Thursday, September 30, 2021

Len's Recipe of the Month - September 2021

 

As the summer closes out, we are coming to the end of "fresh garden tomato" season.   It's really the only time of the year I will eat a sliced tomato.   But here's one last recipe for you to use on those red beauties. 

A tomato galette.

Ideally, you will need two juicy and fresh tomatoes.   Slice them into 1/4 inch slices.  Put them in a strainer over a bowl.   Kosher salt them to death.    This will let the liquid drip through the strainer.

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.

Now you can make your own dough and crust, but it's just as easy to use the Pillsbury ready made stuff.    Place a piece of parchment paper on a cookie sheet.  Roll out one of the pie crusts into a circle.

Leaving about an inch on the sides, spoon and spread some Dijon mustard on the crust.   Then get some shredded mozzarella and spoon that liberally over the mustard.

Slice up one shallot.   

Now take the drained tomato slices and latice them like dominoes over the cheese.   Spread the shallots on top.   Now fold the sides back and pinch them together.   

Beat an egg and using one of those small food brushes, spread it all over the exposed pie crust.   This will get you a nice brown crust.

Bake for about 30-40 minutes.   Remove and cool for an hour.   Serve.

And relish those tomatoes one last time.

Dinner last night:   The pre-game buffet at the Dodger Stadium Club.



Wednesday, September 29, 2021

This Date in History - September 29

 

The autumn leaves are starting to fall.  And, too, are these historical factoids for September 29.

480 BC:  THE GREEK FLEET UNDER THEMISTOCLES DEFEATS THE PERSIAN FLEET UNDER XERXES 1 DURING THE BATTLE OF SALAMIS.

Personally, I'm rooting for Boars Head.

1227:  FREDERICK II, HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR, IS EXCOMMUNICATED BY POPE GREGORY IX FOR HIS FAILURE TO PARTICIPATE IN THE CRUSADES.

Okay, let's think about this.  It's just 1227 and there have already been eight other Popes named Gregory?  Did they have the life span of a gnat?

1567:  AT A DINNER, THE DUKE OF ALBA ARRESTS THE COUNT OF EGMONT AND THE COUNT OF HOORN FOR TREASON.

Washington DC politicians, take note.  That's what you do with dinner guests who show up unannounced.

1650:  HENRY ROBINSON OPENS HIS OFFICE OF ADDRESSES AND ENCOUNTERS - THE FIRST HISTORICALLY DOCUMENTED DATING SERVICE.

"Good looking Pilgrim looking for same.  Let's churn some butter together."

1789:  THE FIRST U.S CONGRESS ADJOURNS.

Right around the time of Nancy Pelosi's first face lift.

1907:  THE CORNERSTONE IS LAID AT WASHINGTON NATIONAL CATHEDRAL IN THE US CAPITAL.

Hang with me, folks.  This joke pays off a little later.

1907:  COWBOY STAR GENE AUTRY IS BORN.

This is the day he was back in the saddle for the first time.

1911:  ITALY DECLARES WAR ON THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE.

And, once victorious, they went on to conquer love seats and end tables.

1916:  JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER BECOMES THE FIRST BILLIONAIRE.

Who was keeping track of this?  Did his money belt suddenly sound an alarm?

1941:  DURING WORLD WAR II, GERMAN EINSATZGRUPPE C BEGINS THE BABI YAR MASSACRE, ACCORDING TO THE EINSATZGRUPPE OPERATIONAL SITUATION REPORT.

When he moved to Bolivia, Einsatzgruppe changed his name to Smith.

1942:  ACTRESS MADELINE KAHN IS BORN.

A wonderful talent who died way too soon. 

1955:  ACTOR KEN WEATHERWAX IS BORN.

That's Pugsley of TV's Addams Family, guys.

1960:  SOVIET LEADER NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV DISRUPTS A MEETING FO THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY WITH A NUMBER OF ANGRY OUTBURSTS.

Bang that shoe!  Bang that shoe!  Bang that shoe!

1963:  THE SECOND PERIOD OF THE SECOND VATICAN COUNCIL OPENS.

Number one topic on the agenda?  Why the hell were there so many Pope Gregorys centurys ago?

1966:  ACTRESS JILL WHELAN IS BORN.

"The Love Boat is making another run........the Loooovvvvee Boat....."

1975:  CASEY STENGEL DIES.

Noted Glendale banker and, oh yeah, baseball manager.  They checked to make sure this wasn't just another long nap.

1988:  CARTOONIST CHARLES ADDAMS DIES.

On Pugsley's birthday.  The nerve!

1990:  CONSTRUCTION OF THE WASHINGTON NATIONAL CATHEDRAL IS COMPLETED.

Here's the joke pay off, gang.  And the construction only took 83 years.  Who was running the crew?  The Three Stooges??

2008:  FOLLOWING THE BANKRUPTCIES OF LEHMAN BROTHERS AND WASHINGTON MUTUAL, THE DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE EXPERIENCES THE LARGEST SINGLE-DAY POINT LOSS IN HISTORY.

Yeah, well.  We're so much better off now.  Not.

2010:  ACTOR TONY CURTIS DIES.

Some Like It Dead.

2020:  SINGER HELEN REDDY DIES.

I Am Corpse.

Dinner last night:  Chicken sausage.

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Hollywood Then and Now - September 2021


One of my favorite things to do when I drive to Toyota of Culver City for my car servicing is zipping past what used to be the gate to MGM Studios.   Back in the 30s when this photo was shot, the history that walked or drove through that gate on a daily basis...well, that was Hollywood.   Then.

And this is Hollywood.  Now.

You can still see the gate and it is still a working studio now owned by Sony. They don't use this for the main entrance anymore.   But it is glorious that it is still there.   

For historians and dreamers alike.

Dinner last night:  Leftover barbecue ribs.
 

Monday, September 27, 2021

Monday Morning Video Laugh - September 27, 2021

Remembering the great Edward Asner with the classic interview scene from the Mary Tyler Moore pilot.

Dinner last night:  Baby back ribs and salad.

Sunday, September 26, 2021

The Sunday Memory Drawer - Drilling Down at the Dentist

 

The dentist.   The great common denominator of us all.   Except, of course, if you don't go.   My own good dental habits were started early.

