More Cartoons in the Time of COVID-19 for July 2020

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I don’t think I often get carried away with these daily offerings. I try to be clever and somewhat, but not always, above the fray but this one took off like a… FULL STOP! I’m afraid we already have the bat out of hell among us.
 
RESTART:
 
“He didn’t process information in any conventional sense. He didn’t read. He didn’t really even skim. Some believed that for all practical purposes he was no more than semi-­literate.” — Michael Wolff in Fire and Fury
 
At the time of our nation’s founding books were expensive– very expensive. In 1776 a copy of Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations would have cost nearly $700 in today’s dollars. Despite this, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams each had libraries of thousands of books. In fact what Jefferson amassed became the original source of books for the Library of Congress.
 
From what we can discern, the amount of reading Donald Trump does puts him at the very bottom of those who have preceded him as president of the United States. Maybe not the very very bottom, Zachary Taylor was thought to actually be illiterate.
 
No one who is honest can be surprised that President Trump didn’t read his daily brief last February that stated a Russian intelligence unit was suspected of offering money to the Taliban to kill American soldiers. And no one who is honest can be surprised that Trump and his White House will avoid admitting anything amiss here but do it as if they are tap dancing around a fallen power line.
 
We currently have a president who doesn’t read, is never wrong, makes stuff up,  actually thinks he knows more than scientists and generals, cavorts with bigots and haters, spends much of his time watching cable news and tweeting hostility at all who may hold him to account. Unless all his tweets are written for him, we know he can write and also that he isn’t a good speller.
 
But back to reading. Certainly, you don’t have to be well read to be elected president and obviously, you don’t have to read to make a lot of money and acquire fame. But there was another president who was thought to be an intellectual lightweight and demonstrably unfit for the job of succeeding Franklin Roosevelt and during World War ll to boot. In his case he rose to the challenge.
 
Harry Truman is now considered as one of the better if not great presidents. Why? Because he was tough and decisive and knew the difference between right and wrong. He had the best interests of the American people always uppermost in his mind and heart. He put love of country before love of himself.
 
Many of us didn’t give Donald Trump the benefit of the doubt when he won the election four years ago but there were also many others who not only hoped, but anticipated he would grow in office and take seriously the responsibilities of his job and adhere to the oath that he swore.
 
That hasn’t happened. He has and will continue to go down that loathsome road that is the only one he travels on, a road where laws and traditions of governance in the United States have been battered like the glass jaw of a washed up prizefighter. The country has been torn further apart politically and socially, its institutions have been disparaged and damaged and our confidence in our future as a nation is shaken to an extent I don’t think any of us ever believed was possible.
 
A significant number of Americans appear to support Trump’s every act, including those acts that are deviant and shameful. Trump has his full throated supporters in Congress but he has also cowed many other Republicans who might want to criticize him but are paralyzed to do that or do so meekly at the risk of their own reelection.
 
The country faces crises that this presidency has not met and tries furiously to sweep under a rug that is now so convex you need mountain climbing gear to scale it. 
 
I found this quote of Harry Truman’s that contrasts mightily with what we regretfully know about Donald Trump.
 
“Not all readers are leaders, but all leaders are readers.” –Harry S. Truman
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More Cartoons in the Time of COVID-19 for July.001

“Men of Dartmouth give a rouse

For the college on the hill…”

My alma mater became coed only after I had graduated and after two centuries of existence. There was no lack of pushback from angry alumni who opposed the decision. But the world was changing. The traditional reasons for all-male colleges were disappearing. According to an account I found, at the meeting of the trustees of the College to vote to either remain all male or become coed some minds were swayed by one member of the board who had been thought to be a vote against accepting women.

“Our students need to learn to work with both men and women. And we do not want to eliminate half the leadership talent in admitting students.”

That statement might have seemed enlightened in the 1970s but the decision for the College to become coed was overdue. Among the changes that were necessary to make co education at Dartmouth viable, there is now a summer quarter which all students must attend at least once during their matriculation. That was a sensible move that increased the ratio of women to men on campus without requiring any reduction of male enrollment. And other adjustments were made…

“Dear old Dartmouth give a rouse

For the college on the hill…”

I confess that I’ve never learned the words to the alma mater but I certainly welcome it having been updated.

It strikes me that the path to the acceptance of gender equality has lessons that are worth remembering as we now experience a convulsive transition that will hopefully, bring us to a greater level of racial equality in the United States.

Getting rid of symbols of the Confederacy is also long overdue but just tearing down statues, I believe, plays into the hands of those who support or are not offended by them. The most successful tactic is what just took place in Mississippi where, faced with the prospect of serious economic repercussions, the last state flag embedded with a Confederate symbol was removed in a vote of the state’s legislators.

I don’t dismiss that this decision was also arrived at out of goodwill, but George Floyd’s death was a catalyst and Mississippi’s rehabilitation of its flag might not have happened now without the pressure that was exerted by groups and individuals as disparate as the Mississippi Baptist Convention, the NCAA and the country music singer and native Mississippian Faith Hill who expressed herself eloquently.

“I understand many view the current flag as a symbol of heritage and Southern pride, but we have to realize that this flag is a direct symbol of terror for our black brothers and sisters.”

In perhaps the only thing I can think of that I might agree on with Donald Trump, revising history does have limitations and the removal of statues has as well. Twelve United States presidents owned slaves, eight of them while in office, including Washington and Jefferson. I’m opposed to the dynamiting of Mt. Rushmore and the renaming of the Washington Monument and Jefferson Memorial. But in no uncertain terms I’m against glamorizing slavery or those who fought to preserve it.

So, why do I have this cartoon with Theodor Geisel standing alongside his Cat in the Hat and Mr. Rogers pulling on his sweater? I thought I would be mentioning them a lot sooner. They are on the Dartmouth Green in Hanover, New Hampshire and that’s Baker Library in the background, modeled after Independence Hall in Philadelphia.

Dr. Suess graduated from the College in 1925 but along the way he was punished for being caught drinking gin and forced to resign as the editor of the student humor magazine. Geisel continued writing for it surreptitiously, signing his middle name Seuss. The rest, I think you will agree, is not subject to revisionist history.

Fred Rogers attended Dartmouth for his freshman year and then avoided another winter by escaping to a college in Florida. That was longer than Robert Frost had lasted on campus. He fled after only one term in 1892.

I’d been under the impression that Bob Keeshan, who was better known as Captain Kangaroo, also attended Dartmouth but that turns out to be an urban legend, although even today I would hardly classify Hanover as being urban but add an e and that’s accurate. Keeshan was adopted by the Dartmouth Class of 1942 and was awarded an honorary degree and both his kids attended the college.

In any event this connection between Dartmouth and these giants of childhood education and entertainment is likely no more than an interesting coincidence. What is true is that Geisel, Rogers and I were all there before there were women or at least a significant number of them. Now, it’s unquestionably a more beautiful day in the neighborhood to be a student at the college.

And one last thing that brings us full circle…

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That’s a picture of the weathervane atop Baker Library. Dartmouth was established in 1769 and its original mission was to educate Native Americans. The weathervane depicts the founder Eleazar Wheelock and a Native American seated at his feet smoking a pipe. It’s been there since 1928 but will now be replaced.
During much of Dartmouth’s history the College has not been connected to its earliest purpose. To its credit that changed 50 years ago and since then over 1,200 Native Americans and Alaskan Natives have been enrolled. The Indian mascot has been retired and athletic teams are now known as the Big Green.
My hope is that the Trump era and the ills it has exposed and exacerbated is temporary and progress toward racial, ethnic and gender acceptance will continue to move forward. Many are responding to recent events as a wakeup call. They are obviously, also a challenge. Will our nation truly embrace and move to assure that all men and women are indeed created equal? The election in November might just be the most important referendum on that question in American history.
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Ok, so the Michelin Man doesn’t exactly look like Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman probably never set foot in a tire store in her life but what I’ve been thinking about is that line of dialogue from Casablanca I’ve used in today’s cartoon. If Ilsa hadn’t walked into Rick’s Café, there wouldn’t have been a movie but of course she did and there was. It took a coincidence:
 
A remarkable concurrence of events or circumstances without apparent causal connection.
 
I’ve been trying to recall examples of coincidence from my own life and there have been a few. Many years ago at the Hollywood Bowl I was waiting for the evening concert to begin when a woman seated beside me offered me a piece of fried chicken. She and her husband had a bucket of it and I don’t think I had indicated in any way that I coveted my neighbor’s legs, thighs, wings or breasts– she was my mother’s age. It was just a friendly gesture and yes, I ate some chicken.
 
We chewed the fat (Weird idiom since talking while sharing something barely chewable with someone else is a pretty disgusting image.) and discovered that the woman had attended religious school on Long Island when she was very young with my mother. That was certainly a coincidence and also a shock since picturing my mother at religious school is akin to imagining Ingrid Bergman shopping for tires. But if there’s such a thing as classifying coincidences, I’d rank this one as benign and inconsequential.
 
Others can be freakish like Thomas Jefferson and John Adams dying on the same day which happened to be the 4th of July and the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1826. And Mark Twain, who was born on the day Halley’s Comet crossed the sky in 1835 and died on the day it next appeared in 1910. Coincidences can of course also be good or bad.
 
Or how about a heart wrenching coincidence? I have one that involves me, a girl and a movie theater. When I lived in New York City right after college I spent a lot of time at the movies and I mean a lot of time seeing a lot of movies. On one occasion I went to six in one day. I think two of them were Ingmar Bergman films, If all six had been, I probably never would have made it home. I would have jumped in front of a subway.

Three theaters in New York were where I spent many evenings because they were repertory movie houses showing old films of all kinds. The Elgin was in Chelsea and it’s credited with being the originator of the midnight screening which began when it showed Alejandro Jodorowsky’s El Topo in 1970. If you’ve seen this movie, then you probably would agree with me that it makes The Rocky Horror Picture Show look like Ding Dong School.

I owe the Elgin for introducing me to Buster Keaton. As big a silent movie star as anyone back in his day, Keaton’s work had been virtually forgotten for decades as well as tied up in legal battles and even misplaced until his genius was rediscovered and the films re-released. The Elgin held the initial Buster Keaton festival and at the first movie I went to I was in stitches and awe and came back for all of them night after night.

The New Yorker theater was on Broadway at West 88th St. and it was there I marveled at Toshiro Mifune’s performance in Akira Kurosawa’s The Seven Samuarai. It was the uncut three and a half hour version that included an intermission that was projected on the screen as part of the film. It also was on the way to the New Yorker one night that I ended up in the hospital.

