Hooray for Captain Spaulding |
Posting to you live
|
Friday, May 31, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:53 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:16 PM
My brother noticed that the IMDB listing dates the movie 2002 but gives a January 2003 release date. He speculates that it may play a few NY and LA theaters December 2002 for Oscar eligibility. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:02 PM
Mr Devon also says Superman would beat the Hulk. When Supes fought the Hulk in 1981, it was basically a draw. The Hulk basically threw a punch which sent Superman (who was looking the other way) flying. Once Supes was prepared, he just stood still while Hulk hit him, making the Hulk near exhausted. Supes then found a doo-hickey that was irritating the Hulk and crushed it, thus calming the Hulk down. This is the Superman who could juggle planets. The modern depowered Superman would have more difficulty. Now as to Devon's other claim of Spiderman beating the Hulk, I say, in Manhatten, sure. Spidey can avoid the Hulk's punchs and essentially rope-a-dope him to exhaustion. In the desert where there's no walls to crawl on, he'd have more trouble. One of the more shameful moments of my life was a Friday evening when a booking that I had was cancelled so I ended up at a fine comic book shop here in LA. I joined in a discussion about the merits of some funny book or another. The discussion degenerated, as many a comic book discussion will, into a "Ho'od Win" debate. The one I remember was Doctor Doom vs Batman. The answer, of course, was that Doctor Doom would use his time machine to save the lives of Thomas and Martha Wayne thus keeping Batman from existing. # | | Thursday, May 30, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:49 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:12 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:01 AM
The same article mentions Scott Baio. A theory I've heard about why we don't see much of Baio is that all the 12-year-old girls he was mean to when he was a star are now the people doing the hiring. The theory falls apart when you see that he will be in the sequel to Baby Geniuses. And finally, what are Bibleman's thoughts about the matter of how most Christians are not celebrating the real Sabbath as indicated in the Bible? # | | Wednesday, May 29, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:43 PM
The last time I got into an argument on this, the creationist/intelligent design said he wouldn't be satisfied until there was an explanation of where molecules come from. As it happened, I knew the answer (thanks to this book). He then demanded to know where the subatomic particles came from. There's sort of a partial explanation (it's the m in E=mc^2) but even without it, do we really need a Creator for subatomic particles? I don't understand how the way to satisfy the problem that a Universe so complex as ours couldn't just happen is to handwave in the existence of something a gajillion times more complex than the Universe. If everything needs a creator, then who created the Creator of the Universe? # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:12 PM
Hi, this is Bob "I don't wanna go to hell" Hope here. How 'bout that Jesus, boy? Ain't that cat something else? I don't know if that water into wine trick was a good idea. Now Dean Martin follows him everywhere. That Jesus is wild. How 'bout his golf game? I don't want to say Jesus is a lousy golfer but the only hole in one he sees is his stigmata. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:08 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:34 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:22 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:36 AM
UPDATE: I just realized something the article doesn't indicate one way or the other. Did Al Qaeda choose their targets because they were in big blockbusters like Godzilla? # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:34 AM
# | | Tuesday, May 28, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:30 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:26 PM
The show potentially has the same problem that I had with Batman Beyond which is that a dystopian future for a superhero universe implies that the work of the superhero was in vain. However I do like that they're using an interpretation of the Huntress that hasn't been used in years. It's produced by the same folks who did Smallville, a show that grew on me. Who am I kidding? It's Batman; I'll watch. I make the same offer I made about another Batman-related project: I am available to play the role of the Riddler. Or Riddler Jr since it's set in the future. I will lose weight for the part. Or you can incorporate my weight problem into the character. "Gee, Riddler, you've really let yourself go!" # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:21 AM
Tomorrow is Bob Hope's 99th Birthday. Bob would love for you to have his souvenir program for just 99 cents to the first 99 customers - Limit 1 per customer - All proceeds from the sale of the programs will be donated to the Bob Hope Hollywood USO. Over $9999.99 will be donated. 99 thanks for the memories, Bob!I presume that the first 99 customers means "the first 99 customers that want one." In addition to tomorrow being Bob Hope's 99th brithday, apparently, according to the ad, yesterday was Dolores Hope's 93rd birthday. # | | Monday, May 27, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:11 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:09 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:05 AM
