Today's Political Clarification

So let's see if I have this right…

Before the current Senate first convened for this term, many Democrats and Republicans (but especially Democrats) sat down and proposed a series of rule changes that would make filibusters less likely. They passed some rules and now in one of the first important matters to come up under the new procedure, it looks like we may have our first-ever filibuster of a Secretary of Defense. Or if we don't, it'll only have been avoided by one or two votes. Is that about it?

Boy, I'm glad they changed those rules.

Today's Video Link

In 1987 when Johnny Carson had logged 25 years on The Tonight Show, NBC produced a short biographical film on the man. There are a few amazing clips in here…

Home, Sweet Home…

When my mother died, I inherited a house. My father bought it in 1953, the year after I was born, for $17,000 and change. That seemed like a lot of money then. Today, if you figured out a price per square foot, you couldn't buy the front hall closet for that.

Years later when my career as a professional writer was taking off, my father was still skeptical that anyone could make a living in that line of work. He, after all, labored for the Internal Revenue Service dealing with delinquents and he therefore did not meet a lot of writers who were solvent. In 1971, I convinced him that I had a future in that occupation by making the final payments on that house. I didn't tell him I was doing it. I just did…with money earned writing Donald Duck comics.

He was startled when he received the final papers from the bank indicating the loan was paid in full. That wasn't supposed to happen for two more years and he phoned them to say there was some mistake. When they told him who'd made the final payments, he came into my room crying, hugged me and never again worried about me making a living in my chosen profession. I moved out in 1975 but he and my mother lived in that home for the rest of their lives. He passed in '91 and she left us last October.

Shortly after my father went away on me, my mother asked me to get her a lawyer. She said, "I want someone who can arrange my affairs so that when I go, you can handle all the paperwork and details quickly." Having recently spent way too much time dealing with mortuary employees burying my father, and bankers to transfer everything from his name to that of my mother, that sounded fine to me. I found an attorney who specialized in such matters, she worked with him for a week or three, then she handed me a sealed manila envelope and said, "Here. When I die, open this and you should be able to take care of everything in about fifteen minutes." Among other preparations, they'd put everything she owned into a trust, designated me as sole heir of the trust and added my name to all her bank accounts. She'd also prepaid for a cremation and a scattering-at-sea.

Fifteen minutes turned out to be an underestimate…but had she died within a few years of setting all that up, I might have been able to do it in twenty. Since she lived a bit more than two more decades, some of her financial details changed and neither of us thought to update the arrangements in that envelope. Mainly, the problems flowed from those crooked caretakers she had. You may remember that twice, I had to cancel my mother's bank accounts and credit cards and open new ones for her. Well, dummy me didn't think to put those new accounts into the trust, plus she'd also opened one at a different bank for some odd reason and she'd listed me on that one but not in the proper way.

I think I've gotten all that straightened out…and you know what the hardest thing has been? Canceling her cable TV account.

Years ago, there was a very funny comedian named Ed Bluestone who seems to have disappeared from this planet. He had a joke about his doctor having a sign in the waiting room: "Death does not mean the end of your financial obligation." I'm learning that death does not mean Time-Warner will stop billing you for cable TV. It took me three months to get them to cease doing that and now I'm working on the refund for the months after I notified them of her passing and they turned it off. Despite my taking a copy of the death certificate to one of their offices, the matter is still under "investigation." I suspect that if we hadn't cremated her, they'd want to exhume the body to make sure she isn't still holding the remote control.

But finally, cable TV aside, I'm down to selling that house, the one I grew up in. People ask if that saddens me and the answer is, sadly enough, no. It's been a bit emotional to go through all the drawers and find artifacts of my father's past, my mother's past and mine…but for the most part, it's just a house I happen to own.

Finding someone to sell it for me was easy. For about the last fifteen years of her life, my mother was inundated by realtors who wanted the task (and commission) of selling the house for her. Some called. Others came to the door often. She told all she was not interested. Not in the slightest.

It wasn't just that she was comfortable there, though that was reason enough. It was mainly that my mother lived with worsening vision and the constant, not unjustified fear that she would outlive her ability to see at all. One social worker at the hospital told her that if she went blind, she'd of course have to move into an Assisted Living facility. She said absolutely not. "If I'm completely blind, I want to be blind in a house I know from top to bottom and inside-out." To test her theory, she'd sometimes leave off all the lights at night and navigate her way around the place.

