Mask and Ye Shall Find

Let's say you're in a roomful of people who are not wearing masks during The Pandemic.  Are you any safer if you wear one?  According to this article, yes, you are.  You're better off not to be in such a room but if you are, Masked is better than Not Masked.

And someone asked me what kind of mask I'm wearing when I go out.  My doctor recommended this one and I'm pretty happy with it.  I have no idea how it'll do on your face but it's comfy on mine and I like that it goes around my whole head, doesn't hook on my ears and it easily covers my chin.  Some of the masks I tried earlier were not so efficient in the chin area.

Minor drawbacks: They aren't the cheapest masks you can get.  Then again, maybe this is not the time to be wearing the cheapest mask you can get.  Also, you'll feel like the 3M company bought advertising space on your face.

This is the 3M Aura N95 Model 9205.  I also wear their Model 9210 which is just about identical but harder to purchase in small quantities.  They say it's "disposable" but I'll bet you could wear one for many days and many nights.

A New Kind of Spam?

Maybe you've been getting these for a while on your cell phone but it's only been the last month or two that mine has received them.  They're fake messages, mostly pretending to be from AT&T, trying to get me to click on a link that will take me…

…well, since I've been wise enough not to click, I don't know where any of them would take me but I think "to the cleaners" is a likely possibility.  Or maybe Computer Virus Hell.  Or maybe to a festival of data-mining and/or an avalanche of additional spam.  Whatever it, is, I'll bet it's not good for me.

This one wants me to click and claim some sort of money they're holding for me.  The one before told me there were serious problems with my bill and I needed to click on the provided cyberlink to sort things out.  The one before that said, "As requested, your cellphone account will be disconnected and deleted in one hour" and then it gave me a link to click if this was not what I wanted.  And so on.  How did I realize it was a fraud?

  1. It has a real phone number, portions of which I have redacted.  AT&T does not need a standard ten-digit phone number to send me a text message.
  2. The link they want me to click to is not to an AT&T address.
  3. AT&T giving me back money?  Are they kidding me?  Are they freakin' kidding me?

And also, I keep getting these.  They have me on High Alert.

I'm not sure if there's anything I can do except to block their numbers.  I have an app that lets me report voice calls I shouldn't be getting and while I'm not sure that does any good, at least I feel like I've done something to fight back.  That's why these are more annoying.

Mr. or Ms. Know-It-All

Shortly after Donald Trump was inaugurated, I had a conversation with a friend of mine who'd voted for him but viewed it less as a vote for Donald and more as a vote against Hillary. This guy really had a hate on for Hillary Clinton for reasons that struck me as having little to do with anything she'd done or might do in government. He kept comparing her to "that girl in high school who kept acting like she knew more than anyone else." At one point we had (approximately) the following exchange…

ME: Wouldn't you like to have a President who knows more than anyone else?

HIM: Not if they keep acting like they do.

It didn't make a lot of sense to me back then. It doesn't make a lot of sense to me now, especially since the guy he voted for was the guy who went around saying things like "Only I can fix it" and "nobody knows more about technology than me." Here's a list of some of the times Trump said he knew more than anyone else about something.

I think this particular friend had a problem with the concept of a woman acting like she was smarter than he was but not with a man claiming it. But a lot of people don't like anyone saying that. They're kind of "in denial" that a doctor might know more about medicine, a lawyer might know more about law, etc. They like The Internet because no matter what stupid thing you believe, you can always find an alleged expert who will agree with you.

99.99% of doctors might agree that hitting yourself repeatedly on the head with a ball peen hammer will not make you live longer but somewhere on the World Wide Web, there's gotta be someone who claims to be an expert and who advocates his "Ball Peen Hammer Longevity Treatment" — and if there isn't, there will be. Even if you don't completely buy into it, it gives you the power to say, "All the science isn't in yet" or "Experts disagree on this." Today, more than ever, we have people who believe they are indeed entitled to their own facts.

Today's Video Link

My pal Charlie Frye is back doing things that I could never-in-a-million-years do…and let's be honest. Neither could you…

Recommended Reading

A lot of people in this country would rather die than get vaccinated…and some will get their wish. Eric Boehlert writes about how the press keeps describing such people as "vaccine hesitant," which he thinks (and I think) trivializes the problem. Here's an excerpt…

A recent Wall Street Journal report on a deadly Covid surge in West Virginia driven entirely by the unvaccinated noted, "Early on, the state excelled at vaccinating people in nursing homes and others who were eager to get the shot, but then it ran into a roadblock of hesitant people, state officials say." [Emphasis added.]

West Virginia "ran into a roadblock of hesitant people," the newspaper reported, and that was it; the Journal delved no further into the how or the why. Fact: The unvaccinated phenomenon in America represents the story of Covid today. But the press tip-toes around it, pretending it's normal for millions of Americans to risk death by refusing to take a vaccine that's been administered billions of times worldwide.

