Wednesday Morning

Didn't watch the Democratic debates. I've kinda decided there's no point in me deciding which candidate I want to see become the Democratic nominee. By the time I vote in the California primary — March 3rd, 139 days from now — the field will be different, the issues will be different, what we know about the candidates will be different…

I've received a whole batch of messages wanting to discuss the merits of privately-owned fire departments and/or the success rates of the times that's been tried. This isn't a debate that interests me a whole lot. I think capitalism is great when we have a Free Market at work — and I mean a real Free Market, not the faux kind that's called that but isn't. That includes the buyer being able to make a reasoned, researched selection with real options, which is not the case when your home's ablaze or you're on a gurney and the paramedics are taking your broken body to the closest emergency room.

And yes, I had lunch yesterday with the inestimable Frank Ferrante. Friends in Southern California keep asking me when, oh when can they see him do his oft-plugged-here An Evening With Groucho without driving to Iowa. An earlier date may appear but right now, his next appearance in the lower half of my state is April 13 and 14 at the North Coast Repertory Theatre in Solana Beach. I would point out that April 10-12 is when the next WonderCon Anaheim takes place and that the two events are but 72.8 miles apart. That will be of interest to a few friends of mine.

Your Daily Trump Dump

Today's Bad News for Donald Trump
Ronan Farrow's new book revives the issue of Trump and/or his handlers paying off women to keep hush about affairs with The Donald.  If the National Enquirer really was shredding papers about those alleged affairs, that's something.  I mean, it's not like the Enquirer ever dumps a story because it's false…

Today's Outrage by Donald Trump
Trump announces that he will soon be "issuing an Executive Order authorizing the imposition of sanctions against current and former officials of the Government of Turkey and any persons contributing to Turkey's destabilizing actions in northeast Syria."  Oh, great.  Now Trump has to impose sanctions on himself.

My Unrelated Aunt Betty

Here's a terrific article from 2016 on Betty Lynn, who played Thelma Lou on The Andy Griffith Show. I would have linked to it then but I just saw it today for the first time.

For those of you new to this blog, there's a reason I have a special interest in Ms. Lynn. In the article, it says — and I quote: "In 1950, she bought a house in west Los Angeles. Built in 1928, it became the home for Lynn, her mother and her grandparents." Three years later, my parents bought the home next door and they moved in, bringing their one-year-old son. That son was me. Betty was more than a great neighbor. She was like my unrelated aunt and I couldn't care more about her if she was family.

With but two and a half months left in 2019, the leading contender for the title of "Favorite Thing I Did This Year" is that last June, I went to visit Betty in Mt. Airy, North Carolina where she now lives. I wrote about it here and in that piece, you'll see me saying a lot of the same things about her that are in the linked article. They include how wonderful she is and how people make pilgrimages to that town and to The Andy Griffith Museum to meet her. Three years later, she's still going there to give them that thrill. I need to make more pilgrimages myself to see her.

Tuesday Morning

During Watergate, the comedian Jackie Mason had a great joke. He said, referring to Richard Nixon, "Because of him, I get up every morning and run out to see if my furniture is still there." Nixon created that kind of mindset in this country…that constant sense of "We don't know what he's going to do but it won't be good." But it's worse with Trump.

Each morning when I awake, I fumble for my cell phone by the bed, open my app for news headlines and wonder, "Well, let's see how things got worse today." There's always something. This morning, it seems to be how bad things are getting to be in Syria and how little thought and consultation Trump seems to have had in making that decision. Hell, even Lindsey Graham couldn't get behind it. The bonus "how bad things are" is how bad they are for Rudy Giuliani.

Remember how for weeks here, I've been saying that it wouldn't surprise me if Trump wasn't on the 2020 final ballot? I'm still not predicting that'll be the case but doesn't it look a tiny bit more possible than it did two weeks ago?