When I was a kid, perhaps the smartest thing the Mount Vernon, New York public school system initiated was the concept of the green slips. Everybody wanted one. You would be proud to bring it to your teacher once you got one. 

And it was something you fought to achieve every year.

A test score? Nope. The green slip was your validation that you had, yes, survived another check-up with the dentist. I can still see those green slips in my mind and, to this day, I imagine that I receive another one when I go for my three annual check-ups every year. The green slips got us all into regular and positive dental habits at a very young age. Perhaps the last smart thing that Board of Education ever did.

Of course, the route to my own personal green slip wasn't a simple one. Nobody likes to go to the dentist. I liked it even less. It was a scary place, made even more so by our family dentist, Dr. Reiner.

Okay, he was a nice man. Let's not confuse him with Dr. Caligari. Or Laurence Olivier's character in "Marathon Man." The problem was that Dr. Reiner was old. He looked to be 100. Given that he undoubtedly aged prematurely, his real age was probably closer to 80. Way too old to be playing in my mouth with some electrical apparatus with very sharp points and edges.

Despite his Moses-like demeanor, my family trooped off to Dr. Reiner regularly. Once again, all my relatives were medically myopic. In our tribe, physicians were handed down through generations like old clothing or vintage silverware. You went to somebody because your father went there and his father went there. The only problem is that doctors and dentists can't simply be restored with some spit and polish. Without that painting of Dr. Dorian Gray in the basement, these people all got old. And I was reminded by that every time I saw Dr. Reiner shuffle me into the examining room. An annual visit which was always preceded by my annual question.

"Why do we still go to Dr. Reiner? He's so old."

The standard volley was always returned.

"Because we do. You ask too many questions."

Dire matters were made even more disastrous when you realized where Dr. Reiner's office was. On the second floor of a row of stores on White Plains Road and 237th Street in the Bronx. Outside the window next to the examining chair sat the elevated subway tracks. And a train went by every two minutes.
Dr. Reiner would approach with one of his chosen weapons.

"Open wide, young man."

The sharpest point known to man would enter my oral cavity. And, then, suddenly...

CLACKETY CLACK CLACKETY CLACK SCREECH CLACKETY CLACK SCREECH CLACKETY CLACK.

There goes the 2:15PM Express to Gun Hill Road. Meanwhile, was that warm liquid in my mouth blood? Was that warm liquid in my pants something altogether different?

Imagine going in for eye surgery and your surgeon is Michael J. Fox.

I fantasized my mother getting him to sign the green slip without an examination. Did dentists take bribes? What was Dr. Reiner's price? How could I avoid going into that chamber of horrors? With a tottering old geezer poking around my mouth amidst the greatest cacophony of metal noise since the Industrial Revolution.

And I was one of the lucky ones. I never had any cavities. Still, I didn't even trust his hands with that little circular mirror. But it could have been worse. The rest of my family was always there for some more advanced work.

It's too late to do an official survey but I'm thinking most of my relatives didn't have a complete set of teeth. And nobody would actually hide this fact. They couldn't. When drunk, they would puke up their upper plate into the toilet. Or, like my dad's cousin Helen, lose them while swimming in the Atlantic Ocean.

Over time, I ran across more dentures than ever Efferdent could imagine. My dad's mouth was pristine. Few others were. And, whenever I went to the dentist with my mom, there was always some aunt, uncle, or distant cousin there to have an extraction done by Dr. Reiner. I'd sit quietly looking for the hidden shovel in my Highlights for Children puzzle. Meanwhile, on the other side of Dr. Reiner's dungeon, I'd hear the whirring of a drill. And moans. Lots and lots of moans. I'd pray for some sound to drown it all out.

CLACKETY CLACK CLACKETY CLACK SCREECH CLACKETY CLACK SCREECH CLACKETY CLACK.

Ah! Thank God for the 11:15PM local to Dyre Avenue. Gratefully, my time with Dr. Reiner would come to an end soon. I needed to go to another specialist.

You see, I needed braces.  More to come.

Dinner last night:   Pepperoni pizza from Maria's.

Saturday, September 25, 2021

Classic Movie Trailer of the Month - September 2021

 Hard to believe this movie was getting ready to open fifty years ago this month.

Dinner last night:  Spicy Chinese noodles.

Friday, September 24, 2021

Len's Jukebox of the Month - September 2021

This gem doesn't get played very often but should have been a hit.   It's from a forgettable movie called "Mona Lisa Smile."   And, thanks to the wonderful orchestration by Elton John, I defy you to play it only once.  Or twice.

Enjoy.

Dinner last night:  BBQ Chicken Pizza from CPK.

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Let A Smile Be Your Umbrella...Unless It's A Pandemic


I think it was a song.   The title of today's blog, I mean.   

Let a smile be your umbrella.

Always good advice especially when you're out in public.   You get good service from a store clerk.   You reward them with a smile.

A driver lets you cut ahead of him at a left turn.   You smile.   He waves.   

You're in a public situation and a smile can cut through all the bullshit of life.  It is truly our best weapon in a relatively hostile post-pandemic world.

The only trouble is that it's not so "post-pandemic."   We are holding onto COVID restrictions as if it's some sort of badge of honor.

Yes, you still need to wear masks.

Suddenly, you can't convey thanks to that store clerk or that polite driver.  Or anybody really.   Who can really convey their gratitude and thanks when we all look...alike?

Have you wondered if that's the ultimate goal of all this masking?   To turn us all into feeling-less robots going about our business.

You may think I am joking.   But I am not.   If you could see through my mask, you will notice that I am not smiling.

Dinner last night:  Salad.

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

This Date in History - September 22

 

Your weekly history lesson. That Nero was a bust, wasn't he?

66: EMPEROR NERO CREATES THE LEGION I ITALICA.

And, to his credit, there was no designated hitter.

1499: TREATY OF BASEL MAKES SWITZERLAND AN INDEPENDENT STATE.

And they've been sitting on the fence ever since. And also on top of a lot of our hidden money.

1598: BEN JONSON IS INDICTED FOR MANSLAUGHTER.

Incited to murder by somebody who taunted him for not knowing how to correctly spell his last name.

1692: LAST PEOPLE HANGED FOR WITCHCRAFT IN THE UNITED STATES.

At least until Fox News debuted on the air.