But read the whole piece. Someday when all this is over — or at least contained — there will be a ghastly statistic of how many people were killed by this thing. And even folks who lived through it will shake their heads and wonder how, oh how, it got that bad.

Peter Palmer, R.I.P.

Peter Palmer, the living embodiment of Al Capp's Li'l Abner, has died at the age of 90. This obit has all the details. I wrote at length about him in this article about the Li'l Abner Broadway show and this article about the movie made from it. Here's an excerpt from the former…

But if finding Daisy Mae was easy, obtaining an Abner proved impossible for a time. Actor after actor auditioned for the role and the casting directors continually broadened their search area, seeking someone who was tall and muscular and who could sing. "We started to panic," [co-author Norman] Panama later recalled. "No matter how good the rest of the show was, no matter how good the rest of the cast was, we knew that without a strong Abner, we were dead." After an exhaustive search that involved auditioning Andy Griffith and inquiring on the availability of Elvis Presley, they settled on the best available candidate, actor-comedian Dick Shawn.

"We weren't completely satisfied with Shawn," Panama remembers. He lacked the brawny musculature that Kidd, Panama and Frank all felt was essential to the role, especially given the show's plotline. Shawn agreed to spend time at a gymnasium and costume designer Alvin Colt began to plan how the actor's physique might be enhanced with padding and shoe lifts.

Shawn's manager reminded his client that a hit show could mean a year or more of solid work and suggested that Shawn take a vacation before rehearsals commenced. The actor departed for the Bahamas, thinking he would begin work on the show upon his return.

The following Sunday evening, Kidd, Frank and Panama were watching Steve Allen's TV show on NBC. A commercial came on and, on a whim, Frank changed the channel over to see what was on Ed Sullivan's competing show on CBS. The threesome heard Sullivan introduce a young soldier who had won the All-Army Talent Competition. A handsome enlisted man took the stage and proceeded to sing "Granada" in spectacular voice.

"That's Abner," Kidd gasped. Indeed, apart from his blonde hair, the singer looked more the part of Abner Yokum than Dick Shawn did…and his singing was vastly superior. The next day, a secretary spent several hours on the phone, tracking down the future star of Li'l Abner. His name was Peter Palmer.

Born in Milwaukee and reared in St. Louis, Peter Palmer became a Missouri All-Star football tackle and attended the University of Illinois. There, he became the first music major to win a letter in football and probably the only gridiron hero to sing the National Anthem before games. Fresh out of college, he won a Chicago radio contest and that led him to Hollywood where most of the major studios butted heads, trying to sign him to contracts. Instead, he enlisted in the service.

Palmer's appearance on Ed Sullivan's program was but one stop in a tour of military installations. "When I got home," he recalls. "There was a message from my wife in San Antonio. She had all these messages from some producers in New York. We didn't have a phone so they'd called our neighbors.

"I called them back collect and Mel and Norman got on the phone — one was on an extension — and they said they were producing this show and they asked, 'Do you know who we are?' And I said no. And then they said, 'It's going to be directed by Michael Kidd. Do you know who that is?' And I said no.

"They asked me if I knew the comic strip and I said yes, it was my favorite. It really was but it had never occurred to me that I might someday play Abner.

"They paid for tickets so my brother and I could fly to New York. I was in my Army uniform and they had me read for them and sing and take my shirt off so they could see if I had real muscles, which I did." Palmer was 24 years old at the time. He was 6'4" and weighed 220 pounds. With his hair dyed black, he looked like he'd stepped right out of an Al Capp drawing. Panama and Frank had to call in favors in Washington to arrange for Palmer to receive his discharge two months early so he could join the cast.

Soon after, Dick Shawn returned from the Bahamas to the news that he didn't have the role he'd thought he had. He was angry but he eventually made the best of the situation by using it in his club act. "Dick and I became friends," Palmer recalls. "He'd kid me about it all. He'd sometimes do ten minutes in his show about how he was laying on the beach in the Bahamas while Peter Palmer was taking his job." (Shawn reportedly told several people that Palmer was infinitely better in the role than he would have been.)

I think that's one of the best "getting discovered" stories I've ever heard in a lifetime of devouring show biz stories. And I think Peter Palmer as Abner was just about the most perfect casting I've ever seen.

I met Peter on the set of a short-lived situation comedy called The Kallikaks that was on NBC for all of five episodes in 1976. He was a regular on the series and I was writing what would have been Episode #6 if there'd been an Episode #6. A few years later, I had a couple of long phone calls with him, interviewing him for the articles. I remember in one, he was about to go on tour with his wife, performing the musical, I Do, I Do. And he said, "We alternate playing in that and The Music Man. I got too old to do Abner." Wish I could have seen him in any of those shows.

