Friday, December 23, 2022

launch-pad

 



        Someone was saying recently that cough drops are just candy and don't help a sore throat or a cough.  I don't feel that way, though.  I think they help.  (And they do taste good...if you have a sore throat, the small pleasure of a good taste can offset the negative thing, the pain....)


I love it when cough drops are called "lozenges."

I don't know why, but I love that word.

LOZZ - enge. ... That soft "g" like in gem, not hard "g" as in gaffe.


        (Politician:  "I surely cannot make a gaffe, as long as I imbibe a lozenge before going up to the microphone."

        British politician:  [same sentence, but with an English accent...])


lozenge

lounge

        "We had a peppermint lozenge at the Peppermint Lounge."


[Wikipedia] -- The Peppermint Lounge was a popular discotheque located at 128 West 45th Street in New York City that was open from 1958 to 1965, although a  new one was opened in 1980.  

It was the launchpad for the global Twist craze in the early 1960s.  

Many claim The Peppermint Lounge was also where go-go dancing originated, although this claim is subject to dispute. ------------------------


-30-

Thursday, December 22, 2022

holiday night

 



---------------------------------------

Christmas season

with a reason

for an Island Of Quiet

to rest our thoughts


-------------------------------------


-30-

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

♪ ♫ slow down, you move too fast

 



Prince Harry and his wife Meghan had a documentary on Netflix.  Online hate racing through Internet -- my android tablet was jumping up and down, and it wasn't even on!


Something I noticed and pondered, over time, was -- before Harry and Meghan met, William and Catherine and Harry used to be kind of a group of "three musketeers," in their casual free time.  They were family, and friends.

        You would see photographs of them laughing together, sitting together....


In a friendly relationship like that, it's a married couple plus a single brother.  Girlfriends and dates of Harry's may have come and gone, but the three friends -- William, Kate, and Harry -- remained solid.  There would be pleasant feelings of being able to count on each other.

        For the single brother, there's the fall-back position whenever he isn't dating someone -- he can always go see William and Kate.


        For the married couple, Harry may have sometimes been a "buffer."  If either spouse might be grumpy about anything, Harry would be there to help joke it away -- smooth it over.  He provided masculine company for Prince William, and probably help with whatever Kate wanted, if she asked.

        Let's play a song!  Let's bake some muffins!

        Almost always available.  "The spare," as the royals say.


Then Harry meets Meghan and starts dating her.

In theory:  two happy couples, having fun together.

In practice:  circumstances improve for Harry, and get a little less good for William and Kate.  Buffer -- no longer available as often as before.  Good, trusted, supportive friend -- no longer available as often as before.


Another aspect that occurred to me -- sometimes in relationships of this kind, the married couple can come to depend on a little bit of a feeling of superiority, believing the single friend to be yearning for what they have.  

        Inside of these types of feelings can grow a strong affection for being "onstage," performing their happiness as a couple for the brother / friend who they may come to regard as their "audience."


Then he meets Meghan and it's like, "What happened to our audience?  Where'd he go?  

        What do you mean, he's looking at this American Meghan-person, and not at me / us??!!"

_____________________________

Another thing I noticed was that William advised Harry not to move too fast in his relationship with Meghan, and this admonishment was not well-received.  I read that.

        (Yikes.)

        Is it good advice?  Yes.

        Should it come from his brother, who is close in age to Harry?  No.


I feel like most people in Harry's position would be able to listen to that advice without resentment if it came from someone in an older generation -- a parent, uncle, aunt, even grandparent maybe.

        But to hear it from a sibling who is basically in your same age group -- most people would be hard-pressed to not get aggravated.  It would be received as:  'I am your contemporary and I know so much more than you about affairs of the heart.'

        ('Ah yes, thank you for your wise words -- please follow me over here, where I can show you our swimming pool -- up close!')


-30-

Monday, December 19, 2022

Laguna Beach

 


Jerry Hall, photographed by Patrick Lichfield


------------------ [excerpt from Jerry Hall:  My life in pictures.  Quadrille - 2010] --------------------------------


Patrick Lichfield


Patrick and his lovely wife Leonora were neighbours of ours on Mustique.  

They were often there at the same time as us, and their children were similar ages to ours, so I knew him first as a friend.    


We'd all get together at people's houses for dinner and games, and Patrick and Leonora were great fun.  He was an extremely well-known photographer, though we only did the occasional job together.  

