Sunday, April 30, 2023

The Sunday Memory Drawer - Apartment Living

 

We all have them.  Stories about weird neighbors next door.  Here's a few of mine.

This is a photo of 455 North Broadway in Yonkers.  This complex is a series of very roomy town homes and I spent about ten years there.  For the most part, these were good times.  For a while, I had very good friends living two doors away.  All was pleasant.

Until the very last year.

Okay, the way the town homes were laid out, I shared a front porch and stairway with the unit on the other side of me.  We also shared the same terrace in the back.  The "way too close" neighbors for most of this time were a divorced woman and two wayward teenage kids.  Mom must have been getting her groove on, because she disappeared for whole weekends at a time.  Leaving the two pre-sixteen-year-olds to fend for themselves. 

Yes, noise ensued frequently.

And, yes, the police were called frequently.

By yours truly.

One such violation of trust really exploded on these two brats.  When Mom returned from her weekend between the sheets with whatever boyfriend she had at the time, she beat the kids up.

Frequently. 

I lived through that noise and I refrained from calling the police this time around.  I was having too much fun listening to these two dummies get what was coming to them.

Eventually, these shitheads moved out and I soon would be longing for their return.  Because, the new tenants turned out to be....

Hillbillies.

No, not the Jed Clampett kind.  These were real slobs from down South.  An older Black couple and there were a couple of kids attached.  Who they belonged to is beyond me?  But, at times, there were so many goofballs going in and out of the apartment that it may have been doubling for the Yonkers branch of HUD.

Okay, the older folks were nice enough.  Very pleasant and folksy.  They came off like a couple of wise crackin' characters on a 1973 Norman Lear sitcom.  The only thing missing was the regular utterance of "dyn-o-mite."  My attitude was that, as long as they left me alone, I would join in with the reciprocal treatment and we could all co-exist amicably.

Until one summer's day when I came home from work.  To find, carefully laid out on our shared front porch, squirrel pelts.

I repeat.

Squirrel pelts.

What the fuck????

Big Momma came out as I surveyed the daily kill.  I spoke the innocent question that just screamed to be asked.  What the hell is this?

"Oh, my husband went huntin'."

No fooling.

"He got some squirrel."

I can see that.  And you're going to be using these skins to make what?

"Oh, they have to dry in the sun before you can do anything with them."

Uh-huh. 

I thought about my address.  I lived in a relatively urban metropolis.  All of a sudden, I was having a conversation that usually takes place somewhere in the Ozarks.

With images of squirrel fur in my mind, I went inside to have dinner.  Or I looked at it before I threw up the last five meals that I had ingested.

And then I wondered...

Where was the rest of the squirrel, um, innards?

Later that night, I had retired to my bedroom upstairs.  Suddenly, I smelled something cooking on the back terrace of my neighbor's.

Oh, no.  Grilling.

I poked my head out of the window.  Big Papa was flipping some meat on his barbecue.  Once again, I spoke the innocent question that just screamed to be asked.  What the hell is that???

"Squirrel."

Kill me now.

"You want some.  It's gooooooood!"

He smacked his lips.  I slammed my window shut.

Suddenly, I was an actively interested buyer in the real estate market.  Looking to purchase any apartment miles away from the charter franchise of "Squirrel Delight."


Just to show you that neighborly hell can be universal, our next tale takes place 3000 miles away.  At the apartment complex shown above on Clark Drive, which is on the cusp of the Beverly Hills city limits.  My writing partner and I roomed there for about a year when we first migrated to Los Angeles.  Almost as soon as we got there, the owners made plans to switch from rental status to condos, which were incredibly unaffordable.  No worries.  The apartment itself wasn't that great.

And the neighbors downstairs definitely sucked. 

Once again, I found myself in proximity to a divorced mother with two teenage brats.  And Mom left virtually every weekend to have, er, her pipes cleaned.

Now, our front door overlooked the pool area.  The dysfunctional bunch was  directly below us and their unit was essentially next to the pool.  When Mommy would leave for the entire weekend to run off with her boyfriend, the two urchins took the opportunity to have night-long slumber parties every Friday and Saturday nights. We'd pound on the floor to no avail. It was extremely frustrating.   This went on for several months.

