One suspect dead. Other suspect at large. Internet orgasmic at flow of info about them…so much there that can be twisted to advance one's political causes. I can't wait to hear how this all proves we need to cut taxes on the rich.
A Bit Later…
Okay…so now they're saying Suspect #1 from the Marathon Bombings is dead and #2 is on the loose in Watertown. No more pretense that all this might not be connected to the bombings. See what some of you miss by going to bed early?
Very Early Friday Morn
I'm watching news coverage of what's going on tonight in Watertown, Massachusetts and on the M.I.T. campus nearby. Everyone's trying to say "They caught the Marathon Bombers" while still being able to say "We never said that" in case it turns out to be a series of unrelated crimes. They were especially cautious over on CNN and I wonder how much of that is because it's the middle of the night so the story isn't being covered by Wolf Blitzer, Anderson Cooper and other superstar reporters. The middle of the night is also not as competitive and I suppose there's less urgency to be first.
And now I'm watching NBC which has gone live with the story, preempting Leno and Fallon reruns. They have measured, cautious coverage but since only so much is known, they're saying the same things over and over and —
Whoops! I blinked and now I'm watching Jimmy Fallon interviewing Tracy Morgan…so it's back to CNN. They're waiting for a press conference. So am I.
Yesterday's Tweeting
- Can't wait to find out the religion of the Boston bombers so we'll know which group of bigots gets to exploit the tragedy. 15:48:12
Carmine Corrections
There have been a number of wonderful things written about Carmine Infantino since his sad passing. There have also been a few in need of some straightening-out…
- Carmine did not create or even co-create Adam Strange. That character first appeared in Showcase #17-19 and Infantino had nothing to do with those issues, the interiors of which were drawn by Mike Sekowsky with inkers Bernard Sachs and Joe Giella. The covers were penciled by Gil Kane but reportedly, the visual image of the hero was designed by Murphy Anderson when he drew a cover for Showcase #17 which was not used. Infantino took over the artwork when Adam Strange was teleported into DC's Mystery in Space comic as of #53. Carmine became the artist most closely identified with the feature but he was not in on its creation.
- Many folks are repeating Wikipedia which says at the moment that "In late 1966/early 1967, Infantino was tasked by Irwin Donenfeld with designing covers for the entire DC line. Stan Lee learned this and approached Infantino with a $22,000 offer to move to Marvel. Publisher Jack Liebowitz confirmed that DC could not match the offer, but could promote Infantino to the position of art director." For what it's worth, I don't believe that offer, which was about as much as Jack Kirby was getting at the time. That was largely a measure of how many pages he produced and I don't believe Infantino could have matched Kirby's output. He hadn't in his work for DC. Moreover, Stan had tried a number of seasoned pencilers who had not been able to give him the kind of work he wanted for the current Marvel line, some "bombing out" as of their first attempt. Infantino hadn't drawn one page yet for that line. Can we really imagine Marvel — then, a notoriously frugal outfit — giving someone a contract the equal of Kirby's when that someone had yet to prove he could work the way Stan insisted his artists work? I sure can't, though I can theorize Infantino told DC he had such an offer to pressure them into countering.
- Some obits say that it was Irwin Donenfeld who promoted Infantino to editorial director and the date is given variously as 1966, 1967 and 1968. It was the middle of 1967 and it was not at the choice of Donenfeld. Donenfeld had been editorial director. He was fired. Liebowitz, who was then ascending to the Board of Directors of the corporation that was then acquiring DC Comics, recommended Infantino for the position. Infantino was promoted to publisher in 1971. Also, Infantino did not bring in Dick Giordano as a DC editor. Donenfeld brought Dick Giordano in as a DC editor. Infantino got rid of Dick Giordano as a DC editor. The two men never did get along very well and one of the things Carmine was angry about after he was let go as publisher was that Giordano was later brought in to fill a job roughly equivalent to his old Editorial Director position.
Lastly: You see the cover to Flash #165 up atop this item? People keep reprinting that as an example of Infantino's superb work as a cover artist on that comic…and I think it's the only cover from the period when he was drawing the comic that he didn't draw. It was penciled and inked by Murphy Anderson. And you see the cover to Batman #180 right next to it? Infantino didn't draw that, either. That's Gil Kane and Murphy Anderson. Carmine may have done rough sketches for one or both of these covers but if they'd been signed, they wouldn't have been signed by him.