The documentary is about the Burstein family who were apparently the first family of Yiddish theater. The career of the family goes from Europe to Broadway to touring Europe and the world (and narrowly escaping the invasion of Poland) to Israel (where the govenment's determination to make Hebrew, not Yiddish, the national language drove them out) to the Catskills back to Israel and finally back to America. The film does not sugarcoat the family's history as we see the daughter who did not want to be part of show business and married young to get out. The mother makes excuses for her as she can not fathom that her daughter did not want any part of this. Some other interesting notes:
# | | Sunday, May 26, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:28 PM
UPDATE: I accidentally posted a link to the wrong letter because I'm an idiot. This has been corrected (the link, not my idiocy). # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:26 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:13 PM
The beginning is particularly interesting to those who favor some legalizing of drugs. The reason Robinson's character retires is prohibition is about to end. Even policemen taunt him that the government is ruining his racket. Apparently in 1933 (when the movie was released and when Prohibition ended), there was no question in anybody's mind that prohibition of alcohol was responsible for the rise of organized crime. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:58 PM
# | | Saturday, May 25, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:10 PM
A question Jim leaves unanswered is the faux skepticism of Gillian Anderson's character. How many years was she "skeptical" of UFOs and paranormalism? Skepticism is not the automatic denial of the unusual. It's the demanding of better proof. An FBI agent who faces the unusual and paranormal every assignment and who was kidnapped by aliens has that proof. Look, someone who doesn't believe in our world in UFOs is a good skeptic. Someone who doesn't belive in UFOs who lives in Metropolis and has Superman and Brainiac fighting outside his window is an idiot. Considering that Jim's endorsement of these episodes is "Here's some that don't suck", it ain't exactly a ringing endorsement. I'll stick with my prejudgement based on the commercials Fox ran before the show premiered. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
5:48 PM
Sullivan's Travels is the film often cited when a comedian wants to make serious films. Oddly enough, for a movie against making preachy films, I remember it as a fairly preachy movie. I may re-tune to it to see if my memory is flawed. I saw it in a double feature with Miracle of Morgan's Creek and any movie would probably pale against Miracle .In Miracle, one horrible thing after another befalls poor Eddie Bracken. Near the end, he seems destined to spend the rest of his life in jail and there seems to be no way around it. Sturges's ending to this movie is one of the top 5 funniest, if not the funniest, ending to a movie ever. If I had checked the TV listings more carefully, I would have noticed that The Palm Beach Story directed by Preston Sturges was playing this morning and suggested that you folks watch it. In it, a wife of an inventor leaves him, convinced that he'd be better off without her. She hooks with a gazillionaire who she tries to get to fund the inventor's project. Now a common problem with love-triangle comedies is that the other guy is made so unlikeable that you wonder what the woman saw in him in the first place. The gazillionaire, played in a great comic turn by Rudy Vallee, is extremely likeable. This, of course, presents the other potential problem of love triangle comedies (which the first problem is a horrible solution for): the audience feels sorry for the other guy when the couple inevitably get back together. Sturges's solution to this problem is hilarious. I'll notify you on this blog when it's on. Until then, catch these other two pictures. UPDATE: I'm an idiot. Palm Beach Story is on tomorrow (5/26) at 12:30 pm EST. So there's still time to watch it. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:42 AM
1) Dave Berg was currently living in the Marina del Rey area which isn't that far from where I live. I checked the phone book and he was listed. So were four other Dave Bergs (albeit only one in Marina del Rey). Here's an essay by Mark Evanier about missing out on an opportunity to meet Stan Laurel . Not that Laurel isn't tons more talented than Berg). It's just weird that someone I grew up reading was a stone's throw away from me. 2) He included caricatures of his family in the "Lighter Side of..." No big secret but now I could put names to some of the faces that always appeared in the cartoons. 3) His last "Lighter Side of..." will be published in September in what's also the 50th anniversary issue. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:16 AM
Jim, Jim, Jim. If a Charles Nelson Reilly appearance on X-Files didn't get me to watch that show, your list ain't gonna do it either. I prefer being able to say I've never seen the show. # | | Friday, May 24, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:09 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:05 AM
