Greetings to our blog readers in Austria, Dubai, and Singapore....
Tonight, we continue marking our tenth anniversary of blogging with an inspiring quote from noteworthy person.
The Quote of the Week and a series of quotes from people in a given, such as playwrights (Arthur Miller and Neil Simon) or punk rockers (Lou Reed of Iggy Pop) used to be standards on our two blogs, so hence we are quoting jazz great Herbie Hancock ("Watermelon Man," "Rockit") with one of his vintage quotes:
"It's a part of life to have obstacles. It's about overcoming obstacles that's the key to happiness."
SIDEBAR: We want to welcome Pope Francis to the United States, and we hope he enjoyed his time in Washington, DC, today. Somehow, we can't imagine that he will go to the 9:30 Club while he is in the nation's capital.
Showing posts with label Arthur Miller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arthur Miller. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Our Favorte Comic Strips from Sunday, Dec. 14th Roanoke Times: Drones Away
Greetings to our blog readers in Cuba, Estonia and New Zealand.....
Today, we turn our attention to our 10 favorite comic strips from the Sunday, Dec. 14th edition of "The Roanoke Times" in Roanoke, Va. (yes, we are a bit behind schedule).
Our top choice is "Pearls Before Swine," in which Rat, one of the three title characters along with Goat and Pig, promises that if he is elected president that he will get one drone to spy on every person on earth at all times; hey, I'd still vote for him over Jeb Bush or Mitt Romney! (forgive the political humor).
"Speed Bump" has a hilarious take on what modern tech would have been like in medieval times, and these means trouble for Sir Textalot as he faces an opponent in a horseback joust in Dave Coverly's single-panel comic strip. Hence, the reason for our image of a "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" poster.
Lastly, "Family Circus" makes a rare appearance in our top ten with a strip that depicts every parent in a grade school auditorium taking photos and videos with mobile devices, we thought it would be humorous to go with an image of Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman" (middle) as this would assuredly be a difficult play for youngsters to perform.
Here is our top ten:
1) Pearls Before Swine
2) Speed Bump
3) Doonesbury
4) Garfield
5) Dilbert
6) Zits
7) Get Fuzzy
8) Funky Winkerbean
9) Non-Sequitur
10) Family Circus
http://www.roanoke.com
http://www.gocomics.com
Today, we turn our attention to our 10 favorite comic strips from the Sunday, Dec. 14th edition of "The Roanoke Times" in Roanoke, Va. (yes, we are a bit behind schedule).
Our top choice is "Pearls Before Swine," in which Rat, one of the three title characters along with Goat and Pig, promises that if he is elected president that he will get one drone to spy on every person on earth at all times; hey, I'd still vote for him over Jeb Bush or Mitt Romney! (forgive the political humor).
"Speed Bump" has a hilarious take on what modern tech would have been like in medieval times, and these means trouble for Sir Textalot as he faces an opponent in a horseback joust in Dave Coverly's single-panel comic strip. Hence, the reason for our image of a "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" poster.
Lastly, "Family Circus" makes a rare appearance in our top ten with a strip that depicts every parent in a grade school auditorium taking photos and videos with mobile devices, we thought it would be humorous to go with an image of Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman" (middle) as this would assuredly be a difficult play for youngsters to perform.
Here is our top ten:
1) Pearls Before Swine
2) Speed Bump
3) Doonesbury
4) Garfield
5) Dilbert
6) Zits
7) Get Fuzzy
8) Funky Winkerbean
9) Non-Sequitur
10) Family Circus
http://www.roanoke.com
http://www.gocomics.com
Labels:
Arthur Miller,
comic strips,
Cuba,
Dave Coverly,
Estonia,
Family Circus,
Jeb Bush,
Mitt Romney,
New Zealand,
Pearls Before Swine,
Roanoke Times,
Roanoke Va,
Speed Bump. Family Circus,
theatre
Saturday, June 7, 2014
We Are Suffering from Blogger's Block..............
Yes, I imagined this never happened to Albert Camus, Leo Tolstoy, Aziz Nesin*, Arthur Miller, Langston Hughes, Emily Dickinson, Miles Davis, Andy Warhol or Lee Falk, but it has happened to me!