Today's Video Link
If you don't understand this commercial, it's only because you never saw a cartoon show called Wacky Races…
The Joy of Flying
Matthew Yglesias thinks we should stop complaining about air travel. Most of his arguments are right as far as they go but he doesn't address my two big gripes about the airlines. One is the incredible expense and hassle you incur when you need to cancel or change a flight. The other is how when you have a problem, there are very few employees to talk to and most of them don't know anything. I'd agree that when things work, they work pretty well…but they don't always work.
Yesterday's Tweeting
- Boston police say they have not cracked the case yet, deny rumors that they're calling in Banacek. 12:24:11
- CNN has a new policy: Everything is BREAKING NEWS, including the BREAKING NEWS that there's no BREAKING NEWS. 13:18:31
- I think what I want is a news station that isn't afraid to say, "We and the rest of the press don't know anything yet." 16:42:23
Market Crash
A British company called Tesco is giving up and closing (or if they're lucky, selling) 200 Fresh & Easy markets they'd opened in California, Nevada and Arizona. The premise of these stores, in case you never went to one, was to offer a kind of friendly atmosphere in which you could buy a mix of familiar brands and products specific to Fresh & Easy. It was kind of like a combination of Trader Joe's, Whole Foods and Ralphs…and the first time I set foot in one, I wanted to like it. My big problem was that they just plain didn't stock a lot of the items I wanted. There's nothing "Easy" about a market when after you shop there, you have to then go to another market to get what you need. The "Fresh" part seemed to be true but again, they had a pretty sparse selection of produce. Also, the self-service checkout lanes were confusing and almost every single time I used one, it malfunctioned and I had to wait until a member of the too-small staff came over and put things right.
I'll give them this: The stores were clean and there was a friendly atmosphere in the ones I visited. I also liked their meat selections and if I still ate desserts, I would have loved the on-premises bakery at the Fresh & Easy out in Burbank. I just couldn't find most of what I wanted in them and it looks like I wasn't alone in that.
Go Read It!
Today's Video Link
Today on Racial Sensitivity Theater, we have a scene from the 1940 Charlie Chan movie, Murder Over New York: The police round up every Hindu in town…plus one Stooge…
More Pessimism
Looks like even the watery, wouldn't-do-much Gun Control bill is withering away for lack of votes. We are, of course, not surprised. Maybe they'll try another one that will do even less to control guns and maybe it'll do so little that the N.R.A. types will think, "Ah, let's back this one so people will think something was accomplished and will give up trying." But I don't even expect that.
Nothing that will actually do anything is going to pass. Not now. Not after the next deranged shooter or the one after or the one after. Even if 90% of the country wanted it, our lawmakers would still be more scared of the 10% working to unseat them than they would be of angry voters among the 90%. Name me the Senator or Representative who ever lost his or her seat because they voted against Gun Control.
Tales of My Mother #14
As readers of this here blog know, my mother passed away last October at the age of 90. Friends keep asking me if I'm all right, if I'm consumed with sorrow, etc. Easy answer: I'm fine with it. Honest. I miss her…but I missed so many things about her while she was alive. For the last decade or so, I missed her being able to walk more than a few steps at a time and even those required a walker. I missed being able to take her to places she loved. I missed her being able to read or cook or do any of a dozen other things that once brought her pleasure. The last six months, I really missed her not being in the hospital and not being deeply depressed about her condition. If you miss a person that much when they're still alive, it's hard to miss them more after they die.
There are so many obits on this site that I get the occasional e-mail from someone asking for tips on how to cope with grief. I'm only an expert on what works for me…and what works for me is this: Just getting on with things, resuming normal activities and not feeling I have to make myself physically or emotionally ill to prove I cared about the departed. After all, you're going to get there eventually. Why not just go there now?
Given her physical ailments and constant hospitalizations, it's not like my mother's death was a surprise…or that there wasn't an aspect of relief about it. She was only months (and not many months) from being totally blind and requiring 24/7 care. She wanted very much to go before those things happened and I'm sure that for the most part, she was glad she did. So I could take comfort in the timing, plus I had all those things to do: Papers to file, calls to make, her house to take care of. This past weekend, I think I checked the last thing off that list.
