Bill Maher's New Rules for Hollywood.
Monthly Archives: March 2012
Soup 4 Less
As noted here so often that I'm sick of saying it, I really like the Classic Creamy Tomato Soup they offer during March at the Souplantation restaurants, which are known as Sweet Tomatoes restaurants in some vicinities. If you go to one the next few days, here's a great discount coupon you'll want to use.
Great Photos of Stan Laurel and/or Oliver Hardy
Number one hundred and seventy in a series…
Today's Stu's Show!
Stu Shostak has a great guest today on Stu's Show. It's Joey Luft, the son of the legendary Judy Garland. You probably haven't heard him interviewed because he doesn't do it very often. He'll be discussing his mother's variety show (on which he made his TV debut) and her life and career, as well as what it's like to grow up with such a famous parent. Sounds like quite a show.
You can hear each episode of Stu's Show when it's first broadcast at 4 PM Pacific time which is 7 PM on the East Coast . You Central Time Zoners can figure out the time wherever you are. Listen to it at the Stu's Show website. And if you miss it, fear not. At that same site, you can download the show in MP3 for 99 cents…the best bargain on the 'net. But wait! It gets better. Select four past Stu's Show episodes from the archives and pay for three. What the heck are you waiting for?
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Today's Video Link
Here's another installment of Bruce Kimmel's Outside the Box, a series about unusual musical theater…
Soup 4 2
So all this month, while they have their Classic Creamy Tomato Soup available as a selection, I'm frequenting the Souplantation. Tonight, I was there with my pal Mark Rothman, who's a very funny guy who wrote and/or produced some very funny TV shows. He also writes a very funny weblog that should be of interest to anyone who wonders about backstage doings in the teevee business, especially on sitcoms. I don't always agree with Mark but he's right about an awful lot of stuff, including my favorite soup which he liked well enough to go back for a second bowl.
Souplantation has, by the way, altered the recipe for their Classic Creamy Tomato Soup. It used to involve a chicken stock and now it's vegetarian. I didn't notice the change when I made my first two visits of the month but I did tonight on this, my third. If they ask me (which they won't), I'll tell them I like the new version about 3% less.
Recommended Reading
Jason Alexander gives his take on the Limbaugh matter. I've actually talked issues with Jason and the way he represents himself politically in this essay is the way he represented himself in our discussions.
I don't think that just because someone is famous and was on a hit sitcom it makes their views any more valid than anyone else's…but I also don't think it makes them any less and he does have some first-hand credibility when he writes about guys like Letterman and Maher.
Fershlugginer Fun
Here's a gallery of some of the recent (and in some cases, pretty darn clever) political pieces in MAD magazine.
Great Photos of Stan Laurel and/or Oliver Hardy
Number one hundred and sixty-nine in a series…
Today's Political Comment
Regarding this whole Rush Limbaugh thing, I think my viewpoint is not unlike that of Josh Marshall. I've already received a couple of Facebooked harangues that it's okay for Rush to call this Sandra Fluke a "slut" because Ed Schultz once called talk show host Laura Ingraham a "slut." Well, no. But in addition to the differences Marshall itemizes, there's this: I think Rush really misrepresented what the lady said. A lot more folks heard his summary than her testimony. They think she said, "I have sex so many times a day I can't afford to pay for it" — because as we all know, birth control pills work like that — "and I demand that taxpayers subsidize this." Her statements before Congress did not say or imply anything of the sort.
Some might argue that Mr. Schultz mispresented what Ms. Ingraham said. I don't recall that he did but if that's so, it's wrong…though not as wrong as what Limbaugh did. Laura Ingraham has ample means and opportunity to fight back. In fact at the time, I think she probably had a much larger audience than Ed Schultz. The more power and reach you have, the more responsibility you have in how you use it. Rush is a pretty powerful guy.
My problem with him and with much of talk radio (including the folks who try to replicate it on TV) is with this attitude of "every single syllable we utter is the God's truth and every single syllable the other side says is a lie." That's never been the case with any political movement in history. Some other practitioners aren't as bad as Rush. Some even issue real corrections and apologies when wrong. Limbaugh fills hours a day with his ravings and defends every minute of it to the death. Everyone in the press, including those on his side, described his slight, forced words of regret on Monday as a "rare" apology.
Question: When was the last time this man was in fair fight? As far as I know, he broadcasts from his secret headquarters in a format where he always has Home Court Advantage and his finger on the button that mutes his caller. I would love to see him sit down in some neutral setting opposite Jon Stewart or Paul Begala or Paul Krugman or someone like that in a venue where both sides get to talk and neither has access to a mute button or editing software. I'll bet a lot of Rush's admirers would love to see that too because they think he'd tear his opponent to shreds…and I'll bet he'd score a fair number of points. But he wouldn't win all of them and that's why he'll never do it; not as long as he's making umpteen zillion doing what he's been doing.
Robert Sherman, R.I.P.
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Robert Sherman, who with his brother Richard penned some of the world's best loved songs, died earlier today in London at the age of 86. He had been ill for the last few years and I guess everyone knew it was only a matter of time. He and Richard gave us many of the songs one hears at Disneyland (including "It's a Small World"), the score of Mary Poppins and other Disney movies, a number of rock 'n' roll hits (like "You're Sixteen, You're Beautiful and You're Mine" and for Annette Funicello, "Tall Paul" and "Pineapple Princess") and of course, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. What a catalog. What a legacy.
I never met this Mr. Sherman. I know his brother Richard but I never got to meet Robert, largely because he moved to England. Not long ago, the two of them were the subject of a documentary called The Boys: The Sherman Brothers' Story. It's a very good film, exploring not only their careers and their music but their relationship which was not always one of brotherly love. If you haven't seen it, Netflix it or order it here from Amazon.
Here's a minute or two of the Sherman Brothers singing one of their songs with Walt. Robert's the one on the left…
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Great Photos of Stan Laurel and/or Oliver Hardy
Number one hundred and sixty-eight in a series…
Go Read It!
I read this article by Chris Parker earlier this evening while waiting for a "to go" order at a restaurant and found it interesting enough to share with you. It's about how your United States Government shut down the online poker industry. I'm not sure if I think that's a good thing or a bad thing.