        One of them was an advertisement for the Mandarin Oriental Hotel chain, which we shot in Laguna Beach, California, with me in a cowboy hat and a white shirt standing in the desert.  

On the day we had to shoot it one of my children was sick and I had to stay in the hotel, so Patrick shot the background and then came and shot me and superimposed the two.  


It was very successful and is still running all these years later.


___________________________


-30-

Friday, December 16, 2022

picture this

 

Terence Donovan photograph of Jerry Hall


--------------------- excerpt ----------------

Terence Donovan


I did a lot of work with Terence after I came to live in London.  

He was one of the original celebrity photographers in London along with David Bailey and Brian Duffy.  


        Between them they captured and helped to create the swinging sixties that made London the fashion and style centre of the world.  


Terence was a lovely guy, and great fun to work with.  He'd take the photos quite quickly, get it all sewn up and then we'd go out and have caviar for lunch and he'd entertain us with stories.  

He was a black belt in judo and wrote a book about it, and he used to tell me about it.  

        He was an adventurous photographer, who always loved to try something new.


______________________

{Jerry Hall:  My life in pictures.  Quadrille Publishing - 2010}


-30-

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

photographs and memories

 

photograph of Meryl Streep, by David Bailey


--------------------- [excerpt from Jerry Hall:  My life in pictures -- Quadrille, 2010] -------------------------


David Bailey:  A Lifelong Friend


David Bailey is the most wonderful photographer to work with.  

We have had so many good times, producing such glorious photographs together.  

His sharp, pared down, tightly cropped and gritty monochrome images transform his sitters into heroic figures.  

He gave me a shot he had taken of Bob Dylan which is one of my favourite photographs of all time.  And I have always loved the photos he has taken of me.     



        One of the things I love most about Bailey is his integrity.  If he doesn't feel inspired by a job, he turns it down -- no matter how much money is on offer.  

Bailey has dyslexia and, while not always adept at articulating his thoughts verbally, he is a visual genius.  He left school at 15 and learned his art by becoming a photographer's assistant, and by his early twenties he was taking pictures for Vogue.  

        Because he works so instinctively, clients have to trust him and let him do his job -- and he always produces stunning photographs....



        One of the most memorable shoots Bailey and I did together was for French Vogue, in the south of France.  We went with the great artist and photographer Jacques Henri Lartigue, who was then in his late eighties.  

        Lartigue had been famous in his youth for his images of the privileged world of France at the turn of the century.  

His photographs of horse drawn carriages, early automobiles and glamorous women and their friends had really captured an era.



        He had been re-discovered in his seventies in New York and had started working for Vogue.  When I met him he was an adorable smiling, white haired gentleman who took snaps of me while Bailey photographed us both.  Later I called his wife begging for one of those photos, but she told me that sadly they hadn't come out well.  I'd have loved to have seen them.


-30-

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

in the middle of all that success

 


I really like Jerry Hall's book.

I can't stop discussing it.

I really like it.

Why?

I don't know, for sure.

        When I read a passage in it (and look at the photographs), it's like a trip around the world.


--------------------------- I really like it when she has a series of pages where, on each page, there will be a description of a photographer and her time working with him -- like the guy who photographed her in the museum in France.  And a picture.


November 29 -- Richard Avedon, with his moving feast of light

December 2 -- Horst!

December 6 -- Gunter Sachs

December 7 -- Hiro

December 8 -- Bill King


------------------- [excerpt from the book] --------------- It was a lot of fun being on tour -- travelling with the boys, sharing their after-show tales and jokes, sitting in the private plane after a successful show, feeling a common bond.  

It was like being part of a big family.  


But it was also hard work; all the travelling was physically and mentally exhausting.  And the groupies were really irritating.  

        Girls would sneak into the hotels and get backstage and throw themselves at the band.  I had to watch out for them -- they were ruthless and would do anything to get noticed!  Often they would have sex with the security men just to get backstage passes.



        By 1979 Mick and I had settled into New York living.  We rented a lovely home and had great friends, but Mick wasn't touring and had too much time on his hands.  He started going out a lot without me.  He would say he had a meeting and then call to say it was running late.  

He had been linked with several girls in the gossip columns, but he denied it all, of course.


        During this time I modelled for the big American designers such as Bill Blass and Oscar de La Renta.  Oscar took me on trips to do fashion shows all over America and a couple of times to Japan.  