As I mentioned here earlier — here, for instance, and later here — I decided to sell her house, the house I grew up in. The process was pretty simple. I determined who the top realtors were in that area…the ones who really knew the neighborhood and were selling homes there. I selected five and interviewed each (plus one couple who crashed the interviews) and made my selection. I do not think I would have gone terribly wrong with any of the five but that's a hunch. I know I didn't go wrong with the guy I chose.
His name is Chad Lund. If you ever want to buy or sell a home near where I grew up, here's his website.
I've written here in the past of the beauty I find in anyone who does what they do about as well as it can be done. Usually, I'm talking about great jugglers or great dancers or great comic book inkers…but hey, why not great realtors? Chad told me what he would do and it was all within the range of Possible. As a person who likes reality in his financial dealings, I appreciated that he did not promise to get me an unreachable price. I also appreciated the attention. He sells houses at about the same pace I knock off blog posts but always had the time 'n' patience to explain everything to me and to answer what must have been some very naïve, repetitive questions.
It would have been easy to dog it once he had the listing. The house was going to sell no matter what he did…and it's not like he needed to impress me with his efficiency so I'd let him sell other homes I grew up in. I just had the one. Still, I was impressed with how "in control" he was of the process and how even after selling as many dwellings as he's sold, he's not bored with it all and sloughing off the details. He got back to me in a flash every time I called and everything worked out pretty much the way he said it would.
Can't ask for better than that.

A very nice family purchased the place. I'm going to go over there later this week with some old photos I have and explain to them all the history they can stand. They've invited me to come back any time if I want to see what they've done with it…and I may change my mind but I don't think I do.
It stopped being my house — or even my mother's house — around 6 PM, last Saturday. Legally, it stopped belonging to anyone named Evanier the previous Wednesday when escrow closed but I still had things to get out, mostly for friends. Carolyn got my mother's dresser and a desk (the kind they call a "secretary") in the living room. My assistant Darcie got the dresser from the back bedroom… the dresser my mother bought to put in there after I moved out of that room with all my comic books. My mother's (and my) former cleaning lady Dora got her refrigerator. My former assistant Tracy got the old paintings in the garage and a wonderful old egg beater. My mother's friend Karen who lives next door and kept an eye on her got an area rug and her cat cookie jar. My friend John the architect, who helped her often, got her old O'Keefe & Merritt stove.
While John was picking up the stove, he met the new owners and I think they're going to hire him to design some new rooms, including perhaps a second story they hope to add. I like that, just as I know my mother would like that Carolyn had her dresser, Dora had her refrigerator, etc. Nothing big went to people she didn't know and a few pieces of her house, like that great urn she had out in the front patio, are now parts of my house.
I hired two men and a big truck on Saturday to deliver many of those items to their recipients and once they were all distributed, I felt like a large chapter of my life was over. And the last dangling matter undangled itself yesterday when I received a check from Time-Warner Cable. It took months to persuade them to cancel her cable TV account and months more to get them to refund fees they'd charged her after she had passed. It was actually easier to get her two banks to acknowledge her death and do what had to be done than it was to get Time-Warner to stop billing her for HBO.
Not long after she died, a well-meaning friend offered me some advice. Noting that I was not consumed by grief, she predicted I would be once the paperwork was done and I'd checked off the last item on my "Things to Do Because My Mother Died" list. She said, "Now, all that stuff is busy work and it redirects your mind from your loss. When it's all done, there'll come a moment when it'll hit you." Well, it's all done and no such moment arrived. Instead, there was a sense of relief that I was finished with that…and a sense of gratitude to my mother for setting it up as neatly as she did. A lady at one of her banks looked over the paperwork my mother had left and said, "I've never seen anyone prepare so neatly and make it so easy for the person in your position."
That was how it worked with us. She took care of me for the first part of my life and then the responsibilities reversed and I took care of her for the last part of hers. Then after she died, we kind of took care of each other.
Yesterday's Tweeting
- Today is National Stress Awareness Day…and I'm worried about that. 15:45:49
A Helpful Site
The folks at Snopes debunk some of the misinformation being dispensed about the Boston Marathon Bombing.