In a hurry to make the beginning of Zoo in Budapest with Loretta Young I ran across the street in front of a bus and got whacked by a Volkswagen that was running a red light. I landed on the hood of the car and fell off onto the street and to the driver’s everlasting credit he stopped, picked me up and rushed me to an emergency room.

My left lower leg swelled grotesquely and turned as red as a salami as I lay on a gurney, but no doctor came to examine me for about an hour. When one ultimately did he led a group of a half dozen others who I realized were interns. Why? Because the first thing the doctor said even before addressing me after he lifted up the sheet covering my battered leg was, “I want to show you a classic example of a massive hematoma.”

After that classic example of American medical bedside manner the hospital gave me a choice. I could be admitted or I could take copious amounts of codeine at home and stay in bed which I opted to do and believe it was for about a month but I have no clear recollection of that time. I still have never seen Zoo in Budapestby the way.

But the jewel in my crown of beloved movie theaters was the Thalia just off Broadway on 95th St.. I think of my three movie houses I surely spent the most time at the Thalia, which was the location for a scene in Woody Allen’s Annie Hall. The Thalia had a double feature every night and rotated one of the two movies out the next day and added a new one in its place. That gave me two chances to catch any single film. The Thalia showed pretty much everything from Marcel Carne’s Children of Paradise to Chuck Jones’ Bugs Bunny cartoons.

One night waiting outside for a show I saw a beautiful girl also waiting by herself. I wanted to start a conversation but had no idea how. Of course “hello!” would have been a logical place to begin but it failed to register as an option. My opportunity vanished entirely when her date showed up. A few nights later outside the Thalia the same situation arose. This time it was a different beautiful girl by herself prompting another painfully shy inability to seize the moment on my part. And then THE SAME GUY arrived and escorted her inside!

All three of these theaters have been demolished or repurposed. Today, the dream I used to have of one day being able to see great movies on my own screen at home has become something we take for granted. 

But I’m afraid the excitement of discovering cinema’s past isn’t the same by watching a recording I’ve made from the Turner Classic Movie channel. Don’t get me wrong, I’m very grateful there’s TCM which shows movies without interruptions. But an optimal movie experience is different. It’s not about the popcorn or candy. It’s all about being part of an audience in the dark watching a film together.

Reading books is a solitary endeavor. Movies can be but I prefer when they are not and am sad to think we may be withdrawing into our private cocoons more and more and in danger of losing the movie theater experience. But like Humphrey Bogart, I’ll always have the Thalia.

As for a final coincidence in my life, or maybe it was just plain bad luck, how about being diagnosed with lymphoma the morning after Donald Trump was elected president in 2016? Yes, that happened to me but I’m still here, doing fine and feeling great!

I’ve been a lot luckier than the country.

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“As Mankind becomes more liberal, they will be more apt to allow that all those who conduct themselves as worthy members of the community are equally entitled to the protections of civil government. I hope ever to see America among the foremost nations of justice and liberality.”

― George Washington (March, 1790)
 
“That is the issue that will continue in this country when these poor tongues of Judge Douglas and myself shall be silent. It is the eternal struggle between these two principles — right and wrong — throughout the world. They are the two principles that have stood face to face from the beginning of time, and will ever continue to struggle. The one is the common right of humanity and the other the divine right of kings.”
— Abraham Lincoln (October, 1858 debating Stephen Douglas)
 
“The whole art of government consists in the art of being honest.”
― Thomas Jefferson (July, 1774)

 
“One of the key problems today is that politics is
such a disgrace, good people don’t go into government.”
— Donald Trump (August 2013)
 
A little American flag trivia…
Betsy Ross may be immortalized as the person who sewed the first flag but almost nobody remembers who designed it. Francis Hopkinson, a naval flag designer and signer of the Declaration of Independence was the guy who claimed to have done so and the historical record supports him. Initially, he asked for a “quarter cask of public wine” for his work but in later requests to Congress he wanted cash.
 
It was a descendant– a grandson –of Betsy Ross who asserted nearly one hundred years later that his ancestor had sewn the flag from a sketch given to her by George Washington. There is no evidence that this in fact happened, not in Washington’s diaries nor the records of the Continental Congress. Ross’s grandson later admitted he could not corroborate his story.
 
So, who did sew the first flag? Another family of a verified flag maker of the time insists she did. Her name was Rebecca Young but of course it was too late to change history. I could say her family had a knit fit but it’s a holiday and I don’t want to spoil your enjoyment so I won’t.
 
How many modifications of the United States flag have there been since 1777? Well, there have been a bunch obviously, as more states joined the union. Still the number– 27 –surprised me. And here’s a last thing I didn’t know but makes sense. Since 1818 when Tennessee, Ohio, Louisiana, Indiana and Mississippi were added as stars on the flag all changes to it have officially taken place on the 4th of July.
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The first paying job I had in journalism was as a copy boy at my local newspaper. I left my first paycheck in my pocket and had to ask for it to be reissued after the pants went through the laundry.

 

I worked during the summers in high school at the Reading (PA) Times and aside from delivering copy to the linotypists (How many remember that amazing machine?), ripping the wire stories off the teletypes (another great old machine) and getting Antonio and Cleopatra cigars for the sports editor– his name was Ken Tuckey and his column was (Wait for it.) Ken Tuckey’s Derby –I was soon given other tasks.

The comic strips came in a few weeks in advance– an individual page for the upcoming run of each comic. My task was to cut them up and put all of the Monday’s to be published in one pile, all of the Tuesday’s in… you get the picture. I thought it was cool to know what was happening with Beetle Bailey ahead of time, but discovered nobody else cared.

Reading had two daily papers and since I worked in the evenings for the morning edition I was soon rewriting the obituaries that had been in the evening paper. Rewriting? Yes, the two editions of the paper had to be different, each had a completely separate staff even though they were located side by side on the same floor. Rewriting obituaries meant just changing around the order of the sentences in what had already been printed. I wasn’t exactly being asked to dig up anything new.

Which brings me to Dick Clark. During my career at ABC News I liked doing obits. No, I don’t have a weird fascination with people dying but pulling together an overview of someone’s accomplishments was more interesting and certainly more fun than covering a wildfire or a plane crash for me.

Back before the network evening news had competition from shows and cable channels that were devoted to sports and celebrity, if someone were famous enough, we’d prepare his or her obituary ahead of time– Jimmy Stewart, Katharine Hepburn, Bob Hope… I put one together for the Japanese film director Akira Kurosawa and even got George Lucas, who considered him an important inspiration, to do an interview for it. By the time Kurosawa died he was no longer remembered well enough to even get a mention on ABC News World News Tonight.

I had hoped to do an obit for Dick Clark but only because I wanted to write the opening line. Here it is: Dick Clark died today. He was 16.

Growing up 50 miles from Philadelphia I watched Bandstand before it was American Bandstand. In fact I started watching the show on the local station WFIL even before Dick Clark became its host. Back then I had two TV induced crushes. One of them was most boys’ dream girl at the time Annette Funicello, who I met by the way when I worked at a Radio Shack in Los Angeles when I was going to graduate school. I installed a replacement radio antenna on her Cadillac which had a poodle as its hood ornament.

My other crush was on a girl named Justine Carrelli who jitterbugged every weekday afternoon on Bandstand. She had a boyfriend named Bob. Annette had Frankie Avalon. My chances for getting a date with either girl were doomed.

Dick Clark had a number of acts from Philadelphia launch their careers on his show: Avalon, Fabian, Bobby Rydell, Chubby Checker and Danny and the Juniors. Remember their hit “At the Hop?” The song’s original title was actually “Do the Bop.” When Clark heard it he told the group to change it to “At the Hop” and it reached number one on the charts in 1958. For his suggestion Clark asked for and received half of the publishing rights. Clark was a cutthroat businessman as well as a broadcasting legend.

At some point in the 1970s I was home visiting my parents. It was a Saturday night and with nothing to do I saw an ad in the paper: “Danny and the Juniors appearing at Hiester’s Lanes” –a cocktail lounge at a local bowling alley –and I went. It was a short set with “At the Hop” as the bookends and “Rock and Roll Is Here to Stay” and “Twistin’ USA” in between. Those were the big and I believe only hits for the group.

Afterward I saw Danny Rapp, the “Danny”, sitting by himself at the end of the bar. I grabbed the stool beside him and we talked. He was the lone original Junior who had performed that evening. The others, Danny told me, had moved on and gotten day jobs and were married and raising families. He was the only one hanging on to the past. He didn’t seem happy.

On April 3,1983 I heard on the radio Danny had been found dead in a motel in Quartzsite, AZ. He had shot himself in the head.

My cartoon today includes Buddy Holly and Ritchie Valens– two rock and roll legends who along with J.P. Richardson– the Big Bopper –died in a plane crash in 1959 when I was in the 6th grade. Holly and Valens are perhaps most remembered for their songs named for real women– Peggy Sue and Donna.

One of my pitches to Nightline one year was to produce a broadcast for Valentine’s Day about actual women who had had popular songs written about them. Nightlife passed but I got to realize the idea anyway and to meet both Peggy Sue and Donna which was really a treat. They were both wonderful persons.

Peggy Sue Gerron still lived in Lubbock, Texas where both she and Buddy Holly grew up. She was not his girlfriend in high school, her boyfriend was the drummer, but her name sounded better as the title for a song that Buddy had written.

We went to Lubbock High School to see the trophy case which you’d expect would be full of athletic awards but this one was different. It was devoted to Holly memorabilia.

We went to his gravesite and a friend of Peggy Sue’s, a Holly enthusiast, bent down and began scratching the ground around the flat stone that revealed that the family name was spelled Holley and that he was 23 when he died. The fan unearthed a half dozen guitar picks buried around the marker by other fans before stopping.

Peggy Sue and I drove a 100 miles to Clovis, New Mexico to the studio where Buddy Holly and the Crickets had recorded most of their hit songs. Their producer was the late Norman Petty, who also recorded other artists like Roy Orbison and Waylon Jennings. The studio was still exactly as it was then and that’s where I did my interview with her.

Peggy Sue was a great tour guide. She died two years ago.

Donna Ludwig was Ritchie Valens’ girlfriend. I met her in Sacramento where she had become and still is from what I can tell a mortgage broker. I wanted to do her interview in front of a jukebox and had gotten a bar downtown to let me make use of theirs. Donna parked her car on the street and fed the meter but the interview went longer than she thought and she got a ticket. She was a bit distraught because she told me it was the first ticket she had ever gotten in her life. I took it from her and paid it.

