Another Nice Message

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Fans of Laurel and Hardy (I am one) have long lamented their fate on home video. It's been a frustrating litany of sporadic releases, most of which didn't do a very good job of packaging, presentation or promotion. Sometimes, the issuers have managed to get one of those three things right but never quite all three. You can buy the complete works of Cheech and Chong on DVD. But Stan and Ollie? Well, not in the United States, you can't.

Just to rub it in, a superb set was issued a few years ago in the United Kingdom. It contains darn near everything The Boys did as a team, lovingly restored and presented on 21 (!) DVDs, totalling about a thousand minutes of my favorite comedians. That's the good news. The bad news for most of us is that it's a PAL/Region 2 release. The DVDs will play in Albania, Andorra, Austria, Bahrain, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Greece, Greenland, Hungary, Iceland, Iran, Iraq, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Malta, Moldova, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Oman, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Vatican City, Yemen and Yugoslavia…

…but not, grumble grumble, the United States. Osama bin Laden can watch this set. We can't.

So American lovers of Laurel and Hardy had a few options, one being to move to one of those countries. Another has been to purchase a region-free DVD player. They aren't expensive. WalMart sells the Durabrand-1002, which claims it'll play anything from anywhere, for $24.88 and other brands are available for not all that much more.

Third option? You could always do without. If you've done without this far, the following might interest you…

Laurel & Hardy – The Collection has now been seriously discounted. It originally sold for £199.99 (about $333 USD) and it's now down to £32.98 (around $55 USD). Here's a link to order it from Amazon UK.

There's a fellow skulking around comic book conventions offering a bootleg version of this set, converted to NTSC/Region 1 but you don't want that. First of all, it's a bootleg. Second of all, I saw the picture quality of one disc and it looked like Stan and Ollie were trapped in one of those multi-layer Jell-O parfait desserts with different color streaks throughout. You're much better off buying the genuine article plus a region-free player…especially since there's no reason to believe we'll soon have a playable-in-the-U.S.-of-A. version on this thing soon. If and when we do, it'll cost a lot more than $55 plus the cost of a region-free player.

Thanks to David Kirkpatrick for letting me know about this.

A Dose of Reality

The White House has set up a website called The Health Insurance Reform Reality Check to debunk the main attacks against their proposals. I'm glad they're doing this but just as some people will never be convinced the world is round, some will never believe that the new plan won't involve putting old folks to death when their medicine starts costing too much.

A question for those who read this website: Have you seen — and if so, can you direct me to — an article that lays out a real case against the current reform proposals? I can't believe there aren't genuine, valid arguments against them but all the talking points we seem to get fall into one of three categories…

  1. You take something rotten that health insurance companies do all the time like denying coverage. You make like that never happens but would constantly if the government got into the health care business, even though the government would have little or no incentive to do that thing, whereas for-profit companies have plenty.
  2. You pretend that the government isn't already in the health care business…and quite successfully, at that. Has anyone ever seriously proposed turning the V.A. over to Aetna to run? I mean, besides maybe Aetna and those they pay to say such things. And has anyone checked to see how many Senators who oppose government-run health care are turning it down and buying Blue Shield policies for themselves and their loved ones?
  3. You just plain lie about what's in the proposal. It's so long that no one's going to read it. So if you say, "Under this plan, if you get sick the government has the right to kill your housepets," no one's going to utterly disprove it. At best, some in the media will pit a talking head who says it's in there against one who says it's not and then act like it's all an open question.

Seriously: Can anyone point to an article against the current proposals that doesn't play those games? I'd certainly be open to the argument that this particular Health Care Reform package is flawed in its design and details but no one seems to be making it. Instead, it's all about "death panels" and arranging for Granny to take the permanent dirt nap before she's ready for it.

Today's Video Link

Here's a must-view N.P.R. interview from a few years back…

Play by Play

This isn't an obit but it's going to feel like one. Vin Scully — the voice of the Los Angeles Dodgers and the best darned baseball announcer of all time — is telling folks that he'll probably retire after the 2010 season. I don't even follow baseball much anymore and I'm saddened by the news.

