When Bloggers Lunch

I have occasionally directed you fine folks to the political writings of a gent named Kevin Drum, who strikes me as one of the most sensible and well-informed people on the Internet. He writes for the fine magazine called Mother Jones and his blog for them is a must-click for me each day. He is also the inventor of Friday Cat Blogging™. Kevin and I struck up an e-mail acquaintance some time ago and I am just back from what turned into a three hour meal/visit with the guy.

We discussed all sorts of stuff…but mostly I wanted to talk about politics and he wanted to talk about comics. So we did both. Occasionally, a conversation on one topic had eerie parallels to the other. Our big disagreements turned out to be that he likes the Legion of Super-Heroes (or at least, he used to) more than me, and I'm a bit more optimistic that Barack Obama will deliver a meaningful Health Care Reform package. Other than that, we got along swimmingly and had a good time. The cuisine was, of course, barbecue.

I mention all this just to marvel at how wonderful the Internet is at connecting people who would otherwise never have crossed paths. If not for blogs, I might well read Kevin in some magazine but we'd never have met, never gotten to have a one-on-one discussion. I meet a lot of people because of this here weblog. It's one of the reasons I do it. It goes right along with the huge blogging salary.

Anyway, when you get a chance each day, go read Kevin. It's not as good as having lunch with the man but at least you won't get barbecue sauce all over your shirt. Unless, of course, you websurf while eating ribs.

Recommended Reading

The New York Times has a good editorial up on the national disgrace (that may be too soft a word) in the sheer number of Americans who lack health insurance. I wonder how many of the folks who felt Terri Schiavo had to be kept "alive" at all costs are interested in helping out sick people who actually stand a chance of getting better and leading real lives.

To me, sheer humanitarian concerns make a pretty airtight case for enabling every American — and yes, even in some cases, illegal aliens, especially their children — to have some sort of "safety net" in this area. But since that won't move some folks to support it, someone oughta itemize the ways in which we personally benefit from everyone having access to health care: Better control of diseases, less crowded emergency rooms, fewer of our friends having to declare bankruptcy, etc.

I even think that my own health care, which comes through one of the major commercial providers, will improve if we have meaningful Health Care Reform in this country. Right now, they know that if I'm not happy with their service, it's very difficult for me to take my business elsewhere…and even if I could, it would only be to another firm trying to make a 35% profit by denying as much coverage as possible.

From the E-Mailbag…

Just got this in from Don Roemer, who's with the Ambassadors of Harmony…

As a long time member of the Ambassadors of Harmony chorus, I thank you on the behalf of all the Ambassadors for including our performances on your blog.

One quick correction, above the La Mancha video you identify us as the Masters of Harmony rather than the Ambassadors of Harmony. There is, by the way, a very good chorus in California with that other name.

The "76 Trombones" was one of two songs we did at the 2009 Barbershop Convention at the Honda Center in Anaheim in early July. We won the contest with a record high score and beat a chorus from Texas which had not lost a competition in thirty years.

If you like, you can learn more about us at www.aoh.org. Thanks again!

Thanks, Don, and my apologies for the name confusion. As the kind of singer who couldn't join in the National Anthem at a baseball game without throwing the entire performance off-key, I have only admiration for the talents and obvious dedication of a group like yours. Someone else posted a link to mine and headlined it, "A four minute smile from Mark Evanier." That's a great way of putting it except, of course, that I deserve little credit for passing it on.

Today's Video Link

The Barbershop Quartet chorus in yesterday's video link is called The Masters Ambassadors of Harmony. Here they are again, this time with the theme from "Man of La Mancha."

FYI

How does health care in the U.S. stack up against health care in other countries? It's hard to find out these days because so many folks are exaggerating, one way or the other, to make some biased point for or against Health Care Reform. I'm especially annoyed by the people who seem to figure that because we're America and America is better at everything than anyone else, naturally it follows that our health care must be the best.