Back at her house Donna wanted to show me something. It was the album Valens had given her with “Donna” and “La Bamba.” As she took the record out from the album’s sleeve she said, “It’s very sacred to me.” She teared up and so did I.

Donna Ludwig was 15 when Ritchie Valens was killed. He was 17.

For my story I also reached out to Paul Anka’s “Diana” and Neil Sedaka’s Carol from his song “Oh, Carol,” who by the way was a fellow high school classmate of his named Carol Klein who later became Carole King. Yes, that one.

Diana wanted to be paid to do an interview which nixed that idea and Neil Sedaka’s wife requested to know how large an audience would see her husband’s interview if he did one. I was doing the piece for Good Morning America and so I gave her the number for the viewers of GMA’s daily broadcast. She wasn’t impressed and turned me down.

I’ve attached a link to a long version of the story I did.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xodg9G-03U8

I’ve uploaded other stories I produced at ABC News to my YouTube channel but this particular one has gotten the most views– 172,000.

Hail! Hail! Rock ‘n’ Roll!

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Oh teachers are my lessons done? 

I cannot do another one. 

They laughed and laughed and said, 

Well child, are your lessons done? 

                                       –Leonard Cohen

 

The summer before entering Dartmouth College my class was sent books to read in advance of our matriculation. One was by José Ortega y Gasset, the other I don’t remember. I do remember that I didn’t read either one so the lecture about them upon our arrival in Hanover was wasted on me.

 Quickly though, I discovered that Dartmouth was not a place where I could blow off or through assignments and skate by. My professors were demanding and my classmates smart and during my four years I remember only one student who I felt didn’t have the brains to be there.

Maybe I’m being harsh about him but it was after midnight night in rural Virginia when he bridged a car in which I was a passenger on a railroad track. Missing the turn was forgivable and fortunately, there was a bar adjacent to our predicament. Its customers streamed out to help lift our vehicle off the tracks so we could return to the road from which we had strayed.

But as we got back in the car the good and drunk samaritans surrounded it and started banging on the hood demanding money.

“What should I do?” asked our driver. “I can’t run over them.”

“No, but you can back the f___ up and get the hell out of here!”

I’m not sure I was the first to shout this but you can imagine.

That close call occurred during the spring of my sophomore year. I was on the golf team and we were on our spring trip, having worked our way north from South Carolina. A place called Fripp Island had been our starting point. It was a newly completed golf resort and its golf course had all the usual hazards you tried to avoid and an extra one that seemed more like a matter of life and death.

In addition to the sand traps and ponds there were alligators and more than a few. Our rounds took longer to complete since when we spotted a gator close to us none of us knew how to ask it to let us play through.

The final match of our tour was at the University of Maryland. I was playing as last man on our team but that day I ended up paired against Maryland’s number one player who was being punished for showing up late. He was mad about that and in golf, unlike football, anger is not usually going to work to your advantage.

I had a great day. The Maryland number one had a bad one and I beat him. That night my teammates and I celebrated and I vaguely remember at one point making a hazy trip to a men’s room.

When I arrived back in Hanover I was faced with an academic decision I had to make. In order to continue my studies in the fall I needed to declare a major. I had considered sociology but a baffling encounter with a department professor who assigned us Jane Jacobs’ The Death and Life of Great American Cities to read squelched that idea.

It was a Tuesday when she announced that we were supposed to have it read by Friday– all 458 pages. I approached her after class.

“Professor, I’m not sure I can read the book that fast.”

“Look, let me tell you something,” she said. “Most people only have one idea they’re trying to get across. If they’re great they might have two and if they have three they get the Nobel Prize.”

She was out the door while finishing that last sentence and I decided that I’d explore a different subject for a major.

And so it was shortly after our return from the golf trip that I walked across the Dartmouth Green to the English Department offices. The afternoon tea at the the stately Sanborn House was for prospective English majors and I had put on a jacket and tie for the occasion that I presumed was expected. If I had been holding my tea cup and saucer correctly, I might have avoided what happened next.

As I listened and nodded while circulating around the room in front of the genteely dressed professors of the department I soon became aware that none were making consistent eye contact with me. They were more focused on the center of my chest. As soon as I lowered my head to see why, I understood the attraction. It was my tie– The same tie I had worn into the men’s room the night after my big win on the golf course.

Puke does not exactly enhance a repp tie and I immediately concluded that English was not going to be the best choice for my concentration of studies during the next two years and made a hasty getaway.

When we returned to school that fall I still hadn’t made up my mind about a major. History seemed like an option and I went to the bookstore to see what courses I would be signing up for but while checking them out I saw a class on Africa that was being taught by a government professor whose course I had taken and liked… Yep, at that moment I became a government major.

After graduation when I went looking for my first job I was asked by an interviewer what I had studied in college. I told him the story I’ve just told you, vomit stained tie and all… I thought he almost hired me but I could be wrong.

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It was over half a century ago that Bob Dylan composed “The Times They Are A Changin’.” Some of us might disagree on many things, many of us might disagree on some things but I’m afraid there’s a growing consensus that a lot of us will agree on one thing. In an ever increasing number of ways, the times —our times since those times— have not always been changing for the better.

Talk radio is one of those developments that I’m certain I could live without. My father used to have his car radio tuned permanently to Rush Limbaugh and so when I visited and borrowed the car I sometimes got a quick earful. When I was in the car with him and Limbaugh was on the air I got a serious earful. About the only thing I learned from Rush and his cohorts was that there’s no issue too complex that it can’t be reduced to fear and loathing.

And if you’ll excuse my own rant, I’ll contend that the majority of talk show hosts are egomaniacs and most of their callers mostly stridently xenophobic and/or racist on the right or often quixotic and/or blindly naïve on the left.

The late former sane governor of Texas, Ann Richards, was once asked why she didn’t have a talk show. Her answer: “The people who have time during the day to listen to me on the radio are not the people I want to be talking to.”

But I remember a kinder gentler time when talk radio was in its infancy and I was not much older. There was a program on local radio in the city where I grew up in Pennsylvania on weeknights that I’d often go to sleep listening to. Its theme music, the big band clarinetist Artie Shaw’s “Nightmare”, would play and Reading’s Night Mayor was on the air.

It might not have been the first radio talk show in the country but I’ll bet it was close. Paul Barclay was the host, a high school school teacher by day and back then, I’d bet, his radio gig was barely making him vacation money. I don’t think he was even much of a local celebrity and he certainly wasn’t into spouting his own opinions to his audience.

No diatribes, no insults, no spin but something else was missing from Barclay’s show that, despite his objectivity and neutrality, made him a very singular voice back in his day. His was in fact the ONLY voice.

In that pre cell phone and Internet era of long ago either the technology didn’t exist or his radio station couldn’t afford it. So, listeners only heard one side of the conversation— the Night Mayor’s. Because of this much, patience was required from the program’s devotees.

Calls all started the same way: “Hello, Night Mayor!” followed by a long silence as the caller made his point and the listener waited to hear Barclay repeat, and no doubt condense, what that point was. Each call was literally translated from English into English and listening to the show plod along could be awkward to the point of painful.

The theme music kind of scared me but I couldn’t resist tuning into the Night Mayor when I was growing up. My transistor radio back then– a leatherbound Zenith portable the size of more than a dozen of today’s iPads in a stack, brought me the world, although St. Louis was actually about as far as it could reach out into it on a good night.

There was rock and roll from New York, basketball from Boston and on the Night Mayor the talk of the stench of Reading politics from its callers. On one occasion I recall it was actually the real thing– complaints about tardy garbage collection.

And then one night I decided to call the Night Mayor myself. I had to. Something incredible had occurred on live television and the Night Mayor was asking for a witness. I had just gotten home from school that afternoon– I think the 6th grade –and saw it myself on a kitsch variety show called County Fair hosted by Bert Parks.

It was a stunt gone amazingly wrong. A woman from the audience was blindfolded and spun around while a lit fuse running on the floor was racing toward her husband. The studio audience had been implored to scream directions to help her find it so she could stamp it out with her shoes. Her husband was sitting in a chair below a sack of flour hanging from the ceiling. At the terminus of the fuse was a firecracker and the firecracker was next to the sack of flour and well… she didn’t find it in time.

When the firecracker exploded the flour ignited and the man instantly became a human torch. I watched in horror as he stood up and Bert Parks ran to him and probably saved his life by knocking him to the floor and smothering the flames with his green master of ceremonies blazer. The show cut to a commercial. Yes, this actually happened!

I could barely believe I had seen it but I had and I felt obligated to report it to the Night Mayor. It was my duty… well partly, but mostly I just wanted to be the first one to call in. I dialed WHUM from the phone in my parents’ kitchen and as it rang and I waited, my nerves started to get the better of me. Stage fright hit and I thought of hanging up. I was a kid, not even a teenager. What was I doing? Only adults called the Night Mayor.

With the suddenness of a car crash it was too late. “Hello, Night Mayor.” His voice sounded much different on the phone. I surprised myself and didn’t hang up and as best I could began my account. The Night Mayor didn’t ask me my age and I was relieved that nobody was hearing me but him. He helped me along with tactical “ah huhs” and “um hums” honed from experience. I rambled around them and paused as the Night Mayor relayed his recapitulation of me to his audience.

How many were in that audience? Hundreds, thousands? Was I articulate? Did I make sense? Together we made it work and then it was over. I was alone in the kitchen and shaking a little but not embarrassed or scared. I was now officially and for all time, a Night Mayor caller.

Years later I became a journalist. I produced reports of events for a living for many others– millions in fact– to watch on network television news. But to this day I have never called another talk show.

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Zeswitz was and I believe still is a musical instruments store in Reading, PA where I grew up. I don’t remember exactly how old I was when I convinced my parents to let me take accordion lessons there. My mother agreed to it I think because she thought it was a good idea for me to have a fallback skill for the future. She would have even staked me the monkey.

There were a lot of other kids taking lessons with me. I’d later realize that Mr. Michaels, the man who was our instructor, had been a real life facsimile of Harold Hill, the charming huckster in Broadway’s The Music Man. Like the Davy Crockett coonskin hat and the hula hoop, learning accordion was a craze for a while in my town.

We all started with beginner accordions that Zeswitz rented for the first half dozen lessons. After that the store played hardball. To continue instruction, a signed contract to purchase a new full blown accordion was required otherwise Zeswitz took away the keys and the buttons. My parents, I’m sure against their better judgement, acquiesced and I plodded along and quickly validated any doubts about their investment when I started to regret having to practice.