Yes, yes…I know some of you — including some who like Trump even less than I do — wish I'd stop writing about this stuff and would instead talk about comic books or old comedians or cole slaw or where Frank Ferrante's appearing. (I can help you with that last one: In less than an hour, he's appearing across a table from me for lunch.) But the premise of this blog is that I write what's on my mind and it's tough to get Trump off it for very long. You're annoyed that I'm not providing your desired means of escape for a few moments because you find it tough to stop thinking about him, too.

This will pass. It may not pass as quickly as we wanted but I'll tell you this: I didn't expect him to be in this much trouble this far before Election Day. I really didn't. Until the ballots are counted and we feel confident they've been counted honestly — if indeed that happens — I will never say Trump can't win a second term. But it feels good that the trajectory of his popularity is only going in one direction and it ain't up.

Today's Video Link

The musical version of Little Shop of Horrors debuted off-off Broadway in 1982 and starred Lee Wilkof as Seymour and Ellen Greene as Audrey. The following year, the two of them and other cast members taped this spot for the annual Jerry Lewis Telethon for MDA. The video is wonderful for many reasons, starting with the fact that it captures part of their great performances. It was also done at the Ed Sullivan Theater, later the home of David Letterman's show and now Stephen Colbert's. And it's also kinda nice to see that a sadistic man-eating plant, determined to devour every man, woman and child on Earth cares enough to raise funds to fight Muscular Dystrophy…

Your Daily Trump Dump

Today's Bad News for Donald Trump
I'm putting the increasing bad news out of Syria in the next category so in this one, I'll just put it sure looks like Rudy Giuliani is in pretty deep legal trouble, which just contributes to the lawless rep of the folks Trump chooses to advise him. I don't think Trump will be able to get away with claiming he doesn't know Rudy but that doesn't mean he won't try.

Today's Outrage by Donald Trump
Things just keep getting worse and worse for the Kurds and for the role of the U.S. in world politics. Fred Kaplan explains.

An important article About Donald Trump
Jonathan Chait lays out the "full" case for the impeachment of Donald Trump. I put "full" in quotes because I'm thinking by the time this thing could get to a trial in the Senate, there'll be a dozen more charges in it.

Breaking Lydia News

I just put out a can of Friskies Salmon for her. She ate half of it, then went back into the little house and curled up to sleep. I think she's finally moved in.

Cat House

As readers of this blog and all the feral cats in my neighborhood are aware, I feed feral cats in my backyard. Leaving food out for them means I also unintentionally feed raccoons, as well as possums who hang around, trying to get in good with the guy who edits the Pogo books.

I've had as many as four feral cats at a time regularly stopping by — or just plain living in my backyard — to partake of the free buffet. At the moment though, I have but one. Lydia resides out there and she has since some time in 2007.

In 2008, as I detailed here, I captured her and took her to a vet who terminated her pregnancy and made sure she couldn't get that way again. If you have a problem with that, don't tell me. Tell the various cat care services and experts who told me that was the humane thing to do. Lydia doesn't seem to have objected. She's still living out there except when the gardeners or pool man come by, whereupon she flees to an adjoining yard until they get the hell out of her home.

A little before she came into my yard and life, I was concerned for the cats who had to weather rainstorms out there so I bought them a home — a little cat house which some of them would go into, though rarely when it was showering. Rain or shine, Lydia though never went into it.

I tried moving it to different places in the yard. She wouldn't go in there. I tried putting her food in the cat house. She'd lean in far enough to eat, then scamper away without ever putting her entire body through the door. I tried picking her up and putting her in there but she wriggled free and fled.

At one point, Carolyn tried some sort of catnip spray that was supposed to make anything you sprayed it on more feline-friendly. All that happened was that I wound up with a yard full of drunken pussycats, none of whom wanted to be in the house for more than a quick hit. I gave up the idea that Lydia would ever use the little house…

…which just shows to go ya. For no visible reason, today she's sleeping in the cat house. First time I've ever seen her in there. I took this photo about fifteen minutes ago…

To enlarge the photo, click softly so you don't wake Lydia.