This report from the Urban Institute attempts to provide a realistic assessment. Its conclusions are a mixed bag. We're good at some things, not as good as we want to be at others. Its compilers lean towards what might be called a Liberal viewpoint but they seem to back up their conclusions with solid sources.

Memories of 3400 Cahuenga Blvd.

So last evening, famed radio legend/announcer Gary Owens calls to ask if I'm going to be at the big Hanna-Barbera event tomorrow night, meaning tonight. "What big Hanna-Barbera event?" I ask. Gary explains that the Paley Center for Media (aka "The TV Museum") in Beverly Hills is having a tribute event for that studio. He's the host and he thinks I should be there. Since I always do everything Gary tells me — how can you resist that voice? — I decide to go. I subsequently find out that it's a two-part event. There's a panel discussion with former H-B employees. That's open to the public. And then after that, there's an invitation-only reunion of folks who worked for Hanna-Barbera or have otherwise been important in its history.

I haven't been invited but heck, I worked for Hanna-Barbera for many years. All those Richie Rich shows didn't write themselves…though if Bill Hanna could have figured out a way to make that happen, they would have. I decide to go anyway, starting with the open-to-all panel discussion in a small auditorium. It's quite nice. Gary hosts and interviews Willie Ito, Ken Spears, Jerry Eisenberg and Butch Hartman. Many H-B folks fill the room. In the front row alone, they have June Foray, Casey Kasem and Marvin Kaplan.

Afterwards and out in the lobby, I mingle with the aforementioned, plus others who are arriving for the party. Everyone is herded upstairs to the rooftop garden…and everyone's name is on the R.S.V.P. list but mine. A nice lady tells me that since I'm not on there, I cannot be admitted. I'm about to slink away in utter alienation when I hear a familiar voice tell her, "He's a very important person. I'll vouch for him." It's Casey Kasem and while the lady may not know who I am, she sure knows him and she knows his voice. I have the feeling he would have said that about anyone who was being kept out but, hey, it works. "Go on in," she tells me.

So in I go, and the place is crammed with even more folks I know and have worked with. I Twitter a joke about how everyone except me has gotten so much older…but the truth is that most people, some of whom I last saw in the mid-eighties, look only a wee bit older and some look the same or younger. There is much hugging and picture-taking and a lot of "So what are you up to, these days?" Stories are swapped of those who are present and those who have left us, particularly the late Bill Hanna and Joe Barbera.

Some of us had our differences back then and some us were glad to get outta there when we did. But that was then, this is now and we're all aware of having been part of something important that matters to a lot of people and no longer exists. For good or ill, and I could name plenty of items in both categories, that kind of cartoon studio ain't around no more. It was, among other differences from today, the kind that had a sense of continuity; where if they hired you, there was a good chance you might be there for many years and many shows, working with pretty much the same people. These days, everyone's a transient, hired for one series, gone when it's completed.

There's an exhibit up in the Paley Center and it'll be there for a while if you want to go see it. It's art and artifacts from H-B shows, and all the reunion-goers stop and look at it. But truth to tell, they're more interested in looking at each other. And catching up. And renewing old friendships. And I even saw two people who'd fought every day at the studio hug and act like old pals. Phone numbers and e-mail addresses are exchanged and everywhere I go, I hear lunch plans being made. Some even involve me.

Back in April, I skipped my 40 year high school reunion. I was already committed to a comic book convention in Calgary when they announced it, but I don't think I'd have gone if I had been in town. Apart from a half-dozen classmates who might not even be there, I just don't care that much about my high school days. They're long gone. So are my Hanna-Barbera days but somehow, they're a lot more important to me. So thank you, Gary. And you too, Casey. I take back every nasty thing I ever said about disc jockeys.

Recommended Reading

Joel Stein on how the recession has nuked Las Vegas. Of special interest is the section on supermogul Sheldon Adelson and his economic woes and projections. If you're envious of guys in his bracket, you may be comforted to know that a billion dollars doesn't buy what it used to.