1776: NATHAN HALE IS HANGED FOR SPYING DURING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.

He had but one life to give for his country and this was apparently it.

1789: THE OFFICE OF UNITED STATES POSTMASTER GENERAL IS ESTABLISHED.

And he probably had four weeks vacation from the get-go. Meanwhile, in 2021, try to find a mailbox on a street corner. It is impossible.

1869: RICHARD WAGNER'S OPERA "DAS RHEINGOLD" PREMIERES IN MUNICH.

Followed a year later by the sequel "DAS PABST'S BLUE RIBBON."

1888: THE FIRST ISSUE OF NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE IS PUBLISHED.

For the very first time, there is now something to read in a dentist's waiting room.

1893: THE FIRST AMERICAN-MADE AUTOMOBILE, BUILT BY THE DURYEA BROTHERS, IS DISPLAYED.

Did you ever hear anybody say they're the proud owner of a new Duryea?

1908: THE INDEPENDENCE OF BULGARIA IS PROCLAIMED.

So what do Bulgarians shoot off every September 22? Anybody?

1927: DODGER MANAGER TOMMY LASORDA IS BORN.

He's gone and now so is his wife.  Slim Fast kills.

1944: DURING WORLD WAR II, THE RED ARMY ENTERS TALLINN.

The Holiday Inn was full.

1956: SINGER DEBBY BOONE IS BORN.

And her life is officially lit.

1961: SCOTT BAIO IS BORN.

What's worse than a sixteen year-old called "Chachi?" A 60-year-old who is called "Chachi."

1975: SARA JANE MOORE TRIES TO ASSASSINATE PRESIDENT GERALD FORD.

A fun month for the President who remembered to duck not once, but twice.

1980: IRAQ INVADES IRAN.

Doesn't this happen like every single day?

1989: SONGWRITER IRVING BERLIN DIES.

At the age of 101. I hope there were no news stories that called his passing tragic.

1991: THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS ARE MADE AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC FOR THE FIRST TIME BY THE HUNTINGTON LIBRARY.

A big deal at the time, you can now read them on your Kindle.

1996: ACTRESS DOROTHY LAMOUR DIES.

Goodbye, farewell, sarong.

2007: MIME MARCEL MARCEAU DIES.

I have no words.

2010:  SINGER EDDIE FISHER DIES.

He slept with Liz Taylor and Connie Stevens.   Not a bad combo.

2015:  BASEBALL STAR YOGI BERRA DIES.

Deja vu all over again.

Dinner last night:  Leftover Chinese food.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Fall TV


It's September and that used to be the time where you look forward to all the new season premieres or returning shows.

Want to know how many shows I have currently set in my DVR queue?

One.  "The Conners."

That's it.

So, thank goodness for the Season 2 return of "The Morning Show" on Apple and the fact that they are running it one episode a week.   The way TV series should be viewed.

But the fall had an early start in August with this gem on Hulu.   Of course, with Steve Martin and Martin Short as stars, you cannot go wrong.   They are a great "unofficial" comedy team and we are lucky to have them.   In this over-hyped 2021 world of non-talents, even something mediocre from Steve and Marty would be ten times better than most of the shit being streamed.

The glory of "Only Murders in the Building" is that it clearly was filmed in New York City and Gotham never looked better.   Steve and Marty play two guys who live in this large Dakota-like building.   Another neighbor is played by the mysterious Selena Gomez who really holds her own with these pros.    

The plot is pretty simple.  A young guy in the building shot himself.  Or did he.  And why not?   Bored out of their minds because their careers as a TV detective (Steve) and a Broadway director (Marty) have dried up, they start asking questions along with Gomez.  They all think it's a perfect way to begin a podcast on the subject.   

Eventually, everybody in the building is a suspect including Sting who plays himself.   For good measure, Tina Fey and Nathan Lane pop up in guest roles but, frankly, Steve, Marty, and Selena need no help.   There are some overly dramatic subplots that often mess with the comedic tone.   But when you watch the masters at work, you forgive those sins.

The good news is that "Only Murders in the Building" has already been renewed for a second season.   So savor it all.

One episode at a time.   One week at a time.

Dinner last night:  Leftover sausage, peppers, and onions.

Monday, September 20, 2021

Monday Morning Video Laugh - September 20, 2021

 Who says the UK is so civilized?

Dinner last night:  Sausage, peppers, and onions.

Sunday, September 19, 2021

The Sunday Memory Drawer - When Tree Leaves Go From Green to Golden

 


Back in the day, there was no on-screen TV schedule.   If you wanted to know what was on, you bought....the TV Guide. 

We would wait anxiously for Wednesday.  As early as we could get to our local candy store or newspaper emporium, we would run.  It became a relentless quest every week.


"Bob's Candy Store doesn't have it yet."

"Did you try the guy near the cleaners?"

"He doesn't have it yet.  Let's hear down to 241st Street.  There are three stores down there."

For me, it was a thirst that needed to be quenched as soon as possible.  I would not rest until...

I had, in my grubby, young hands, the next week's TV Guide.

When you're young and in grade school, you live for two things every single evening.  The completion of your nightly homework.  And your personally chosen primetime television schedule. 

As soon as every Wednesday arrived and you'd see who was adorning the cover of next week's TV Guide, you could breathe a little easier.  Life was going to be okay.  At least, for another seven days.

When we would go to my aunt's house a few blocks away, she would marvel at her own TV Guide.  Sent in the mail.  Isn't that easier than buying it in the store?

And what day does your mailed TV Guide arrive?

"Thursday, sometimes Friday."

Audible scream.  Me.  That's way too late.  I needed to start planning my TV viewing sooner than that.

I'd read that TV Guide all the way home from the store.  I probably dodged death by fender more than once as I had my nose buried while crossing major thoroughfares.  You automobiles can wait.  I need to see if Paul Lynde is making a guest appearance on the Dean Martin Show next Thursday.

I had a grid in my school notebook.  It showed me night-by-night what was on my television docket.  It was meticulously planned out.  When shows seamlessly flowed to one another.  When I actually had to change the channels.  Which shows would I have to watch on my own and which ones were programs that I enjoyed with my grandmother.  This information was perhaps twice as important as any of the school lessons on the other pages.

The pinnacle of TV Guide issues every year happened on the very first Wednesday of September.