So, you can imagine my anger one Sunday night when I dropped a can of tomatoes on the kitchen floor. Two minutes later, there is a knock on the door from Mommy Downstairs.

"Could you please keep the noise down?"

Huh?

She left so quickly that I had no chance to respond. But, my writing partner had plenty to say when he got home several hours later and heard my story.

"We'll fix her ass."

Two days later, my roommate had to be working till 3AM. When I walked out of my bedroom to go to work in the morning, he had pinned a note to my door.

"On your way out, go downstairs and see what I did."

In the middle of the night, he had taken every piece of pool furniture and stacked it up against their front door. The way it was all positioned, it would come crashing into their apartment as soon as they opened the front door. Neither of us had to be there when it happened. We could imagine the disaster. And that's all we needed.

And, apparently, that's all they needed. They moved out one month later.

Dinner last night: Nachos.








Saturday, April 29, 2023

Classic Musical Comedy Production Number of the Month - April 2023

Well, it is springtime.  And a five Saturday month which means we get to revel in a classic musical comedy production number.   So let's truck out this gem.  Not the original from the Zero Mostel/Gene Wilder, but the film version of the Broadway musical with Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick.  Heil!

Dinner last night:  Pulled pork sandwich at Dodger Stadium.

Friday, April 28, 2023

Len's Juke Box of the Month - April 2023

 The soundtrack of my youth.  Playing over and over and over on my parent's hifi.  As for me, I would stare at the album covers.

Dinner last night:  Sandwich.

Thursday, April 27, 2023

Hollywood Then and Now - April 2023

Hollywood Then and Now comes to my own backyard.

I live in what is called officially "Century City."  Pretty much known for its condo apartment building and the gigantic Westfield mall which I rarely go to.

Now the word "Century" is a throwback to the neighboring Fox Studio Lot, which used to be 20th Century Fox.  Back in the day it looked a little like this.


This is from the early 60s.  The Fox backlot extended a lot further to the north.  Pre-mall.  Pre-Century Tower office building which used to eclipse the skyline.

Now there are two schools of thought about what happened.  In the early 60s, the studio started to bleed money.   Some blamed it on Marilyn Monroe.  But, in reality, the smart pick is the hemorrhaging of dough from that mega-bust of a movie, "Cleopatra."   

Whatever the reason, 20th Century Fox needed cash and sold off the backlot to developers who envisioned...

A mall.

Several towering office buildings.

And probably some condo apartments like mine.

Here's a glimpse today.

And the world keeps on changing.

Dinner last night:  Hamburger.


Wednesday, April 26, 2023

This Date in History - April 26

 

Whenever it's Carol Burnett's birthday, she will get her picture on this blog. And this date turns out to have a connection to another famous redhead.   Read on.

1478:  THE PAZZI FAMILY ATTACK LORENZO DE' MEDICI AND KILL HIS BROTHER GIULIANO DURING HIGH MASS IN FLORENCE CATHEDRAL.

Some people will do anything to avoid putting money in the offering plate.

1564:  PLAYWRIGHT WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE IS BAPTIZED IN STRATFORD-UPON-AVON, ENGLAND.

To be born or not to be born...

1721:  A MASSIVE EARTHQUAKE DEVASTATES THE IRANIAN CITY OF TABRIZ.  
Which probably started their move to the United States.

1777:  SYBIL LUDDINGTON, AGED 16, RIDES 40 MILES TO ALERT AMERICAN COLONIAL FORCES TO THE APPROACH OF BRITISH TROOPS.

Paul Revere, feh.

1802:  NAPOLEON BONAPARTE SIGNS A GENERAL AMNESTY TO ALLOW ALL BUT ABOUT ONE THOUSAND OF THE MOST NOTORIOUS EMIGRES OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION TO RETURN TO FRANCE.

And you thought Trump started all this shit?

1865:  UNION TROOPED CORNER AND SHOOT DEAD JOHN WILKES BOOTH, ASSASSIN OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN.

That manhunt took eleven days.