She found that she could manage it — sort of, but it was like a successful fire drill. She prayed it would never come to that; that her heart would quit completely before her eyes did…and that was how it worked out. She also managed to pass away, I'm being told by everyone, at the perfect time to sell that house. From every realtor who wanted the listing, I heard the same thing: "This is a highly desirable area and there's absolutely no inventory. If we list it soon, you'll have the only home for sale for ten blocks in any direction." With realtors, it's always the perfect time to sell your house…and probably also the perfect time to buy one. But that thing about the ten blocks seems to be true.

Over the years, my mother had amassed an amazing collection of note pads, calendars, date books, seed packets, oven mitts, nail files, mugs, calculators and other tchotchkes (here, look it up if you don't know) each bearing a realtor's name, number and often a photo. Having lifted a few, I even had note pads in my home from realtors who worked her area.

And the gifts were still coming. One gent, unaware she'd passed, left a poinsettia plant on her doorstep just before Christmas — apparently, an annual tradition with folks whose business he courted. I found it there on one visit along with several ads and business cards from other realtors. There was no card on the plant — no indication at all of which realtor had left it. My theory is that one of the other realtors, when he dropped by to leave off a calendar, saw the potted plant and removed the card bearing the name of his competitor. In this world, it's every man for himself.

At some point, while she was still with us and they were trying to charm her into listing with them now or later, one of them began contacting me. She told the ones who came to her door that she would never sell the house but that her son someday would. And sure enough, one got my number and phoned a couple of times to impress upon me that if I loved my mother, I would get her into a nursing home a.s.a.p. and, hey, I could pay for that nursing home by letting him sell her house. It was, after all, the perfect time to sell.

That one phoned twice. In both calls, I told him (much to his surprise) that I had no intention of kicking my mother out of her home. For a long time, I had the feeling that when she did go, the way I'd find out is that this guy would phone and say, "Hey, sorry your mother died. Ready to list with me?" By the time it happened though, in a neat bit of irony, my mother had outlived him. Go, Mom!

Recently, it seemed like I was ready to unload the dwelling. After consulting with friends who knew about such things, I decided to meet with the five best local realtors, whoever they might be. I got hold of a list of agents who'd sold properties in the neighborhood over the last 24 months, then I lopped off the ones whose names appeared nowhere on my mother's memo pads and potholders. I also crossed off three guys who had the best track record in terms of getting the most money for what they'd sold because they'd achieved that by selling only one house. It was a few miles away and it belonged to Candy Spelling.

Once I'd crossed off all those names on the list, I contacted the top five remaining and arranged to interview them at my mother's house, one realtor or team at a time, in 90-minute intervals over two days. The idea was to find out what each thought they could get for the place and what I might have to do to it in order for them to get that — and of course, I wanted to find a realtor I could trust.

As it turned out, the appointments were highly educational. By the time I'd finished the meetings, I'd learned so much about the business that I had to phone the first ones I'd met with and ask additional questions. The first thing I learned is that there's no prompter person on this planet than a realtor who wants your business. Every single one was there on the dot. I interviewed all five…plus one surprise entry. While I was sitting there chatting with Realtor Candidate #3, a team of two of his competitors — a man and a woman team — came to my door. They'd apparently been coming by for days, knocking and finding no one there. Finally, they caught me in.

"We were talking to others on your block here and one of your neighbors said you might be interested in selling this home," one said. I resisted the temptation to ask them, "Gee, which neighbor might that have been?" Instead, I explained that I was talking to a realtor in the dining room at that very moment and I took their card and promised to call them if I decided to interview any others. They went away…but not far. I'm guessing they waited down the block in their car, watching to see when #3 would leave. I was just getting into my car to go home when they came running up, claiming they'd been driving by again when they saw me come out…and could I spare a moment to hear what they could do for me?

Ordinarily, I shy from pushy salespeople. When I'm in a position to engage writers or artists or actors, nothing makes me less likely to hire someone than a vigorous sales pitch from an agent…or any pitch at all from the Talent. But in this case, I was looking for someone to sell on my behalf so I thought, "Hmm…maybe I want a pushy salesperson." I met with the team and decided I did…but not them.