Weather or Not

Did you see John Oliver last night? It was a great episode about the attempts of the Trump administration to make the National Weather Service — which is paid for by us and which works for us — to instead be paid for by us and work for private industry. The N.W.S. is a super-efficient, right-more-often-than-you-think operation which gives away its expertise for nothing. Private weather companies take the N.W.S. data and process it further, making it more specific or tailored to paying clients, and profit off it. But what they'd really like is for the N.W.S. not to give away their forecasts for free to the public at all so they [the private companies] can sell it to us.

This is not new. Back in those wonderful pre-Trump days, companies like AccuWeather fought for this. On this blog in 2005, I wrote about how then-Senator Rick Santorum had introduced a bill that would make it illegal for the N.W.S. to make its forecasts available for free on the Internet. It was, of course, just a coincidence that Santorum was from Pennsylvania, AccuWeather was based in Pennsylvania, and AccuWeather had contributed lots of bucks to Santorum's campaign fund.

That didn't succeed but now Trump is trying to put one of the chief execs of AccuWeather in control of the National Weather Service. Trump has never believed that The Public Good ever takes precedence over someone increasing their profits. Ever.

So I just decided, while writing the above paragraph, that I ought to embed Mr. Oliver's report for anyone who didn't or couldn't see it. Keep in mind that the National Weather Service saves lives and property. To me, putting its resources under the control of those who want to make big money from it would be like letting a private, for-profit company take over the Fire Department in your town…and when your home was on fire, you'd have to call them and get an estimate on them sending someone over to put the fire out…

Your Daily Trump Dump

Today's Bad News for Donald Trump
Trump keeps citing Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, who in a tweet said there was no quid pro quo regarding the Ukraine call. But later this week, Sondland will reportedly testify that he wrote that there was no quid pro quo, not because he knew that to be the case but just because Trump told him.

Today's Outrage by Donald Trump
Did you catch any of Trump's rally last Thursday night in Minneapolis? There's more than a year until Election Day and he's hurling mud like an infinite number of monkeys flinging their poo. And he's getting it from the same place.

A Question About Donald Trump
Trump complained a lot about that Fox News Poll that showed that a majority of Americans want him impeached. He's been saying, "Fox News isn't working for us anymore," right? So what is he expecting? Is he angry that Fox News, having received those numbers from their pollsters, didn't just fib and adjust them in his favor? Is that what he expects of the news media? No wonder he doesn't like any of them.

My Larry Hagman Story

This is a rerun from November of 2012 and maybe the second-most-linked-to article ever on this site, the Mel Tormé story being the first. It's my Larry Hagman story…

Here is my Larry Hagman story. Get comfy. This will take a while.

The year is 1980 and I am the Head Writer on Pink Lady, an infamous variety series that was forced by high-level corporate interests on All Concerned: Its producers, its staff, some of its stars, certain folks at NBC who didn't want to put it on…and on the American public, most of whom opt not to watch. Working on it presents every conceivable problem one can have making a variety show and a biggie is that guest stars do not wish to guest. Or at least, the ones you'd want for promotional purposes don't want to guest. Even before the show airs and anyone has any idea if it's good or bad, we cannot secure a guest star whose name means anything.

A man named Fred Silverman is running NBC that week, trying frantically but nobly to enrich the disastrous ratings levels he inherited upon his arrival. Mr. Silverman did not want to put Pink Lady on the air but was so ordered by those above him. Seeking to make the best of things, he adds his clout to our endless pursuit of guest stars. This means going after performers not on NBC shows since there are so few of those viewers will tune in to see. He sets his sights on Mr. Hagman, the star of Dallas over on CBS. Hagman is very popular, though not as popular as he'd be a few months later.

Silverman himself gets on the phone to try and arrange a Hagman guest shot on Pink Lady. Failing to navigate through a sea of agents, he decides to call the star directly. You can do that when you're Vice-President of Programming — I think that was his title — at NBC. Time is of the essence so he phones him on a Sunday. The following is the story as told to me by Mr. Hagman and if it isn't true, it oughta be.

