn by Gene. Just about everyone good who worked at Hanna-Barbera at the time worked from time to time on them, including Pete Alvarado, Willie Ito, Bob Singer and Harvey Eisenberg. Several of the samples Ger offers were drawn by Eisenberg. Also, for much of their runs, both strips were lettered and inked by Lee Hooper.

Word-A-Day

In case anyone asks you what constitutes "torture," here's the definition that most nations accept. The United States did too before George W. Bush and his mob decided they could redefine it to exclude whatever they wanted to do.

Len Wein Update

Offers of comics continue to arrive hourly to restore the comic book collection that Len Wein lost in his recent house fire. And actual, physical donated comics have started to arrive at my mailing address, which is a friendly little mail drop.

I am, however, way behind in responding to e-mail and in updating the checklist over at the official site of The "Let's Restore Len Wein's Comic Book Collection" Project website. So if you haven't heard back from me, please be patient. And be aware that we've had at least another 200 offers that are not reflected on the current list. I'll let you know here when I can update it again…might not be for about a week. The generosity is running so strong that I'm having a hard time keeping up with it.

From the E-Mailbag…

As you may have heard, Jay Leno checked himself into a hospital yesterday afternoon for a condition that remains the subject of rumor and speculation. The main rumor on the Internet is food poisoning. I heard that the staff was told it was dehydration, which could be the same thing, right? True, it sounds like the kind of thing you say when there's something more serious and you're trying to keep the lid on it. But it's also the same thing you'd say if the person was hospitalized from dehydration and/or food poisoning. I suppose we'll know soon enough.

NBC ran a rerun last night and will be running one tonight. David Carroll, a reader of this site, writes to ask…

On the topic of Jay Leno's illness…it's day one May sweeps, Jay's in the hospital, and NBC is running a Tonight Show repeat. Hopefully his stay in the hospital will be brief, and he'll be back on his feet in a day or two.

But…what if it's an extended illness? How long will NBC (or whoever has final say) go on with repeats? At what point would they give in and let someone guest host?

I admire Leno's work ethic, truly remarkable. But even Letterman, a fellow workaholic, allowed some guest hosts during recent illnesses, both lengthy and brief.

And frankly, during Carson's heyday, some of the guest hosts did great jobs; Leno himself, Shandling, Rivers, Bishop, Brenner, Jerry Lewis etc. Obviously for many, like Leno it opened the doors for greater things.

I particularly enjoyed it when "short notice" hosts like Burt Reynolds, Steve Allen, Steve Lawrence, Rich Little or Bob Newhart filled in when Carson suddenly took ill (or was holding out for more cash, or both). I thought Steve Allen in particular was excellent during the 70's when he would be called upon in a pinch.

Anyway, I'd like to read your thoughts on whether the "no guest hosts" policy would hold up if Leno is laid up now, or later for a week, two weeks or more. And is his apparent refusal to have guest hosts now during his rare vacation days really a "work ethic pride" thing, or one of Leno's quirks: "I worked damn hard to get this gig, and no one is upstaging me."

My understanding is that Leno's reticence to use guest hosts comes from the same place as Letterman's: A feeling along the lines of "I'm supposed to be the star of the show so I oughta show up for work and do it." I suppose there have been times when each was reluctant to let the network use their programs to audition potential replacements…but I don't think that's been a major concern. They both enjoy doing their shows. Leno especially has long been a workaholic. Back in the seventies when I was hanging around the Comedy Store in Hollywood, it was not uncommon for him to do a spot at the Store there, then drive up to Westwood and do a spot at the Comedy Store there, then zoom back to Hollywood to do stand-up in the other room there…and somewhere along the way, he might cruise by the Improv or the Comedy and Magic Club in Hermosa Beach and do a set.

That's all in one night. The guy has always seemed to delight in working longer and harder than anyone might believe possible. If he doesn't feel like he needs a night off, why should be take one?

Mr. Carson used a lot of guest hosts but I gather that flowed from his belief that if he did the show every night, he'd get weary and sloppy, and audiences would get sick of him. He had NBC pull the weekend Tonight Show reruns off at one point because he feared overexposure and also because he was going to cut back his weekday appearances and wanted to save the best reruns for that slot. (It might also be noted that when Johnny started on Tonight, it was an hour and 45 minutes and then it went down to ninety. He went to an hour format in 1980 but before that, his show was more work than the shows Dave or Jay do, and there was probably more concern about oversaturation.)

