Mark's 93/KHJ 1972 MixTape #13

The beginning of this series can be read here.

Coming in at Number 13 on our countdown are The Beach Boys with "Wouldn't It Be Nice." It's from 1966 and for some reason, it doesn't have a question mark in its title. I saw this wound up as #97 on Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 1966 and I thought it must have come out late in the year. I couldn't go anywhere without hearing it. But no…it came out in July. Meanwhile, Wikipedia says…

The song was inspired by [Brian] Wilson's confused infatuations for his sister-in-law Diane Rovell, who projected an "innocent aura" that he wished to capture in "Wouldn't It Be Nice." Lyrically, the song describes a young couple who feel empowered by their monogamous relationship and fantasize about the romantic freedom they would earn as adults. It subverted past Beach Boys songs, which had normally celebrated material possessions and casual flings, and inaugurates the themes that recur throughout the rest of the album.

I never thought of it that way, perhaps because I never thought of it any way. But I guess that's as good an interpretation as any…

The Outrage Industry

Two of many things that bother me about politics these days are closely allied.  One is the Outrage Industry.  Something happens that is not 100% in lockstep with your political beliefs and instantly, others on your side are spotlighting it and screaming about it and possibly distorting it to try and get you as angry about it as they can.  In some cases, they're using it as clickbait to get you to pay attention to them on TV or on the web; in others, they're trying to get you to feel you're in a war and they need you to get more furious against your common opposition.

And the other is this notion that if someone says something you don't like, you respond with The Worst Possible Insult You Can Think Of.  When I make unintentional detours to websites where this kind of mindset holds forth, I see this.  The most frequent seems to be to accuse the person you don't like of being a pedophile.  There's no evidence or any children being molested at all and certainly nothing connecting the accused to any such heinous crime…but it is probably The Worst Possible Insult They Can Think Of.

A close runner-up is to accuse the person of hating America, which I always think is an empty, usually-baseless accusation.  I mean, if the person is on record as saying something like "You know, I really despise the United States," okay.  Then it would be valid.  But people who hate America rarely say it and people who accuse others of hating America can't read minds and know that.  It's just something you say when you don't have a real criticism but you want to throw something.

Okay.  So the other day at a pre-Olympics match, an 98-year-old World War II vet played the National Anthem on his harmonica.  Members of the U.S. National Women's Soccer Team seemed in some videos of the event to be turning their backs on the man and the Outrage Industry had a new opportunity it couldn't resist.  The athletes, of course, were widely accused of "hating America."

They weren't accused of hating harmonica music or hating the National Anthem — which I think a lot of very patriotic Americans think is not the best song that could have that distinction.  They weren't even accused of hating that one World War II veteran. They were accused of hating America. Rod Dreher, a Conservative pundit I often follow, wrote…

The U.S. women's team is the overwhelming favorite to win the gold in Tokyo, but after this stunt, I'm rooting for anybody who plays against the U.S., because I don't want to see those two ungrateful creeps shame this country by doing that stunt on the platform in Tokyo.

Why do I often follow Mr. Dreher? Because even though I disagree with much of what he says, he strikes me as a smart guy. And unlike too many pundits these days, he admits when he's wrong. He posted this comment he received…

Rod, I'm afraid you've been duped by a clickbait story designed to gin up outrage. First off, you have your facts quite literally backwards. As it happens, the players you highlight in the photo are facing toward the veteran playing the anthem…The players who are accused of "turning their back[s]"…all of whom are vehemently and correctly denying this story on Twitter…turned solely [to] face the large, highest flag to their right.

And to his credit, Dreher admitted his mistake and apologized. Very few people in today's political arena ever do this. Standard Operating Procedure these days when you're corrected seems to be to insist you were right, double-down on your accusation and call everyone who thinks you were wrong a pedophile.

Today's Bonus Video Link

I love silent movies, especially comedies and especially when they're presented the way God and Cecil B. DeMille intended — at the proper projection speed and with proper musical accompaniment. I also like to see them with an audience but we'll settle for two out of three here. For some time now, a gent named Ben Model has been presenting great silent pics online. He's a fine pianist and an expert on the material he's accompanying, plus he brings in other experts to supplement his online presentations.

Each week, he offers up a program of well-selected silent comedies and he does these live online, though we're about to look at one that was recorded on June 13. The point is you can watch them live every Sunday at 3PM Eastern Time. There's a lot of talk and history preceding each film and I find it all fascinating.

