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Sunday, June 30, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:29 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:21 PM
Simon Louvish has written two terrific books, one about W.C. Fields and one about the Marx Brothers. Both are very heavily researched. What's particularly great about Monkey Business is that while most Marx Brothers biographies treat their vaudeville and Broadway careers as preludes to their movie careers, Louvish realizes that that period was half their lives and treats it accordingly. He takes nothing for granted, even debunking the "Margot Dumont didn't get the jokes" legend (She had worked in burlesque for years prior to being with the Brothers). Louvish has an upcoming Laurel and Hardy bio which I'll plug when it gets published. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:00 PM
[a] one-man vocal spectacular [which] features over 50 voices from TV's favourite dysfunctional family in a hilarious performance of Shakespeare's bloodiest tragedy!To me, it sounds like the old hack stand-up premise of "I like Disparate Item A[Shakespeare] and Disparate Item B[Simpsons]. So I thought 'Why not combine the two?'" but extended to a full 2-3 hours. Which reminds me that I like Spider-man and I enjoy the work of William Faulkner, so I thought "Why not leave them alone?" Since I like them so much and all. # | | Thursday, June 27, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:18 PM
I just bought the "For Your Consideration" videotape of the documentary for $2.50. Hooray for Hollywood! # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:31 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:19 PM
# | | Monday, June 24, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:12 AM
Mark Evanier writes in this column about when he figured out BETA was dead. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:08 AM
# | | Sunday, June 23, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:26 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:21 PM
# | | Friday, June 21, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:30 PM
The favorite moment occurred as Burns and Allen were saying good night: BURNS: Gracie, how did you recognize Harry Von Zell?Gracie portrayed the best scatter-brain in comedy. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:19 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:18 PM
# | | Thursday, June 20, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
4:21 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:44 PM
ALERT 2: If your Internet speed isn't fast enough for the various links to the segment of Triumph the Insult Comic Dog goofing on Star Wars fans or you just want to see the segment in larger-than-two-inchs format, the episode will be rerun on Monday. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:30 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:53 PM
One gentleman who was fighting to get Speedy back on the air states that Speedy Gonzales "one of the major stars of the classic Looney Tunes shorts". To me, Speedy Gonzales was one of the stars of the declining years of Looney Tunes. Watching Daffy Duck in those cartoons is as painful as watching Bob Hope read cue cards in his specials or watching Woody Allen as a shell of himself in Hollywood Ending. While some of those cartoons did win Oscars, Mark Evanier has a plausible-sounding reason why that happened. Speaking of Evanier and Looney Tunes, here's a nifty essay of the history of television's butchering of the great cartoons and how their popularity despite that shows how great the cartoons were. # | | Wednesday, June 19, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:52 PM
# | | Tuesday, June 18, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:58 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:53 PM
Max also describes this entry below as a "dissection of Vicki Lawrence's web-site." Not quite. A dissection would be pointing out that the claim of the press release that Mama's Family "consistently topped the ratings for its entire six-year run of original shows" is demonstrably false since the show was cancelled while on NBC. While it did have a few years of first-run syndication, this was in the pre-FOX-WB-UPN era when the huge demand for programming for independent stations allowed shows like Small Wonder to flourish. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:36 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:08 PM
Speaking of Carol Burnett Show alumni in Vegas, you too can win a chance to meet Tim Conway and Harvey Korman in Vegas. Details here. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
3:04 PM
If you're at a resort casino where Don Rickles is playing, you owe it to yourself to catch a performance. Rickles is of the generation who puts 137% into every show. I had a great time when I saw him. I was sitting close enough to get to shake his hand but not so close that I was the Jew or the fat guy he makes fun of. As for Vicki Lawrence, not since Frank Gorshin and Dick Van Patten were touring as The Sunshine Boys has a piece of entertainment sounded so wonderfully awful. # | | Monday, June 17, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:56 AM