Very nice man. Very proud of his career…and humble. Well aware of the flukish nature of his entire career. It was a good one.

Lasagna Memories

Every so often the last week or so, I take a break from work, turn on PlutoTV and catch some episode of Garfield and Friends that I haven't seen in more than twenty years. I just watched one that had the above title card in the end credits. As usual — and as negotiated with his agent — Lorenzo Music got special billing and then we listed the other folks who did voices in this half-hour. The additional cast for this one was Thom Huge, Gregg Berger, Howie Morris, Arnold Stang and George Foreman.

Yes, that's the George Foreman who was a two-time world heavyweight champion and an Olympic gold medalist, and current grill entrepreneur.  And that's Arnold Stang, the great comic actor who was in dozens of movies and TV shows and who voiced many a cartoon superstar including Herman the Mouse (in the Herman & Katnip cartoons) and Top Cat. The two men were not in the same Garfield cartoon, nor were they in the same recording studio, nor were they recorded on the same day.

How did we get George Foreman to do the voice of a prize fighter who can't stop eating? We had the same attorney. He told me George wanted to do a voice in a cartoon.  I told him, "I think we can arrange something" and then we arranged something.  George is a very funny, sweet man and it's difficult to believe that his main profession once was beating the crap out of people.

He took direction well and proved to be a pretty good actor.  The rest of the cast was delighted to have him there and Lorenzo brought in a pair of professional boxing gloves and got George to sign them.

How did we get Arnold Stang to do what he said was his first cartoon job in many years? I called his agent and booked him but it wasn't that simple. Arnold lived on the East Coast — in Connecticut, I think. One season late in the run of Garfield and Friends, our producer Lee Mendelson was nice enough to indulge me and spend the extra loot it cost to have me record some New York voice actors for the show and one of them was Arnold.

I was in a recording studio in Manhattan with the guest stars who came in one at a time, each to be in a different cartoon. The rest of the cast was in our recording studio in Los Angeles and we were connected so well that you couldn't possibly tell from the finished cartoon that someone was 3,000 miles away. (Nifty Coincidence: The amazing Andy Morris, who ran the studio we used in L.A., picked out the studio he'd connect with in New York. When Arnold arrived, he said, "Hey, this is where I used to record Herman & Katnip!")

Arnold was our first guest voice of the day and being a seasoned pro, he arrived an hour early. I was delighted because that meant we had an hour to sit and talk, mostly about his participation in my favorite movie, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. I was further delighted by stories of working on Top Cat and on Milton Berle's legendary TV series, and especially by the fact that Arnold Stang looked and sounded exactly like Arnold Stang.

The lovely and brilliant Howie Morris was in the L.A. cast and he and Arnold had a very nice reunion via the phone patch. Back when Howie lived and worked in New York — and sometimes since — he and Arnold were always seeing each other at auditions. Being two funny, tiny guys, they were constantly up for the same parts. Both were up to voice the title character in the 1963 Beetle Bailey cartoons and Howie got it. Both were up to play Hysterium in the national touring company of A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum and Arnold got that one…and so on.

I wrote more about that day here. If you click over there, you can hear the answering machine message that Arnold recorded for me.

I have a lot of writing that needs to get done this week but every so often, I can't resist clicking on PlutoTV and seeing what memories it evokes. George and Arnold were two good ones.

Today's Video Link

All the stories about Simone Biles caused me to pay more attention to gymnastics than I ever have. It was a sport that I never looked at too closely because it reminded me of how miserable I was at every single activity that falls under that category. I don't care how you've failed in your life…you have never been as bad at anything as I was at gymnastics.

Watching videos of the amazing Ms. Biles caused me to see others who do what she does. This is Katelyn Ohashi and it doesn't get much better than this. It's not just the incredible flips and turns and gravity-defiance. It's also the sheer joy in her performance and the enthusiasm of those watching her from the sidelines…

A Reasonable Request

Hey, when you write me an e-mail, please include your name in it. Don't expect me to connect your e-mail address to who you are. I have a real good memory but unless your e-mail is from yournamehere.com, it's a good idea to include who you are in the body of your messages. I just put mine in a signature that is appended to every message I send.

Last Night at the Emmy Awards

Like you, I didn't know enough about the nominees to watch last night's Emmy Awards. I've also reached a certain saturation level with awards shows. I gather from the online chatter 'n' clips that it was the usual tedious and self-important event, that John Oliver won his usual two and that the broadcast networks won very little. About the only thing I wanted to see was the In Memoriam reel, which had more familiar names than usual. Here it is as broadcast and we'll discuss it after we watch it…

I can already hear two complaints about it, one being that a lot of people didn't get full-frame. The director was more interested in showing us the musical performers than the people the segment was about.