By the way: If you think you're the least bit funny and you crave a great audience, just have a house that realtors want to sell for you. Every one of them thought I was the wittiest person on the planet and eagerly played Ed McMahon to my Johnny Carson. If I'd mentioned the Holocaust to some of these folks, they would have howled and I don't even think they were faking. I think one of the qualifications to be a successful realtor is that you have to find hilarity in every word uttered by a potential client. With one, I had the following exchange…

REALTOR: Wow, you should be a comedy writer.

ME: I am a comedy writer.

REALTOR: Well, there you are. I should have known, considering how funny you are.

ME: You should have known because I told you five minutes ago.

And when I said that, he practically fell over laughing.

I finally settled on one who I think knows what he's doing. He's certainly sold enough homes lately.  When he asked me how I picked him — these folks are all well aware of their competition — I explained, "I got it down to two of you who seemed to know how to be aggressive without being an asshole. And then I flipped a mental coin and you came up heads." That seemed to please him. I could tell because he didn't laugh at that, just grinned. Two of the realtors I didn't pick called or sent e-mails to ask me to explain my decision so they could learn what they were doing wrong. One called to say she has a buyer lined up and would like to make an offer on the house now and perhaps save us the trouble of formally listing it.

We're formally listing it for sale next week and my guy thinks it'll be on and off the market in five days. I told him I'm in no hurry to grab an offer. I want to close off that chapter and not have to take care of the place…but if waiting a year or two would get me a significantly higher deal, fine. No rush. He thinks prices may be peaking and that we'll get as good a deal now as we would by waiting — which is what I'd expect a realtor to say. They all did but there is some supporting evidence so we'll see if he's right.

We'll also see if at any point, watching my childhood home go to someone else has any real impact on me. So far, like I said, it's just a house I happen to own and want to unload. I vividly remember almost everything that occurred there since about the time I had my fourth birthday party. Maybe that's why I'm having no trouble parting with it…because as with my mother dying, I've been prepared for this for a long time. And even after we close escrow, I'll still have all those memories.

On Your Mark…

This year's Comic-Con International convenes in San Diego July 18-21 and if you want to attend, it's time to start figuring out how to get in. Badges go on sale at 9:00 AM Pacific Time this Saturday, February 16, 2013 and if you want a chance at snagging one, go to the convention website, learn how the process works and get yourself a Member I.D. number now. Badges will sell out quickly. They always do. More will probably go on sale later and they will sell out, as well. It is a simple, sad truth that not everyone who wants to attend will be able to attend.

If you can't get in or even if you can and want to attend two great conventions, badges are available for WonderCon, which is in Anaheim this year from March 29 to 31. This is also a great con — not as big as San Diego but bigger than most conventions. You certainly won't lack for things to buy or programming to attend at WonderCon. I will be doing four panels there — a Cartoon Voice Actors panel, a panel of folks who worked on comics in the seventies, a Sergio-less installment of Quick Draw!, and a panel that will just be me lecturing on how to write for animation. Full schedule coming soon.

Today's Video Link

You don't need years of practice to be a great sleight-of-hand magician. Not if you employ a little thing called stop-motion photography…

Travel Time

As long as I've been going from L.A. to Las Vegas, I've been hearing talk of someone building a high-speed rail line betwixt those two cities. Breaking ground on it has always been eighteen months in the future. Eighteen years ago, it was eighteen months in the future. Five years ago, it was eighteen months in the future. Eighteen months ago, it was eighteen months in the future. Today, it's eighteen months in the future and eighteen months from now, guess what it'll be. Right: Eighteen months in the future.

I used to think how great it would be and toyed with the idea of buying a condo there and living in both places, shuttling back and forth with a residence and a car at each end. But it's never gonna happen…and even if the current plan did go forth, it for some reason isn't between Los Angeles and Las Vegas. The California end would be in Victorville, which is a 90-minute drive from L.A. and that's without traffic. Most of the day, it's more than two hours. So you'd have to leave maybe a 2.5 hour window on your schedule to make sure you got there in time for your train, leave your car in a lot there and then ride the rails to Vegas. Or you could ride the existing Amtrak train to Victorville and change there but that train is three hours.

The point is it might all take more time than just driving straight through to Caesars Palace. And if that's the point, what's the point?

