me on the radio

Hey, I made it onto a right-wing talk radio station! A few weeks ago, I was interviewed for a show called By the Book with Matthew Worley, which runs on SuperTalk WFHG in Bristol, Virginia — a station whose main lineup features the likes of Glenn Beck, Bill O'Reilly, Bill Bennett, etc. The subject was, of course, my book on Jack Kirby and they're broadcasting the chat this weekend.

The show airs Saturday with an encore performance on Sunday, and you've already missed Saturday. The Sunday broadcast is at 1 PM Eastern Time so you can figure out when that is for you. What you might not be able to figure out is how to listen live through the links on the station's website. I think this is the streaming link but I can't get it to work for more than a few minutes at a time. If you can, let me know.

Before Bedtime

As you might deduce from the time stamps here, I'm pulling a near all-nighter to get a script finished. I'll resume work in the morning. Don't expect a lot of postings here this weekend. Good night, Internet.

Today's Video Link

We have a piece of film history here: The screen debut of George Burns and Gracie Allen, doing a hunk of their vaudeville act as an 8-minute Vitaphone short called Lambchops. This came out in October of 1929…and just to save you doing the research and the math, Mr. Burns was 33 years old at the time, and he and Gracie had been married since January of '26.

Gracie's age is a little more difficult to peg. When asked her birthdate, she gave a wide array of answers, including "None of your business." When she died in 1964, George told reporters she'd been born in 1902. Historians have since concluded that 1895 is more likely…but not proven. If she was born in 1895, she was a year older than George.

This short did not catapult the team of Burns and Allen to movie stardom. They made a few more like this one and it boosted interest in their act. But it wasn't until they got into radio that they became famous. Here's a great artifact of the days of vaudeville…

VIDEO MISSING

Bell Book (no Candle)

Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Times has a review of Blake Bell's new book, Strange and Stranger: The World of Steve Ditko. I got to page through a copy at the Book Expo a couple weeks ago and what I saw and read looked pretty good to me. If you wanna pre-order one, here's an Amazon link that will help you…and also net me a tiny commission.

Go Read It!

Over in the New York Times, Michael Cieply has a nice piece on the promotional aspects of the Comic-Con International in San Diego. And I don't say it's a nice piece just because he interviewed me for it.

Tonight's Political Comment

Yes, I am disappointed today in Barack Obama and all the Democrats who caved in on the issue of telecom immunity. And like a lot of you, it's especially annoying because we have nowhere else to go. In November, I'm not going to be able to cast my ballot for someone who thinks that our government should not be able to break its own laws and then retroactively make it okay. We have truly arrived at the day when, as Richard M. Nixon once said, "If the president does it, it's not illegal."

And you've got to wonder: If Congress will bend over backwards to overlook the excesses of a spectacularly unpopular administration, what are they going to do for one that America actually trusts?

Today's Bonus Video Link

I don't know who April is…but someone put this on YouTube for her birthday present and it's the funniest, laugh-out-loud clip I've seen there in weeks. It's Joe Cocker at Woodstock…but with subtitles. Thanx to Dawna Kaufmann for telling me about it.

VIDEO MISSING

Cable Guys

A couple of folks have written to ask if I ever resolved the problems with my Time-Warner digital phones. The answer is yes. Someone high in that company, it turns out, is a reader of my weblog. He read what I wrote and contacted the right people, causing technicians to come dashing over here to undo all the damage that the previous installers had done. Now, not only does everything work fine but an average of once a day, someone from Time-Warner Cable calls to make sure everything is functioning properly…which it is. I am a satisfied customer — at the moment.

Hot Time!

It's only 34 days until the Comic-Con International convenes in San Diego. Tickets are going fast and it's about time for my annual joke about how if you want to get a parking space, you'd better leave now.

Around 120,000 people will attend the convention over its 4 days (4.5 if you count Preview Night) and many more would but that's about all the convention center can hold.

Every so often, someone suggests that the whole shebang be moved to Las Vegas, where there are larger convention centers with more being built. I am convinced this will not happen for any number of reasons but this one will suffice…

Go Read It!

Found this on the website of my pal Paul Harris. It's a piece by James Randi about myths of gambling. I've pretty much given up my one interest in that area, which was Blackjack, but during the years I did a lot of that, I came to a number of conclusions and one was that it helped to be as realistic about it as Mr. Randi is in that article. I mean, you can believe the myths and still win via dumb luck but it's not something I'd want to count on. Steve Wynn is worth zillions because people believe the myths.

The other things I found out is that you have to really, really learn the game(s) you're playing; that you have to only play when you're alert and able to pay good attention; that even when you do everything right, you can lose; and that you have to master the hardest part…which is to quit when you're ahead. Despite understandable temptations to the contrary, I gave up Blackjack when I was and if I don't get stupid, I will remain that way for the rest of my life. If I go back to it, I will at some point be behind again. Ahead is a better place to be.

From the E-Mailbag…

Every time I post something even vaguely political here, I get angry rebuttals and insults from a couple of folks, often the same couple of folks. A regular is someone named Hank Cox, and the following is quite typical of how it goes…

I am not surprised that you linked to electoral-vote.com since that's another socialist (i.e., liberal) website run by another one of your Anti-American defeatists. I wouldn't trust a comma on that Obama Osama loving site. If you are as fair minded as some claim, why did not you link to election projection, which is run by a good, God-fearing American who also lists and analyzes the polls? Could it be that you do not live in the reality-based community of your mind and think you can trick Republicans into the same kind of defeatist mindset you favor for Iraq, making us believe we cannot win?

Actually, election projection is another decent tracker of electoral votes. At this moment, they figure Barack Obama with 349 electoral votes and John McCain with 189. The "socialist" site you abhor has Obama at 317 and McCain at 194.

Birth Marx

The BBC is running a three-part interview with Miriam Marx entitled "Groucho Was My Father." You should be able to listen to Part One at this link. If it doesn't work, try looking around on this page for a link that will play through your browser.

Part Two airs this Sunday and shortly after it does, Part One may disappear from the website and be replaced by Part Two. I'll link to Part Two once I know it's up but in the meantime, you might want to listen to Part One before it goes away. And yes, that's our pal Frank Ferrante doing the Groucho impression. Who better?

Black Magic

Hey, guess what I did last evening! Along with my friends Earl and Denise, I went to see Lewis Black discuss and sign his new book, Me of Little Faith. There was a long interview that proved once again that Mr. Black is very funny and very perceptive…and nowhere near as angry as some think. The discussion was conducted by Time Magazine columnist Joel Stein, who was a very good foil for Black, setting 'em up so Lew could knock 'em down, and occasionally convulsing the interviewee.

The chat was primarily about theology, which is the subject of Black's book. In it, he criticizes some of the more eccentric and/or destructive practices of all the major religions except Islam. As Black explained, he didn't want to spend the rest of his life in hiding. Otherwise, it's a series of short essays by a man who says he could never get any of the faiths to work for him but learned to live a happy, moral life without them. I'll write more about it as soon as I finish reading it.

Here's a link to the Amazon page where you can order the book. And even if you don't want to, you should go there because they have three short promotional videos up that you'll want to watch.

Today's Video Link

From the late sixties: Yogi Bear and Boo Boo (with the voices of Daws Butler and Don Messick) lecture kids on the evils of smoking. This was to counter all those Winstons commercials that the Flintstones once did.

Tortured Logic

Wanna read a spirited debate about the rights of the detainees in Guantanamo and the recent Supreme Court decision about those rights? Okay, start by reading this.

Then read this.

Then read this.

Then, finally for now, read this. There may be more chapters to follow but that should be about as much as anyone can handle.