1925:  PAUL VON HINDENBURG DEFEATS WILHELM MARX IN THE SOUND RECORD OF THE GERMAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION TO BECOME THE FIRST DIRECTLY ELECTED HEAD OF STATE OF THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC.

After Paul gained a few pounds, people were whispering that he was a big blimp.

1933:  THE GESTAPO, THE OFFICIAL SECRET POLICE FORCE OF NAZI GERMANY, IS ESTABLISHED.

One-Adolf-12.

1933:  ACTRESS CAROL BURNETT IS BORN.

And she received flowers every birthday from Lucille Ball.   Even though....well, keep reading.

1945:  WORLD WAR II - LAST SUCCESSFUL GERMAN TANK-OFFENSIVE OF THE WAR AND LAST NOTEWORTHY VICTORY OF THE WEHRMACHT.

Wehrmacht?  There, Macht.

1954:  THE GENEVA CONFERENCE, AN EFFORT TO RESTORE PEACE IN INDOCHINA AND KOREA, BEGINS.

And thus ending any future plots for M*A*S*H*.

1958:  FINAL RUN OF THE BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROAD.

Although it's still running on Monopoly boards all over the world.

1960:  FORCED OUT BY THE APRIL REVOLUTION, PRESIDENT OF SOUTH KOREA SYNGMAN RHEE RESIGNS AFTER TWELVE YEARS OF DICTATORIAL RULE.

A sad Mother's Day in the offing for Mrs. Rhee.

1962:  NASA'S RANGER 4 SPACECRAFT CRASHES INTO THE MOON.

Was it supposed to do that?

1965:  COMIC KEVIN JAMES IS BORN.

A slow day for birthdays if this unfunny guy gets mentioned here.

1970:  STRIPPER GYPSY ROSE LEE DIES.

She took it ALL off.

1973:  ACTRESS IRENE RYAN DIES.

Ran out of rheumatiz medicine.

1981:  DR. MICHAEL HARRIS OF USC-SF PERFORMS THE WORLD'S FIRST HUMAN OPEN FETAL SURGERY.

Sad to say he's out of network.

1981:  ACTOR JIM DAVIS DIES.

Jock on "Dallas."

1984:  BANDLEADER COUNT BASIE DIES.

Down for the...well...you know.

1986:  ACTOR BRODERICK CRAWFORD DIES.

Arrested for the last time.

1986:  A NUCLEAR REACTOR ACCIDENT OCCURS AT THE CHERNOBYL POWER PLANT IN THE SOVIET UNION, CREATING THE WORLD'S WORST NUCLEAR DISASTER.

Think about all those hair stylists in Russia now out of work.

1989:  ACTRESS LUCILLE BALL DIES.

Lucy died early in the morning.  Carol got Lucy's birthday flowers in the afternoon.

1991:  SEVENTY TORNADOES BREAK OUT IN THE CENTRAL UNITED STATES.

Well, that certainly gave the Weather Channel something to do.

2011:  SINGER PHOEBE SNOW DIES.

Melted.

2015:  TV PERSONALITY JAYNE MEADOWS DIES.

No secret.

2018:  COMIC BILL COSBY IS CONVICTED OF SEXUAL ASSAULT.

What's in that drink?

Dinner last night:  Salad.

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

The Amazingly Short Shelf Life of a Major Motion Picture

 

This is more of a commentary than a movie review, but we'll get into the latter a little.

Thinking about motion picture releases, how things have changed during my life.
When I was a kid in Mount Vernon, New York, major movies would open downtown in Manhattan and really not circle up to us for a few months.  So we would not see them until long after their original opening.

When television came into play, theatrical films would eventually show up on each network's prime time movie nights.  But that would take a few years.

When cable giants like HBO showed up, movies would recycle onto those systems a year after theatrical release.

Now, thanks to greed and/or COVID, all bets are off.  Some movies never make it to real theaters and go straight to TV streams.   

What's the point of all this?   Well, "80 For Brady" did open in theaters the week before the 2023 Super Bowl.  That was early February.   I was busy the two weekends it was in theaters.  But, have no worries.  It showed up on my TV in April.  About two months later.