Being in the middle of all that success was like being in the eye of the storm.  


The phone rang constantly, as did the doorbell.  I always had to answer it because Mick wouldn't -- he was usually watching cricket on TV.


-30-

Thursday, December 8, 2022

Linda Evangelista, Rene Russo, Jerry Hall

 




---------------------- [Jerry Hall:  My life in pictures.  Quadrille -- 2010.]


Bill King


Bill was pretty mad.

He always wanted high energy and lots of action on his shoots, and he used to have wind machines and an assistant with a plastic water spray.


He'd put on two wind machines and spritz you and shout 'jump, jump, more, more, more'.  It was exhausting -- you really had to be in top shape with him.  Because of his style there was a kind of looniness in his pictures.  You didn't always look that great because you'd be kind of leaping across the page.


        His look was all about energy and movement.  He was fun, quite wild, a bit of a party boy.  I enjoyed working with him and he booked me a lot, we had a great time together.  He loved gossiping, just like Scavullo.


-30-

Wednesday, December 7, 2022

on the sand by the sea

 




------------------ [Jerry Hall:  My life in pictures.  Quadrille -- 2010.] --------------------------


Hiro


Hiro was a great artist, and a lovely man who had started out as Avedon's assistant and we worked together a lot along with the Japanese hairdresser Suga, who always worked with him.


Everything about the way Hiro worked reflected his Japanese culture.  His studio was incredibly organised and minimalist, and his work was very technical and beautifully crafted.  His assistants didn't have anything to do but hand him something because he knew all the technicalities and he prepared it all himself.

        He had a lovely personality; sweet, gentle and very giggly.


I'm surprised he's not more celebrated as he took such wonderful pictures -- elegant, clean, with startling colour and often with unexpected elements.


        We went to the Caribbean island of St. Martin to do a campaign for the Japanese designer Hanae Mori, where Hiro took this incredible photo of me, using a camera lens that NASA had developed.

        It was a huge close-up of my head, as I lay on the sand by the sea, looking like a giant sculpture from Easter Island.


        There was no retouching then, and only someone of 18 could get away with having their pores magnified like that!  It was later used as a poster and in a calendar.


-30-

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

"no" in six languages

 

artwork by Gunter Sachs


---------------------- [excerpt from Jerry Hall:  My life in pictures.  Quadrille - 2010] --------------------------


Gunter Sachs


Gunter was a famous photographer who was also an economist, a mathematician and an industrialist.  


He had been married to Brigitte Bardot and had quite a reputation as a ladies' man, but when I went to stay with him and his wife Mirja in Saint-Tropez I found a polite, charming guy.  

        His wife was lovely, they had little children and it was all very normal.  


I was booked to do a shoot with him but I wouldn't go topless, so all the other girls in the photo are topless, and I've got my hands and hair covering myself.  He took the shot in his house on the beach where he had a giant chessboard made out of stones.


        Every photographer wanted you to do topless shots, it was a constant battle.  Most of the time I said no.  My mother had warned me not to do nude shots, but I wasn't just being modest -- in those days if you were working for Vogue, which was the pinnacle of every model's career, they wouldn't work with you if you had pictures in Playboy.  

High fashion and soft porn just didn't mix, so I was always careful.


-30-

Monday, December 5, 2022

the one where Chandler writes a book

 


Matthew Perry (Chandler on Friends) recently had a memoir published, that gives the story of his life, and also discussing his addiction issues.

        He has been telling interviewers he wrote the book to help other people who struggle with addiction.


        Some Internet commenters complain that he "made bad choices" and then wants to get even richer by selling a book about it.


        I came across his book on Audible, where he himself is reading it aloud -- it's on YouTube, for free.


        So then -- having it free on You Tube takes away the criticism that he's just trying to make even more money, with this project.

        Then some commenters under the You Tube book were yelling -- "this is stealing from Matthew Perry!  It's wrong to have this on You Tube!"

        LOL, someone's always caterwauling in the comment sections, no matter what you do.


        Another comment there said what I was thinking:  Matthew Perry must have a lawyer and an I-T and an assistant and a veritable "army" of people, some of whom cover the Internet daily and "block" anything on there that belongs to Mr. Perry, if he doesn't want it to be out there for free.

        I think that book sitting there on You Tube proves he wrote it with the first priority being to help other people.