Yeah, yeah, I know. The veterans we're memorializing are the real heros. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:18 AM
Al Jaffee replied, "No, I'm here for the funeral of plumber Dave Berg." OR "Funeral? I thought this was the Automat!" OR "No, I'm here to answer idiotic questions by schmucks like you." OR THIS ONE LEFT BLANK FOR THE READER TO FILL OUT # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:47 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:42 AM
Harold Lloyd, it seems to me, has gotten the short shift these days compared to Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton, even though he's just as funny as they are if not funnier. His slapstick is a beautiful thing to watch. You can see some short clips of it here. # | | Thursday, May 23, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:24 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:56 AM
An honor I can give Gould is his books were so good that I sought out other books on the subject (Richard Dawkins is especially recommended) and those other books convinced me that Gould's theory of punctuated equilibria is wrongity-wrong-wrong. And that's what science is about. Science is practically the only human endeavor whose history is filled of incidents where people say "I have examined your evidence and reached the conclusion that you're right and I'm wrong." # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:46 AM
I never saw an episode of X-Files, not even the one with Charles Nelson Reilly. I find somewhat offensive the idea of a show with the basic premise that everything that has been disproved by James Randi or the Skeptical Inquirer is actually true. It's not like UFO-niks and psychics don't already get enough exposure on the TV disproportionate to the evidence of their claims. Later, I heard that for a time Gillian Anderson's character still didn't believe in aliens even though she had been kidnapped by aliens. The X-File's use of the typical Hollywood, cartoonish portrayal of skepticism as ideal employees of Monty Python's Argument Clinic only confirmed my decision to not watch. And, yes, I know about suspension of disbelief and I heard how good the writing and acting was. But consider that if there was a show about two FBI agents who were chasing evidence that the Holocaust was a hoax and fighting the Zionist cover-up within the FBI, I probably wouldn't want to watch that either. (Yes, I know Godwin's Law too.) # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:42 AM
Speaking of the Batcave, for a mere $295, you can get a Shakespeare bust just like Bruce Wayne's which actually works. Although if you shop around, I think you can find one for $195. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:32 AM
# | | Wednesday, May 22, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:15 PM
Update: Now "Marvelous Max" Power thinks that it might be OK to send pizza pie. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:13 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:07 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:39 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:27 PM
Special thanks to my brother Ted for passing these on to me. Ted correctly notes that the British have better letter pages than the U.S. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:22 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:45 AM
Of course, I'm still bitter that I was robbed of the Foggy Nelson role. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:34 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:32 AM
I had one of those semi-frustrating experiences where you have a punchline but no plausible set-up. I figured one out while walking to my car from the Open Mic. This is copyright ME and is not for stealing. Premise: Jesus Christ if he performed at a Friar's Roast: "How about that last guy's set? You know I died for mankind's sins; what's his excuse?" Not only do I have a plausible reason to do the punchline but I can expand the bit now. # | | Tuesday, May 21, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:57 AM
# | | Monday, May 20, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:01 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:49 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:43 PM
How did Episode I escape protests for the blasphemy of Darth Vader having a virgin birth? # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:18 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
5:52 PM
I'm think part of the reason Episodes I and II are weaker than Episodes IV-VI is that Lucas is treating Episodes I and II as part of the same movie whereas the other moving pictures each had a full story. I'm not convinced that Episodes I and II will be that much better when we get III and can watch it all as one story. I almost wish these movies were the story of Walrus Man. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
5:35 PM
Some inter-blog discussion on Episode II would be interesting. Let me try to get the ball rolling. In my review, I had asked a few plothole questions and made the snarky remark that they should have been answered in the film and not in the movie in your head. Anyone have answers for any of the questions? Answer on your blog and/or email me. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:03 AM