Larry Hagman lives in a big house in Malibu where he observes certain rituals which some might call superstitions. One is that he does not speak on Sundays. He whistles. He can whistle in a manner that goes up in pitch at the end. That one means "yes." He can whistle in a manner that goes down in pitch at the end. That one means "no." He has a few others but those are the key ones — The whistle for "yes" and the whistle for "no." Those who know the star know all about this and Fred is well aware. He starts the call by saying, "Larry, I know you don't talk on Sundays but please listen to this…"

He tells him about the show and how all we want is a day or two of his time. The pay will be $7500, which is more or less standard for a Big Name Star in this kind of gig — or at least it was then. Hagman will be in a sketch or two and he will not be alone in these as Sid Caesar is also a guest. At he mentions Sid Caesar, Silverman unknowingly scratches a long-held itch of Mr. Larry Hagman. Larry grew up watching Sid's old Your Show of Shows, thinks Caesar is the greatest genius ever on television, and once fantasized about being Carl Reiner or Howie Morris — a second banana supporting player to Sid Caesar.

When Fred asks, "Will you do it?," Larry Hagman gives his whistle for "yes." Fred mishears it as the whistle for "no" and offers $10,000.

Hagman gives the whistle for "yes." Fred mishears it as the whistle for "no" and offers $12,500.

Hagman gives the whistle for "yes." Fred mishears it as the whistle for "no" and offers $15,000.

Hagman gives the whistle for "yes." Fred mishears it as the whistle for "no" and says, "Well, I can't go higher than that but I'll tell you what I can do. You have your own production company, right? I'll arrange for it to get two commitments to produce TV-movies for NBC. There's good money in those and if one of them becomes a series, that could mean millions."

Hagman says, "You've got a deal!" There are some situations for which one will break one's vow of silence.

Fred's happy. We're happy. Larry is happy. Who is not happy? The producers of Dallas are not happy. They're shooting a key episode that coming week and are horrified when their star announces that on two days — Wednesday and Thursday — he will be walking off their set at 6 PM so he can come over and do our show. They want him to be able to stay later if they need that, then they want him to go home and rest and learn lines for the next day. Wednesday evening, he will rehearse with us. Thursday evening, he will tape with us.

There's apparently no point in getting angry at him so they get angry at us, like it's unprofessional of us to make an offer to their actor. I have nothing at all to do with schedules nor did I hire Larry Hagman but one of their Production Managers phones me to complain and to say things like, "How would you like it if we hired one of your stars to moonlight while you're shooting?" I tell him (a) he's quite welcome to any or all of them and (b) if he doesn't like it, he should call Fred Silverman at NBC. In a semi-threatening tone, he tells me we'd better not keep Hagman up late. "He has to be in makeup for us by 6 AM each day."

Wednesday evening, Larry Hagman walks into our rehearsal at around 7 PM. He is utterly charming and human and just about the nicest guy you could ever want to meet. He is so thrilled to be working with Sid Caesar but he is also genuinely polite and gracious to everyone…and very humble. Well aware he is new to this "variety show thing," he asks everyone if he's doing this or that right, if we're okay with how he's reading certain lines, etc. He even comes up with one great joke to add to a routine.

During breaks, he and I get to talking and I tell him — true story — that I was in a "test" audience once that was shown the pilot to his earlier TV series, I Dream of Jeannie. I was among those in the test group that voted to put the show on the air. He loves me for that and thanks me like I am wholly responsible for his career. He also likes that I don't ask him what's up in the current Dallas storyline…though he did let me in on a secret. He'd just come from filming a scene in which his character, J.R. Ewing, was shot and may die. "It's going to be the cliffhanger at the end of this season. Everyone will have to wait until September to find out if J.R. lives or dies and who shot him." I am not a watcher of Dallas but I have to ask, "Okay, so who shot him and are you coming back?"

He says he doesn't know who shot him. "I don't think the producers have figured that out yet or if they have, they ain't telling." As for coming back next season, he says that all depends on how contract negotiations go. In other words, how much they pay him. It is at this moment that he tells me and some of the others who work on the show, the story of how he agreed to do it — Fred Silverman, the whistling, the commitment for two TV-movies. The commitment is one reason he can say, "If they [the Dallas folks] don't meet my price, I'll star in one of those TV-movies, we'll make sure it becomes a series and I'll do just fine."