-------------------- Book-people will still buy the book.  And there are people who never go on You Tube.  So it isn't such a "threat," imo.

_______________________________


Meanwhile, I listened to most of it while doing chores -- it was interesting!  I had to skip over parts where he described some of the severe symptoms and hospital treatments.  Can't do it.  And the drug stuff, I kind of understood and kind of didn't -- if these drugs like Zanax and Vicadin cause such horrible effects, why do doctors prescribe them?  This doesn't make sense to me.


I sort of have a prejudice, or stereotype, when it comes to doctors and other professionals.  The top part of my brain can know that these are just people, and some of them may be corrupt.

        But an intense and immovable belief, in the back of my brain, tells me doctors, lawyers, priests, teachers, etc., cannot be corrupt, they have to do the right thing.

        (I guess maybe I need to work on my brain, or my belief systems and assumptions....)


In the book Matthew also talks about the entertainment business and how some of it works.  That part I was really interested in.

        He mentions several times having a lunch-meeting, or dinner-meeting, with Bruce Willis or some other major star -- they go to an expensive restaurant and order food and never eat any of it.

        They have their conversation and then they leave.


They should box up that food and take to a food bank, or ask the restaurant people to do it.

        (Actors can be imperfect??  Aaaauuuugggghhhh!!!!)


I got to thinking, if they're not going to eat a meal, why go to a restaurant?  Meet at each other's houses, or sit on the front stoop, and have bottled water.  Don't worry about food, and save money.


        But then I remembered Matthew Perry mentions in his narration of his book, that when they go to these expensive and trendy restaurants, at the door there will be a gaggle of "paparazzi" to take their pictures.  So I guess they want that.

        (Some of the paparazzi should take photographs of all the food those guys waste.)


He also writes / talks about what kind of stories work in the TV business, and what kind of stories don't work.  Except there are no rules.  A lot of it is luck.  You can't always tell what is going to be popular at any given moment.


        Apparently when you work on an Aaron Sorkin (Charlie Wilson's War) project, you cannot change one word, or one contraction -- if script says, "He is going to be late" and the actor says it as, "He's going to be late" they have to shoot it over again.  And Mr. Sorkin doesn't like to hear any ideas from actors.


        MP was accustomed to more of a collaborative environment at Friends.


Perry uses the "Shakespeare" example when describing how you have to say the exact words, exactly as they are in the script, when working with Sorkin -- Matthew Perry says, "like it's Shakespeare or something."

        That's a familiar expression -- I've heard some other actor say the same thing, or maybe I read it....


Back in Shakespeare's time over in England, I wonder if they would be rehearsing a play and one of the actors would get impatient and grumble to William Shakespeare, "Come on, man!  Like it's Shakespeare or something...!"


-30-

Friday, December 2, 2022

"you'll see things in a different way"

 

Rodin Museum

     (Urban Sketchers)


--------------- [excerpt from Jerry Hall, My life in pictures.  Quadrille Publishing.  2010] --------------------------


Horst


Horst was a German-American photographer who had taken some extraordinary photos of celebrities as far back as the thirties.  


When I worked with him he was in his seventies and working for American Vogue.  


His style was very arty and surrealist, I thought it was beautiful and I did quite a lot of work with him.  

Horst liked natural light and tungsten light; he was an old-time photographer who took very stylized black-and-white, graphic photographs.  


He was a charming man who was polite and thoughtful, entertaining and very knowledgeable.  

He loved to use a classical setting and one of my favourite photographic sessions with him was at the Rodin museum in Paris, where he pictured me alongside the stunning marble sculptures.


__________________________________

♫♪ ♪♫

If you wake up and don't want to smile

If it takes just a little while

Open your eyes and look at the day

You'll see things in a different way



Don't stop thinking about tomorrow

Don't stop, it'll soon be here

It'll be here, better than before

Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone



Why not think about times to come?

