Matt Zoller Seitz likes Last Week with John Oliver more than The Daily Show with Jon Stewart or The Colbert Report. So do I but not by as wide a margin.
Bat Stuff
The photo of Adam West in his Batman suit I posted earlier reminded me of something that bothered me about that show. Actually, there were a lot of things but one was that I thought someone was telling the wardrobe department, "Keep moving Adam's chest insignia down towards his stomach so he looks dumpier."
The pic above at left is unretouched. For the one at right, I moved the insignia up. Doesn't he look more heroic? Why didn't he look that way on the series?
In the meantime, my pal Tom Galloway sent me this link to a report on why it took so long for the Batman TV show to make its way to home video. Some of you may be amazed to see that DC Comics sold the rights to do the series for so little but that was how the comic book business operated back then. Martin Goodman, founder-owner of the company we now know as Marvel Comics, licensed Captain America for a 1944 movie serial for either zero dollars or one dollar, and sold the rights for the 1966 Marvel Super Heroes cartoons for not a whole lot more. The premise was that the TV/movie version would make the character more valuable, boost the sales of the comic book, secure all sorts of licensing deals, etc. In Goodman's case, I doubt either deal paid off the way he'd hoped.
In '66 when DC Comics sold the rights to Batman, they had that in mind but Jack Liebowitz, who was calling the shots then, was also gearing up to sell the company. The success of the Batman TV show enhanced the value of the whole enterprise, brought forth more potential buyers and inflated the purchase price. Batman was a hit TV show when they made the deal in 1967 whereby Kinney National Company acquired. So selling the rights for the TV show even for a pittance was probably a wise, wise move.
In the article, you will note many mentions of my friend, Wally Wingert. Wally is still one of the busiest voiceover actors in the business even though he no longer announces The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. I work with him whenever we do Garfield cartoons since he's the voice of Jon Arbuckle and I hear him on an awful lot of other shows and commercials. Still, I think he'd trade it all if he could tool around in the Batmobile with Adam West…
Feeding Frenzy
Here's a list of things you should never give a cat or a dog to eat. They don't mention candy corn but I guess that goes without saying.
Today's Video Link
The Birthday Paradox, explained…
Recommended Reading
Here's a long profile of James Randi, a man in whom I find much to admire. He doesn't like the term "debunker." I don't like the term "skeptic" as it's currently applied. (Most people I encounter who describe themselves as "skeptics" in the Randi sense tend to be too skeptical, usually starting with the presumption that the conventional wisdom about anything must be wrong merely because it is widely believed.)
I've met and spoken to Randi a few times and find him fascinating and generally heroic. I don't always agree with what he says but do get the impression that he is quite prepared to disagree with what he said last week if he encounters better data. I am of the belief that there's no such thing as E.S.P. or talking with the dead or psychic healing or ghosts or mystic powers or people who like cole slaw or…well, ignore that last one. But I believe what I believe about the other stuff and think it's great that someone is out there exposing the Sylvia Brownes and Peter Popoffs among us who swindle the gullible.
The article spends a bit too much time on Randi's personal problems and it neatly skirts his devout atheism…but it's a pretty good read about a pretty "amazing" man.
Kim Possible
So Kim Kardashian poses for this magazine cover that has her bare butt glistening with oil and, it would seem, her waistline photoshopped down to make it thinner, therefore making her butt seem bigger. And the Internet is awash today with stories of how Ms. Kardashian's butt is "breaking" the Internet…
..and it is, sort of. It's not flooded with images of her butt. It's flooded with articles about how it's flooded with images of her butt.
Of course, almost all those articles include the image of her butt but the flood is because of all those postings about the flood.
Years ago, I think on this blog, I wrote something about Anna Nicole Smith. I said there are people in this world who are famous. Then there are people in this world who are famous for being famous. Ms. Smith, I wrote, was the first person to be famous for being famous for being famous. All her fame was built on how well she'd become famous for being famous.
When she passed away, I switched the line to Kim Kardashian and it fits even better.
And here she is, causing an Internet flood of articles about how she was causing an Internet flood which she probably wasn't causing before people started writing about how she was causing it.
I can't wait to see this taken to the next level. It will probably be a flood of people writing about how she caused an Internet flood of people writing about how she caused an Internet flood of people writing about how she caused an Internet flood of people writing about how she caused an Internet flood.