We hurry Larry through rehearsals, well aware he has to get back to Malibu (a 30-45 minute drive) and learn lines and sleep before he has to be in Burbank at 6 AM but he doesn't seem to care. We tell him at 10 PM he can go. Still, he sticks around, discussing his scene with Sid and then chatting with us. I mention a movie he was in that I had recently seen — Fail Safe with Henry Fonda — and that elicits a half-hour of anecdotes, all of them riveting, about how green and nervous he felt on that set with all those seasoned actors. He segues to tales of his mother, the great Mary Martin, and what it was like to grow up in her world.

We talk of Jeannie and of his hat collection. The man collects hats. He has come to us wearing what he says is his favorite. It's a baseball cap imprinted with the logo of a company in Texas that sells, presumably for purposes of artificial insemination, bull semen. I can't imagine what else you'd use the stuff for. Sun screen?

Hagman calls that cap the supreme metaphor for show business. He also likes the looks he gets when people who are talking to him suddenly read his hat. He says, and this is clearly a reference in some way to his upcoming negotiations to return to Dallas next season, "Life is a whole lot more fun when you can keep other people just a little off-balance."

The stories go on and on. Every ten or fifteen minutes, I hear the voice of that Production Manager and I say something like, "Well, Larry, I know you have that long drive back to Malibu and an early call tomorrow…" Larry nods and grins and starts another anecdote. I finally escort him to his car and we stand there in the parking lot for another half-hour until, just past Midnight, he grudgingly heads home. I have no idea how he managed to get there, sleep, learn lines and be on the set the next morning at six but he did that. He filmed there all day, then came to us with a full load of energy to perform.

He was perfect in every capacity: Charming, funny, gracious to all, etc. At one point, we encountered a production delay that added at least an hour to our evening and forced all to sit around and wait. Not a peep of complaint was heard from Larry Hagman.

His key sketch, the one he'd been looking forward to, was just him, Sid Caesar, one other actor and two allegedly naked women. The actor was Jim Varney, who was later famous for his "Hey, Vern" routines. The ladies were not naked but you only saw their legs and were supposed to presume that somewhere above the top of your screen, each was indecently attired.

Caesar and Hagman play two businessmen going out to discuss contracts and terms at a restaurant. It turns out the restaurant has strippers and as Hagman tries to talk about financial matters, Caesar struggles to take his eyes off the young ladies and to focus on what Hagman is saying. Hagman is brilliantly deadpan throughout, making like the dancers aren't there. Caesar cannot take his eyes off them, especially as items of clothing fly from the stage and land upon him. It's a very short sketch but it's pretty funny and Larry Hagman is thrilled to have done it. Afterwards, he tells all, especially Sid, over and over what it means to him to appear in a sketch with the great Sid Caesar.

I again walk Larry to his car and we stand out in the parking lot for another half-hour as he tells me about his love of Caesar and of that style of comedy and how he wishes he had grown up to be Howie Morris. (As I will learn later when I work with the man, even Howie Morris wished he had grown up to be Howie Morris.) Larry finally heads back to Malibu around 1 AM, which I'm sure thrilled the crew over on Dallas no end.

Time passes, as it has a way of doing. I finish the sixth episode of Pink Lady (all anyone was contracted to do) and move on to another show. J.R. Ewing is shot on the final episode of Dallas that season and all of America wonders whodunnit. Those who are aware that Larry Hagman is renegotiating his contract are equally intrigued to know if J.R. will live or die. Larry does sign. J.R. comes back. It turns out J.R.'s mistress Kristin shot him. And at some point, Fred Silverman leaves NBC.

One day, I am over at the studio of that very same network, walking through a corridor and I hear a voice say of me, "I know that man." It is Larry Hagman. He doesn't recall my name — I wouldn't have expected him to — but he does recall me. I wouldn't have expected that, either. He hugs me and tells the folks he's with all about this sketch he got to do on our show with Sid Caesar and how it was a childhood fantasy come true. In the course of the chat, he casually mentions, "I had such a great time that it doesn't even bother me I didn't get paid."