So why Victorville? I did some research and couldn't find an explanation. I'm guessing it's that Victorville-to-Vegas would mean going through largely unpopulated, undeveloped land so it would make possible the current cost estimate of $7 billion to get the train up 'n' running. To extend that route to Los Angeles would take it through actual cities where people live — a much higher cost per mile, to be sure. The whole project would wind up with a pricetag that would guarantee no part of it would ever happen.

I wish we had more realistic mass-transit projects in this country. Traffic lately is such that I'm starting to really hate driving. When I have to go some distance, I use Google maps and Henrietta (that's what I call the G.P.S. in my car) to find routes that may not require braking every nine seconds. They help but only a little.

Waiting in a doctor's office recently, I picked up a magazine and read an encouraging piece that predicted technological advances would make driving easier. Global positioning systems would be getting smarter about re-routing you around congestion. New high-speed rail and subway systems would ease the bumper-to-bumper of freeways and surface streets. Smartphones would make it easier to figure out which bus or train to take and let you know when the next one would be along.

The article said we'd start seeing improvements in less than a year…which would have given me hope had I not then noticed the magazine was three years old.

Omelets for Pussycats

friskies01

The Friskies company is making this stuff…cat food that is designed to be your cat's breakfast. There's a Rise & Shine dry food and four varieties of wet food:

  • Friskies® Rise & Shine Tasty Turkey & Egg Scramble (accented with Cheese in Sauce)
  • Friskies® Rise & Shine Sizzlin' Beef & Egg Scramble (also accented with Cheese in Sauce
  • Friskies® Rise & Shine Sunny Chicken & Egg Scramble (accented with Garden Greens in Sauce)
  • Friskies® Rise & Shine Savory Salmon & Egg Scramble (also accented with Garden Greens in Sauce)

Sound tasty? Of course. But I've always found it silly that the way to sell pet food is to make it seem appealing to the buyers who are not going to eat it. I fall for it, too. I like tuna so I buy cat food with tuna in it based, I guess, on the premise that animals around me will like what I like. My lady friend Carolyn doesn't even like a lot of the foods I like but somehow the stray cats out back share my culinary tastes. The truth is that they'd probably rather have Chopped Mouse or something like that.

Anyway, upon seeing "Rise & Shine" foods in the market, I purchased one can — the kind with the salmon in it — and took it home to study extensively in my test kitchen. Which is to say I split a can between the two feral cats, Lydia and Sylvia, I've lately been feeding on my back porch. The verdict? They loved it. And neither was famished as both were fed well about eight hours earlier.

Lydia seems to like anything with any kind of fish in it. Sylvia will eat anything. But I can't recall either devouring their chow quite as ravenously. Since it's the same price as the other cans I buy them, I think I'll try out the other varieties and a few more tins of the salmon. I may start serving it to them with hash-browns and a toasted English muffin on the side plus a cup of joe. Lydia prefers hers black with two Sweet-n'-Lows.

AM/FM

The other day here, I extolled the lost glory of the radio station I and most of my friends listened to in the sixties. Meanwhile, my buddy Ken Levine has posted a manifesto on how stations like that — in fact, any that aren't Internet-based — are going away on us. He knows of what he writes.

Today's Video Link

Here's a blast from my past. Back in the sixties, I was the president of an entity known as the Los Angeles Comic Book Club. We billed ourselves as "the largest comic book club in the world" because we didn't know of any others. Every Saturday afternoon, we convened in a meeting room at a public park, the Palms Recreation Center in West L.A. I've written about this club in a number of my essays on the world of comics.

I don't think I mentioned in any of them that there was another club at Palms Park for much of the same time — officially unaffiliated but full of a lot of the same folks and run by some L.A.C.B.C. members — mainly Barry Siegel and Bruce Simon. This was the Old Time Movie Club which met on some (not all) Friday evenings. Sometimes, they showed 8mm silent movies from the personal collections of members. Dues were collected at those meetings and when there was enough in the treasury, they'd use the dough to rent a 16mm print of some great sound film. The evening I recall best was when they ran the Laurel and Hardy film, Our Relations. The place was packed and I don't recall ever being in an audience where as many people were convulsed with laughter.

The leaders of the club not only showed silent films, they also made them. Barry, then 17 years of age, made the first one and it starred him, Bruce, a bevy of L.A.C.B.C. members…and, briefly, me. He recently posted Spats and Splats — an ode to the joy of spitting on other people — on YouTube.