*-He is a famous deceased Turkish writer
*-He is a famous deceased Turkish writer
Saturday, September 1, 2012
20 Things To Do List for September- Get a Haircut
With an image of Bulgarian stamps, a Japanese barber (that's not me in the barber's chair, in fact, I've never been to Japan) and a poster for Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman," which is apparently being revived on Broadway, we are posting our 20 Things To Do List for September:
1) Read the overcoming procrastination book (by Jane B. Burka, et al)
2) Use Craig's List more often
3) Wear the Batman tie more often
4) Get stamps
5) Visit the Unitarian Universalists congregation in your area
6) See an ACC college volleyball game
7) Get a haircut
8) Watch Democratic Convention on PBS
9) Call Bob
10) recylcle
11) wash car
12) Write an essay
13) shoot hoops
14) Listen to "All Things Considered" on NPR on Mondays
15) Get more orange juice
16) Go to make-shift Facebook high school reunion in Bethesda, Maryland*
17) Have coffee some place besides Starbucks
18) See a local stage play
19) Go to a Turkish-American event
20) Laundry
*-Bethesda is not where I really reside; it's an in-joke for those of you who have read this blog day in and day out for the last seven years.
http://www.kramers.com (Bookstore in Washington, DC, where we originally saw the book mentioned in #1)
http://www.craigslist.com
http://www.neckties.com
http://www.uua.org
http://www.charlestonuu.org (We chose the Charleston, SC, UU congregation at random)
http://www.gopack.com (We chose North Carolina State's athletic page at random, nothing against Duke or UNC).
1) Read the overcoming procrastination book (by Jane B. Burka, et al)
2) Use Craig's List more often
3) Wear the Batman tie more often
4) Get stamps
5) Visit the Unitarian Universalists congregation in your area
6) See an ACC college volleyball game
7) Get a haircut
8) Watch Democratic Convention on PBS
9) Call Bob
10) recylcle
11) wash car
12) Write an essay
13) shoot hoops
14) Listen to "All Things Considered" on NPR on Mondays
15) Get more orange juice
16) Go to make-shift Facebook high school reunion in Bethesda, Maryland*
17) Have coffee some place besides Starbucks
18) See a local stage play
19) Go to a Turkish-American event
20) Laundry
*-Bethesda is not where I really reside; it's an in-joke for those of you who have read this blog day in and day out for the last seven years.
http://www.kramers.com (Bookstore in Washington, DC, where we originally saw the book mentioned in #1)
http://www.craigslist.com
http://www.neckties.com
http://www.uua.org
http://www.charlestonuu.org (We chose the Charleston, SC, UU congregation at random)
http://www.gopack.com (We chose North Carolina State's athletic page at random, nothing against Duke or UNC).
Labels:
Arthur Miller,
Bethesda,
Bulgaria,
Japan,
Maryland,
neckties,
NPR,
PBS,
stage plays,
stamps,
Turkish-Americans
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Quote of the Day/Week- Elia Kazan
Since the Oscars will be televised at the month, we have decided to quote Academy-Award film directors throughout February. Keep in mind that the number of acclaimed film directors who never won an Oscar is a bit shocking, as it includes the likes of Alfred Hitchcock, Stanley Kubrick and Orson Welles.
But, one film director who is a worth Oscar-winner is Elia "Gadge" Kazan (1909-2003) who won Best Director Oscars for "Gentleman's Agreement" (1948) and "On the Waterfront" (1955). His direction of the screen version of "A Streetcar Named Desire" (1951), written by Tennessee Williams, is frequently cited as one of best screen adaptations of a stage play.
Kazan also won three Tony Awards for Best Director, including two Arthur Miller plays "All My Sons" (1947) and "Death of a Salesman" (1949) as well as "J.B.," a 1958 play by Archibald Macleish based on the Biblical story of Job. Cult actor John Cazale, who died at age 42 in 1978, starred in a 1962 off-Broadway production of "J.B.," which was not directed by Kazan.
The son of Anatolian Greek immigrants also directed "Viva Zapata!" (1952) with his frequent collaborator Marlon Brando; a film which us Netflix users are eagerly awaiting for. Interestingly enough, in a editorial by William Kristol in the conservative magazine "The Weekly Standard," this film was cited by Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) as his personal favorite. The editorial was written when McCain was running as the Republic nominee for president in 2008.
Kazan also helmed a screen version of "America! America!" (1963) based on his own novel. The movie was partially filmed in Istanbul, Turkey, the city of Kazan's birth. Kazan recieved an Oscar nomination for directing that film as well.
Here is our quote from Gadge:
"A good director's not sure when he gets on the set what he's going to do."
SIDEBAR: Having just returned from The Bahamas, we wanted to recommend other potential tourists to be sure to visit the Ardasta Zoo in the capital of Nassau where one can watch a dancing pink flamingo show at 10:30, 2:10 and 4:10. It would be quite ironic if film director John Waters was at one of these shows (forgive the movie people humor).