The Fall Preview!!!

It was time to learn about all the new shows that the three, yes, count 'em, three networks had to offer to the unsuspecting public.  I'd systematically read through all of the descriptions and formulate my own opinions.  I needed to determine if any of these new programs stood a chance of cracking my own viewership grid.  And God forbid if they were at the same time as one of my favorites.

Once I digested it all, I needed to present my findings to my grandmother.  I watched almost seventy percent of prime time with her.  If I was sold on a  TV show, she needed to be on board.  I'd sit and copiously read to her all the descriptions from the Fall Preview.

The Time Tunnel.  Two guys go back into time every week.

"Sounds silly."

The Outer Limits.  Scary different tales every week.

"Too spooky for me."

Jimmy Durante Presents the Lennon Sisters.

"Nice girls.  We should watch that."

And so it went.  The yearly process.  As regular as Thanksgiving dinner and income tax day.

Most weeknights and on Sundays, I could be found downstairs in Grandma's part of the house.  Me in the rocking chair and her in that big, comfy easy chair.  But, on Saturday nights, I was cast adrift.  Literally.

We had two television sets in our house.  One upstairs in the lair of my parents and me.  One downstairs in Grandparentville.  Plenty of chance for diverse sampling, right?

Wrong.

My Saturday grid was shanghai-ed by two television consoles that both needed to be tuned to...

Lawrence Welk.

And a one and a two and a "Len is screwed..."

Meanwhile, while I'm hearing some Champagne Lady sing in all corners of our house, I am thinking about my shows and what I'm missing.  I Dream of Jeannie.  Get Smart.  My Three Sons.

I must have protested a lot.  Miraculously, one Christmas, I wound up with my own portable black and white TV for my room only.  A very, very nice way for my folks to tell me to "get lost."

I will do so.  Gladly.

Finally, I could address my primetime grid completely.  All seven nights a week.  Mine.

Dinner last night:  General Tso's Chicken from Chin Chin.

Saturday, September 18, 2021

Classic TV Theme Song of the Month - September 2021

We salute the late Edward Asner with the wonderful opening to the phenomenal "Lou Grant" series.

Dinner last night:  Italian sub from Jersey Mike's.

Friday, September 17, 2021

Your Weekend Movie Guide for September 2021

 

Well, this breaks my heart.   Driving around Westchester last weekend, I see that the Bronxville movie theater is still...and probably always will be another victim of COVID.   It does not look as if it will be re-opening soon.   There was a sign in the door.   I didn't want to see what it had to say.

I can't tell you how many wonderful movies and memories I made in this theater.   It was the place to go when the local movie houses in next-door Mount Vernon, New York shuttered.  Even with three screens, it was such a homey spot to have a cinematic experience I am hoping they will rebound.   I expect the worst.   And, speaking of which, there is junk opening this week.   You know the drill, folks.  I will root through the movie listings and give you my knee-jerk reaction to what is polluting those theaters that are still open.

We pray for you, Bronxville Cinema.

Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten:  I see the word "Marvel."   I keep moving.

Malignant:   Doesn't that title make you want to avoid this film?

Venom - Let There Be Carnage:   And this one, too.

Candyman:   Not the Willy Wonka version.

Jungle Cruise:  Since they went politically correct on the Disneyland ride, I am boycotting this film.

Respect:  Reviewed recently on this blog.  Who doesn't like Aretha Franklin?

Snake Eyes:  Also sounds avoidable.

The Boss Baby - Family Business;  The cartoon characters look super creepy.

Paw Patrol - The Movie:   As opposed to Paw Patrol - The Flea Powder.

Free Guy:   Ryan Reynolds as a character in a video game.  I have run out of quarters.

Copshop:   Corrupt police.   Don't you see enough of this on MSNBC?

Cry Macho:  Clint Eastwood's latest in front of and behind the camera.   I always try to support because he always manages to tell an interesting story.  Even at 90.

Don't Breathe 2:   If you paid attention to the title in the first one, you're not around for the second.

The Card Counter:  Paul Schrader directs, which means this is weird shit.

After We Fell:  The break-up of a young romance.   Who needs to relive this???

Everybody's Talking About Jamie:  I'm not.

Stillwater:  Matt Damon looking for his kid.   Try Lost and Found.

The Green Knight:   I saw King Arthur in the logline.   I hate medieval stuff.

The Eyes of Tammy Faye:   Jessica Chastain stars as....   Probably your first 2022 Oscar nominee for Make-Up.

Dinner last night:  A long travel day so nothing really.

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Wait! What? - September 2021

 

My now monthly snapshot of hypocrisy in America.

So the photo above was in the news last week.   If you were vacationing on Mars, the courts of Texas apparently made it a bit harder for women to get abortions there.

Okay, so Len's opinion on this?

As pretty much a Libertarian, I don't believe the government should have any control over what you do to your body.   You want to eat until you're Jabba the Hutt?  Go ahead.   And those ultra-freedoms include abortion.   

Now, I understand that if I were Catholic, I would feel differently and rightfully so.  But I'm not and I don't.   If there is a God and you endure an abortion and it's really the sin it is preached to be, then you will have your day of reckoning when your body is reduced to a nice sirloin steak char in the kitchen of Satan.

I can see why people are all bent out of shape over this.   But.....

The same folks who espouse woman's right to choose what her body does are also the same stooges who are pushing everybody to get a COVID vaccination.

So, on one hand, you have control over what you do to your body.   But, on the other hand, you have to do what the government is telling you to do.

Now, don't get me wrong.   I think everyone is better off with the vaccination than without.   But I also realize some are worried about side effects or perhaps have religious aversions.   I mean, it was only last Fall when Democrats were warning everybody to stay away from the vaccines...largely because they felt that the Republicans were whipping up the dosages in the White House basement.

You see how this plays?   What works for one tenet should also be valid for another.   

But it isn't.

Welcome to America 2021.

Dinner last night:  Mongolian beef at PF Chang's.




Wednesday, September 15, 2021

This Date in History - September 15

 

Live from any NYC hotel, it's Bedbug Live. While these things crawl around your mattresses, let's see what history has to say about this day.

668: EASTERN ROMAN EMPEROR CONSTANS II IS ASSASSINATED IN HIS BATH AT SYRACUSE, ITALY.