# | | Sunday, May 19, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:32 PM
UPDATE: It turns out that the same thing was noticed in the review on the Fluxblog site which I hadn't read until now. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:30 PM
Outside the theater was a guy dressed as Spider-man and a guy dressed as Superman to take pictures with tourists or plug the wax museum or something. Spidey had a wedding ring so I guess it's comic book continuity Spider-man. Superman had the small curled forelock which was a nice touch. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:03 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:56 PM
I left the theater with a mostly-positive attitude. I'll even go as far to say this is the level of quality that I was expecting from Episode I and didn't get. However, at the end of the day, I was more emotionally involved about the lousy pizza I had for lunch. SPOILERS: The audience laughed at the dialogue of "The sand is coarse. Here everything is soft...like you." The deal with Count Dooku which my brother asked about was this: Dooku was setting up an alliance of rebelling planets, the Trade Federation and others. The real reason he was doing this was to give Palpatine an excuse both to get absolute emergency powers and to start an army. However numerous questions still exist: 1) Why did the Dooku alliance want Amidala dead when she's the leader of the opposition against a standing army? I understand that Dooku-Sidious want her out of the way so Jar-Jar will do what they want but why would the rebelling planets want her gone? 2) Why does Jango Fett go to that planet the Dooku alliance was at? 3) Why isn't he suspicious that the other side has his clone army? 4) Why isn't anyone in the Republic suspicious that an army that normally takes ten years to create is ready immediately after the vote (Even if it weren't a mess o' clones, it would still take a while to set up a damn army). I'm sure after thinking about it, I could come up with explanations for all these things. However, if the movie in your head is better than the one on screen, why go see the flick? I liked the chase across Coruscant, the background with constant flying cars, the fights with Fett, and the Yoda vs Dooku scene. I like the idea that Yoda has that capability in reserve even if he doesn't do it everyday. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:22 PM
# | | Saturday, May 18, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:28 PM
Thanks to "Delightful Dave" Trowbridge who pointed me to this site which led me to this site which had what I needed and some other good stuff. I promise not to overuse this sound effect and to only use it for good, not evil # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:13 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:08 PM
I will say this. The film does solve one mystery that has been plaguing Star Wars for years: How come if Uncle Owen is Luke's uncle, Uncle Owen doesn't have Jedi powers? # | | Friday, May 17, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:02 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:57 PM
I can't say Dave Berg would have made my top five favorite MAD artists but he did have one small bit of influence in my life. I occassionally respond to insults or surprises by staring at the insulter/surprise in shock with mouth agape. I refer to this as my Dave Berg take after the reaction the straight person would often have in "Lighter Side of..." to a punchline. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:53 AM
A special thanks to "Delightful Dave" Trowbridge of Redwood Dragon for saving me the trouble of finding that essay in Google and for the permalink. Here he has a picture of Mt. Stoogemore. I hope he ain't going to be talking no smack about my homeboy Shemp. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:43 AM
Here's the pitch: How do we know that Darth Vader is Luke Skywalker's father? Who's testimony do we have? Darth Vader, a man who murdered an entire planet's population and has other evil stuff on his resume? Obi-wan Kenobi? He either lied in Star Wars when he told Luke that Darth Vader "betrayed and murdered" his father or he's lying in Return of the Jedi about Darth Vader being the father. Yoda? Who knows Yoda's motivations? Hell, he got mad at Luke for interrupting his training to save his friends. Wouldn't an "everything you know is wrong" story have been interesting? Sure we'd still know that Darth Vader triumphed but how would be less certain. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:21 AM
He reminisces about Stan Lee's "chatty footnotes" in the great old Marvel comics. My personal favorites were the ones where he'd say stuff like "This happened last issue. If you didn't read it, what the hell's wrong with you?" I also saw ones in an old Doctor Strange where he said "Happened some time ago. I don't remember what issue". # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:39 AM
He also sent me a site which seemed to have the two trombone sound effects I asked for. The problem is you have to subscribe to get access to them. I have no idea what to put in a google search for what I need. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:13 AM