My guess is that Jay will be back Monday and this will not be an issue. If he did have to stay out longer, then it would be a question of how long…and how well the reruns do in the overnight ratings. At this point, NBC probably wants him there for the same reason he has a greater-than-usual incentive to be there. It's his "send-off" month and the network is planning on a lot of publicity built around the end of the Jay Leno Tonight Show. The only way they'll bring in a guest host is if the ratings are plunging, Jay's out of commission for a while, and they're worried about losing too much audience share before the arrival of Conan. I don't see that happening.

From the E-Mailbag…

About eighty people answered my question about Microsoft Money. Here's one of them — Brian Armstrong…

Hi Mark, I actually worked on Microsoft Money from 1994-2005, so there's finally a question on your blog I can answer! That little envelope means Money thinks it detected a recurring transaction (if you mouse over the icon it should show a tooltip explaining that). To get rid of it, right-click and choose "Review Potential Recurring Transaction" and then "Ignore" if you don't want to set up a recurring bill for that transaction.

And if you want it to stop doing that forever, choose 'Tools / Options', select "Bills", and turn off the option to "Watch transactions for recurring payments."

When I mouseover the icon, I get no tooltip. But thanks to you and everyone, I now know what it is and how to turn it off. Thanks, everyone.

Mystery Mail

microsoftmoneyquestion

Anyone here use Microsoft Money? If not, ignore this message. If so: Do you have any idea what it means when the second column over (the one titled by a red exclamation point) shows a little envelope icon with a red question mark on it? I keep seeing this on certain of my entries and I have no idea why. I searched the manual, I asked someone at Microsoft, I asked someone on the Help line of my bank. No clue. Someone reading this will know.

Saturday and Sunday

This coming weekend, my co-conspirator Sergio Aragonés and I will be among the guests at the Calgary Comic & Entertainment Expo. On Saturday, we're doing a panel on our work together at 1 PM. Then at 2 PM, I'm on a panel about writing comic books and at 4 PM, I'm on one about writing animation. On Sunday, I'm on a Creator Rights panel at Noon and then at 4 PM, I'm on a panel about comics on TV and in movies. When I'm not on a panel, I'll be roaming about the hall, talking with people, buying a few things and trying to figure out the money.

If you have a donation for the "Let's Restore Len Wein's Comic Book Collection" Project, I won't be accepting them but there will be someone present who's volunteered to take 'em and ship 'em back for me. So find me and I'll tell you who it is.

A Handshake, Not a Kiss

nixonmao01

Much fuss has been made the last few days about President Obama (gee, that's fun to type) being cordial with "evil" heads of state. Frankly, I think the policy of the U.S. oughta be that we're willing to sit and engage in gentlemanly talk with anyone, especially a guy like Hugo Chávez who, whatever else one thinks of him, is the duly-elected head of an important country. Turning our back on someone powerful and refusing to even confront him on a social level is a lot like what I did in fourth grade when I was scared of the class bully and thought that if I pretended he didn't exist, he'd go away.

For some reason though, some folks think it's a sign of "strength" to stubbornly refuse to meet with these people. I think those are the same people who believe that any day now, our policy of sanctions will bring Fidel Castro to his knees. They also seem to like to invoke the name of Neville Chamberlain and point out how only weakness came from his cozying up to Hitler. Apparently, if you shake hands with a dictator, it's almost the same thing as giving him half of Czechoslavakia.

Naturally, as Republicans have been attacking Obama for not bitchslapping Chávez when he had the chance, Democrats have hauled out the photos of Rumsfeld's warm greeting with Saddam Hussein, of Bush hand-holding with Prince Abdullah, etc. Also mentioned is the meeting between President Richard M. Nixon and Mao Tse-tung…but Bill O'Reilly on his show the other night said that wasn't true; that Nixon on his fabled trip to China met with Chou En-lai, not Mao Tse-tung. Of course, as the above photo and many others prove, O'Reilly doesn't know what he's talking about.

So would anyone like to bet me this won't be on Keith Olbermann's show this evening?

Sanity Clause

marxbrothers08

I usually think online petitions are a waste of time but this one somehow feels worthwhile. Five boys named Marx grew up in a home on East 93rd Street in New York. Developers are aiming to eradicate the house of Groucho, Harpo, Chico, Zeppo and even Gummo. Take a moment to go to this page, read a message from Woody Allen, and sign two petitions they have there — one to preserve the home, the other to rename the block "Marx Brothers Place." If they can name things in this country after every lousy elected official we've ever had, we can name something after the Marx Brothers.

London Lasagna Lover

The Garfield Show, the new series I've been working on, starts May 5 on Boomerang UK, meaning England. There's a sparse page about it here and at the moment (this will change soon), there's a preview video on this page.

The series is already airing in France and several other nations. It's been sold just about everywhere except, they tell me, Japan and the United States. It'll get to both those places eventually, I'm sure. We just don't know when. In the meantime, we're starting production on Season Two…