At one point we had a giant recital at the local college field house and I think all  of us, under the spell of Mr. Michaels, nearly filled the entire basketball court. If The Guinness Book of Records had known about the event, we might have qualified for an entry— most accordionists per square foot.

The most proficient among us played that accordion rite of passage “Lady of Spain.” I was in the group that played the much easier “All Through the Night.” My memory has fooled me into believing that I had already packed up my instrument and was headed out the door while others were still performing.

A short time later I met my Waterloo (not Abba’s version) when we had to deal with both sharps and flats for mastering “Oh, Them Golden Slippers.” I also gave up any hopes of my ever appearing in Philadelphia’s New Year’s Day Mummers Parade and in my frustration destroyed my grandfather’s beautiful metronome as well.

My parents had been paying for my accordion on the installment plan. I don’t know how they unloaded it but I do remember that for years afterward every pawn shop in Reading had accordions in its window.

Many more years later I heard a story about a guy who left his accordion in his car and went to eat at a restaurant. When he returned one of his car windows had been smashed and there were two accordions on the back seat.

Somebody called the accordion the Rodney Dangerfield of musical instruments and it’s true that, although it gets more respect than a toy piano, it’s rarely been seen on stage with an orchestra be it a symphony or a big band. One accordionist says it’s a matter of class prejudice.

The accordion was invented in the 19th century when the instruments on which music was played were determined by the societal status of the audience who the music was being played for. The accordion, being portable, was played in working class neighborhoods and not the drawing rooms of the aristocracy. When was the last time you saw a harpsichord in a bar?

Upon checking I’ve found that there are some memorable songs that featured an accordion. Here’s a short list:

Rocky Racoon— The Beatles

How Can I Be Sure— The Young Rascals

Wouldn’t It Be Nice— The Beach Boys

When I Paint My Masterpiece— The Band

Piano Man— Billy Joel

Constant CravingK.D. Lang

I no longer have a clue how to play an accordion and I’ve been told that a true gentleman who does know how is one who won’t play.

But here’s a blast from the past in case you want to see how it’s done. Take it away Lawrence Welk… a one, and a two and a three… 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ejiw9J3XkgQ

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Before I ever learned that politicians parse the truth or just lie a good deal of the time and all of us parse the truth or lie some of the time I had an eye opening life primer in the truth about what’s true courtesy of a man named Lester Fisher.

 

My family belonged to a reform synagogue and I attended weekly religious school from the first through ninth grades. I was in sixth grade when our textbook for the year was When the Jewish People Was Young. Some of us couldn’t accept the title as grammatically correct but it was– a “people” is singular although I don’t recall to this day reading or hearing anybody ever say, “The American people is…”

Anyway, When the Jewish People Was Young was published originally in the 1930s. When we were given our copies in the late 1950s its style was as parched as the Israelites must have been wandering about in the Sinai. The book was a snooze. It could have been printed on stone tablets.

Lester Fisher was our religious school teacher that year and challenged with trying to resuscitate this lifeless version of Jewish biblical history. I don’t recall that he succeeded. I only remember THE TEST.

Now, up to this point in my education a true or false exam was preferable to multiple choice or to being asked to provide an actual name or date and certainly it was a much more welcomed alternative to any questions that required a written sentence or God forbid, a paragraph.

But Mr. Fisher was about to change the entire calculus of what I considered my testing pecking order. He was my father’s age and in retrospect maybe didn’t want to be teaching our class about as much as we didn’t want to be attending it. He was serious, actually stern, and he enjoyed being a bit theatrical at times and the day of THE TEST he was in total performance mode.

“Close your books and get out a pencil and paper. This will be a True-False test.”

I’d done the reading and felt prepared to achieve a passing grade which was all I wanted to accomplish. But then Mr. Fisher ominously upped the ante.

“Get ready for ‘Fisher’s Horrible Hundred!'”

The questions began and they were tough– really tough. After the first half dozen I realized I had marked them all as true. I was fairly confident they were but then after a few more that I marked as true as well I began to feel uneasy. How could there be this many true answers in a row?

I opened my mouth. “These are all true,” I said and it probably sounded more like a question born of insecurity than a declaration of certainty.

Mr. Fisher did not look at me and did not pause. His face did not change its expression. The questions kept coming and they all still continued to seem to be true even if I wasn’t sure anymore. My impulses were telling me they were. My logic was telling me that it wasn’t possible.

I had to make a choice, go with my gut or my skepticism  “Fisher’s Horrible Hundred” could turn out to be the easiest hardest exam I’d ever taken and if I were to simply mark all one hundred questions true I was done. But who would ever give such a test?

In a split second I lost my nerve and began to write as many Fs as Ts the rest of the way. As I write this I realize it was an indication that I wasn’t a gambler and looking back on my life I guess I haven’t been. But as I recall I still got the highest mark in our class on THE TEST that day. It was a pyrrhic achievement. “Fisher’s Horrible Hundred” were indeed all true and our entire class failed!

Several years ago I found a copy of When the Jewish People Was Young for sale on eBay and bought it from a public library. Inside the cover I discovered it had been used by a congregation in Las Cruces, New Mexico. A boy’s name from long ago was inscribed in it as well. For no good reason I tracked down his family in Las Cruces and learned he was an insurance agent in Southern California. I called him. He did not want his book back.

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I’ve been creating my cartoons every day since April 1. I’m not the president so history won’t likely judge me on my first 100 days and if we’ve learned anything along the way we now know that 100 days from April 1st ends on July 9th.
I’ve reached a milestone or maybe it’s a millstone. I love doing this but it’s also become a bit of a compulsion and I’ve thought of stopping. But as Yogi Berra probably never said, “When you get to the fork in the road, take it!”

I have a shelf of unpublished inventory. Some of the cartoons on it didn’t seem ready for primetime, others were but have been held in reserve for a rainy day and sometimes I saved a particular cartoon too long and it lost its relevance.

Many in France take the month of August off. I’ve thought of doing that but it’s not like I’m going to be taking a vacation anywhere and for now I have my backlog to share for the rest of July and will undoubtedly come up with new contributions along the way. However, I will not be adding an accompanying commentary everyday unless something motivates me to write one. I can’t begin to fathom how Scheherazade told her stories for 1001 nights but I’m sure something will tweak my memory or tempt me to weigh in as the days unfold.
I really disdain politicians who resign and give as their reason for doing so: “I have decided I need to spend more time with my family.” It’s almost always a bogus and dishonest cop out and during the time of COVID-19 it’s truly as transparent as ZBLAN optical fiber– you can look it up. Hey, if you’re at home with your family or just yourself and have been for months at this point, go ahead, say you need to spend more time with them or you. In my book that should rate infinite Pinocchios.
And let me add that a number of you brighten my days by sending me your responses, recollections and reflections triggered by what I’ve posted. So, it’s not over until the fat lady sings and we can actually choose to hear her in person again if we want and feel comfortable in doing so. How long will that be? Who knows.
And a very special thank you to friends Linda and Arthur who threw me a 100th cartoon party last night!!!
Stay tuned. Starting tomorrow it’s TRUMP WEEK!
Peter
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For nearly 40 years I have saved a magazine cartoon. It was on my wall at work and is on my wall now as I am writing this. It shows a king on the balcony of his castle as he is addressing his subjects who are gathered below. The caption reads:
“I am old and tired. From now on your lives will be ruled by television.”
That caption has grown to mean more to me today than when I cut it out of the New Yorker all those years ago. I thought of it then as a jab at a society being anesthetized by TV. That ship has sailed. Nearly four years ago the country elected a president who is reported to watch from four to eight hours of television a day. He often tweets instantly what he sees and hears.
Donald Trump doesn’t let anyone touch the remote but himself. In November we must change the channel.
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Although it might look scathing, after I composed it and did a little homework I realized this is a more complicated cartoon than meets the iMac, iPad, iPhone or whatever you’re using right now to see it. Life usually has a way of being more complicated, doesn’t it!
On the one hand opening schools this fall with the virus foreseeably, still raging out of control in many parts of the country sounds ill advised if not dangerous. On the other hand, as important and desirous as getting people back to work, is getting kids back to school.
I’ve read good arguments on both sides of this dilemma in the time of COVID-19 and I’m not sure of where I come down on what to do. But I know this, Donald Trump is not the president we needed to be dealing with this or just about any other critical issue that has faced the United States since he was elected. A sincere vision of what’s best for the country is not in his wiring. We know that. In my opinion his major accomplishment in office has been to further divide us as a nation.
It’s heartbreaking to say this but even if Trump is defeated in November and the Senate flips and the House remains in the control of the Democrats, putting Humpty Dumpty back together again is as formidable a challenge as the last line of the nursery rhyme. All the king’s men (I don’t know why his horses were ever considered for the job.) couldn’t do it. Can we?
Most of us have lived with the complete understanding of who Donald Trump is for nearly four years now. He will not change. His base will not change. That’s beyond depressing. But what’s also sad for me about today’s cartoon is my knowledge of the human capacity to change. Some people are capable of it.
“In the name of the greatest people that have ever trod this earth, I draw the line in the dust and toss the gauntlet before the feet of tyranny, and I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.”
–George Wallace (1963)
 
George Wallace spoke those words when he first became the governor of Alabama. He then ran for president four times and during the third try an assasination attempt in 1972 left him permanently paralyized below the waist.
 
Point of reference… The depth of depravity of the then sitting president, Richard Nixon, was of Trumpian proportions. Immediately after the shooting, Nixon sent E. Howard Hunt to the would-be assassin’s home to clandestinely plant campaign literature of his Democratic opponent George McGovern. Hunt got there too late however. The FBI had already sealed off the apartment. 
Despite being gravely wounded, Wallace was reelected governor and by the late 1970s, the man who had stood in the schoolhouse door to try to block the integration of the University of Alabama, was a changed man.
“I was wrong. Those days are over, and they ought to be over.”
–George Wallace (1979)
Wallace not only publicly asked for forgiveness from black people but appointed a record number of blacks to state positions during his last term.
Did being shot change him? It’s likely it did, but not exactly how you may think. Rep. Shirley Chisholm, the first black woman in Congress and the first black woman to run for president suspended her own campaign after Wallace was shot and requested to visit him in the hospital.
Wallace’s staff was skeptical and so was Chisholm’s and when she arrived in the hospital room Wallace’s daughter remembers her father asking her…
George Wallace: “What are your people going to say about your coming here?”
 
Shirley Chisholm: “I know what they’re going to say but I wouldn’t want what happened to you to happen to anyone.”
 