Because It's June, June, June, June, June…

Ray Bradbury, June Foray and Grim Natwick

Many of you have ordered copies of June Foray's autobiography, advertised here and available through www.juneforay.com. You oughta know that this coming Wednesday, June will be signing all the copies ordered so far and they'll be tossed in the mail immediately after that. So if you're eagerly awaiting yours, that's the timetable.

If you haven't ordered yours, now is the time. Get your order in before Tuesday night so it can be included in this week's signing. Thereafter, she'll be autographing them every ten days or so.

In the meantime, above is another photo from June's files that didn't get into the book. It's a shot of her in the early eighties with Ray Bradbury and the great animator, Grim Natwick. Grim left us in 1990, two months after he turned one hundred years old. Ray, we're happy to say, is still with us. In fact, he's celebrating his 89th birthday today. So Happy 89 to the world's greatest writer of fantasy tales and an inspiration to many, many generations.

Now Hear This!

My favorite interviewer, Paul Harris, had a nice chat the other day with songwriting superstars Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. It's online and you might like to listen in.

Today's Video Link

Ladies and gentlemen…I give you the 2009 International Barbershop Chorus Champions performing a rendition of "Seventy-Six Trombones" that I think would have made Meredith Willson very happy. Stick with it 'til the end for some fancy staging tricks…

See What's Developed…

A company called Urban Outfitters is now selling Polaroid cameras and film…the last ever, it's said.

Daily Dose

Last night, Jon Stewart's guest was Betsy McCaughey, a former Lieutentant Governor of New York who keeps popping up in health care debates to spread what even some who kinda side with her describe as misinformation. She's been given a lot of credit for crafting lies — and I'm convinced they were, pure and simple, premeditated lies — that sank the "Hillarycare" initiative. She seems to have helped launch the "death panels" whopper about the current proposals. The interview ran long and was truncated for air but you can watch the whole thing over at the Daily Show website. (I'd embed it but they're probably getting so many hits over there than an embed here would move like you were connected to the Internet via a Dixie Cup and string.)

It was one of those interviews where your reaction will depend a lot on what you want to believe. If you think, as I do, that we're in a place where some people will say (and even convince themselves of) any stupid thing that will kill "Obamacare," then Stewart eviscerated her. If you want to see the proposals nuked, then I guess she held her own in a hostile environment. There were many spots throughout the discussion where I wished that one had let the other finish a sentence that was already in progress.

James Fallows points out some of the flaws in her argument…and Mr. Stewart came close to a point I think should be made in all this. Even if you can somehow parse and twist some clause in the bill to seem to say that doctors will be rewarded for forcing patients to adhere to advanced directives if they change their minds, that's not anyone's intent. There is, in any doctor-patient relationship, a certain amount of minimal trust that has to exist. They all hinge on the presumption that your doctor, whoever he or she is and whatever the laws may be, isn't sitting there thinking that they can make an extra $25 if they prescribe what's bad for you. If your doctor's thinking like that, you're in big trouble, regardless of how the laws are written…or even if nothing gets changed.

Today's Video Link

Here, for no particular reason, is an old clip of Mort Sahl on some TV show in 1967. I think I hear Steve Allen laughing in the background so that may explain where the clip's from. This is a short version or excerpt from a much longer routine that Sahl was doing at the time…a pretty funny one, as I recall. One night he was on a local show in Los Angeles and they let him just go on and on with it, and it must have run a half-hour, uninterrupted by commercials. I remember it as being pretty darned brilliant.

VIDEO MISSING

Late Comer

This story is on the wires now…

Former US homeland security chief Tom Ridge charges in a new book that top aides to then-president George W. Bush pressured him to raise the "terror alert" level on the eve of the November 2004 US election.

Gee, Tom, thanks for telling us about that now. Any other evidence of wrongdoing you withheld until no one could be held accountable and you could use it to sell a book?