The film was shot in 8mm over two days in 1970 — early in the year, as I recall. There were scenes shot at Barry's house, at Palms Park and out by some abandoned buildings out by the ocean in Santa Monica. Barry had, of course, no permits to film in the latter two locations so out in Santa Monica, we were chased by a security guard. You'll see some shots of the old Pacific Ocean Park (a seaside amusement park) and the Aragon Ballroom, which is where Lawrence Welk did his show for years. It had all burned down a year or so earlier, probably because Barry needed the visual of some ruins for his film.

Steve Sherman, who was later my partner working for Jack Kirby, was an actor in it but he was also the Director of Photography, which means he ran the camera. One of the toughest problems Barry had to solve was finding black-and-white 8mm film for that camera. Color stock could be purchased at any drugstore…but he felt an old-style silent movie had to be monochrome and it took a while to locate a supply. The title cards were done by a mail order company run by someone named Jack B. Hardy.

In it, you will see a young skinny M.E. making my film debut as the Hamburger Vendor. I botched things up on my first take…and as it turned out, that was the only take. That security guard was threatening to call the cops on us so we had to hurry. Thus, my flawed performance had to stay in. Barry did not use me on camera in his subsequent cinematic efforts and I don't blame him one bit.

In addition to making films, Siegel and Simon produced some popular underground comics. I don't think it's been released yet but a few months ago, it was announced that a publisher was bringing out a collection of their strip, Blackwall Siegel. Blackwall was a character based loosely on Barry's dog, Blackwell…and you can see the actual pooch playing himself in a brief cameo in the film. I'm ashamed to admit he was a better performer than I was.

If you'll promise to keep in mind that we were all teenagers, I'll let you click on the little arrow and watch Spats and Splats. The Academy Award that year went to Patton but only because Barry forgot to submit his film. If he had, I'd guess a minimum of eight Oscars including Best Supporting Actor to Blackwell…

Doctor Doom

Carol Tilley teaches at the University of Illinois Graduate School of Library and Information Science. She says Dr. Fredric Wertham was not entirely honest or accurate in his writings, including his infamous book warning of the evils of comic books, Seduction of the Innocent. We all knew that he didn't understand the work he was criticizing so I guess it should come as no surprise that he fibbed a little. Or maybe a lot.

Good Question

Why does bottled water have an expiration date? Here's the answer. I recently had to throw out about ten gallons of Crystal Geyser I had stored in my garage for the same reason.

Today's Political Report

I thought the President's State of the Union address was quite fine, though throughout I could hear echoes of Rodney Dangerfield muttering, "Tough crowd, tough crowd." I understand that the Republicans feel their "we hate everything this man stands for" posture plays well with their base…but if there's anything this last election proved, it's that their base isn't large enough to win them elections. Really, when Obama can say "Let's agree, right here, right now, to keep the people's government open, pay our bills on time, and always uphold the full faith and credit of the United States of America" and G.O.P. leaders like John Boehner sit stonefaced and unapplauding, it's kinda obvious what's going on here.

I wonder which part of that Boehner didn't like. Keeping the people's government open? Paying our bills on time? Maybe it was that part about upholding the full faith and credit of the United States. But then he also wasn't impressed by the 102-year-old lady who stood in line for seven hours to vote or the mention of "our wounded warriors." When a Democrat doesn't stand and cheer for the latter, that's supposed to be proof he hates the military.

I more or less agree with John Cassidy's take on Obama's speech and on the Republican response, though I think people are making way too big a deal about Mario Rubio's sip of water. There are reasons Rubio should not be in power but among them is not that he had a clumsy moment on television. I wish we could get past caring about such things.

Today's Video Link

From May of '65, It's Jimmy Durante and Louis Armstrong singing one of Jimmy's hits on Hollywood Palace. They're so delightful together that the producer didn't even care that Satchmo got half the lyrics wrong…

Ooh! Ooh!

Here's another one of my unprovable theories. Every few days in this country, you see some pundit or political candidate or public figure say something really outrageous or insane…and attention-grabbing. It can be an uninformed male's understanding of rape or it can be some borderline-racist putdown of minorities or it can be darn near anything Pat Robertson or Donald Trump says about anything. But it evokes anger and calls to apologize and it makes you wonder, not why does the person think that but how could they be so stupid as to say it?