The other complaint was the usual "So-and-so" wasn't in it…and usually, some of that was because there's a cut-off date for the assembly of the montage and a few people who died the week before didn't make it in. This year, the Academy seems to have made a special effort to cut down on that. Norm Macdonald and Michael K. Williams were included.

The larger gripe each year is that someone decided that "So-and-so" did deserve inclusion and others didn't. If you wonder why they couldn't include everyone, go watch this video and force yourself to sit through the entire thing. It's on the Academy website and it's a list of everyone in the TV industry who passed in this past year. It's a little over seven minutes long and they probably still left someone out. Imagine that you were the person who had to decide who to include in the on-air presentation…and perhaps you will feel a twinge of sympathy for the folks who have to make those decisions.

And there's another reason to watch it in its entirety. I saw at least twenty names of people I worked with or knew casually…and I hadn't heard that they'd died. It might be more than twenty.

Recommended Reading

This is "Recommended Reading," not "Super-Recommended Reading" like the previous post but it's still "Recommended." Jonathan Chait debunks the fib that the richest one-percent of the country pays 40% of the taxes. This is one of those lies — like Trickle-Down Economics and "Trump won the 2020 Presidential Election" that is said mainly by people who will never stop saying it, no matter what.

Super-Recommended Reading

Photo by me at one of its previous locations.

Our pal Harry McCracken has done Pulitzer-worthy investigative reporting to present an illustrated history of the Bullwinkle Statue up on Sunset Boulevard. The statue is sixty years old today so today would be a great time to read all about it. Warning: It'll take you a while.

This is one of the finest works of journalism I have ever seen and I ain't kidding about this. I'm familiar with this turf and I sure couldn't have come up with most of what Harry uncovered. (Funny Typo! I just typed "moost of what" and corrected it.)

Harry sent me the link because he knew I'd share it with you and that we'd all love it. Also, he wrote to me, "I'm not sure if you're aware that your prediction of cars crashing into it in its new location has already come true at least twice." No, I wasn't. You can read about that prediction deep in the article.

From the E-Mailbag…

After I posted the link to Ted Koppel's little tour of Mt. Airy, I got a lot of messages like this one from J. Tein…

I watched the video and had to wonder why you posted it without comment. You visited Mt. Airy in North Carolina. Did you observe the same things that Mr. Koppel observed?

Well, I was in Mt. Airy for less than twenty-four hours following two days at a comic convention in Charlotte. Unlike Ted Koppel, I didn't go around talking to people for however long he did. I didn't ask anyone about their politics. I didn't ask any black people if they'd experienced racial discrimination. Matter of fact, I don't think I saw any black people in Mt. Airy and that, I assume, had to do with how little of the town I covered — two restaurants, one hotel, one museum, a retirement home and the airport in nearby Greensboro.

I'm not dodging your question. I'm declining to make a judgement based on not very much evidence…something I wish more people would do.

Everyone I encountered in North Carolina was nice and friendly and really no different from the people I've met anywhere in the United States or my three brief trips to Canada. Admittedly, I have not traveled much in my life. The three Canadian excursions were all to comic conventions and people tend to be pretty much the same at comic conventions. They all ask me what Jack Kirby was like and what the hell do I do on Groo? I have been nowhere else outside the continental United States and to less than half of those states.

When I've been in different cities not for conventions, I still haven't seen much difference. I didn't see the people I met in Mt. Airy as particularly different from the people I met in Muncie or the people I meet in Los Angeles. But maybe it's that I didn't go looking for differences as Ted Koppel did.

He interviewed one small bus full of people who were almost all pro-Trump and there was a woman who was concerned that people would think they're stupid. Well, yeah. I suspect that anywhere you go, there are people who are pro-Trump and people who are anti-Trump and they all think those of the other mindset are stupid. But that political opposition aside, most people are nice and friendly, at least in my limited experience.

You know what I did find that Ted Koppel found? He spoke with one family that was visiting the Andy Griffith Museum. When I was there, I visited that museum with my beloved Betty Lynn, who was in a wheelchair. In my report after the trip, I wrote…

I was pushing her from my rental car towards the museum when a visiting family approached and asked, pretty please, if Betty would allow a photo of her and the two young girls in the family. Of course she would. She was so nice to those people, answering their questions and appreciating their love of the show.

The conversation Mr. Koppel had with the family he encountered was almost identical to the conversation with the family who asked to meet Betty. It was not the same family but both spoke of The Andy Griffith Show as a teaching instrument to instill morals and values in the children. That show has endured to some extent because of that. Whether you think it's a good or bad thing, it really does mean that much to some people. And I don't think it's that way just in Mt. Airy.

Today's Video Link

Newsguy Ted Koppel pays a visit to Mayberry Mt. Airy, North Carolina. You'll see my old neighbor Betty Lynn, who's the big attraction there…

Today's Video Link

William Shatner reacts to various impressions of William Shatner…