And not about the things that you've done

If your life was bad to you,

Just think what tomorrow will do



Don't stop thinking about tomorrow

Don't stop, it'll soon be here

It'll be here -- better than before

Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone



All I want is to see you smile

If it takes just a little while

I know you don't believe that it's true

I never meant any harm to you



Don't stop thinking about tomorrow

Don't stop, it'll soon be here

It'll be here, better than before

Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone



Don't - stop - thinkin' about tomorrow

Don't stop, it'll soon be here

It'll be here, better than before

Yesterday's gone, yesterday's gone



Don't you look back

(Ooh)

Don't you look back

(Ooh)

Don't you look back

_____________________________________

{"Don't Stop," song written by Christine McVie, recorded by Fleetwood Mac, Rumours album, 1977}


-30-

Thursday, December 1, 2022

can you hear me calling ♫ ♪ out your name

 



Fleetwood Mac is such an interesting band:

All the early line-ups from the 1960s to '74.

Then the 1975-onward version, with Buckingham and Nicks --


Three men and two women

Three English people and two Americans

Three songwriters (Christine, Stevie, and Lindsey)


songs from

Fleetwood Mac (1975 album)

and Rumours

that were written by Christine McVie:


"Warm Ways"

"Over My Head"

"Say You Love Me"

"World Turning" (with Lindsey Buckingham)

"Sugar Daddy"

"Don't Stop"

"Songbird"

"The Chain" (along with the other four band members)

"You Make Loving Fun"

"Oh Daddy"


Two more from later on:

"Everywhere" (currently in a Chevrolet commercial)

and

"As Long as You Follow."

__________________________________


        Reading Comments under the New York Times story about Christine McVie, I found that there were some from people who were very critical of the post-1974 Fleetwood Mac that included Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham.

        These commenters seem to be mostly people who were fans of the earlier Fleetwood Mac that had Bob Welch, Danny Kirwan, Peter Green, Bob Weston, Jeremy Spencer rotating in and out of the band.


        These fans / commenters liked these early iterations of "FM."  Then when Buckingham and Nicks joined, it was a somewhat different band.  

Both were songwriters, and Lindsey played the guitar, so there was bound to be change in both sound and in what kind of songs were going to be created, because now you've got total of three songwriters, two of them new.


        The band then focused on making records that would reach a large number of people, and hopefully sell, and it worked.  Fleetwood Mac reached a new level of success, with the famous Rumours album.

And that new version of FM is vastly irritating to some fans of the earlier "Mac."  They remark on the post-1975 FM being a "candy-pop band," etc.


-------------------------- It reminds me of the fans of Bob Dylan's earliest folk albums getting mad when he "went electric."


(concert promoter in 1965, trying to calm down a crowd:  "OK, OK!  Bob has gone to get his acoustic guitar!!")


-30-

Wednesday, November 30, 2022

Christine Perfect

 

John McVie; Christine McVie; Mick Fleetwood



Christine McVie (nee Perfect) died today, at the age of 79.


some of the Reader Comments under the New York Times story --


Scott 

NYC

Ugh!!!!!!!!  :(


EJD

New York

Oh my heart.


Paul Smith

Austin, Texas

RIP Christine!  I loved not only her hits with the Buckingham-Nicks era Mac, but also her album with Chicken Shack, and her songs on the underappreciated FM albums from Future Games through Heroes Are Hard to Find.  

Her wonderful songs and recordings will live on!



Steve Mason

Ramsey, New Jersey

Great singer, great talent, great band.


Robert

Virginia

Christine McVie perfectly balances Fleetwood Mac.  Understated elegance in her songs and voice.


Jennene Colky

Denver

She was born Christine Perfect.  Seldom was a name more apropos.  RIP.


Newton Guy

Newton, Massachusetts

How sad.  What a legendary combination of talent that band was.


Paul

Sora, Panama

...Christine's soulful voice... Losing her seems so damn... personal.  I'll never stop loving her.


Michael 

Fresno

I loved Christine.  She always felt like the most balanced member of the group, and if you've never listened to her song "Why" -- on the Mystery to Me album -- go put it on, right now.


Pegah

San Francisco, California

Indeed a genuine loss.  She made this world a happier place


Elex Tenney

Beaverton, Oregon

Great band; she had a great voice.  Another sad passing for my generation.



Cinnamon Girl

New Orleans

...the songs are not just nostalgic.  They are timeless


Ed

New York

I have literally a lifetime of memories soundtracked by her exceptional songs.


Sandra

Olympia, Washington

Her songs made my heart sing.  Thanks for the memories.


Juraj Kovac

Slovakia

Warm Ways was her most inspired song for me.


magzeen

new england

Fleetwood Mac was the soundtrack of my life when I was in high school.



Quohog

Jersey Shore

Wonderful voice.