Go Read It!
Someone — I'm not sure who — schools Senator Ted Cruz on what "Net Neutrality" is.
[UPDATE: As seventy-three billion of you have told me in the last hour, that site is the work of cartoonist Matthew Inman. And fine work it is.]
Today on Stu's Show!
The Batman TV show (the one with Adam West) has finally gotten a DVD release and also a Blu-ray release. Those are the links to order.
And while you wait for your copy to arrive, tune in Stu's Show today when Stu's guest will be the noted Bat-expert, Joel Eisner, author of the newly-revised The Official Batman Batbook. Stu and Joel will be talking about all sorts of bat-things but mainly the TV show.
I have an odd view of that series. I'm fascinated by the making of it and I really liked most of the people on it, plus one of its main writers, the late Stanley Ralph Ross, was a good buddy of mine. But I didn't like the show…much. It was too repetitive and too contemptuous of its source material. I liked Adam West and Burgess Meredith and Victor Buono and Julie Newmar and when Yvonne Craig came along, Yvonne Craig. I liked many of the others, too. I just didn't like that they had to keep doing the same thing every week and I also didn't like the hard-to-overlook feeling that some of those behind the series thought the comics were crap and that anyone who liked them was pretty feeble-minded.
Stanley and I used to talk about this a lot and I think he came to agree with me that the show often had its tongue too far into its own cheek and that the adherence to formula is why it had an unusually short run for a series that got that such astronomical ratings when it first came on. So I won't be clicking those links I embedded above…but if you loved the show (and a lot of my friends did or do), I certainly understand. I sure liked most of the performers on it.
Anyway, that's what I think about it. If you want to hear what Stu Shostak and Joel Eisner think of it, listen in today. Stu's Show can be heard live (almost) every Wednesday at the Stu's Show website and you can listen for free there. Webcasts start at 4 PM Pacific Time, 7 PM Eastern and other times in other climes. They run a minimum of two hours and sometimes go way longer. Then, not long after a show ends, it's available for downloading from the Archives on that site. Downloads are a measly 99 cents each and you can get four shows for the price of three. Holy Bargain!
Now Available!
Today is the publication date for The Art of the Simon & Kirby Studio, a new book that I helped assemble for Harry N. Abrams Publishing, one of the leading publishers of art books in the world today. To get the Amazon link out of the way quickly, you can order a copy here. Now, let me tell you what you're ordering. Here's a slightly trimmed version of something I posted here a few months ago…
Before Jack Kirby worked with Stan Lee on the Marvel Super-Heroes of the sixties, he was partnered with a great creative talent named Joe Simon. It was Simon and Kirby who launched Captain America and the Boy Commandos and the Newsboy Legion and who invented romance comics and who became one of the most popular creative forces in comics of the forties and much of the fifties. Their studio produced great comics, many of them written and/or drawn by Joe and/or Jack but also employing other top talents including Mort Meskin, Al Williamson, Doug Wildey, George Roussos, Bill Draut and many, many more.
Joe Simon saved a lot of the original art to the comics they did and just before his death in 2011, he was looking forward to assembling a big art book featuring some of that art, presented "warts and all," meaning that you'd be able to see stray pencil work, smudges and pasteovers and corrections and everything. In my 2008 book, Jack Kirby, King of Comics, I presented a Simon-Kirby Fighting American story printed right off the originals and Joe loved the look of it and the idea of letting people see the artwork, up close and personal like that. He made a tentative deal with the folks at Harry N. Abrams Books, who'd published my book, to put out a whole book like that and he asked me to be its supervisor. When the estate representing Jack Kirby's interest (which is sharing in the book) asked me also, I couldn't say no.
The project got off-track for a time when Joe passed but since he wanted it out, it's coming out.
It's a big book. The pages are 9" by 12¼" and there are 384 of them. That is not the size of the original artwork. I love those big collections that do that but I find them hard to read and harder to store. This book is meant to be read and to that end, I included as many complete stories as we could locate.
Most of those 384 pages contain artwork by Simon, Kirby or someone who worked for them. Some though have an intro by me telling a little about Joe and Jack and what they did. And some pages have an article by Joe's son, Jim on what the world of Simon and Kirby looked like from his unique perspective.
Not much to add to that. I'm quite proud to be associated with this book. The art's great and the folks at Abrams do a dazzling job of production and design and making sure the printing is first-rate.