In Baltimore, which is the hometown of the eccentric filmmaker, the Maryland Zoo is hosting an adults only Sex in the Zoo talk about the mating habits of animals. Our collective jaws recently dropped when we read about how porcupines mated in the last issue of "Mental Floss."
SIDEBAR 2: For some reason, Godzilla and Quick Draw McDraw are two of the hot links on our blog this week!
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Happy Thanksgiving from Charlie Brown

As is our tradition whenever there is a holiday, we like to wish it from a cartoon character, kitschy celebrity (such as Barry Manilow) or whacko politician (ie. Michele Bachmann). And, today we go with the legendary comic strip character Charlie Brown, the brainchild of Charles Schultz (1922-2000).
When I was tutoring a student taking an English class, I actually compared Charlie Brown to Willy Loman, the character at the center of Arthur Miller's stage play "Death of a Salesman," in order to get the student to grasp the play's themes and simplify them.
Charlie Brown made his debut in "Peanuts" on Oct. 2, 1950. Snoopy came into the picture two days later. The beloved pooch also made its Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade debut as a float in 1968, a full 16 years before a float for Garfield, the comic strip cat created by Jim Davis that debuted in 1978, made his way down lower Manhattan in 1986.
Today's parade also feature a reincarnation of a float for the video game character Sonic the Hedgehog and a float created by filmmaker Tim Buron, called Character B.
Charlie Brown is noted for his rivalry with Lucy van Pelt, who pulls the football away from him as she did in the very last original "Peanuts" strip on Feb. 13, 2000.
The Little Red Head Girl is the figure of Charlie Brown's infactuation, but since he represents futility across the board, he never gets to meet her_ not even for a date at Starbucks (yes, we are aware there were no Starbucks around in 1950; it was a joke). She never actually physically appears in any of the comic strips, but her face has been shown on tv specials for "Peanuts." The character usually appears in strips that were written by Schultz around Valentine's Day.
Charlie Brown is also associated with the holidays because of both the Thanksgiving special, which first aired on Nov. 20, 1973, and the Christmas special, which premiered on Dec. 9, 1965, before folks in the United States started celebrating Christmas in September!
SIDE DISH: As we reported yesterday, my alma mater Radford University played the Univeristy of Kentucky, the #2-ranked men's basketball team, in Lexington, Ky., last night. And, like Charlie Brown trying to kick the dreaded football, the Highlanders came up very short in an 88-40 loss to the Wildcats. Terrence Jones scored 17 points for the home team; Jonathan Edwards scored 10 points and grabbed eight rebounds for RU.
SIDE DISH TWO: Yes, folks started lining some time ago for the Black Friday Sale at Target which gets underway at midnight here on the East. According to a tweet from "The Charlotte Observer," some 15 customers had started lining up at the main Charlotte, NC, Target store circa 8:00 p.m., a full hours before the madness begins.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Special Quote of the Day- Joe DiMaggio
Today, we quip the late slugger Joltin' Joe DiMaggio (1914-1999), who was also known as the Yankee Clipper. The New York Yankees great was a three-time MVP and a 13-time All-Star. DiMaggio had a 56-game hitting streak in 1941 which has yet to be broken.
Off the field, DiMaggio made headlines during his brief marriage to Marilyn Monroe. Playwright Arthur Miller ("Death of a Salesman") whom we've quote a lot here was her other husband.
DiMaggio was also the spokesperson for Mr. Coffee during the 1970s, and he is mentioned in the classic Simon and Garfunkel song "Mrs. Robinson."
Here is the quote:
"There is always some kid who may be seeing me for the first time or the last time, I owe him my best."
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Quote of the Week- Arthur Miller

Those of you who just read my last entry about my Facebook page being hijacked by a cyber-pirate might be wondering if this is really Spacely Sprocket from Dayton, Ohio, and I want to assure that is indeed me and I have a memo to fire George Jetson.
In all seriousness, we are going to blog a bit to take our mind off things even though the girl I like is probably meeting a guy from Slovenia through an E-Harmony rip-of site as we speak.
Our Quote of the Week is the late, great playwright Arthur Miller (1915-2005) who left us with some great quips.
His most famous play "Death of a Salesman" will be in production at the Milwaukee Repertory Theatre in Milwaukee,Wisconsin, from April 12-May 8, 2011. The theatre is now performing "Cabaret," and, of course, Miller never wrote musicals!
The Eclipse Theatre Company in Chicago is currently performing a much lesser-known Miller drama "A Memory of Two Mondays." Tickets can be purcahsed by calling 773-325-9655.
Here is the quote from Miller:
"I think it's a mistake to ever look for hope outside one's self."
Here is
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