As long as you're taping TCM, you also might want to get The Loved One which is playing just before it at 6:00 AM EST. A very funny, dark comedy starring Robert Morse and Jonathan Winters; The American Way of Death as comedy, if you will (possibly inspired by the book, being released two years after the book was published). UPDATE: I am informed by Mr John P. Powell that The Loved One is based on a novel by Evelyn Waugh. On the wishlist it goes. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:51 AM
My favorite part of dealing with these idiots on the cable side was when I asked if their digital cable would work with Tivo. I was flat out told "No." Here's a product that Tivo sells in conjunction with AT&T Broadband. It took ten calls for me to get somebody to admit that, yes, maybe they should change what they're telling customers. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:32 AM
# | | Saturday, June 15, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:23 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
6:18 PM
# | | Friday, June 14, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:35 AM
# | | Thursday, June 13, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:38 PM
I went "Bananas" for this smart "Sleeper" about stupids, so "Take the Money and Run" to see Small Time Crooks.The only thing that keeps it from being perfect the Platonic ideal of a Gene Shalit review is that it's missing some reference to the eventual Oscar hopes of the film ("Looks like this Small-Time Crook will be stealing your hearts...and an Oscar!"). # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:29 PM
# | | Tuesday, June 11, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:54 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:42 PM
# | | Monday, June 10, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:51 PM
Do people think grains and vegetables and fruits haven't changed one iota since humanity started farming 50,000 years ago? When people choose the big plants for seeding next year's crop (just like that Planet of the Apes episode), they're genetically modifying the food. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:30 PM
The source for this is an excellent book entitled The Language Instinct by Steven Pinker. This book is a great survey of linguistics for the curious. Linguistics and the fact that humanity instinctively learns languages was the original debunking of the type of behaviorism that's behind the Koko "teachers". Pinker also wrote a great chapter debunking William Safire and other grammar mavens. At some point, I'll do a post on that subject. # | | Sunday, June 09, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:09 AM
Here's a link to the real life Susquehana Hat Company. (Link is not currently working but I am charitably presuming this is a temporary condition.) # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:58 AM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:14 AM
The plot's dopey as it turns around Chris Rock's character having an identical twin he didn't know about as well as Hopkins's disgust with how Rock's character is being used as a pawn (Who knew that the CIA could be so ruthless?). However the expected Hopkins-talking-black part was surprisingly low-key (I expected him to be doing it every time he shot a bad guy) and they also spared us a Hopkins dancing to hip-hop during the credits sequence that similar movies would have done. My friend and I also found enjoyment in making fun of the film's telling us where the film was taking place by using titles on the screen. At one point, literally seconds after "The Kaputnik Monastery" was typed on the screen, a character says "Sir, they're at the Kaputnik Monastery." # | | Friday, June 07, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:56 AM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:47 AM
The only thing missing is a little clock in the corner of the screen counting down the minutes until the uptight old white guy starts talking black. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:20 AM
# | | Thursday, June 06, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:56 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
12:54 PM
For those unfamiliar with the Jack Benny Show (I know, anyone under the age of 50, besides me) and thus don't recognize the significance, about once every six months, Jack and the gang would have to ride a train somewhere. Mel Blanc as a train announcer would announce "Train leaving on track five for Anaheim, Azusa, and Cuc...amonga." He would keep doing that, progressively stretching out the pause between "Cuc" and "amonga". Here's a WAV file of Blanc doing the line. Anaheim's web site gives a history of how the three towns took advantage of the publicity of being a Jack Benny gag. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
9:03 AM
Nacogdoches, TX where the Marx Brothers allegedly went from a singing career to a comedy career* does a half-assed job of exploiting their connection with the brothers here and here (do a search for Marx in both pages). Since nature abhors a vacuum, the town of Denison,TX claims it was where the Marx Brothers started doing comedy. *The apocryphal story is the audience left in the middle of a performance. The Marx Brothers were so mad that when the audience came back, they started hurling insults including "Nacogdoches is full of roaches." # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:51 AM