"Didn't get paid?"

No, he tells me. He was supposed to get these two TV-movies to do for his production company but NBC kept stalling his lawyers on when…and then after Silverman departed, the network said, "What commitments? Nobody here knows anything about any TV-movie commitments to Mr. Hagman." He literally did not receive anything for doing our show.

I tell him, "That's awful" and I say I'll call Marty Krofft (he was the producer) and maybe we can get him paid some amount in some way. Legally, he must at least receive union scale.

Larry interrupts and tells me not to bother. "If you saw the deal I made to come back to Dallas, you'd know why this doesn't bother me. They're paying me millions." He insists I drop the entire matter saying, "I just told you that on account of I find it so funny the way they love you one moment in this town and the next, it's like "who the f are you?'" And he says it with a twinkle that reminds me why he is able to play J.R. Ewing so well. Then he adds, "Hey, you know what I would like? I don't have a copy of that show. If you could arrange that, I'd call it even."

I assure him that will be arranged and he gives me his address saying, "Now, if you lose that, just call the National Enquirer and ask them. They send a nice man around every night to go through my garbage." We part and I go home and phone Marty Krofft who arranges for a videotape to be messengered to Hagman's home.

End of that story. Here's the sequel…

A few days later, Marty's secretary Trudy phones and tells me, "Larry Hagman's assistant just called. He wants to send you something to thank you. Is it okay if I give them your address?" I tell her it's fine and I figure I'm about to get an autographed photo or a note or something. Two days later, a delivery man brings a large, cylindrical package to my door. It's from one of the most expensive stores in Beverly Hills and I want to say it was Abercrombie and Fitch. Maybe it wasn't but I'm going to say it was Abercrombie and Fitch.

Helping me open it — because she was there at the moment — is a young lady named Bridget Holloman, who was one of the dancers on Pink Lady. In fact, she provided one set of the legs Sid Caesar had ogled in that sketch. The box, we discover, contains a quite-lovely white Stetson-style cowboy hat. There's also a handwritten note. It says, "Thanks for being one of the good guys" and it's signed "Larry."

What a nice, thoughtful gesture. I certainly wasn't expecting anything from him, particularly something like this. But I don't wear hats and I certainly don't wear hats like this. Bridget, on the other hand does. She looks good in everything but she really looks good in this white Stetson except, of course, that it's a size or two too big for her. Fortunately, the box also contains a slip that says that if it doesn't fit, bring it back to the store and exchange it. I tell Bridget the hat is hers. "Take it back and get one that fits." Three days later, she goes to do that.

I'm working at home when I get a frantic call from her — from a pay phone at the store in Beverly Hills. At first from her tone, I think she's been mugged or beaten up or that something horrible has happened. "Calm down, Bridget," I tell her. "Take a deep breath and tell me what happened."

She takes a deep breath and says, like she's telling me the Earth has been invaded, "It's…it's a fourteen hundred dollar hat!"

She says they cheerily took it back and told her she had a little over $1,400 in store credit. This is around 1983. That was even more money then than it is now and it's a lot of money now. "What do I do?" she asks me. I tell her she can pick out another hat or anything else she wants or she can see if they'll let her take some or all of it in cash. I say, "Maybe you can buy a pair of $20 earrings and take $1,380 bucks in change." What she does is to buy a cheaper (and to my eye, almost identical) hat and take the rest in currency.

The almost-identical hat costs her under $200 and it makes a good point. If Larry Hagman wanted to send me a white cowboy hat, he could have spent $200 and I would have been perfectly pleased and impressed by the gesture. But he didn't. He spent $1,400.

Bridget wants to give me the change or at least split it with me but it's almost her birthday so we make a deal: She'll keep the cash but for the next six months, whenever we go to a restaurant, she pays. I kind of enjoy that when our server brings me a check, I can point to the cute blonde lady and say, "She's paying." I get some awfully odd looks.