And later Chisholm told the daughter:
“You know you always have to be optimistic that people can change, and that you can change and that one act of kindness may make all the difference in the world.”
Wallace did change. Was it because of that one encounter? Who knows. But in order for someone to change there has to be an awareness of the world beyond one’s self. For the man in the White House today every window is a mirror.
 
“I don’t have a racist bone in my body.”
–Donald Trump (2015)
And I guess all it took was a rainy day to come up with another cartoon and a commentary.
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Can Donald Trump sing? I doubt it, no matter what he might say. He’s always claiming he’s a great golfer but in every photograph I see of him playing golf he’s swinging at a ball while standing in the weeds.
 
But doesn’t Trump look like he’d fit right in as a Las Vegas lounge act? Of course in that photograph of him returning from his rally in Tulsa a few weeks ago he looked more like a deflated Willy Loman than the pumped up ceder of America’s role in the free world.
I chose the snippet of a song that’s coming out of Trump’s mouth in tribute to the columnist Dave Barry. I remember that In 1993 Barry asked his readers to send him their votes for the absolutely worst song they knew. He was stunned at the response– the most for any column he’d ever written. And the winner was…
 
“Although there are many songs that I hate more than “MacArthur Park”, it’s hard to argue with the survey respondents who chose it as the worst. All the elements are there: A long song with pretentiously incomprehensible lyrics that was popular enough to get a huge amount of airplay and thus was hammered deeply and permanently into everybody’s brain.”
–Dave Barry
 
And it is a truly awful song written by Jimmy Webb and sung by Richard Harris. MacArthur Park wasn’t just the winner, it won in a blowout.
 
“My 12-year-old son, Rob, was going through a pile of ballots, and he asked me how “MacArthur Park” goes, so I sang it, giving it my best shot, and Rob laughed so hard that when I got to the part about leaving the cake out in the rain, and it took so long to bake it, and I’ll never have that recipe again, Rob was on the floor. He didn’t BELIEVE those lyrics were real. He was SURE his wacky old humor-columnist dad was making them up.”
–Dave Barry
Yes, and I wish I could say that the last four years weren’t real either. It is no surprise to me that the list of recording artists who have told Donald Trump to stop playing their songs at his events is longer than his ties, including…
The Rolling Stones
The Beatles
Prince
Tom Petty
Neil Young
R.E.M.
Aerosmith
Adele
Elton John
Queen
Earth, Wind and Fire
The O’Jays
Twisted Sister
Pharrell Williams
Rihanna
Guns N’ Roses
 
Half of the Beatles, Prince, Freddy Mercury and Tom Petty may be dead but wouldn’t it be great to have the rest of the list do an online concert just before the election? Others I’m sure would want to join in. No folksingers please. Wouldn’t want it to turn into a Zoom-baya.
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While my intent for this cartoon was to make you smile, in the course of creating it I came across a story written by Will Hobson that appeared in the Washington Post three years ago. It’s chilling and disturbing and stark evidence of Donald Trump’s lack of empathy and basic decency.

It’s about a horse and the only time Trump ventured into the world of horse racing. It’s worth your time even though it made me angry and will wipe any smile off your face.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/sports/wp/2017/05/19/the-sad-saga-of-thoroughbred-d-j-trump-donald-trumps-lone-foray-into-horse-racing/

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Thirty years ago Donald’s Trump’s Taj Mahal casino hotel opened in Atlantic City billing itself as the eighth wonder of the world. Switchboard operators answered every call with a cheery, “Thank you for calling the Trump Taj Mahal where wonders never cease.”

The Taj, as it was called, cost over a billion dollars to build and went into bankruptcy a year later before eventually being sold for $40 million– that’s four cents on the dollar. In the casino business the house is always supposed to win but Donald’s house was a gigantic loser as well as just the first of his four business bankruptcies.

The New York Times architecture critic at the time gave the Trump Taj Mahal what I’d call a glowering review.
 
“It’s the best piece of casino architecture in Atlantic City by far. But that’s mainly because everything else has been so awful.”
 
But Paul Goldberger’s closing paragraph in 1990 seems to me today to have been as prescient as it was grim…
 
“The Taj Mahal, this plain building dressed up to within an inch of its life, is relentless – a grim money machine, towering over the bleakness of crumbling Atlantic City. In the end, for all that its glitter promises joy within, behind all that crystal hanging over all those slot machines, there is only bigness, and no more real joy here than on the desolate streets outside.”
 
Trump continued to build things in a style an architectural historian named Barry Goldsmith called “Trumpitecture,” which Goldsmith summed up by asking the question if it should be considered great design or erectile dysfunction.
 
And an update on the Taj’s current stature and/or virility… Last month the current owner of the complex, Carl Icahn, submitted plans to tear down the casino and hotel by the end of the year. I guess we’ll have to adjust to having just the Seven Wonders of the World again.
TO BE CONTINUED TOMORROW
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Yesterday’s post about Trump’s Taj Mahal was a setup to my own encounters with two of the world’s noted architects– Richard Meier and Frank Gehry.
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In 1997 I was handed a plum assignment. I took a short tram ride up a hillside adjacent to the 405 Freeway that connects the Los Angeles Basin to the San Fernando Valley to begin shooting a piece about the new Getty Center and to do an interview with its architect Richard Meier for World News Tonight with Peter Jennings.
The Getty, as it’s called, hadn’t opened yet and I had secured one of my favorite cameramen on this assignment. I need to admit something right off the bat. I worked for ABC News for 26 years and in all that time I can count the truly great camerapersons I worked with on one hand. There was Bob Goldsborough, Duane Poquois, Bob Tews, the late Ronny Ladd and Blake Hottle, who was with me that day.
 
Yes, I raised the bar high but in television news storytelling the pictures are as important as the words that accompany them and sometimes more important. With a great cameraperson the chances of having a great piece are exponentially enhanced.
 
And so we began. My assigned correspondent wasn’t with me. An NBA player had choked his coach at practice and he’d been pulled off our story for that one. I also must confess I liked working without a correspondent when the opportunity arose even if in this case it was supposed to be a great one and my good friend Brian Rooney.
 
So, as I walked off the tram I noticed a man on his knees beside some rose bushes. He wasn’t dressed like a landscaper. To my surprise it was the architect himself, Richard Meier, and as we got closer I saw he had a bunch of cigarette butts in his hand. He wasn’t a landscaper. On this day he was the trash collector.
 
We were introduced and for the next hour Meier gave us a personal tour of just about everything he had designed on this hilltop with one exception. In addition to the stunning buildings there was a large garden that if Disney ever decided to do a version of Alice in Wonderland with live actors, would be a cinch to be chosen for the tea party scene.
 
This possibly psilocybin inspired garden was the only part of the Getty Center campus that Meier didn’t get to design and a source of emotional pain to him he could not hide. He refused to walk through it and to add insult to injury this just happened to be the day giant planters suggested by the garden’s creator were being placed on the steps leading up to one of Meier’s gallery buildings.
 
It was at that moment that Meier morphed into King Lear. He left us and ran up the steps where he attempted to push one of the planters down them. He couldn’t. The planter was so large he failed to even get his arms around it and it must have weighed at least as much as a compact car.
 
It appeared to me Meier might be suffering from something like an architect’s equivalent of postpartum depression when  later in the gift shop he scolded an employee about the appearance of a display and then rearranged it himself. 
 
The Getty Center had taken 12 years to build and Richard Meier lived in a house on the site for all of them. At the end of our time together I took the liberty of counseling him.
 
Me: “Richard, I’ve only known you for an hour but I think you need to let go.”
 
Meier: “I know… but it’s so hard.”
TO BE CONTINUED TOMORROW
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The second great architect I met and interviewed was in 2003 when I was assigned to cover the opening of what’s become a Los Angeles landmark– Disney Hall.

 
The late Roone Arledge had transferred his television genius from sports to news and ABC News had gone from being a ratings laggard to the most watched evening news broadcast.
 
One of Arledge’s innovations was something called Person of the Week, a long– four minutes –by TV news standards feature that ran every Friday and profiled someone notable who had made news that week. Peter Jennings voiced these but producers did the interviews with those chosen as the week’s POW (an unfortunate coincidence of acronyms).
 
I got to do a bunch of them and also on occasion pitched and sold my own suggestions for who should be the subject. If you’ve seen it, then you’ll likely agree Disney Hall is a unique piece of architecture and Frank Gehry was  a worthy choice to be a Person of the Week for its realization.
 
The building’s exterior reminds me of two silent film comedies. One is Charlie Chaplin’s Modern Times. I’m thinking of the scene where Charlie gets swallowed up in the gears of a factory’s machinery. I imagine that Disney Hall  could be what that factory looked like after Charlie was through with it or it was through with Charlie.
 
The other is a Buster Keaton short One Week when Buster satirizes the Sears kit homes that buyers assembled themselves in the first part of the 20th century. Of course Keaton gets his all wrong and that’s also what Disney Hall looked like to me at first glance but Gehry’s building casts a spell and becomes awe inspiringly beautiful very quickly.
 