Oddly enough, I like it the way it used to be when I was a kid.  It really increased the anticipation of seeing a blockbuster movie.  Films were still a big event to wait and crave for.

As for this particular film, I saw it mainly to see old friend Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda on screen again, this time with Sally Field and Rita Moreno.  Essentially, this was "The Golden Girls Meet Tom Brady."  Passable entertainment by some pros with a surprising touch of melancholy and sadness to their tales.  

Would I have waited with anticipation years ago for something like "80 For Brady?"  Probably, but, then again, I was a kid.

So much for movie magic in 2023.

LEN'S RATING:  Three stars.

Dinner last night:  Leftover spare ribs.


Monday, April 24, 2023

Monday Morning Video Laugh - April 24, 2023

 Murphy's Law.

Dinner last night:  Barbecue spare ribs.

Sunday, April 23, 2023

The Sunday Memory Drawer - Carol Burnett

 

The legend turns 90 this Wednesday and there will be plenty of hoopla around it, including a two-hour special on NBC.  The latter is interesting because her career was largely on CBS.  Hmmm.

Whatever.

For me, whatever is planned is not big enough a celebration.  Carol's birthday should be a national holiday because she has influenced the lives of so many people in my generation.  Indeed, her variety show was my indoctrination into adulthood in so many ways.

Back in the day when her show started in 1967, my school night bedtime was still a trifle early.   For years, I had to enter into negotiations just to stay up for Andy Griffith's show which was Mondays at 930PM originally.  If my family had a busy weekend, they would scoff at me staying up on Mondays.   It was a television tug-of-war I remember to this day.

But, by the time Carol debuted, I was a little older and it was deemed okay for me to last till 11PM at least one night.  Perhaps I was entering adulthood.  In more ways than one.  Carol Burnett and her troupe of merrymakers were essentially my creative puberty.

As a kid, my television tastes were certainly child-like.  Oh, sure, I loved the reruns of such "adult" fare as "I Love Lucy" and "Dick Van Dyke."  But most of what I watched were things like Bullwinkle cartoons, "Mr. Ed," and "The Munsters."

The day I outgrew them was probably the day I started following Carol Burnett.  There was something about her variety series that was so novel and inside and directed right at me.  The movie parodies.  The Q and A with the audience.  Mama's family.  It seemed so organic that was a live theater performance solely for me.

The key for all of this was the spontaneity of it all.  While it was taped in CBS Television City, the show seemed to be live.  The glory of it all was they didn't really stop tape for any reason.  If Carol or Harvey or Tim or Vicki broke up or "went up" with their lines, that was part of the show.  In an odd way, this humanized it in a way that made it seem these folks were my friends or extended members of my family.  It was the first time that show business felt personal to me.

Naturally, the would-be writer in me watched intently as this TV show, like Lucy and Dick and Mary and Archie, taught me how to craft a joke.  This was all Comedy Writing 101.  And Sigma Delta Chi at Fordham asked me several years later to craft an evening of comedy sketches for a dinner, I naturally channeled everything I learned from Carol and company.

Those were the hallmark days of TV comedy.  Think about CBS Saturday nights in the 70s.  There was one season where the line-up was virtually magical.

All In The Family.

M*A*S*H*

Mary Tyler Moore.

Bob Newhart.

Carol Burnett.

That will never be topped.  Ever.

There are so many special moments from Carol's show from "Gone With The Wind" to "As The Stomach Turns" to Tim as the Dentist.  Hopefully, the NBC special this week is jam packed with all of them.  For me, anything with Harvey Korman as Mother Marcus stands out.  A Jewish mother impersonation that would never fly in today's super sensitive society.

Brilliance.

About twelve years ago, my writing partner and I were sitting in the now-gone Cheesecake Factory of Brentwood.   Sitting at the next table was Carol.   Trying to hide behind dark sunglasses and a column.  When I am out and about among celebrities, I always refrain from bothering them.   That day, I came pretty darn close to invading her space.  But I didn't.  

That's the way people should act toward royalty.  And, for us, Carol Burnett was a queen.

Happy birthday, Carol, and wishes you more years of laughs.  For you and for all of us.