Larry Hagman was right. Life is so much more interesting when you can keep other people just a little off-balance. I'm sorry his is over. There may be other stories about him that paint him as another kind of guy but this is my Larry Hagman story and I'm sticking to it.

Today's Video Link

Jake Tapper is a wise man as proven by his love of the Pogo comic strip. But he also proves it with segments like this…

Your Daily Trump Dump

Today's Bad News for Donald Trump
There are a couple of choices but I'm going with how it increasingly looks like Rudy Giuliani is in legal trouble. Yesterday, it seemed like Trump was going to drop Rudy as his lawyer and start claiming he barely knew the guy. Today, he looks like he's decided he's stuck with him.

Today's Outrage by Donald Trump
The commander of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, Gen. Mazloum Kobani Abdi, is being quoted as having told a senior American diplomat, "You have given up on us. You are leaving us to be slaughtered. You are not willing to protect the people, but you do not want another force to come and protect us. You have sold us. This is immoral." And indeed, the slaughter seems to be starting.

Bonus Article About Donald Trump
Here's an odd article by Alexander Hurst which compares ceasing to be a Trump supporter with fleeing from a cult. The author tells us a lot of interesting things about cults and the mentality of those who people them but he doesn't convince me it's that bad with most who voted for Donald and would again. There are those in this country who simply prefer the right-wing agenda and if Trump's the guy who's going to put it in power, fine. That's all they want him for.

If someone else could give them the same "win" without the pathological crap and the shady business history and the pussy-grabbing and insulting Bruce Springsteen, fine. What I think Trump fears most now is that some Republican — maybe Romney — is going to mount a credible campaign to offer the Trump agenda without Trump, and a lot of Trump voters will flee to that person. Once he starts looking like a loser — and he's lost a lot lately and been acting like a panicked loser — he's of no use to them. Cult leaders don't worry like that.

Saturday Morning

I have a couple of e-mails asking me if I'm affected by the California wildfires. They're nowhere near me, if that's what you're asking. 90% of Los Angeles would have to have burned to the ground before the flames got anywhere near where I live…but yes, I'm affected. I'm affected any time people are losing their lives and/or homes…from mass shootings, hurricanes, fires, anything. I'm concerned for friends and even for strangers. That's how I'm affected.


Last Monday night in New York, there was a tribute/memorial evening for Stan Lee at the New Amsterdam Theater — the Broadway house where Disney's Aladdin plays on other nights. According to reports, there were a few speeches by folks who knew and worked with Stan and several from actors who play Marvel characters in recent TV shows and movies. It was all recorded for a special which will be broadcast on ABC at some yet-to-be-announced time. The audience was in large part, a gathering/reunion of Marvel staffers and freelancers from the last few decades.

I just got someone to take down a tirade posted on Facebook. It was anger over the celebration of Stan Lee without a corresponding celebration of Jack Kirby and as an example of the snub, they said that I, Jack's one-time assistant, was not invited to the event. That's not true. I was invited. I just chose not to spend the time 'n' dough to fly to New York for the one evening. (Most of those who did, I assume had another reason: To attend the New York Comic Con which was held in the days just before the Stan event. Given my unpleasant experience at that con two years ago, I didn't want to go to that.)

But, please…relax, Kirby fans. Jack's getting more recognition than he ever has and I'm as certain as I can be of anything that there will only be more and more ahead. We can argue that Stan sometimes gets feted for the work of others but many things he inarguably did are still cause for celebration and remembrance. And time will add more perspective to what he didn't do.


This morning was the Returning Registration online scramble for Comic-Con International 2020. A certain number of badges were available for past attendees and that certain number sold out in 59 minutes. On some as-yet-unannounced date, they will have Open Registration when anyone with a Member I.D. can try to get the badges that will be made available at that time. I will try to post that date when it's revealed but if you want to try for badges then, don't count on me. Sign up for the e-mail alerts and keep an eye on the Comic-Con website. Many who want badges will not be able to get them and there's nothing you, I or anyone can do about that.

Today's Video Link

Here we have Liza Minnelli singing one of the best songs she sings. This is from The Dick Cavett Show in 1972…