If you're anywhere near Miami, I will be speaking about this book at the Miami Book Fair, which runs November 16-23. I'll be there the last two days signing (I'm not sure yet when or for how long) and speaking (Sunday at 2 PM for an hour). C-SPAN will be broadcasting many of the speeches at the Book Fair but I'll bet you $50 mine is not among them but the one by Lou Dobbs is.
G.I. Jack
On Veterans Day, Marvel Comics salutes Jack Kirby…for his military service.
John Cleese Alert!
John Cleese is on a book tour, popping up everywhere. He is never not interesting so I'll link to this interview which Vince Waldron told me about. I'll probably be linking to others, plus I'm going to go see him speak next week. Betcha dozens of people there try to get his photo even though as he mentions in the piece here, he doesn't like doing that.
Today's Video Link
My pal Steve Stoliar is a writer and an actor and a Marx Brothers historian…in fact, he's the guy who worked in Groucho's house the last few years of the great comedian's life. I have plugged Steve's book about that experience before and I'll plug it again. I think I even plugged it before I knew Steve so you know I'm sincere. It's a real good read.
Via the Marx connection, Steve got to know another Friend of Groucho, the eminent TV host Dick Cavett. This led to, among other things, an odd TV appearance by my friend Steve. But here — I'll let him tell you about it…
Cavett had a late-night talk show on the USA Network in 1985-6. He came to L.A. to tape some shows, amongst them a writers panel with three legends: Pat McCormick, Larry Gelbart and David Lloyd. His secretary, Judy Englander, called me and said that Dick wanted me to be a part of the panel to represent young, aspiring writers.
I had great mixed feelings: On the one hand, if I tried to pass myself off as their equal, people would think, "Who is this jerk?" On the other hand, if I just sat there silently, radiating, "Gosh! Golly! Jeepers!", people would think, "Who is this idiot?" So I was nervous. A few days before the taping, Judy called to say I wouldn't be participating after all, because "Pat McCormick doesn't want to be on a panel with more than three people." I said, "Pat McCormick is more than three people," but was relieved to be off the hook.
The day of the taping, Larry Hussar and I went down to the Mayfair Music Hall to watch the show from the audience. I had on one of my trademark Hawaiian shirts and blue jeans. We loved listening to everyone's stories and Cavett was longtime friends with all three writers. Then, just after the show appeared to have wrapped, a production person came down to me in the audience and said, "The next guest was supposed to be Rod Steiger, but he's trapped in Malibu because of the mudslides, so we're going to bring you out and add you to the panel and tape a few more segments."
I went pale and clammy, then asked, "But — what am I supposed to do or say?" She said, "Dick will explain everything."
That was October of 1985. Dick has yet to explain anything.
Next thing I knew, someone was running a microphone cord down my shirt and tucking a remote into my back pocket, another chair was brought out, I was plunked down into it, and Cavett introduced me to this cluster of brilliant wits, my heart pounding and my mind racing. I was still faced with how to come off as more than a mute and less than an undeserving punk. Here's how I handled it…
Recommended Reading
Brian Beutler gives some good reasons why the Supreme Court won't vote to gut Obamacare. I don't have a lot of confidence in anyone's predictions about what the Supreme Court will do and I don't think some of its members care all that much if a given ruling is illogical if it achieves the political result they crave. (See Bush v. Gore)
Still, I think Obamacare will never go away unless it's replaced by something better (and no one seems to have anything better) or the same thing disguised as a Republican alternative. I'm not even sure most of those who say they want to "repeal and replace," want it to go away. For one thing, none of them seem to have or be trying to find a real replacement. I think they just want to gin up anger against the Affordable Care Act, exploit that anger for personal gain, and then not have to face the fallout from taking away health care from people who will die because of it.
The Right to Arm Bears
So there was this bear in the Polish Army…
No, really. A real bear. In the Army. Honest. A filmmaker named Brendan Foley is working on a movie about him and I know Brendan. He's a decent, honest fellow who's married to my pal, Shelly Goldstein. If Brendan says it's so, it's so. Read all about it here. He's like Harry Speakup but he's a bear.
Sarah Palin Warned Us!
Obama's Death Panels have already claimed one victim. They ordered the execution of Bea Arthur! Is Betty White safe?