Dinner last night:  Pepperoni pizza at CPK.

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Classic Movie Trailer of the Month - April 2023

Seventy years old this year and always perfect to drag out during the Easter season.  The first widescreen movie.   Don't forget to letterbox it. 

Dinner last night:   Taylor Ham sandwich.

Friday, April 21, 2023

Your Weekend Movie Guide for April 2023

 

Here is the famous Cinerama Dome back in 1966.   And now entering its third straight year of being COVID-closed.   Oh, there are rumors that the complex will reopen, but news updates have grown scarce again.   

How I miss this place.  The perfect venue to see a movie.  The Arclight Hollywood sure did know how to give you a true cinematic experience.   Now all we have got is crappy chains like AMC which barrage you with eight or nine trailers before the picture even starts.   But we'll see what's playing there regardless.   You know the monthly drill, gang.   I'll waft through the LA Times movie guide and give you my knee jerk reaction to what's on the screen.   

All the while...thinking fondly of the day when the Arclight Hollywood comes back to us.

Air:   The trailer, seen at an AMC...natch, looked interesting.   But let's face it. How much story can you get about the creation of a sneaker?

Super Mario Bros Movie:   I forgot to bring quarters.

The Pope's Exorcist:  Starring Russell Crowe and I am sorry.  Nothing can top the original.

Renfield:  Dracula's assistant and this time the vampire is played by Nicolas Cage.  Sorry, Bela.

Dungeons and Dragons - Honor Among Thieves:   I know nothing about this game and I'm kind of proud about that.

John Wick - Chapter 4:  Still working on Chapters 1 to 3.

Mafia Mamma:  Toni Collette as the Godmother?

Guardians of the Galaxy, Volume 3:   Still working on Volumes 1 and 2.

Sweetwater:  Biopic about the first Black player in the NBA.  There would be more.

Creed III:  Eventually, this Rocky reboot will give us the grandson of Apollo Creed.  Or granddaughter.

Half Sisters:  Because they identify as half brothers?

Fast X:   Still working on II through IX.

Evil Dead Rise:  Rinse and spit and repeat.

How To Blow Up a Pipeline:  Ask Joe Biden.

Beau is Afraid:  This comes in at a length of 3 hours, so Len is also afraid.

Somewhere in Queens:  Ray Romano's directorial review and it's about an Italian family, so he is directing what he knows about.

Dinner last night:  Leftover SPO.



Thursday, April 20, 2023

Pet Peeve # 1,238

 

I do have a lot of them.  Pet peeves, I mean.   And the more I watch what passes for television entertainment these days, the more annoyances I find.

Here's one.  Why do all the characters on TV show no longer talk like normal people?

Let's start with HBO's "Succession." a drama I have watched since it began despite the fact that I hate every single character in the cast.  Since Season 1, I have been waiting patiently for the corporate jet crash that demolishes everybody.  Finally, in its final season, they are starting to kill people off.  

But I digress...

Everybody on "Succession" talks as their dialogue was crafted by Shakespeare or Norman Mailer or Noel Coward.  Each sentence is designed to be the most profound thing you ever heard.  Until the next line which is designed to be the most profound thing you ever heard.   All of this is peppered liberally with the F bomb.  

PS, nobody talks like this.

Let's move on to Apple TV's "Shrinking," which, in its first season, was a show I sort of liked despite the fact that the lead actor Jason Segel is a horrible actor.  I watch it mainly for the comedic turn offered by, of all people. Harrison Ford.  But, here again, we have a bunch of characters who are continually trying to top each other with cleverness.   It sounds so unbelievable and hollow.

Add to this the always constant dropping of the F bomb by everybody regardless of age or gender.   You would expect this kind of language from Tony Soprano and the boys.  But from a bunch of maladjusted psychiatrists in Pasadena?

PS, nobody talks like this.

My last exhibit, your honor, is a Netflix show called "Unstable."  I was drawn to it by the pairing of Rob Lowe with his real life son playing...ta da...father and son.  I've watched two episodes and may or may not return.  Why?  Because it's another contest of who can say the most clever line of dialogue this side of Neil Simon.  None of it sounds realistic.