I probably listen to him for about four innings a year but it was always comforting to know he was there, and that it was humanly possible to be that good at something for that long. I don't even care about the Dodgers and couldn't name a member of the team if you had a Louisville Slugger and threatened to belt my nads into left field. I just liked listening to Vin…and I'll be sad when that's no longer possible.

June in August

That's a photo of Bill Scott, who was the voice of Bullwinkle and the producer of his show, and June Foray, who was the voice of Rocky the Flying Squirrel. This photo did not make the cut and is not found in June's newly-released autobiography, Did You Grow Up With Me, Too?

But dozens of other great photos did. They illustrate the wonderful anecdotes and the delightful tale of how this tiny lady with the big voice became the First Lady of Cartoon Voices…and by the way, she's also been heard in hundreds and hundreds of non-animated movies and TV shows and commercials, and she founded the L.A. branch of ASIFA and she was on the Board of Governors of the Motion Picture Academy and she's just an amazing woman.

The book made its debut at the Comic-Con in San Diego, where the line of June's fans backed up to Frostbite Falls. Not everyone had a chance to purchase one with her autograph so we've decided to make that possible. We've set up www.juneforay.com where you can go — right this minute, even — and order your every own copy, signed by June…and she'll even autograph it to you.

Earl Kress and I helped her write it, and our pal Leonard Maltin contributed the foreword. But never mind us. Get one because it's June Foray. That's reason enough right there.

Once again, that's www.juneforay.com. Your one-stop destination for copies of June Foray's autobiography signed by June Foray.

Material Guy

About once a week, some blossoming cartoonist writes to ask me about art supplies. Seeing as how I last purchased art supplies in the eighties, I'm probably the wrong guy to ask. One right guy would be Tom Richmond, who does such splendid work for MAD Magazine. In this post, he tells of what he uses…and his whole blog is a trove of tips for those who wish to make money drawing silly pictures.

While I'm on the subject of Tom: That Sergio guy ain't the only one of The Usual Gang of Idiots whose work is hanging in a museum someplace. A show of Tom's spot-on caricatures is currently festooning the walls of the Children's Museum of Pittsburgh, which I believe is located in, uh, Pittsburgh. If you too are located in Pittsburgh or anywhere near it, you might want to drop by. And believe it or not, Sergio will be drawing on the walls of the Men's Room there, too.

Late Night News

A couple of points about this article that notes the ratings plunge (but demographics gain) of The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien behind the desk. One is, of course, that NBC ain't as happy with the situation as they claim to be. They couldn't be. Another is that CBS isn't crowing too loudly about Letterman's ratings dominance because everyone at both networks is thinking that anything can happen once Mr. Leno's new show debuts. It's all so lacking in precedent — and the viewerships for Conan and Dave seem so uncommitted — that no one wants to predict anything.

And the third thing is that because of the second thing, everyone's quietly drawing up contingency plans. CBS is thinking about what they'll do if all the late night viewing patterns collapse. NBC is thinking about what it would involve to put Leno back on The Tonight Show. And all the other networks are thinking that once they see what Leno's show will do to the dynamics, it might be a dandy time to invest in new late night programming. No one's saying it out loud but meetings are being held and proposals are being pitched. A friend of mine who's in the thick of it says, "Everyone knows someone's going to eat it…and they're all poised to leap in and capitalize on that failure. Just as soon as they know whose it is."

Recommended Reading

Bob Elisberg — who, I'm proud to say, I no longer owe a lunch or anything else — thinks that a Kennedy Center nod should go to the songcrafting team of Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. Absolutely.

Writers Guild Business

For what it's worth: In the upcoming Writers Guild election, I'm throwing my support to the slate of Elias Davis for President, Tom Schulman for Vice President and David N. Weiss for Secretary/Treasurer. Here's a link to the website promoting this trio and many fine board candidates. Not that there aren't some good folks not on this list…but I think the Guild is doing a lot of things right these days and that these candidates are primed to continue and build on that momentum.