Elizabeth

New England

"The songbirds are singing like they know the score"...



Vera Camden

Cleveland

The lilting voice of a generation.  She was brilliant.


Karla Decker

Victoria, B.C.

I loved her voice....My contemporaries are splitting the scene at an alarming rate.


Stef

New Hampshire

She was the heart and soul of Fleetwood Mac.  Her passing is like that of a close friend, but then I am now listening to Rumours and she's here.  She always will be.


Sedat Nemli

Istanbul. Turkey

Née Perfect.  And she was.  R.I.P.


Eric

Virginia

You can take me to paradise and then again you can be cold as ice.... her voice and music just made me float among the clouds


Andrew

Philadelphia

...Fleetwood Mac was always a favorite of mine, too, and Rumors was the first album I ever bought.


John 

Akron, Ohio

Christine McVie was a "perfect" fit for each of the several phases of Fleetwood Mac, despite the very different styles of Peter Green, Bob Welch, and Buckingham / Nicks.


ThurmanMunson

Canton, Ohio

45 years, I've marveled at Christine McVie and Stevie Nicks, two of the best Rock 'N Rollers of all time, who held together one of the best Rock 'N Roll bands ever.  Gonna not shed a tear but raise a full glass.



Bascom Hill

Bay Area

She sang a soaring background vocal on Bob Welch's Sentimental Lady.  An epic voice.


Art

Phippsburg, Maine

"Hypnotized" was on Mystery to Me, not Penguin.  Still my favorite Fleetwood Mac record.


Redd Pharmer

Coming Out Of Turn Four

Will have to pour a whisky neat and toast the memory of that warm voice.  RIP.


Sane citizen

NY

Fleetwood Mac was just magical.  Thanks for all, Christie.


Marcy

Paris, Texas

....I love the songs "Everywhere" and "Little Lies." ...


Gary

New Mexico

I fell in love with her with Chicken Shack.  For me she was always the center of Fleetwood Mac.


Chindhee

Wyoming

...I'm glad that music lives forever.


Rob F

California

For those of us alive in the seventies and seeing Fleetwood Mac playing Days on the Green in Oakland, it is hard to imagine a more optimistic time.


______________________________________


-30-

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

such a good book

 

Jerry Hall by Richard Avedon



------------------ [excerpt from Jerry Hall:  My life in pictures, Quadrille Publishing, 2010] --------------------- Richard Avedon was a fantastic photographer who took very intimate and focused shots.  He had assistants with hand-held lights so the lighting was constantly moving around you and you were free to pose in any direction.  

Other photographers had fixed lights on stands and you had to stay looking in one direction, but Avedon created a moving feast of light and you were free to do whatever you wanted, which was very liberating. --------------------------- [end / excerpt]

_______________________________


I like how she calls it "a moving feast of light" -- a phrase borrowed from novelist Ernest Hemingway, who said,

        "If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast."


        A Moveable Feast is also the title of a memoir by Hemingway.


-30-

Monday, November 28, 2022

ripping off the consequence-immune

 

Hustlers   (2019)


The last night to watch American Beauty (1999) on Netflix is November 30th -- however, it just showed up on Amazon Prime Video...sometimes that happens, a film "overlaps"...


I finally said, "I want to see Hustlers," so paid to see it on Amazon.

Tighter pacing would have helped this film, but it's not bad.

It got more interesting for me when I read somewhere that it was to be a sort of parallel, or homage, to Goodfellas.  

        So I said, 'OK - watch them back-to-back...'


The Jennifer Lopez character has the nerves-of-steel for that shit they're doing, but not everyone in her crew does:  when the Constance Wu character says softly, "I don't want to hurt anybody," you realize -- OK, this young lady does not belong anywhere near the credit-card operation, and maybe not even in the primary, original job which was being a "stripper."  

        And when Ramona starts recruiting random marginal ladies of doubtful repute -- it starts a downward slide which is similar to Goodfellas -- where it all falls apart...


-30-

Friday, November 25, 2022

grit and gratitude

 

Flat Boat
Andrew Wyeth



A You Tuber I listen to sometimes said that "grit and gratitude" is her motto for the holiday season.
        She added, "Your problems would be some people's miracles."


I looked for poems about November -- one that I found was written by Maggie Dietz:



November


Show's over, folks.  And didn't October do
A bang-up job?  Crisp breezes, full-throated cries
Of migrating geese, low-floating coral moon.