TV writers should listen to conversations I have with my friends.  As real and genuine and organic as you can imagine.   And nobody is trying to top the other with a bon mot.

PS, we don't talk like that.

Dinner last night:  Leftover SPO.

Wednesday, April 19, 2023

This Date in History - April 19

 

Happy birthday to Elinor Donahue.  This is probably the only blog in the world sporting a picture of her today.

65 AD:  THE FREEDMAN MILICHUS BETRAYS PISO'S PLOT TO KILL THE EMPEROR NERO AND ALL THE CONSPIRATORS ARE ARRESTED.

Too bad.   Would have saved a fortune on arson insurance.

797:  EMPRESS IRENE ORGANIZES A CONSPIRACY AGAINST HER SON, THE BYZANTINE EMPEROR CONSTANTINE VI.

April 19...a day to plot overthrows apparently.

1529:  THE BEGINNING OF THE PROTESTANT REFORMATION.  

My pal Martin Luther must be in the middle of this somehow.

1539:  CHARLES V AND PROTESTANTS SIGN THE TREATY OF FRANKFURT.

With mustard and relish.

1770:  MARIE ANTOINETTE MARRIES LOUIS XVI OF FRANCE IN A PROXY WEDDING.

A head of her time.

1775:  THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION BEGINS WITH AN AMERICAN VICTORY IN CONCORD.

USA!  USA!

1810:  VENEZUELA ACHIEVES HOME RULE WHEN GOVERNOR EMPARAN IS REMOVED BY THE PEOPLE OF CARACAS AND A JUNTA IS INSTALLED.

Junta...always loved that word.

1882:  THEORIST CHARLES DARWIN DIES.

Evolve this.

1892:  CHARLES DURYEA CLAIMS TO HAVE DRIVEN THE FIRST AUTOMOBILE IN THE US.

Probably a false claim because I never heard of anybody driving a new Duryea.

1927:  MAE WEST IS SENTENCED TO TEN DAYS IN JAIL FOR OBSCENITY FOR HER PLAY SEX.

That's play sex as in theatrical production, you dirty minds, you.

1930:  ACTOR DICK SARGENT IS BORN.

Darrin #2.

1935:  ACTOR DUDLEY MOORE IS BORN.

Probably stayed at the same height for the rest of his life.

1937:  ACTRESS ELINOR DONAHUE IS BORN.

A good friend of mine is a good friend of her son.   If anybody is playing Six Degrees of Elinor Donahue.

1943:  WORLD WAR II - IN POLAND, THE WARSAW GHETTO UPRISING BEGINS AS GERMAN TROOPS ROUND UP THE REMAINING JEWS.

Paying attention, President Roosevelt?

1948:  BURMA JOINS THE UNITED NATIONS.

Shave.

1956:  ACTRESS GRACE KELLY MARRIES PRINCE RAINIER OF MONACO.

Based on his looks, he did very, very well here.

1971:  CHARLES MANSON IS SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR CONSPIRACY IN THE TATE-LABIANCA MURDERS.

And this guy walked the Earth much less than he should have.

1971:  SPORTSCASTER RUSS HODGES DIES.

Also sentenced to death today.   Sort of.

1987:  THE SIMPSONS FIRST APPEAR AS A SERIES OF SHORTS ON THE TRACEY ULLMAN SHOW.

After all these years, wow, that's a lot of yellow ink.

1995:  THE OKLAHOMA CITY BOMBING.

Remember it like it was just yesterday.

2005:  CARDINAL JOSEPH RATZINGER IS ELECTED TO THE PAPACY AND BECOMES POPE BENEDICT XVI.

Later quit when he discovered he had to work Christmas Eve.

2005:  ACTRESS RUTH HUSSEY DIES.

Listed here only because the last name makes me laugh.

2011:  FIDEL CASTRO RESIGNS AS FIRST SECRETARY OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY.   

Wonder what kind of 401K plan the Communist Party has.

2013:  JOURNALIST AL NEUHARTH DIES.

Founded USA Today which nobody reads unless they're in a hotel on a business trip.