If you don't — if you just want to watch the movies — you might want to catch the replays so you can fast-forward. One friend of mine told me he started doing it that way but one day, he watched a little of the commentary and history, got hooked and now watches Ben's presentations live or delayed, start to finish.

Either way, it's free…though I think an occasional donation is in order. Mr. Model and his crew do a great job.

To perhaps get you hooked, I selected a Silent Comedy Watch Party from a few weeks ago with two great shorts. There's Harry Langdon in one of his best ones, All Night Long and even better is Buster Keaton in Cops. In my opinion, Cops is about as good a comedy short as anyone ever made. It's joke after joke, great physical feat after great physical feat…and as a bonus, you get a nice look at how Los Angeles looked in 1922.

Langdon can be an acquired taste so if you're totally new to silent comedies, start with Cops, which starts in the video below at this point. Then go back and watch the commentary that precedes it. Then go back and watch All Night Long. Then plan on joining future Silent Comedy Watch Parties and catching up on ones you've missed. Or you can just watch all of this one in sequence by clicking below…

Today's Video Link

This runs 24 minutes but if you're anywhere around my age (69), you'll want to watch the whole thing as I just did. It's a video compiling the openings to the 42 different TV shows that comprised the Spring 1962 prime-time TV schedule for CBS.

I was ten years old then and I remember almost all of them…

Today's Video Link

Here's another one of those ZOOM orchestras performing a tune — in this case, "Home" from The Wiz. The superb vocalist is Landi Oshinowo…

This Just In…

I just spotted this post on Twitter and it appears to be true…

The National Weather Service is forecasting the hottest part of Death Valley to reach 130 degrees Fahrenheit this upcoming Sunday! This is likely the highest temperature ever forecasted by the NWS or any weather agency across the globe.

And I found myself thinking of all those people who will read that and say, "Why should I care? I don't live in Death Valley!"

My Latest Tweet

  • Today's potatoes are from CBC Farms in Parker, ID. Where else?

Today's Video Link

Here's ten minutes of stunning video of Las Vegas in rather high-def. Take this full-screen and see if you don't enjoy it as much as I did. This may be as close as I get to that city for quite some time…

Fresh Start

I go almost nowhere these days. Yes, I know COVID is not the threat it once was…and yes, I know the Delta variant may well be more of a threat than many people believe…but there's another reason I go almost nowhere: There's nowhere to go.

I don't think I'd be comfortable sitting in a movie theater these days close to others but I don't have to make that decision or overcome that fear/discomfort because there's nothing out there that I want to see. In truth, I wasn't going to very many movies before most of us had heard the word "coronavirus." No one I know seems to be having any parties except in The Magic Land of ZOOM. There are no plays I want to go to…no concerts…

And I'm perfectly happy in my house as long as I have my computers, high-speed internet, my TV and voluminous piles of DVDs and Blu-Rays, and selected company visiting me. Not counting walks for the sake of walking, about the only places I go are doctor offices and markets…and I don't go to many of them. I have learned the joy of having Costco deliver groceries and of getting the stuff I can't get at Costco — or don't want a three year supply of — via other services.

But the other day, I had to go somewhere near a new (open since January) Amazon Fresh store. As an online customer of Amazon Fresh from time to time, I thought I'd pop in, see what they had and pick up some of the things I usually get delivered by Amazon Fresh. I was afraid it might be crowded but as it turned out, it wasn't. In fact, it was close to empty. The aisles were full of Amazon Fresh shoppers scurrying about the store filling orders from the shelves.

It's a huge store and they have aisle after aisle of groceries and I went up and down each of those aisles and I bought…

…absolutely nothing.

It's a beautiful store and they have all sorts of high-tech ways of interfacing with the Amazon app on your phone, including charging the whole thing to the credit card you have linked to it. They have these magic shopping carts that will keep a running total of the prices of everything you put in them, including weighing your bananas. (I didn't use one of the magic carts. I used a regular one and didn't find anything I wanted to put in it.) There are little stations where you can "Ask Alexa" where to find the goddamn Rice-a-Roni.

The produce and meat counters looked great. And yes, they had paper towels and I use paper towels but I have a case of Costco paper towels. And I have cases of certain canned goods I often consume…and I have three unopened boxes of Cheerios from Costco and I have plenty of Rao's Marinara Sauce…

I was hoping to find items in two categories. One was that there are certain things I order from Amazon Fresh that I haven't found anywhere else. I still find them on the Amazon Fresh website where at this very moment, they're telling me I can order all I want of them and get free 2-hour delivery on any order over $35.00. But I couldn't find them on the shelves of the Amazon Fresh store where, I'd assumed, my orders were filled…but maybe not.