First, the itineray has expanded to include Chester, IL, home of Popeye. Second, this weekend is also the annual Superman celebration. I say the planners of the Jack Benny statue dedication screwed up and should have checked their calendars more closely to avoid conflicts like this. I shouldn't have to choose between Jack Benny and Adam West. Third, "Billionaire Bill" Sherman suggests flying into St. Louis and driving to Metropolis from there. Right now, my best bet is looking like St. Louis to Chester, Chester to Metropolis, Metropolis to St Louis, fly to Chicago, then Chicago to Waukegan. # | | Wednesday, June 05, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:52 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:46 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:30 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:49 PM
Recently an employer called me, desperately seeking a programmer to write software for a novel cell-phone design. He was different, he said: He would not insist on experience in a specific programming language. I replied that he was in luck; I knew a good programmer who was seeking work, and as a bonus, had experience with radio-frequency engineering applications. Good, he replied. "What frequency?"And here's a FAQ on this subject. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
10:19 PM
Speaking of Jewish Marvel charcters, Marvel has, on occassion, been weaselly about whether or not Magneto is Jewish. Here's textual proof that he is. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:29 PM
This sort of nonsense of insisting on experience on a particular technology when competence in the general field of programming and a book about the tecnology would really suffice is the reason why tech salaries were inflated during the .com boom and still are somewhat now. I once had a job interview for a gig I didn't get because I did not have two years experience in a technology that was, at the time, exactly two years old. I wish I could say that's an atypical experience but it ain't. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
7:17 PM
I never understood why Supes's mother was upset with him for taking a human bride in Superman II. Forbidding him to marry outsiders takes the metaphor of a Jewish Superman too far. He's the only Kryptonian on Earth; what did they expect of him? I also don't think Spidey's decision at the end of Spider-man regarding Mary Jane was a good one. She was endangered when she wasn't dating Peter. Also Aunt May is endangered by his dual identity (and was, in fact, hospitalized because of it) and I don't think anyone would applaud his abandoning her for safety's sake. Now, mind you, I don't dislike the fact that he made that decision. This is the sort of self-created angst that was typical of Spidey's comic book. He's 18 or 19; he's entitled to make dopey decisions. More importantly, I don't think the movie itself considers Spidey's self-imposed celibacy a good decision and I suspect the sequel will deal with that. Especially since it looked like they were hinting that MJ has figured out the dual identity. Finally, Attack of the Clones establishing that jedis are supposed to be celibate is just further proof that Lucas is making this crap up as he goes along. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:16 AM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
11:03 AM
I noticed on the schedule that they were going to do a performance of the Jack Benny Show. I volunteer my services in the role of Frank Nelson. I do a great "Yesssssss?!?! May I heeeeeeelp you?" # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
1:15 AM
If you didn't know in advance that Cracked hadn't been published in a while and that it had a backlog of material, you would have guessed it very easily. Included were parodies of Tomb Raider and the game shows that are all the rage these days. Even though I had stopped reading both mags at the time, I was still shocked in 1988 when Don Martin left MAD for Cracked. For those not familiar with humor magazines, this would be the equivalent of John Lennon quitting the Beatles to join the Monkees. # | | Monday, June 03, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
2:28 PM
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Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:41 AM
# | | Sunday, June 02, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:28 AM
I'll figure out something to do with these books; selling isn't an option. # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
8:23 AM
# | | Saturday, June 01, 2002
Posted by Daniel Frank at
5:30 PM
[Last week, I also saw The Komediant. My review of that here.] # | |
Posted by Daniel Frank at
5:23 PM
Anyway last week, my old man tells me he bought an X-box. The idea was when the Xbox goes online in the fall, he, I and my brother (who already owned one) would play games online. Who was I to get in the way of family fun across this great land of ours? So I got one. The controls have like a gajillion buttons and three directional control doohickeys. I understand how old people felt when facing a computer for the first time. Now mind you, I'm not saying the original joystick-and-one-button are the "good old days"; games can do a lot of cool stuff that need all the things in the controls. I just wonder if my late-twenties-ish hand-eye coordination can adjust. Or if I can invest the time to learn. # | |
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