Well, at least they saved on the crime scene clean-up.

921: AT TETIN, SAINT LUDMILA IS MURDERED AT THE COMMAND OF HER DAUGHTER-IN-LAW.

The very first truly hated mother-in-law.

1254: ITALIAN EXPLORER MARCO POLO IS BORN.

Little did he know that he would also start a popular swimming pool game.

1616: THE FIRST NON-ARISTOCRATIC, FREE PUBLIC SCHOOL IN EUROPE IS OPENED IN FRASCATI, ITALY.

If this place is close to Pompeii, does that mean they get a "volcano day?"

1776: DURING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR, BRITISH FORCES LAND AT NEW YORK' KIPS BAY SECTION.

When did they move on to other telephone exchanges like Murray Hill and Bigelow?

1789: THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF STATE IS ESTABLISHED.

More jobs provided by the 1788 stimulus bill.

1812: THE FRENCH ARMY UNDER NAPOLEON REACHES THE KREMLIN IN MOSCOW.

Smart of them to make the trip before the winter weather comes in.

1821: GUATEMALA, EL SALVADOR, HONDURAS, NICARAGUA, AND COSTA RICA JOINTLY DECLARE INDEPENDENCE FROM SPAIN.

So when do they declare their independence from the United States?

1835: THE HMS BEAGLE, WITH CHARLES DARWIN, REACHES THE GALAPAGOS ISLANDS.

I don't really give a shit except that the ship is named after my favorite breed of dog.

1851: SAINT JOSEPH'S UNIVERSITY IS FOUNDED IN PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA.

The college that also brought you the baby aspirin.

1907: ACTRESS FAY WRAY IS BORN.

Which makes her 25 years old when she's fooling around with King Kong. Talk about peaking early.

1916: DURING WORLD WAR I, TANKS ARE USED FOR THE FIRST TIME AT THE BATTLE OF THE SOMME.

Despite many stateside "anti-tank" demonstrations.

1918: COMEDIAN NIPSEY RUSSELL IS BORN.

We salute September 15 in every way because Nipsey Russell was born this day.

1935: THE NUREMBERG LAWS DEPRIVE GERMAN JEWS OF CITIZENSHIP.

A big news day in Germany. See below.

1935: NAZI GERMANY ADOPTS A NEW NATIONAL FLAG WITH THE SWASTIKA.

So who was the marketing genius that came up with this logo?

1944: FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT AND WINSTON CHURCHILL MEET IN QUEBEC TO DISCUSS WAR STRATEGY.

And liquor was served. Lots and lots and lots of liquor.

1952: THE UNITED NATIONS GIVES ERITREA TO ETHIOPIA.

Who even knew that Eritrea was up for grabs? Did we miss out on a good deal or what?

1959: NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV BECOMES THE FIRST SOVIET LEADER TO VISIT THE UNITED STATES.

He was supposed to visit Disneyland, but backed out when he learned he might get wet on Splash Mountain.

1981: SANDRA DAY O'CONNOR BECOMES THE FIRST FEMALE JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES.

Years later, Ruth Bader Ginsburg became the first ugly female Justice of the Supreme Court.

1981: VANUATU BECOMES A MEMBER OF THE UNITED NATIONS.

Not to be confused with Xanadu, which did not become a member of the United Nations, but was a lousy movie nonetheless.

1998: MCI WORLDCOME OPENS ITS DOORS FOR BUSINESS.

And they haven't stopped calling in the middle of dinner ever since.

2007: MATCH GAME STAR BRETT SOMERS DIES.

"When Brett passed on, they decided to put in a ___________."

2008: LEHMAN BROTHERS FILES FOR CHAPTER 11.

And so ends John McCain's bid for President.

2019:  ACTRESS PHYLLIS NEWMAN DIES.

You may remove your blindfold.

Dinner last night:  Cavatelli with sausage at Buon Amici.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Not Your Grandfather's 101 Dalmatians

 

In the still COVID-ed world of 2021, it is quite easy to miss new motion picture releases.   Oh, sure, you can find them on streams and in theaters.  But, for some reason, they are much more likely to slip by unnoticed with barely a yip.

Such is the case of Disney's "Cruella."  Now, in normal times, I would have likely seen this in the Arclight Hollywood cinema.   Because it stars Emma Stone and...well...Emma Stone.   Yet, this past summer, I always seemed to have something else to do.

Enter my recent flight to NY from Los Angeles and so bored and masked that I needed something to do that would occupy my mind.  Ah, one of the 100 plus entertainment selections was "Cruella."  Okay, as one dalmatian might say to the other..."I'll bite."

Now the original cartoon was one of my very favorite Disney films, next to the always canine-filled "Lady and the Tramp."   And there was no better Disney villain than the mink-coated and bony-kneed Cruella DeVille.  Her theme song still rings in my ears.  So I was interested to see how they would provide the live-action backstory.   How did Cruella DeVille become Cruella DeVille?

Well, you find out in this tale and I won't tell you much because there are some twists and turns.   You find out how dalmatians become her most hated pets.  You learn how she hooks up with her henchman Horace and Jasper.   And you get a delicious performance from Emma Thompson as Cruella's template for evil.  

As with all Disney live action these days, "Cruella" is loaded with special effects that become numbing after a while.   But, the curious thing about this film is that, despite its cartoon origins, it is hardly a movie you would want to bring little kids to.   There are many sinister and scary images.   But there is also an underlying comedic bite to the dialogue that adults will appreciate.  The only quibble I have is that the old theme song is almost unrecognizable as played during the closing credits.  Boo.

And, oh, yeah....Emma Stone.

So, somehow, you can eventually can and should catch up to "Cruella."   You don't necessarily have to do it at 35,000 feet.

LEN'S RATING:  Three stars.

Dinner last night:  Turkey burger at the Cheesecake Factory.

Monday, September 13, 2021

Monday Morning Video Laugh - September 13, 2021

From our most recent hurricane....idiot.

 

Dinner last night: Veal saltimbocca at Gianna's.

Sunday, September 12, 2021

The Sunday Memory Drawer - Twenty Years Ago Yesterday

 

This photo is historic.   It was a live shot during the 10PM News on New York's WPIX Channel 11.   Taken at 10:44PM on Monday, September 10, 2001.