So anyhoo, thanks for the plugs from "Stunning Stephen" Green of Vodkapundit and "Cunning Ken" Goldstein of The Illuminated Donkey. I've also been permalinked (Is that the term for the static links on a blog? Or are they just called "static links"?) by "Fantastic Fluxblog" and "Brilliant Bill" Frank of Terablog (coincidentaly my father). New Hooray for Captain Spaulding policy: If you link to me, you too will get a Stan Lee-esque nickname. Hurry before all the good ones are taken. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:56 AM
Assumably, like the Gilligan's Island movie last year, other actors will play the young Adam West and Burt Ward. If the producers need someone to play Frank Gorshin, I'm certainly available. Or Milton Berle if there's a Louie the Lilac segment. There might be some juicy gossip from Milton Berle's appearance. In Burt Ward's autobiography, he claims to (how to keep this PG?) share a certain infamous trait of Milton Berle's and I don't mean joke-stealing. While searching for Ward's autobiography, I learned that Yvonne Craig (TV's Batgirl) also has a book. # | | Thursday, May 16, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:42 PM
People avoid Episode II on the old Yogi Berra principle of "Nobody goes there anymore; it's too crowded." Those that haven't seen Spider-man yet because of the crowds figure it'll be less crowded what with a new Star Wars movie and all. Spidey hovers close to or even beats Ep II in the weekend totals. I don't buy it either. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:30 PM
One of the benefits of the relatively obscure is that you're fairly early in somebody's search results. Someone looking for Star Wars is going to get a gajillion sites.* If they're looking for Ruth Buzzi or Al Boasberg, I'm on page 2 of the hit results *I did get one hit from someone clearly looking for one of those free downloads of Episode II that the entertainment industry told Congress was all over the Internet. (And the entertainment industry wouldn't tell a lie to the United States Congress, would they?) I also got a hit for someone of search parameters "Star Wars vagina" which I don't want to think about. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:45 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:35 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:33 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:15 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:17 AM
Soon all the world will be discovering me, "Captivating Captain" Spaulding. We just got plugs from "Jolly Jim" Treacher and "Marvelous Max" Power. That's in addition to the link from "Beautiful Bob" Powers. So a lot of people will be learning what you true believers already know, Hooray for Captain Spaulding is the place to be. Now hold on to your hats for more exciting adventures. Excelsior! Stan Lee Mode OFF I was going to use fake HTML tags for the Stan Lee wackiness above rather than Mode ON but blogger confused the fake tags with real tags. The how-to-do-HTML blog must really suck. I'm getting google hits now. I'll do the obligatory "wacky hits from google" post later. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:27 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:21 AM
Similarly, Matt Weinhold (a very funny comedian) theorized that Lucas edited a reel of only Jar Jar Binks moments which he then screens for every visitor to Skywalker Ranch, nudging said visitor in the ribs, saying "Huh? C'mon! Huh?" # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:09 AM
# | | Wednesday, May 15, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:55 PM
Three years ago when Phantom Menace debuted, I attended the second screening of the day at 3:00 AM at Mann's Chinese theater with friends. I avoided the midnight screening because I didn't want to be around all the nerds (wah wah). I figured, what the hell, I was unemployed, living in LA, I could buy the tickets in advance, why not take advantage of stuff like this. The evening started at an Open Mic that was coincidentally across the street from Mann's Westwood Village, another theater where fans had been lining up months in advance. Many comics had been making fun of these guys. I had been pointing out the hypocrisy in that: Comic 1: Man, these fans should get a life. Waiting so long for a movie.A few people showed up in Star Trek uniforms to the anger of the folks lined up. I was slightly disappointed to find out that they were not spontaneous fans but there to pass out fliers to the Trekkies documentary. At Mann's Chinese while on line, we saw people leaving from the 12:01 AM show. A bad sign was that they were mostly silent. The theory amongst our group was if they had enjoyed the movie, they'd be talking about all the great things they had seen in the film. At the same time, a homeless guy was arrested. Joe Wagner (from TV's Late World with Zach) suggested that he was arrested for saying "I didn't really like the movie." When we left the movie, we were the only ones remotely happy. We giggled about the train wreck we had just seen. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:23 PM
And here's another African-American cartoonist talkin' Star Wars. PARENTAL WARNING: Contains a cartoon character giving the bird. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:41 PM
In the article, Allen says that he writes his scripts in "a couple of weeks." This may be the problem. A couple of rewrites maybe could have saved the movie. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:03 PM