Like I said: For what it's worth.

Today's Video Link

Last night, I posted a link to a commercial for Fruit Stripe Gum and made reference to the ubiquitous (for a time in New York) singer who sang for the zebra in it. Greg Ehrbar, who knows about this kind of stuff, says it's probably Mike Stewart…and the female singer is Robie Lester, who was on every kids' record that came out in the fifties and sixties. Or so it seems.

Greg also notes that in South Pacific, Bill Lee did the singing for John Kerr. I've written before here about Mr. Lee, who was heard in a heck of a lotta movies. Greg reminded me of a few in his e-mail: Bill Lee sang for Christopher Plummer in The Sound of Music and for Yogi Bear in Hey There, It's Yogi Bear. What's more, his daughter Diana sang for Samantha Eggar in Doctor Dolittle, Diana Sowle in Willy Wonka and Liv Ullmann in Lost Horizon. So dubbing other actors is apparently hereditary.

Moving on to new business: Thirty-five years ago today, Richard M. Nixon resigned as President of the United States. Here's part of the speech he delivered in prime time the night before. My father thought it was the best thing he ever saw on television and was hoping the networks would make it a weekly series…

Recommended Reading

The comparisons of Barack Obama to Hitler strike me as a weapon of agonized desperation, hurled by folks who don't have anything meaningful to throw at him. That's pretty much the same as any comparisons of anyone to Hitler unless, of course, the person in question has actually waged genocide. I think if someone kills a lot of Jews, it's okay to liken them to ol' Adolf. But short of that, it's just a matter of some cluck thinking, "Hmm…what's the worst thing I can say about this guy? I know! I'll say he's like Hitler!"

This blog post by someone named "citisven" has an interesting take on the old Call 'em Hitler trick. You might want to give it a peek.

Sergio on Display

My amigo Sergio Aragonés is being celebrated in his home town of Ojai this month with an exhibition of his work. Personally, if I were setting up the gallery, I'd hang drawings by Mort Drucker and Jack Davis, then have Sergio draw on the baseboards and in the corners. But that's just me.

Seriously, it's a great honor for a most deserving individual and there's a very nice piece in the Los Angeles Times about it…actually two items. Read the short one first, then read the long one.

The exhibition is at the Ojai Valley Museum and it's there until October 4. There will be several appearances there by Señor Crowdscene during the run…and when he isn't there officially, he'll probably be in the Men's Room, drawing on the walls.

Incidentally: The above photo is the earliest known picture of Evanier and Aragonés together, though we'd known each other for several years by that point. It was taken (I deduce) at the 1972 San Diego Comic-Con, which was called San Diego's West Coast Comic Convention and held at the El Cortez Hotel. What puzzles me is why I found the negative to this photograph among the strips of negatives I took at that convention. The obvious answer is that someone else took it with my camera…but as you can see, in the photo I'm holding my camera, and I'm pretty sure that's the only camera I owned at the time. One of life's little mysteries.

By the way, my computer has been fixed but I'm still way behind.

Closed for Repairs

My primary computer has gone banana-whackie on me again and I'm over here, as you can plainly see, on my backup computer. I was "behind" enough before this happened and now…well, I may not be posting a lot here during the rest of this weekend.

I would appreciate it if there were no deaths of anyone I care enough about that I feel I need to post an obit. Actually, I'd prefer it if all such people would wait a long, long time before dying…at least until after I go. But if you must die before then, try not to do it before…oh, if you could hold off 'til Tuesday at the earliest, that would help me out a lot. Thank you.

Job Loss

As we mentioned back here, the economist and game show host Ben Stein has outdone himself in the "I'll say anything if you pay me enough" sweepstakes with his endorsement of a new online scam. That has proven to be enough to get him tossed out of The New York Times. Apparently, being consistently wrong about everything wasn't enough.

Recommended Reading

Nate Silver crunches numbers better than just about any number cruncher on the Internet. He says Obama has cut taxes for 98.6% of working households in this country. You'd think Republicans would like him for that, wouldn't you?