Wow, this seems like just yesterday.   Vivid memories always will seem like they just happened.  This is a Sunday Memory Drawer entry that I will repeat for as long as this blog exists.   Sadly.

Fittingly, I am in my hometown of New York today.  Fifteen years ago, I was not.  Part of me is glad that I was 3,000 miles away.  But, there is a portion of my soul that wanted to share that experience here with all the support and solace I could muster.

Prior to 2001, the last time this nation was truly united behind one cause came during World War II, most likely the days and months immediately following Pearl Harbor.  On 9/11, we came together again as a single unit.  It didn't last long and, sadly, the patriotism was short-lived.  Look how hopelessly divided we are today thanks to all the goof balls in charge since.  Yet, still, for a fleeting moment in 2001, we were one nation.  Under God.  Indivisible.  

The images of that day don't return like cherished tapestries.  Instead, they are brief and blinding flashes of light as if someone clicked on a digital camera that was a little too close to your eyes.

For reasons only someone who grew up in New York could totally comprehend, I regret not being there in the metropolitan area on that day.  It was a lonely and helpless feeling for me 3000 miles away and three hours earlier.  Most of my life had been in New York and this was a reminder that I had moved away from some very good friends.

For me, that day started very ordinarily. I was dressing to the local TV news. Since I like to work NY hours even in Los Angeles, I was up early enough to see the second plane hit. I watched this unfold before me in my bedroom, but, still, I did not disrupt my routine. Finish dressing. Go to the kitchen for a little breakfast and my eighteen vitamin supplements. Back to my bedroom and bathroom for teeth brushing, hair drying, and the final comb. Despite the drama, I never broke step.

I still left the house at the same daily appointed time. I still got into my SUV and left the garage. I was two blocks away at a traffic light on Wilshire Boulevard. Howard Stern was on my "free" radio as usual, but he was still live as opposed to the usual West Coast tape delay. He was watching his studio television. And, suddenly, the first tower collapsed. Howard's voice cracked as he described it and he sounded like he never has before. I was finally frightened.

I made an immediate and abrupt U-turn on Wilshire and headed home.

I knocked on my writing partner/roommate's bedroom and woke him up. I had never done that before. But this was unprecedented. 

We popped on the television and watched. Moments later, the second tower fell. There was still a fire at the Pentagon. He thought about his family living close enough to urban chaos.  I got an urgent e-mail from a cousin that I had not heard from in about a year. She was praying that I would answer, given that she was aware of my bi-coastal existence. Scary, scary stuff in a country where democracy allegedly reigned supreme.

I decided to continue my drive to the work place.   Go figure.

It was the calmest LA freeway day ever. While there was the usual bumper-to-bumper rush hour traffic, no one seemed to be in their customary hurry mode. Eerily quiet. And borderline pleasant.  I am sure that, inside every car, the radio was tuned to all news.

The work place was a confusing mess.   After helping to guide folks on a decision of whether or not to stay, the place was closed.  At that juncture, we didn't know what else fate had planned for America.  And where.   Like Mary Richards at WJM, I was one of the folks who turned off the lights at 1045AM.   

On the way home, I drove past my church. There were strangers walking around the parking lot. They weren't casing the joint. They were people from the neighborhood looking for some sort of a safe haven. I called my pastor and told her I would open the doors wide.  I took the American flag from the altar and put it by the front door.

I then passed the Federal Building in Westwood. I finally grasped the enormity of it all. There were soldiers all over the grounds. They were all looking to the sky with their rifles held high. They were ready to shoot at anything or everything.

Like most Americans that day, I consumed a lot of visual memories on television. By 530PM, the immense tension had created an appetite. My roommate and I decided to venture out for food. Wilshire Boulevard, which is usually a speedway at that hour, was empty. You could shoot a cannon down the block and not hit anybody. All of a sudden, it was like Christmas Eve. There were no restaurants open. For once, people were staying home and having a cherished dinner with their loved ones.

The only eatery open happened to be the delicatessen/restaurant, Nate N Al's, in Beverly Hills. Regardless of what was transpiring on the other coast, there would be people who would not be denied their brisket with gravy. Inside, we would have our most surreal moment of a day that was filled with a thousand of them. In the booth beside us, we found Rodney Dangerfield. Sitting in his pajamas. With the worst case of bed head known to man.

I remember this all with fresh sadness. It is just one story of 200 million others that lived through that experience.

And, unfortunately, there are another 3,000 or so stories that were never quite finished.

A week later, I was on one of the first American Airlines flights out of LAX.  I got upgraded to first class and, frankly, there was room for about six or seven friends if I wanted to bring them along.  There were only about five folks up in the fancy seats.  One was actor Timothy Busfield from "Thirtysomething" and "The West Wing."  We were all strangers as is usually the case on an airplane.

That day, we chatted like longtime pals.  If Facebook had been popular back then, we would be "friends."

Approaching Newark Airport, the day was way too overcast for us to see anything.  My very first image came the next ultra-sunny day as I crossed 6th Avenue at 50th Street.  I looked south.

Smoke.  Nothing but.  Over a week later.

I stared long and hard.  

I still do.   I have not visited the new memorial down there.   I want to.

But, at the same time, I don't.

Dinner last night:  The buffet at the Westchester Marriott.

Saturday, September 11, 2021

Friday, September 10, 2021

Hey! The School Photographer is Here!











 Dinner last night:  Roast beef and German potato salad at the NY apartment.

Thursday, September 9, 2021

Morons of the Month - September 2021

 

A smart man, that Winston Churchill.  Saying something that I've been saying for years.

And we all know these people.   They're in our lives.   Folks who are politically minded and really only know one side of the story.   In a two party system, they are only checking into one party.   And everything else is wrong.

We go into our respective social media portals and there they are.   Most of the noise comes from the liberal clowns who still allow Donald Trump to live in their heads rent-free.   They were noisiest last year around this time with the upcoming election.   Preaching tolerance but being so intolerant.  They wouldn't rest until their guy got in by hook and literal crook.

But, in September 2021, we have daily evidence that their guy was not the answer either.   A botched escape from Afghanistan.   Americans left behind.   Terrorists now entering our country via the southern border which is as solid as the New York Jets offensive line.   Spiraling inflation.   Rampant homelessness.   Criminals taking hold of our major cities.