And so I set out again with cameraman Blake Hottle to interview Gehry. The immediate challenge before us was where we would do it. The inside of the concert hall reminds me of what I imagine Noah’s Ark could have looked like minus its cargo and all the mess. It’s a spectacular place in which to hear music. But we wanted to show Geary against the exterior of Disney Hall. A wide shot of the structure with him in it would have put us on a public sidewalk across the street which would have been noisy and unmanageable. So, that was a non starter.
And we encountered another problem if we were going to put Gehry too close to his creation. The stainless steel “skin” of Disney Hall reflected so much heat that standing beside it in certain places was actually painful.
This wasn’t just our problem that day. Residents nearby complained about the reflected heat turning their condos into ovens. Drivers were being blinded by the glare off Disney Hall’s exterior. At one spot we considered, I said to Blake, “If we do the interview here, we could record Frank Gehry’s being fried alive on television.” In the end 22 million pounds of stainless steel was sanded and dulled to resolve the issues.
But that didn’t solve our problem of where to put Frank Gehry that day. Eventually, we found an outside passageway that was shaded and showed off Disney Hall’s curves, some of which I would contend are voluptuous. And although I could say it was just what the decor ordered, I’ll spare you that one and keep it to myself.
Peter Jennings had sent me a bunch of questions to ask Gehry and I was free to ask my own and at one point I got a terrific show and tell when I did.
Me: “How do you come up with your ideas for the design of a building like Disney Hall? It’s unlike anything I’ve ever seen. How do you do it?”
Gehry, who was seated, reached into his pocket and pulled out a handkerchief, unfolded it and tossed it into the air. It landed on his knee and looked like a tent that had been uprooted and thrown about in a storm.
Gehry: “That’s what people think I do. But it’s not at all like that. Every curve, every piece you see is thought out and I wrestle with them. It all has to work together.”
After we finished I complimented Gehry on the handkerchief demonstration.
Me: “That was great. You must do that a lot to explain how you work.”
Gehry looked at me shaking his head sideways.
Gehry: “I’ve never done that before.”
I believed him.
Some years later I returned to the exact place where I did the interview and had Jo take a picture of me recreating the handkerchief throw.
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And here’s a link to that interview and the Person of the Week piece that aired in 2003.
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Follow up to yesterday and tying things together with today’s cartoon… Taking you inside Disney Hall at the link below to hear the Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by Gustavo Dudamel playing the Bacchanale by Camille Saint Saens from the opera Samson and Delilah.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbkCfxnoY4A


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On the Fourth of July in 1939 Lou Gehrig gave what’s still remembered 81 years later as the greatest speech in the history of American sports. He spoke with humility and gratitude as he was being honored at Yankee Stadium after having learned he was fatally ill.
Gehrig played for the New York Yankees and for just shy of 14 seasons never missed a game at first base. Weakened by ALS, his streak ended and he died two years later. Sadly, ALS became known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.
But why is the cartoon today about him?
Well, there’s a part of the speech he gave that I say to myself most days, in fact just about everyday… “Today, I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth.”
And why am I telling you this today?
Easy! It’s Jo’s birthday and I’ll be thinking how lucky I am all day.
Where’s the connection to baseball if there is any?
Yes, there is sort of one and I’ll explain.
Now, Jo will tell you, even if you don’t ask, that she’s not a sports fan but once when we still lived in Los Angeles she said she wanted to try to get interested in baseball.
That was welcome news and I got tickets for a Dodgers game. Along with my son, who by the way has a website closecallsports.com that’s devoted to interpreting and analyzing the rules of the sport and has been mentioned by ESPN as well as the New Yorker, we took Jo out to the ball game.
There are a number of wonderful baseball stadiums, the oldest like Fenway Park and Wrigley Field where the Red Sox and the Cubs call home are now considered shrines. And there are nice new ones, too like those in Pittsburgh and San Francisco. But Dodger Stadium, now the third oldest ballpark in the Major Leagues, gets my vote for having the best natural setting and for watching daylight slink away and the ballpark lights become the surrogate sun that lets grown men continue playing their kids’ game outside after dark.
Of course we weren’t going there to gaze at the San Gabriel mountains disappear behind the darkness. No, our mission was to convince Jo that baseball was worth her time and it was going Ok until she noticed that a lot of the fans were actually looking down at their cellphones as much as they were looking up at the field. I had no good defense I was willing to offer to explain that away. I wasn’t going to say baseball moves along slowly until there’s a paroxysm of excitement like a homerun or a great stop or catch and that with baseball you need to pay attention not to miss that event when it happens. Baseball is slow and that’s why its statistics and records are so voluminous. For even the rabid fan it requires filler during the stretches which may seem like inactivity.
We hadn’t lost her yet and there was still hope but then the beach ball happened.
Dodger Stadium has a beach ball tradition and a beach ball problem. It’s hard to detect and confiscate an uninflated beach ball at the gate but stadium rules are that anyone who is caught with one is subject to ejection. Nevertheless at some point in any game a beach ball gets its wings and is batted around in the stands until a Dodger security official or an unplayful paying customer gets their hands on it. In both instances they are booed for nixing the fun.
How this beach ball bouncing started is blamed on the Beach Boys and an appearance by them at a game in 1968 to sing the national anthem. I’m guessing beach balls may have been a promotional giveaway that day.
I believe it was the 7th inning at our game when disaster struck and the fateful hit occurred, actually three of them in succession, that ended the ball game with the equivalent of a walkoff home run. None of this took place on the field.
A beach ball was in our airspace and there was a guy in the aisle who was next to us and carrying a full tray of beers. Someone punched the beach ball, the beach ball smacked the beers and the beers toppled and soaked Jo. Yes, it was three strikes and we were out of there.
Hey, but we tried.
So, all I have left to say is Happy Birthday Jo!!! And what I claimed when I proposed still goes. I love you more than music, more than movies, more than golf, more than food, more than the internet!!!

Peter

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Susan Collins: The Great Pretender
Recorded by the Platters in 1955
 
Oh-oh, yes I’m the great pretender
pretending that I’m on your side
I seem to be what I’m not you see
I’m taking you all for a ride
and Mitch gives me some space to hide
 
Mitch McConnell: You’re No Good
Recorded by Linda Ronstadt in 1974
 
I held up Merrick Garland we all know that it’s true
I held up Garland and there’s nothing you could do
I’m the grim reaper it’s plain to see
And we’ll play by my rules until you get rid of me
Knock on wood
Knock on wood
Knock on wood
That would be so good
 
 
Lindsey Graham: Fools Rush In
Recorded by Frank Sinatra in 1940 and Ricky Nelson in 1963
 
Fools rush in, where wise men never go
But wise men never kissed an ass
So how are they to know
When Trump won I saw that suck ups thrive
I know how to be that guy so well so I survive 
 
 
I’m a Loser
Recorded by the Beatles in 1964
 
Of all the deals I have claimed I have notched
There is one deal I have totally botched
It was a country I have screwed and defiled
When it turns on me I will rant like a child
 
I’m Bidin’ My Time
Recorded by Judy Garland in 1943
I’m bidin’ my time
‘Cause that’s the kind of guy I’m
While other folks are busy
I try to keep from getting dizzy
Bidin’ my time
 

Next year, next year
Somethin’s bound to happen
This year, this year
I’ll just keep on nappin’
And bidin’ my time
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In case you haven’t seen the Seinfeld episode that made babka famous here’s some background…
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This is not a quiz but I expect baseball fans among you will try to identify all the imagery in today’s cartoon. If you think you have, let me know.
An abbreviated baseball season like no other is now underway and I watched a bit of the game last night from Los Angeles. It’s weird to have play on the field with no one in the stands. But give the Dodgers credit for originality. One of the cutouts behind home plate was of Mary Hart who once hosted Entertainment Tonight and was in her usual seat. She’s a season ticket holder even in absentia.

The Super Bowl may have long ago eclipsed the World Series as the most viewed sporting event in America but when it comes to movies there are a lot centered around baseball that are memorable.
Here’s a short list:

Field of Dreams
The Natural
Moneyball
The Pride of the Yankees
Bull Durham
A League of Their Own
Eight Men Out
Bang the Drum Slowly
Sugar

Fear Strikes Out

However, my favorite scene that involves baseball in any movie is a fleeting moment in a film that isn’t about the game at all. It takes place in Akira Kurosawa’s Ikiru that tells the story of an unremarkable Japanese bureaucrat receiving a terminal cancer diagnosis, a story told in flashbacks from his life revealing how he sought to make his last days meaningful.

In the baseball scene the man is in the bleachers when his son gets a base hit. He rises and turns toward the other spectators and the camera as a proud father delighting in the other fans’ applause.
But the son leaves first base recklessly and in the next instant is picked off. The son is out, the father humbled. As they say, that’s baseball. It’s certainly possible to fail in other sports but the line “There is no joy in Mudville — mighty Casey has struck out,” is probably more familiar to Americans than any other ending to any other sports poem or even any other poem.
I believe baseball more than other sports gets passed down from generation to generation. If you’re lucky enough, the pure joy of having a catch with your child is unforgettable, although the first time my father and I switched to using a hardball I got a fat lip.
I wasn’t much of a baseball player but I admit I lived vicariously through my son’s career. He got to play in Cooperstown in a tournament as a member of his Little League’s all star team. When he got beaned I jumped out of the stands and rode behind the ambulance that took him to the hospital. He was Ok and two days later hit a home run over the center field fence.
Baseball has been very very good to me.
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Ok, lots of right answers to yesterday’s baseball cartoon montage. Here’s what was there:
–In left field Mike Trout of the Los Angeles Angels (of Anaheim). He’s considered the best player in the game at the moment. The movie Angels in the Outfield is deemed a correct answer, too.
–In center field Willie Mays making “The Catch” running with his back fully turned away from the ball in the 1954 World Series. His team the New York Giants swept the Cleveland Indians in four straight games.
–At shortstop is Snoopy who was also a power hitter on Charlie Brown’s baseball team.
–At third base a pair of Red Sox. The Sox were hosed for 85 years until capturing a World Series title again in 2004.
–Running down the third base line Tigger from Winnie the Pooh. Connection to baseball? Yes, a fascinating backstory. A dozen years ago the Walt Disney Company released a video game called Winnie the Pooh’s Home Run Derby. The game was intended for children but was discovered to be way too difficult for kids to play and ultimately ranked as one of most difficult video games for anyone to play ever. Reminds me of being in a 90 miles per hour batting cage once and trying to make contact or even see the ball.
–Standing at home plate the catcher Yogi Bear. When the Yankee Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra died in 2015 the first AP wire service report mistakenly reported the demise of Yogi Bear.
–Behind the plate a beach ball to represent the tradition at Dodger Stadium I described recently that ended my attempt to interest Jo in baseball.
–Also behind the plate a box of Cracker Jack which has a long association with baseball. The line in Take Me Out to the Ballgame about peanuts and cracker jack was written in 1907.
–Coming out from the first base dugout with the day’s lineup from the concession stand is a Baltimore Oriole. Sporting events and airports charge exorbitant amounts for what’s usually mediocre fare. Baseball has tried to up its game and I recommend the fish tacos at the Padres’ stadium in San Diego.
–On the mound a Cardinal and as far as I can tell the only Catholic Cardinals in St. Louis have been on the team. I can’t find evidence that there’s ever been a cardinal from the Archdiocese of St. Louis.
–On first base Abbott and Costello. Their routine Who’s on First was introduced to the nation on the radio in 1938. It took until 2007 but it finally happened. Chin-lung Hu got a single for the Dodgers and Hu (who) was on first.
–Left lower corner is the baseball card of Chico Escuela. Chico was an imagery major leaguer from the Dominican Republic who Gilbert Morris portrayed on Saturday Night Live. Just guessing but I don’t think a character with limited and heavily accented English whose answer to every question was “Baseball has been berry berry good to me.” would catch on today.
Thanks to those of you who submitted answers!
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Here it is straight from the Guinness world record book:

The most hours by any individual on American television is 16,746.50 hours by Regis Philbin (USA) whose career spanned 52 years as of 2011. This is an average of almost one hour a day throughout his 50-year career.