Nothing left but fool's gold in the trees.
Did I love it enough, the full-throttle foliage,
While it lasted?  Was I dazzled?  The bees


Have up and quit their last-ditch flights of forage
And gone to shiver in their winter clusters.
Field mice hit the barns, big squirrels gorge


On busted chestnuts.  A sky like hardened plaster
Hovers.  The pasty river, its next of kin,
Coughs up reed grass fat as feather dusters.


Even the swarms of kids have given in
To winter's big excuse, boxed-in allure:
TVs ricochet light behind pulled curtains.


The days throw up a closed sign around four.
The hapless customer who'd wanted something 
Arrives to find lights out, a bolted door.



-30-

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

tobacco-land

 


"Winston tastes good, like a cigarette should!"

was a slogan in a television advertisement for this brand of "smokes."  

'90s-kids etc. might be disbelieving of the idea that cigarettes used to be advertised on TV, but they were:


"I'd rather fight than switch!"  

        Tareyton

"I'd walk a mile for a Camel."

        (Camel)

"You've come a long way, baby!"

        (Virginia Slims, working a little "women's lib" into the theme)

______________________________


There was a commercial for Salem cigarettes that I used to notice when I was in the early years of grade school -- seated around a long table, a bunch of adults sang boisterously,

♫ ♪ ♪♪

You can take Salem out of the country, but --

You can't take the country out of Salem!


They swayed back and forth as they sang -- it looked like they were having a fun party.


----------------------- The "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should" slogan had hit a snag earlier, in 1954, when news anchor Walter Cronkite was supposed to do a live-read of a Winston ad, and he protested that the grammar was incorrect -- he said it should read, "Winston tastes good as a cigarette should."


        Winston ads later on, that I heard over the TV, built on that one-time controversy by saying the line correctly -- "as a cigarette should" but also throwing in a little back-and-forth where one character would say, "What-a-yah want, good grammar or good taste?"



The Tareyton ads showed an adult with a black eye, and he (or she) would say, "I'd rather fight than switch" -- that slogan was memorable, for some reason; my mother had an irritated antipathy to those ads.

--------------------------------------------


President Nixon signed legislation banning cigarette ads on TV and radio on April 1, 1970.

        ("Hello, R.J. Reynolds?  APRIL FOOL!!")


The last televised cigarette ad ran at 11:50 p.m. January 1, 1971, during Johnny Carson.


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Tuesday, November 22, 2022

"Up To the Minute"

 

CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite   1962


The Mary Tyler Moore Show is currently on Amazon Prime Video -- Walter Cronkite appeared in Episode 21 of Season 4 (starts at 19:40).


It's a good scene.


I was thinking maybe it is "meta" because Walter Cronkite -- the real television journalist -- appears on the MTM Show, which is fiction -- and Cronkite plays himself.  Or -- he is himself.

        In the storyline, Cronkite is an acquaintance of Lou Grant (who is a fictional character on the show, portrayed by Ed Asner).


(The word meta came to my mind, but I'm still not sure what it is -- when I Google "what does meta mean" words and paragraphs come onto my android tablet screen, and I read some of them and end up more confused than when I started.)

________________________________


[Wikipedia excerpt] --------------- Walter Cronkite became one of the top American reporters in World War II, covering battles in North Africa and Europe....He was one of eight journalists selected by the United States Army Air Forces to fly bombing raids over Germany in a Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress as part of a group called The Writing 69th....He covered the Battle of the Bulge, and after the war, he covered the Nuremberg trials....


In 1950, Cronkite joined CBS News in its young and growing television division, again recruited by [Edward R.] Murrow.  Cronkite began working at WTOP-TV (now WUSA), the CBS affiliate in Washington, D.C.  He originally served as anchor of the network's 15-minute late-Sunday-evening newscast Up To the Minute, which followed What's My Line? at 11:00 pm ET from 1951 through 1962.


...On April 16, 1962, Cronkite succeeded Douglas Edwards as anchorman of CBS's nightly feature newscast, tentatively renamed Walter Cronkite with the News, but later the CBS Evening News on September 2, 1963, when the show was expanded from 15 to 30 minutes....

        ...During the 1960s and 1970s, Walter Cronkite was often cited as "the most trusted man in America" after being so named in an opinion poll.  [end - Wikipedia excerpts]

________________________________


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