If you look at the same loud mouths on social media, they have finally done what everybody wanted to do a year ago.   

They shut up.

Nothing to say.

Marcel Marceau would be a fan.

People who are troubled by everything from an independent viewpoint still have plenty to say.   But the other lemmings?

They are posting about the weather.  Or the latest show they are binging on Netflix.  Or a deer in their backyard. 

It is remarkable how stupid they can be.   

God bless Winston Churchill.

Dinner last night:  Leftover Chinese food.  


  

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

This Date in History - September 8

 

It's back to school. And here's your first history lesson of the semester.

70: ROMAN FORCES UNDER TITUS SACK JERUSALEM.

Jerusalem should never have tried to go for it on fourth down.

1331: STEPHEN UROS IV DUSAN DECLARES HIMSELF KING OF SERBIA.

But who got Florida's electoral votes?

1504: MICHELANGELO'S DAVID IS UNVEILED IN FLORENCE.

And, all of a sudden, Italian women begin to clamor for David's phone number.

1565: THE KNIGHTS OF MALTA LIFT THE TURKISH SIEGE OF MALTA.

And, later on, they also defeated the Knights of Columbus as well as the Kiwanis.

1755: BATTLE OF LAKE GEORGE BEGINS DURING THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR.

The French? The Indians? Gee, I'd be hardpressed to root for anybody in this one.

1796: DURING THE FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WAR, FRENCH FORCES DEFEAT AUSTRIAN TROOPS AT BASSANO DEL GRAPPA.

Hey, France, where was all this fighting spirit during WWII?

1863: DURING THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR, A SMALL CONFEDERATE FORCE THWARTS A UNION INVASION OF TEXAS AT THE MOUTH OF THE SABINE RIVER.

The good news is that France finally decided to sit one out.

1888: IN ENGLAND, THE FIRST SIX FOOTBALL LEAGUE MATCHES ARE PLAYED.

Also signaled the invention of the sports bar.

1892: THE PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE IS FIRST RECITED.

Do school kids even do this anymore?

1915: ACTOR FRANK CADY IS BORN.

Yay, Sam Drucker! And he's still with us!!

1921: 16-YEAR-OLD MARGARET GORMAN WINS THE ATLANTIC CITY PAGEANT'S GOLDEN MERMAID TROPHY AND OFFICIALS LATER DUB HER THE FIRST MISS AMERICA.

A note to those of you who thought it was Bess Myerson.

1925: ACTOR PETER SELLERS IS BORN.

Sellers died in 1980, which means Frank Cady's career was longer.

1926: GERMANY IS ADMITTED TO THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS.

The League didn't exactly think that through, did they?

1930: 3M BEGINS MARKETING SCOTCH TRANSPARENT TAPE.

How soon was it before the tape end got stuck to the roll rendering it useless?

1935: US SENATOR FROM LOUISIANA, HUEY LONG, IS FATALLY SHOT IN THE LOUISIANA CAPITOL BUILDING.

And all the king's horses and all the king's men...

1941: DURING WORLD WAR II, GERMAN FORCES BEGIN A SIEGE AGAINST THE SOVIET UNION'S SECOND LARGEST CITY, LENINGRAD.

League of Nations, we told you so.

1966: STAR TREK PREMIERES ON NBC.

And a sci-fi comic book geek is born somewhere.

1968: THE BEATLES PERFORM THEIR LAST LIVE TV PERFORMANCE ON THE DAVID FROST SHOW. THEY PERFORM THEIR NEW HIT "HEY JUDE."

The most annoying Beatles song ever written. I'm just saying.

1969; TV HOST BUD COLLYER DIES.

To tell the truth, Bud couldn't beat the clock.

1974; PRESIDENT GERALD FORD PARDONS FORMER PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON FOR ANY CRIMES COMMITTED IN OFFICE.

Say what you want, Ford's move was one of the guttiest decisions by any President. And it pretty much delivered us Jimmy Carter on a silver platter.

Dinner last night:   Grilled filet mignon cubes at Pearl District.

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Hollywood Bowled Over

 

Summer always officially concludes with the traditional John Williams concert at the Hollywood Bowl during Labor Day Weekend.  Of course, in 2020, summer never really opened so the now-soon-to-be-90 Williams had the year off.   But he and the LA Philharmonic were back strong.   Some in the orchestra wearing masks.  Some in the audience wearing mandatory masks, unless they were "actively eating and drinking."  That would be me.  To keep a mask off for a long duration, I can actively eat and drink with the best of them.

The audience was starved for this concert.   In fact, they lit their light sabres long before the music began.   As for the program, it followed the format of past years. With Williams now up in years, the first half is a potpourri of great old movie music conducted by the legendary David Newman.  Then, John comes out for the second half and may the force be with all of us.   Geeks out of mom's basement for the first time in a year were in eighth heaven.

So this was a grand evening, Len?

Um not so much.   Oh, the concert saved the night.   But the evening was filled by one snafu after another.   Thanks to...

Technology.

Yep, that wide scoping arena which is supposed to be make our lives easier made ours a living Hell.

What mystifies me is that this particular soiree was not my first rodeo at the Bowl this year.   Given a shortened season, I only signed up for three concerts.  And the first two went off seamlessly, except for a reserved parking lot misfire in July.   Indeed, the John Williams fun started when, because of the overflow crowd, cars with ADA placards were put in a lot at the bottom of a hill.   Good luck with anybody sporting conflicted knees.  Like me.

Now the ADA placard also gets me into the ADA entrance, complete with elevator.  And that worked well until I had to show my tickets which, like all venues in the COVID world, were nestled in my phone.

Except the ticket taker with the wand couldn't make magic with mine.  We waited and waited for some sort of connection with the box office gods.   Finally, the kid with the wand (and, yes, he did remind me of Harry Potter) called over his supervisor who is probably entering his junior year in high school.   Hmmm, he said.  We have to confirm that these tickets are real.   So he got my name and location and called the box office guard assigned to this task.   We were finally released to move forward.   Jeez, people are getting through the US southern border with less problems.

The Harry Potter kid said he preferred it when there were paper tickets.   I offered to adopt him.

So, our normal concert customer is then to hit the snack bar offering burgers, grilled cheese sandwiches, etc..   In the past, it has all worked well.  You order, you pay for your food, and, five minutes later, somebody pops out of the kitchen and calls your name.  