You’ve likely heard about Regis Philbin’s passing already but let me add an angle you’ve never thought of that only a cynical television news producer can offer you.

In my career with ABC News I got to travel to some pretty small and remote places and I’d read the obituaries in the local newspapers where there were still any. What I was looking for were stories about interesting lives. More often than not the obits I came across were perfunctory but sometimes I’d find one that hinted at a lot more than a life of convention, a life I could imagine as accomplished and admired or intrepid and inspiring.

I realized many years ago that everyone has a story but most of the time (mea culpa) we’re more interested in telling our own than listening to theirs. I told stories for a living and sometimes that meant crafting someone’s obituary. Almost always it was somebody famous of course. Network News rarely ever did fanfares for the common man or woman.

Life includes death and as I began a career in journalism certain deaths that were unexpected as well as those that were inevitable were always going to be news

I went to work at CBS News in New York after my college graduation and was low man on the totem pole (Is that Ok to say anymore?) on the Evening News with Walter Cronkite. This also made me the youngest person on the staff. In the summer of 1971 Cronkite’s lead editor asked me for advice.

“This singer Jim Morrison who just died in Paris. Have you heard of him? Should we mention him tonight?”

I told him yes and was dispatched to buy a Doors record album that was used as a picture behind the anchorman that evening. As far as I know I was the only one consulted about Morrison’s importance and for a brief moment I felt like I was a spokesperson for my generation.

When I got to the ABC News Bureau in Los Angeles in 1982 we’d work up selected obituaries in advance for notable Hollywood stars whose health might be failing or were simply getting old. I worked on one for Katharine Hepburn that makes me smile even three decades later.

Hepburn did a number of interviews with Barbara Walters through the years and as we watched them I noticed something undeniable. Hepburn aged gracefully. If she was having any plastic surgery, it was not detectable. On the other hand Walters kept getting better looking from hers as time went by. It was weird and in my opinion at a certain point a face trying to look the age it isn’t becomes one in which much of its experience of life has been erased.

During my career in television I learned a few things about when not to die if you’re famous. You don’t want to die on the weekend for instance when hardly anybody’s watching the news and skeleton news staffs don’t have the resources to put together something you’d consider worthy of your status and accomplishments.

And you don’t want your demise to be competing for time with some other big event. Take Richard Burton, he had the misfortune of dying during the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Olympics and on a Sunday to boot. He may have played King Arthur in Camelot and been married twice to Elizabeth Taylor but he was upstaged by the athletic heroics of Michael Jordan and Mary Lou Retton. ABC, which was the network of the Olympic Games back then, barely granted him a last curtain call.

And there’s another situation that you want to avoid if you’re a celebrity and at all able to put off knocking on heaven’s door. On October 10, 1985 Orson Welles and Yul Brynner died on the same day and got equal time on ABC’s World News Tonight with Peter Jennings. This was probably half the amount of recognition they each might have gotten otherwise had they died on separate days.

Actually, despite Welles having starred in and directed Citizen Kane, one of the greatest films of all time, Brynner might have garnered a bit more coverage because there were powerful television public service announcements he made before his death about the dangers of smoking that caused his lung cancer.

For a posthumous TV tribute sometimes you only needed to be cast in a memorable moment occurring in a movie to make it into millions of homes. Take Slim Pickens. He might not have had the career of an author like say Graham Greene but Slim rode a nuclear bomb into oblivion at the end of Dr. Strangelove which for TV is a picture worth infinitely more than the 500,000 words Greene produced with his writing. Greene’s acclaimed literary trove where the visuals he created could only be imagined inside one’s head was indeed slim pickings for television in comparison and his closing chapter probably went unnoticed by many a TV newsperson.

I got to do Roy Rogers’ obituary the day he died and was faced with a surprising challenge. It was a no brainer that we’d use Roy and Dale Evans singing “Happy Trails to You” in our remembrance. It was heard at the end of every episode of their TV series that my generation watched growing up. And that was the problem. “Happy Trails” was sung over the closing credits but you never saw Rogers and Evans actually singing it on camera.

Fortunately, we found a guest appearance by Roy on a variety show where he performed his signature tune mounted on his horse Trigger so that we could have him ride off into eternity serenading us.

The business of doing an obituary before a person actually dies is certainly prudent journalistically but it occasionally upset those asked to participate in the effort. Case in point— Bob Hope. He warranted extensive preemptive preparation and I was assigned to work up a story on how he had influenced comedy as well as his peers.

I had no problem lining up contemporary comedians like Bill Maher (unpleasant but gave us a good soundbite) and Arsenio Hall (nice guy who gave us an even better soundbite). But I also wanted some of Hope’s contemporaries and was getting nowhere. In fact at one point I thought I might be heading for trouble after I had this exchange with Sid Caesar’s agent.

Agent: “So, let me get this straight. You want Sid to talk about Hope as if Hope is already dead?”

Me: “Well, not exactly. We’re preparing a story about Hope that will be broadcast when he dies but we want to do it ahead of time.”

Agent: “So, Hope will be dead when you show this, right?”

Me: “Yes.”

Agent: “So Sid will talk now but Hope may as well be f—–g dead!…  I know Roone Arledge and you should be ashamed of yourself.”

A few years later I did a much better job convincing no other than George Lucas to do an interview for me well before the death of another filmmaker Akira Kurosawa. I knew Lucas revered the Japanese director above all others and had credited Kurosawa’s film The Hidden Fortress as an inspiration for Star Wars.

After making a request for Lucas’s help I received a phone call from his representative.

Representative: “As you know George is a great admirer of Kurosawa but he feels uncomfortable speaking about him now and says he would be glad to do so if you ask him upon Kurosawa’s death.”

Me: “I’m afraid on the day when Kurosawa dies, we won’t have time to get a camera to you. Please tell Mr. Lucas that giving us his thoughts ahead of time would be the surest way for him to have a chance to pay tribute to Kurosawa when that day comes.”

I usually don’t think quite that quickly on my feet but I had this time and got a call back the next day telling me George Lucas would be available for us to interview within a week.

Akira Kurosawa passed away six years later. It was on a Sunday and there was no other earth shattering news breaking on the planet. The obit I had produced, written and edited was in mothballs somewhere in the vault of ABC News headquarters in New York. I phoned there to make everyone aware of its existence but by then Kurosawa had, through no fault of his own, committed the ultimate dying gaffe that conspired against my homage and George Lucas’s salute to him ever getting on the air.

For our perceived audience he had outlived his success and fame. He died too late.

Regis Philbin was an ultimate creature of television and as sometimes happens he may well be given a longer goodbye on the tube than in print. He had 28 credits as a host and 36 more as an actor. Perhaps his most memorable line was one he repeated ad nauseam on Who Wants to be a Millionaire?– “Is that your final answer?”

From what I’ve read about him these wouldn’t have been his final words. He never admitted he was retiring and just said he was moving on. I think that would have been his final answer.

The most hours by any individual on American television is 16,746.50 hours by Regis Philbin (USA) whose career spanned 52 years as of 2011. This is an average of almost one hour a day throughout his 50-year career.

You’ve likely heard about Regis Philbin’s passing already but let me add an angle you’ve never thought of that only a cynical television news producer can offer you.

In my career with ABC News I got to travel to some pretty small and remote places and I’d read the obituaries in the local newspapers where there were still any. What I was looking for were stories about interesting lives. More often than not the obits I came across were perfunctory but sometimes I’d find one that hinted at a lot more than a life of convention, a life I could imagine as accomplished and admired or intrepid and inspiring.

I realized many years ago that everyone has a story but most of the time (mea culpa) we’re more interested in telling our own than listening to theirs. I told stories for a living and sometimes that meant crafting someone’s obituary. Almost always it was somebody famous of course. Network News rarely ever did fanfares for the common man or woman.

Life includes death and as I began a career in journalism certain deaths that were unexpected as well as those that were inevitable were always going to be news

I went to work at CBS News in New York after my college graduation and was low man on the totem pole (Is that Ok to say anymore?) on the Evening News with Walter Cronkite. This also made me the youngest person on the staff. In the summer of 1971 Cronkite’s lead editor asked me for advice.

“This singer Jim Morrison who just died in Paris. Have you heard of him? Should we mention him tonight?”

I told him yes and was dispatched to buy a Doors record album that was used as a picture behind the anchorman that evening. As far as I know I was the only one consulted about Morrison’s importance and for a brief moment I felt like I was a spokesperson for my generation.

When I got to the ABC News Bureau in Los Angeles in 1982 we’d work up selected obituaries in advance for notable Hollywood stars whose health might be failing or were simply getting old. I worked on one for Katharine Hepburn that makes me smile even three decades later.

Hepburn did a number of interviews with Barbara Walters through the years and as we watched them I noticed something undeniable. Hepburn aged gracefully. If she was having any plastic surgery, it was not detectable. On the other hand Walters kept getting better looking from hers as time went by. It was weird and in my opinion at a certain point a face trying to look the age it isn’t becomes one in which much of its experience of life has been erased.

During my career in television I learned a few things about when not to die if you’re famous. You don’t want to die on the weekend for instance when hardly anybody’s watching the news and skeleton news staffs don’t have the resources to put together something you’d consider worthy of your status and accomplishments.

And you don’t want your demise to be competing for time with some other big event. Take Richard Burton, he had the misfortune of dying during the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Olympics and on a Sunday to boot. He may have played King Arthur in Camelot and been married twice to Elizabeth Taylor but he was upstaged by the athletic heroics of Michael Jordan and Mary Lou Retton. ABC, which was the network of the Olympic Games back then, barely granted him a last curtain call.

And there’s another situation that you want to avoid if you’re a celebrity and at all able to put off knocking on heaven’s door. On October 10, 1985 Orson Welles and Yul Brynner died on the same day and got equal time on ABC’s World News Tonight with Peter Jennings. This was probably half the amount of recognition they each might have gotten otherwise had they died on separate days.

Actually, despite Welles having starred in and directed Citizen Kane, one of the greatest films of all time, Brynner might have garnered a bit more coverage because there were powerful television public service announcements he made before his death about the dangers of smoking that caused his lung cancer.