I'll deconstruct the ad later when I have time. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:57 PM
Of course, I do have a birthday coming up in three months. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:23 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:19 PM
Instead here's Ted's solution to the Mideast problem. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:21 AM
Thumbnail: In 1975, Spider-man fought a clone of himself who died in an explosion. In 1994, it was revealed that the Spider-man funny book readers had been following for twenty years was actually the clone from the story. The "real" Spider-man appeared and took up the mantle. This was apparently intended to be permanent until enough of a fan uproar brought things back to the status quo. The whole mess took two years. This dopey storyline may or may not have been the basis of the Simpsons episode where the real Seymour Skinner shows up in Springfield. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:55 AM
A friend of mine said he was going to wait until the middle of next week 'cause he didn't want Clones beating Spider-man's record. I sympathize. However, that ain't gonna happen so I'll probably go this weekend. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:20 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:06 AM
Interestingly, this sort of thing is not without precedent in Woody's career. When the Museum of Television and Radio ran a TV retrospective on Woody Allen, it included a sketch from whichever Sid Caesar show he was involved in (not Your Show of Shows, I know that much). The sketch was a parody of American Bandstand and essentially a "how 'bout them crazy kids with their kooky music and nutty dances." It did end on an Allen-esque twist of the teenager gushing over the host saying he buys the records and watchs the show and goes to the concerts. He then says "Is this all there is to my life?" and starts sobbing. # | | Tuesday, May 14, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:41 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:38 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:27 PM
I always hoped they'd go all the way with the B-list folk and do theme casts. An all-drag version with Tony Curtis, Peter Scolari, and Dave Foley. Or an all-Laugh-In version with Judy Carne, Jo Anne Worley and Ruth Buzzi. JO ANNE: Hey Ruth, I just bought a vagina urn. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:48 AM
# | | Monday, May 13, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:18 PM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:04 PM
Monkey Boy once came up with my favorite moon-landing hoax conspiracy theory: OJ Simpson was framed because he got too close to the truth in Capricorn One. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
5:44 PM
I genuinely think Israel is held to a double standard that no other nation (maybe the US, sometimes) is held to. And I can't think of a reason that doesn't end in the word "Jew". # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:05 AM
Again, my main suspect for it taking so long is the fact that most of Christianity is blindly following the Catholic Church's edict regarding Sunday being the Sabbath. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:44 AM
My next encounter with Chomsky revolved around his writing an introduction to a book by an anti-Semite named Robert Faurisson who denied that the Holocaust took place, that Hitler’s gas chambers existed, that the diary of Anne Frank was authentic, and that there were death camps in Nazi occupied Europe. He claimed that the “massive lie” about genocide was a deliberate concoction initiated by “American Zionists” “and that “the Jews” were responsible for World War II. Chomsky described these and other conclusions as “findings” and said that they were based on “extensive historical research.” He also wrote that “I see no anti-Semitic implication in the denial of the existence in gas chambers or even in the denial of the Holocaust.” He said he saw “no hint of anti-Semitic implications in Faurisson’s work,” including his claim that “the Jews” were responsible for World War II. He wrote an introduction to one of Faurisson’s book which was used to market his anti-Semitic lies.You know how when show-business types give their views on issues, people sometimes say "What does he/she know about this? Just because he's famous." Noam Chomsky is the academic version of that. He's the far-left equivalent of the mechanical engineer who gives creationists quotes on how evolution is impossible so they can claim they have science on their side. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:23 AM
I wonder if the guy who wrote that bit wanted the stunt double there for the entire show. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:16 AM
Evanier came up with some points I wouldn't have. Most of Carson's showcases date from when his show was 90 minutes. Comics can get national showcases elsewhere without late night TV. Carson had an elder statesman vibe that Leno or Letterman don't (which, when he introduces a hot new comic, compels the audience to pay attention). He left out, what to me, is an obvious difference which is when, say, David Brenner debuted on the Tonight Show, half of America was watching. It's plausible that Jack Benny recognized him. (Yes, I read Brenner's autobiography.) An equivalent show doesn't exist today (which isn't necessarily a bad thing). Plus I think we're still paying for the eighties boom. The audience for stand-up isn't as great as it once was. Chris Rock can't even sell a comedy album. I'm sure someone will correct me here but I can't think of anyone in the last ten-to-fifteen years who became famous solely as a stand-up. It's always something else that makes a stand-up famous. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:30 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:02 AM