It wasn't that I couldn't find them. Alexa didn't know either so I reverted to the primitive method of asking human beings. Those humans were filling online Amazon Fresh orders but they said this Amazon Fresh store doesn't carry everything that Amazon Fresh offers online. Neither could explain how that works.

Then there was the other thing I hoped to find there: They offer a lot of prepared meals like carved meats and pizza and soups and sushi. That's all supposed to be available after 11 AM but at 11:40 when I was there, most of it was not. The pizza was but it didn't look too appetizing.

So I left empty-handed or empty-carted or whatever the term is. I like the cleanliness of the place. Amazon Fresh looks fresh. I liked the innovative computer/internet integration. I just couldn't find anything I wanted to buy. Mr. Bezos and his crew need to work on that part of it.

Mark's 93/KHJ 1972 MixTape #12

The beginning of this series can be read here.

Danger Man was a British TV show starring Patrick McGoohan as secret agent John Drake. It ran over there from 1960 to 1962 and then they stopped making 'em for a while. They started up again in 1964 and made new episodes of a slightly-revamped version until '68 when Mr. McGoohan quit to do The Prisoner.

I know people who will argue until they're the color of a Smurf that The Prisoner was a sequel to Danger Man and that McGoohan was playing the same character. I also know people who will argue until they're the same hue that he was not John Drake in that show. Do not — repeat: DO NOT — send me your views on this because I don't care and because I think The Prisoner is a more interesting show if we aren't sure about that.

CBS aired Danger Man here in 1961. Later, when they brought the series back and aired the new version, it had a new title (Secret Agent) and a new theme song. The song was written by P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri, and Johnny Rivers recorded the short version heard on the show. It got so much attention that later, during a live engagement at the Whisky a Go Go night club here in Hollywood, he recorded the longer version he performed here, there and everywhere. It was a very big hit…

Mark's 93/KHJ 1972 MixTape #11

The beginning of this series can be read here.

From 1966, it's The Cyrkle with "Red Rubber Ball," a tune which reached #2 on the charts that year. I'm looking over the list of The Cyrkle's other records and the only one I recall ever hearing was "Turn-Down Day," which did not make my mixtape. "Red Rubber Ball" was written by Paul Simon of Simon & Garfunkel and Bruce Woodley of The Seekers and I recall liking the tune although I never saw a sun in the sky that in any way reminded me of a red rubber ball.

But it's a nice-enough song in spite of that and I can always make my friend Shelly Goldstein laugh by telling her, "Hey, you're not the only starfish in the sea."

I don't know what show this clip is from but I think it really is them lip-syncing. Back when I was doing variety shows, we usually had groups mime to their records or pre-recorded tracks and a very experienced TV director told me, "Very often, you'll find that the singers will do a good job but they'll be consistently a fraction of a second behind their voices on the track. That isn't a problem in itself because you can always slide the track a few frames and put their lip movements in perfect sync with the track. The trouble is when you have a drummer in the shot because most drummers are precisely on the beat so if you slide the track, you put the drummer out of sync. Usually, I have to split the difference but a better way is to just not get the drummer in the same shot as the singers if you can arrange it."

It doesn't look to me like they had that problem in this video but once the director told me that, I began to notice it on a lot of shows where singers were lip-syncing. They were in sync but the drummer wasn't — or vice-versa. And now that I've mentioned it here, you'll probably start noticing it.

Drive-In Movies: Good Riddance!

This first ran here back on June 5, 2011. It seemed like it was about time it was here again…

I'm sorry. I'm not the least bit nostalgic for drive-in movies, nor do I resent their near-extinction. Obviously, a part of their appeal was that a guy and a girl could go to one on a date, ignore the film on the screen and have a wee bit of privacy for purposes of necking…but not much. Apart from that, I never understood why anyone had any use for them except as a good place to park or hold a swap meet during daylight hours.