For a posthumous TV tribute sometimes you only needed to be cast in a memorable moment occurring in a movie to make it into millions of homes. Take Slim Pickens. He might not have had the career of an author like say Graham Greene but Slim rode a nuclear bomb into oblivion at the end of Dr. Strangelove which for TV is a picture worth infinitely more than the 500,000 words Greene produced with his writing. Greene’s acclaimed literary trove where the visuals he created could only be imagined inside one’s head was indeed slim pickings for television in comparison and his closing chapter probably went unnoticed by many a TV newsperson.

I got to do Roy Rogers’ obituary the day he died and was faced with a surprising challenge. It was a no brainer that we’d use Roy and Dale Evans singing “Happy Trails to You” in our remembrance. It was heard at the end of every episode of their TV series that my generation watched growing up. And that was the problem. “Happy Trails” was sung over the closing credits but you never saw Rogers and Evans actually singing it on camera.

Fortunately, we found a guest appearance by Roy on a variety show where he performed his signature tune mounted on his horse Trigger so that we could have him ride off into eternity serenading us.

The business of doing an obituary before a person actually dies is certainly prudent journalistically but it occasionally upset those asked to participate in the effort. Case in point— Bob Hope. He warranted extensive preemptive preparation and I was assigned to work up a story on how he had influenced comedy as well as his peers.

I had no problem lining up contemporary comedians like Bill Maher (unpleasant but gave us a good soundbite) and Arsenio Hall (nice guy who gave us an even better soundbite). But I also wanted some of Hope’s contemporaries and was getting nowhere. In fact at one point I thought I might be heading for trouble after I had this exchange with Sid Caesar’s agent.

Agent: “So, let me get this straight. You want Sid to talk about Hope as if Hope is already dead?”

Me: “Well, not exactly. We’re preparing a story about Hope that will be broadcast when he dies but we want to do it ahead of time.”

Agent: “So, Hope will be dead when you show this, right?”

Me: “Yes.”

Agent: “So Sid will talk now but Hope may as well be f—–g dead!…  I know Roone Arledge and you should be ashamed of yourself.”

A few years later I did a much better job convincing no other than George Lucas to do an interview for me well before the death of another filmmaker Akira Kurosawa. I knew Lucas revered the Japanese director above all others and had credited Kurosawa’s film The Hidden Fortress as an inspiration for Star Wars.

After making a request for Lucas’s help I received a phone call from his representative.

Representative: “As you know George is a great admirer of Kurosawa but he feels uncomfortable speaking about him now and says he would be glad to do so if you ask him upon Kurosawa’s death.”

Me: “I’m afraid on the day when Kurosawa dies, we won’t have time to get a camera to you. Please tell Mr. Lucas that giving us his thoughts ahead of time would be the surest way for him to have a chance to pay tribute to Kurosawa when that day comes.”

I usually don’t think quite that quickly on my feet but I had this time and got a call back the next day telling me George Lucas would be available for us to interview within a week.

Akira Kurosawa passed away six years later. It was on a Sunday and there was no other earth shattering news breaking on the planet. The obit I had produced, written and edited was in mothballs somewhere in the vault of ABC News headquarters in New York. I phoned there to make everyone aware of its existence but by then Kurosawa had, through no fault of his own, committed the ultimate dying gaffe that conspired against my homage and George Lucas’s salute to him ever getting on the air.

For our perceived audience he had outlived his success and fame. He died too late.

Regis Philbin was an ultimate creature of television and as sometimes happens he may well be given a longer goodbye on the tube than in print. He had 28 credits as a host and 36 more as an actor. Perhaps his most memorable line was one he repeated ad nauseam on Who Wants to be a Millionaire?– “Is that your final answer?”

From what I’ve read about him these wouldn’t have been his final words. He never admitted he was retiring and just said he was moving on. I think that would have been his final answer.

—————–


imageI haven’t played Bingo since I was a kid when it was an activity before the cake and ice cream at a birthday party. Now, I’ve reached a point in life when Bingo is perhaps again age appropriate but I’m not interested.

I guess you can make a case for Bingo requiring a certain amount of skill if paying attention and being able to shout qualify as a skill set and that’s at least more than you need to be able to do to play a slot machine.
I’m not a gambler, certainly not a successful one. I’ve played the lottery and obviously, not hit a jackpot otherwise I’d be writing this from New Zealand. I’ve bet on sports events occasionally and been to the race track. Neither of those have, nor I suspect will ever become a habit. When I think of bingo winnings I see large stuffed animals or Joe DiMaggio and a Mr. Coffee.
So what’s a relevant tie in between Bingo and the pandemic? Gee, I can’t think of one and I’ve tried. But maybe if you have a few minutes I can make a connection through the back door by telling you about a senior living community I discovered years ago where I’m pretty sure there were no Bingo games. It’s a place where a group of people aren’t spending their declining years with a jar of corn kernels by their side and was in Los Angeles. Sunset Hall is a retirement home for aging social activists.
I did the story for World News Tonight with Peter Jennings and after a few weeks when it hadn’t been broadcast I asked why not.
World News Tonight: “The people look so old.”
Me: “Yes, they are old.”
World News Tonight: “We can’t show this to our audience.”
Me: “Isn’t this our audience?”
End of call
A long version of the story ran on the overnight newscast which functioned as a sort of graveyard where many rejected stories were buried.
I thought it was a worthy piece…
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Before starting a daily cartoon on April Fool’s Day I created other stuff. For a few years I posted quirky quizzes on Facebook but that ended when I got off social media a couple years ago. I’ve never looked back on that decision.

In what in retrospect looks like a warmup for the cartoons, last March I put together some versions of public service announcements using well known movie lines to make the point about how our lives were changing.
Here are some of them…
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Jo was telling me yesterday that our 8 year old grandson asked her if she was jealous of anything. Perhaps he wanted to know if it was a normal human emotion and of course it is and that’s indisputable. But most of us, as we reach adulthood, realize and accept that jealousy isn’t often something we act upon like we might have as a child wanting some other kid’s toy.

It’s clear that Donald Trump is jealous of Anthony Fauci’s popularity and when Dr. Fauci threw out the first pitch at the Washington Nationals’ opening day game last week, Trump actually lied about being asked by the New York Yankees to do the same. The Yankees were blindsided. There had been no invitation offered. Trump had thrown them a curveball.

Yesterday, still grousing about Fauci’s popularity he complained that, “Nobody likes me,” sparking a couple of comments, one funny, one sad and both accurate.
“Trump finally told the truth,” wrote George Takei.
“This is what he thinks about, with 150,000 American dead due to the pandemic,” wrote David Corn.
We know there are plenty of immature and petty grown men and women in the world and more than their share are in our nation’s capital but I think Donald Trump is in a class all by himself.

He’s jealous of someone who got to throw a baseball and so he invites himself to do the same. Who does that sort of thing?

I’ll tell you who. A normal human being who is a father would. He’d invite himself to have a catch with his son. Any bets Donald Trump ever has?

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The latest from the World Health Organization as of July 27.,,
There are 139 vaccines for COVID-19 in preclinical trials around the world that have not yet been tested in humans. Twenty-five vaccines are being tested right now in humans in various trial stages.
The biotech firm Moderna, which is one of the leading candidates to come up with an effective vaccine, is recruiting 30,000 volunteers for phase three of its coronavirus trials. Oddly enough, Moderna is looking for many of those volunteers in the Las Vegas metropolitan area. Honest.
I discovered this when I tried to find out if any Vegas bookmakers were taking bets on when a COVID-19 vaccine might be available. I couldn’t find any that were. Vaccines obviously, aren’t like sporting events that you know are being played on a particular day by particular teams or individuals. Is there a horse race for a vaccine? Sure, but there’s no Daily Racing Form to consult and although many Vegas betters might be fools, the bookies are not.
According to a report from the World Health Organization from two weeks ago, more than a billion children around the world have been vaccinated against diseases in the last decade. And the WHO claims that this has prevented two to three million deaths annually of children globally.
Just as the United States has not dealt with COVID-19 as well as most of the rest of the world we are also laggards in our receptiveness to a potential medical solution to its presence. Back in June an article in Science cited polls that indicated that only 50% of Americans said they planned to get a COVID-19 vaccine when and if it becomes available. That’s stupefying to me.
I once did a story about a community in California where there was a higher incidence of childhood autism than normal. Many of the parents of these autistic children blamed the immunizations their kids received as infants. No peer reviewed study has ever shown a connection between vaccines and autism but these parents were convinced that the one had caused the other.
Having an autistic child is heartbreaking and I can understand the desire to blame something other than misfortune. But I have no such sympathy for parents who refuse to vaccinate their children because of misguided religious beliefs or a rejection of science. Sadly, there are a lot of them out there today.
I sure hope that a vaccine is coming that will eradicate COVID-19 to the same extent as smallpox and polio. But even more fervently I wish there might someday be a way to inject everyone in our country with common sense.
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President Donald Trump may not be able at this point to delay the November election constitutionally but I don’t think there’s any question that he’ll use whatever heavy artillery he has at his disposal to savage and discredit any result not in his favor even before there is one.
The worse his poll numbers are the less his campaign will likely be focused on his opponent and the more he will scream about how the upcoming voting will be rigged.

Yesterday’s outburst was just the most recent rant in his effort to sow doubt in the minds of his base about the electoral system’s integrity. It’s a given he’ll resort to increasingly dishonest and unscrupulous behavior in the months ahead. This is who Trump is. This is the sorry and scary situation the nation finds itself in.

I can’t make light of our present circumstances but last night I remembered a movie I saw years ago that was funny and outlandish and now improbably relevant at least for me. It was called The Ratings Game and although it didn’t rate highly with either critics or moviegoers, I loved it.
Here’s the plot. A shady trucking company owner wants to be a Hollywood television writer/producer. His scripts are rejected at every network he approaches and justifiably so because they’re atrocious but he makes a pilot. He then befriends a disgruntled employee at a Nielsen like ratings company and they concoct a scheme.
After a struggling network agrees to air the pilot as summer filler, the nation’s “Nielsen” families are notified that they have won a free cruise vacation. Once they are onboard their ship they are detained at sea while truckers invade their homes and watch the pilot and subsequent episodes on their televisions. This totally skews the ratings and makes an incredibly bad program the number one show on TV for weeks.
Does Trump’s attempt to delegitimize mail-in voting and his effort to starve the postal service of funding and create voting chaos in November seem something like a reality show sequel to The Ratings Game?
 
Maybe not yet and maybe my imagination is running wild but what if it isn’t?
Are goons at the polls and obstruction at post offices really beyond the realm of what’s possible now?
 
In The Ratings Game the trucker is arrested at a television awards ceremony after the scam is uncovered. As they say that was then, this is now.
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