# | | Sunday, May 12, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:58 PM
The screening of Love and Death I refer to is the same one which featured the joke of a man plotting Napoleon's death saying "From now on, the world will remember my name: Sidney Applebaum!" When the audience did not give the joke the laughter it deserved, I shouted "Oh, come on!" Some of my so-called "friends" claim that I stood up and gestured angrily at the audience. These friends are liars. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:40 PM
I remember as a lad when the second series of Star Wars action figures came out and included a "Luke Skywalker in X-Wing Fighter Suit" figure. The 6-to-12-year-old set were horrified that they'd made two Lukes. When I told my brother that the Luke in Tie Fighter suit was a seperate action figure and not a costume for the existing Luke action figure, he called me a liar. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:26 PM
I had originally planned to see it(Hollywood Ending that is, not Dracula, Dead and Loving It) last weekend with my friend Chip Pope but other obligations prevented it. I called Chip to cancel and told him to feel free to see it without me. He replied, "I'm not in that big of a hurry to see it." The movie has funny moments but these are few and far between. There were several moments where a scene ends and Chip and I said to each other "A punchline here would have been nice." The jokes at Los Angeles's expense just reminded me of how funny Annie Hall was. The film closes with Woody Allen asking if his Dramamine was packed. There is one scene where Woody's character, a director who is trying to mask the fact that he has gone blind, is learning the layout of a hotel suite where he will have to meet with an executive alone. The scene was an endless one of bumping into furniture that would have made Leslie Nielsen say "Enough already!" At one point, I whisper to Chip, "The joke here is that he can't see anything." Chip suggested that the furniture was about to walk out in disgust. Now there's nothing wrong, per se, of a long scene based on a single joke or endless repitition of a joke. Hell, how many times did Sleeper do the weapons blow up on the secret police gag? The difference between this movie and Sleeper is that when making Sleeper, Woody Allen didn't think slapstick or even comedy was beneath him. To end on a positive note, the Grove at Farmer's Market is really nice. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:04 PM
Oddly enough, long lines weren't a problem when I saw Hollywood Ending yesterday. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:05 PM
Sure, it's a lot of money for a comic book--people also spend a lot of money on old baseball cards and antique radios and first edition beanie babies and tin robot toys and bottle caps and lunch pails and all kinds of goddamn things. This is hardly a revelation. Except to the New York Times, whose writers are apparently required by the official Times stylebook to adopt a condescending tone whenever comic books are mentioned. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:16 AM
Here the author dissects Campbell's claim that the trash compactor scene in Star Wars is "a variant of the death and resurrection theme, in which the hero begins to discover his power": All of this would make sense if Luke used the Force to hold back the crushing walls. But nothing of the sort happens in this scene: Luke and his friends escape only through the timely help of the dithering robot C3PO. Innumerable action-adventure heroes have had to fight their way out of rooms in which the walls or ceiling slowly close in. Campbell is taking a standard cliffhanger plot device -- one as hoary as having a mustachioed villain tie the heroine to a railroad track, or send her trundling toward a sawmill blade -- and trying to pump it full of significance, with predictably flatulent results. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:49 AM
In this article, Mark Evanier discusses how when Jack Benny started crediting his writers, comedians were mad at him for destroying the illusion that comics made up their own stuff. The article Evanier links to about comedy writer Al Boasberg is good too. Boasberg helped create the personas of Jack Benny, Burns and Allen, and Bob Hope and contributed to the Marx Brothers' Night at the Opera and Day at the Races. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:29 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:19 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:11 AM
The second defintion of optimism? I keep seeing multiplexes that have Hollywood Ending on two screens. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:54 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:53 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:43 AM
# | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:42 AM
# | |
|