Ours was the Olympic Drive-In, which was located at the corner of Olympic and Bundy in West Los Angeles. The three times my parents took me there, the place was crawling with kids who were running around between parked cars and drivers were honking horns continuously and there always seemed to be some poor guy wandering around with a tray of sodas and popcorn, having forgotten where his car was located so he kept yelling, "Marge?" For some reason, it was always "Marge?" It all seemed about as conducive to romance as trying to make out in the middle of a Kmart during the Blue Light Special.

olympicdrivein01

My folks took me to the Olympic to see the following movies: Gulliver's Travels (the Max Fleischer version), Onionhead (starring Andy Griffith), Alias Jesse James (Bob Hope) Visit to a Small Planet (Jerry Lewis), The Delicate Delinquent (Jerry again) and Once Upon a Horse (the film debut — and almost the demise — of Rowan and Martin). I remember the movies but not which was paired with which in double features. These spanned the years when I was six, seven and eight — 1958-1960.

I also remember the Olympic as a horrible place to watch a movie. You'd pull into a spot and take the speaker, on which you foolishly expected to hear the movie's soundtrack, from a little pole and hook it over your window…only the speakers rarely worked. If you found a good, vacant parking space it was probably vacant because its speaker didn't work…as my father would find out. He'd have to move the car again and again and sometimes even again…and then right in the middle of the movie, the speaker would conk out and he'd have to move us yet again. So there was yet another distraction. The cars next to you were always moving around. Even when you found a space with a dependable speaker, the odds were that one or both of the speakers next to you didn't work so other cars would be pulling in and out of those spaces throughout the evening.

So the sound was bad and occasionally non-existent. The image was also bad…projected on a screen miles away that was covered with bird dung and serious weather damage. The Olympic got prints that were on their last go-round and full of splices, and you could always count on each movie breaking once or twice. During Onionhead, it would just stop like clockwork every ten or so minutes and the screen would be blank for about three. I figured out later that they must have only had one working projector that night so every time they got to the end of a reel, the projectionist would have to take that one off and then mount the next reel on the projector.

Whenever there was no movie on the screen, everyone honked their horn and hooted until there was again. There was also a lot of honking when cars tried to leave and back out of their spots…

…and then there was the refreshment stand. Oh, Sweet God in Heaven…

It was located in front of the screen in a low building which also housed rest rooms which had not been cleaned since the marquee included the name of Lon Chaney…senior. There was also a little playground there with swings and teeter-totters. I have this indelible memory of my father taking me to the men's room right in the middle of one of the Jerry Lewis films and it was like a twenty-minute wait for the only working toilet. We were lined up outside and I was watching a grown-up woman who must have weighed 250 pounds, sitting on one side of the teeter-totter…and there were about six men pressing down on the other end, trying unsuccessfully to get her off the ground while she ate a meatball hero sandwich.

I laughed out loud. It was a lot funnier than the Jerry Lewis movie, not that that's usually a tough standard to beat.

Before we went back to the car, my father bought popcorn and sodas, which were the only thing in the refreshment stand that looked remotely edible. There were hot dogs there that looked radioactive…like they might actually get up and do the little dance that the animated hot dogs had done in the intermission cartoon. There was also a big tub of chili that, so help me, had something living in it.

We finally got the popcorn and drinks back to our car…which took a while because, of course, my father forgot where the car was. I think I suggested he try yelling "Marge?" even though my mother's name was Dorothy. Once we finally located the auto with her in it, I promptly spilled refreshments all over the back seat, which I later learned was pretty much expected when you took a kid to a drive-in movie. Or at least it should have been.

So I couldn't enjoy the movie and I couldn't eat. My mother had brought along my pajamas with the bizarre idea that if I got tired, they'd put me in them and I could doze off in the back seat. Like that was remotely possible. It was very awkward for her to change me into my jammies inside the car and between the sound of the movie and the car horns honking and people racing engines and the lost fathers wandering around the lot screaming "Marge?", I couldn't have gotten any shuteye if you'd administered a lethal injection. Add in the huge traffic snarl at the end and the long, long wait to get out of the lot and you can understand why I never had any use for drive-in movies.  How anyone ever did is as big a mystery to me as what was lurking in that chili.

Today's Video Link

Some of you have probably seen this but I hadn't until today. This is the Brooklyn Handicap one afternoon in June back in 2013. Just watch what happens and use it as a metaphor in life…

Today's Video Link

One of my favorite comedians of the sixties was Jackie Vernon and one of his best routines was the slideshow. It still makes me laugh…

Recommended Reading

If you want to know what's going on with the indictment of the Trump Organization and Allen Weisselberg, read Andrew Prokop.

If you want to know why Donald Rumsfeld was a horrible, horrible Secretary of Defense, read Fred Kaplan.

And if you want to know just why Rudy Giuliani can no longer practice law in New York, read Eugene Kiely and Robert Farley.