I mean, I understand that there are folks out there who hate people with different-colored skin or who attend a different house of worship. What I used to wonder more about is why they weren't smart enough to avoid saying what they said the way they said it. This is especially true of those who are courting votes. You'd think, for example, that every male seeking public office would have learned to steer clear of the topic of rape. You'd think their advisors would have said to them, "No matter how obvious or reasonable it may seem to you, it will come across to many as insensitive and foolish." You'd think Donald Trump would have realized he couldn't engage Bill Maher in a public fight and not come off looking to much of America like a stuffy anal sphincter.

And here's where my theory comes in. I've come to think that while some folks may say outrageous things because they think it'll get them attention and sell books (Ann Coulter comes to mind), I think a lot of them are guilty of Joe E. Ross Disease.

joeeross01

You remember Joe E. Ross, the star of Car 54, Where Are You?, It's About Time and nothing else. Mr. Ross was very funny on those shows and very funny before them with intermittent appearances on Sgt. Bilko. His career dwindled to darn near nothing after the short-lived It's About Time, in large part because he got a reputation in show business for (a) being utterly unreliable and (b) having no sense of time and place.

Regarding (a), it was said he was never on time, never knew his lines and never changed when he was told to shape up or ship out. His biggest role was on Car 54, which ran two seasons. Had it been picked up for a third, Ross would not have been picked up with it. The show's producer-creator Nat Hiken had simply had enough of the guy.

But his career was probably harmed more by (b). It was said that he never once thought, of anything that came out of his mouth, "Hmm, this might not be the right audience for this." Having starred for a time in burlesque, he had a repertoire of filthy jokes — appropriate for those venues, inappropriate for others. He didn't care. The Sgt. Bilko show was shot in front of a live audience for its first few seasons. Then they started filming without one. After every two filmed-without-one episodes were edited, they'd send the films, some audio engineers and a cast member to some sort of theater with some sort of audience. The cast member would welcome the crowd, warm them up with a comedy routine, then the episodes would be shown and the live laughter would be recorded and dubbed onto the shows.

That was how it worked every time…except the week they sent Joe E. Ross.

He got up there before an audience of older and middle-age people — with some children present — and began telling jokes that would make Lenny Bruce blush: jokes about sex with nuns and hookers servicing sailors and…well, you know that kind of joke. You may even tell that kind of joke…but I bet you'd have the good sense not to tell them to your grandparents.

Joe E. Ross did this kind of thing all over the place because he had no such sense. When people ran in horror from the hall, he just kind of wondered what had gone wrong. Everyone had howled at those same jokes when he'd told them at a stag party the week before.

Which brings us to my theory. Some of those shocking/stupid things said by public figures are obviously calculated to get ratings or sell books or otherwise make money. But I think a lot of them are things which when said in the right room in front of the right crowds drew cheers and ovations and fealty. The mistake, like Ross's, was in thinking they'd play as well in a bigger room to a wider range of people. All those nutcase Pat Robertson quotes over the years were things he said on his TV broadcasts without his studio audience moaning or hooting. They just didn't play well beyond the flock.

This is the scary thing to me about someone who gets up and yells that there's incontrovertible evidence that Barack Obama is a Kenyan-born Socialist Muslim who had Andrew Breitbart murdered. It's not that that person is looney. It's that there are auditoriums in this country where that rhetoric played well for that person…places where they cheered their agreement. In most cases, I don't think people believe rubbish because their leaders say it. I think the "leaders" say it because people believe it. It's what enables them to retain their status as "leaders" with all the perks (the money, the attention, etc.) that are attached.

There are though, let's admit, two key differences between someone like Michele Bachmann or Rand Paul and Joe E. Ross, one being that Ross eventually paid a price for his insensitivity to his audiences. Nowadays, you can make a very good living telling a minority of Americans what they want to hear. Most people in this country think Obama's a pretty good president but you can sell a lot of books to the ones who don't. An awful lot of books. In some areas, you can get elected.

And the other difference is that Joe E. Ross was funny. Sometimes, he was funny in the wrong place and/or at the wrong time. But he made me laugh, whereas Donald Trump doesn't. Not even with that hair of his. I'd trade him for Joe E. Ross any day.