Okay, now during this summer, they installed a QR code so that you look at the menu on-line.  Of course, I suppose that means people without cell phones go hungry, but I digress.   Even this "innovation" worked previously.

But not on John Williams Night.   You had to order your food either on your phone or a computer kiosk.   My friends did and even ordered for me.   But neither has a cell phone handy so they used my number.   We received a text message with a confirmation number.   We should go to the counter when we got the text that said our order was ready.

We waited.

And waited.

And WAITED.

I began to wonder if the cheese on my sandwich had been imported and delayed.

From the order going through to that moment, it was already forty minutes.  The counter help, which probably went to the same high school as the ticket takers, kept looking at computer screens and handing out bags.   But not ours.  

The trouble is that we had the audacity to inquire about our order, they looked at us as if we had imprisoned their grandparents in a garage.    Customer service that could be bored into a thimble without spilling a drop.

Eventually they went back to the old method and started calling out names.  We finally got our grub.  And, by the way, it's four days later and I'm still waiting for the text to pick up my food.

But this is life now.   We make it easy for you.   But it really isn't.

Still, once the music started, it was all wonderful again.   Hope next summer is filled with mask-less people and cash transactions at the snack bar.

Dinner last night:  General Ching's Chicken from PF Chang's.



Monday, September 6, 2021

Monday Morning Video Laugh - September 6, 2021

Labor Day always makes me think of Jerry Lewis.   And, like him or not, there are some funny moments on film.   For instance, 1958's "Rock-A-Bye-Baby."

 

Dinner last night:  Leftover tortellini.

Sunday, September 5, 2021

The Sunday Memory Drawer - The Labor Day Musing

 

Here's a photo of New York City's Labor Day Parade in 1882.  There was such a celebration?  Did people flock to it?  Was it covered by Bob Eubanks and Stephanie Edwards?

The fact that they were celebrating Labor Day at all is a mystery to me.  Unlike all the other holidays, what the heck was being commemorated with this day?  I remember asking the question of my mother.  Just what is Labor Day?  She went for a response that was definitely feminine-skewed.

"It honors all those pregnant women who have labor pains before giving birth."

Huh?   So, it's a day where women go into labor.

"I guess."

The logic escaped me.  How long could labor be?  I was born in February.

"You ask too many questions."

There I go again.

Now, the mere mention of the first Monday of September would send chills up and down a kid's spine.  After all, in many other subtle ways, we were lamenting the end of summer.

We'd notice that it was a little bit harder to see the ball in our nightly softball contest down at the local lot.

We'd discover that there was more of a chill in the air at night as we would sit on somebody's front stoop yakking up the day's events.

And, while the Good Humor truck was still showing up promptly at 8:47PM each evening, that strawberry sundae on a stick you had been eating in twilight was now being consumed in complete darkness.

It was all so ominous.

We were headed back to school.

And Labor Day was the last straw we had.  For me, school usually began the Wednesday or Thursday afterward.  I'd immediately pull down a calendar to find my first days off.  Since the Mount Vernon, New York public school system was jampacked with Jewish teachers, we'd always get Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur off.  Sometimes, these days would happen as soon as school started.  Bonus days of summer.  My only problem with this concept was that all my friends in the neighborhood went to Catholic school.  I'd have the days off but had little to do but watch the Hollywood Squares with my grandmother.

When Labor Day weekend rolled around, this meant another complete horror for yours truly.  The annual quest for new school clothes.  And I was dragged to Genung's Department Store on Fourth Avenue by my mother.

Now, my mom was always very fashion conscious.  When it came to herself.  But, the outfits she'd suggest for me were, well, odd.   Oh, I was always completely color-coordinated.  But, then again, so was Superfly.

Mom, don't you think this shirt is a little bright?

"Well, you'll be easier to find after school after they turn the clocks back."

I could be easily seen from down the block and perhaps even Venus.

As I got older, the annual Genung's battle got more heated as I began to assert more and more power into my own clothing choice.  No, I don't like cuffs.  No, I don't want to wear a clip-on bowtie.  And white belts are for country clubs in Ohio.

Eventually, Mom gave up.  As all mothers do.

One more signal to the end of summer would be the television commercials on Channel 5 Metromedia in New York heralding the arrival of...

The Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon for Muscular Dystrophy.

Back in the day, the Jerry Lewis Telethon was done in New York, as I'm not sure Las Vegas had been invented yet.  And we watched it for all the wrong reasons.  Not because we were devoted to the charity.  Nope, we tuned it because it had all the promise of horrible television with heavy doses of schmaltz blended in.

Would Jerry make his monetary goal as predicted by co-host Ed McMahon in between swigs of some Budweiser?   Could Jerry possibly get through 21 hours on the air without a nap?  Would he break down and sob during his closing number, the ridiculously inappropriate "You'll Never Walk Alone?" 

You knew that, every year, it would be a car crash.  You just had to tune in for the exact moment of impact.

We used to watch along and my mom viewed it all with disdain.  You see, she was no fan of Jerry Lewis.  When I was a kid, his movies dominated the local cinemas and we were his target age group.  My mother wanted nothing to do with taking me to see his latest trash.  That job usually fell to my dad, who would conventiently doze off one reel into "The Errand Boy."

But, then, one Labor Day, there was a miracle...

My mom had just started a job in downtown Manhattan at an accounting firm, which just happened to be the official auditors for Muscular Dystrophy.  One year, she was asked to be part of the accounting staff to work at the telethon.

When she came home, I craved for details.  It's so bad on the screen.  Just how awful is it backstage?

A curveball flew out of my mother's mouth.

"That Jerry Lewis is quite a guy."

Huh?

"He is so devoted to those children.  It's like they're part of his own family."

Say what?

"There's a secret reason why he does this telethon, but he will only tell everybody after there is a cure."

Okay, just what was flowing from those water fountains down at the TV studio?

My mother had been transformed into a Jerry Lewis zealot.  In subsequent years, she watched the telethon with a different fervor.  I couldn't watch it with her again.  Instead, I had to hide in my bedroom with it shining from my black and white portable television.  I could easily giggle with the door closed.

And, for me, Labor Day just never was the same after that.

Dinner last night:  Grilled cheese sandwich at the Hollywood Bowl.