2013:  BOSTON MARATHON BOMBING SUSPECT TAMERIAN TSARNAEV IS KILLED IN A SHOOTOUT WITH POLICE.

As depicted in the movie Patriots Day, this guy was one dumb terrorist.

2016:  BASEBALL PITCHER MILT PAPPAS DIES.

Gets listed here because, frankly, April 19 isn't a particularly busy day for dead celebrities.

2021:  POLITICIAN WALTER MONDALE DIES.

Or politicians.

Dinner last night:  Fried chicken sandwich at the Dodger game.

Tuesday, April 18, 2023

Yay! I Finished Reading Another Book - "Live Wire" by Kelly Ripa

 

One, two, three, everybody....

HUH?

Longtime readers to this blog know my penchant for not reading as many books as I'd like.   And buy.  I have stacks of books that I craved but never get around to the prose.  If there are pictures inside, the book has a fighting chance to be opened.

So, how did I wind up so quickly digging into Kelly Ripa's memoirs?   I don't even have a good, fake answer.

I have long watched her allegedly "live" TV show with a bevy of male hosts from Regis to Strahan to Seacrest to now her husband.  It is my morning background noise and I tune in to really find out what's new in movies and television.  It's all so light and airy...even if the show is "previously recorded" two days out of every five.

This doesn't sound like the most compelling reason in the world to read her book.  But, on my last trip to NY, I arrived in LAX and realized I had forgotten to pack a book that I wouldn't crack on the flight.  Suddenly, I felt naked in Terminal 4.  How can I fly without a book?  Maybe this was an omen.  He forgets to pack a book and the plane crashes into the ocean.  End of life.   

Len, you need a book.

I walked into the LAX bookstore and the first one I see is Kelly Ripa's tome.  They swiped my VISA card.   Air calamity averted.

On the plane, for some other reason I can't explain, I felt compelled to open the book.  And read it.  And read it.  And read it.  Oh, don't get me wrong.  This book is barely a blip on the literary meter.  But it is a pleasant diversion as the author takes you inside all elements of her life on TV and as a wife and mother.  It's helped along by a snarky tone from the author that actually sounds real and genuine.  And those who want some inside dirt on Regis Philbin won't be disappointed.

Is it a must read?  Nah.   If you're trying to ensure that your plane won't crash, it's worth the price.

Dinner last night:  Leftover Chinese food.

Monday, April 17, 2023

Monday Morning Video Laugh - April 17, 2023

One last salute to the past winter.   A lot of East Coast cities got little snow.  But, in Seattle... 

Dinner last night:  Sausage, peppers, and onions.

Sunday, April 16, 2023

The Sunday Memory Drawer - You're Holding Onto What?

 

When I was in New York last month, it was another trip East with the best of intentions.   

This time, I was going to clean out the closets of my apartment there.  Mostly because that process is way overdue.  Partly because there is in my mind a possible end date to being bi-coastal.  I'd love to keep up two homes but, as time moves on, it gets a little harder financially.  But, still, the Yonkers/Hastings border abode is a touchstone for me and my early life in Westchester, New York.  To do away with that completely is tantamount to trying to completely erase the past.  And since the place is now mortgage-free...

Meanwhile, I deal with the fact that the NY domicile is a bit of a storage area for the first half of my life.  In one closet is my guitar.  Yes, a guitar.  And I played it for about five weeks in the sixth grade.  I did my best to learn from a manual.  And the only song I learned to play?  The theme song from "Bonanza."  Well, at least, the first eight bars.  For some reason, I feel a need to keep this thing. 

At the bottom of that same closet is a two-drawer file cabinet.  Loaded with nothing but Playbills.  Years and years of Broadway.  I don't dare stop and look more closely because I can get sidetracked for days.

In another closet, I have tossed a lot of my parents' stuff.  You see the top two shelves in the photo above.  Things that I have yet to toss into a dumpster.  Why?  You hold on for a reason, even if it isn't clear to see.  I listen to a parental voice in my head and it scolds me.

"You threw out my Technicolor slide carrier."

That's the suitcase-like contraption in the upper right hand corner.  It contains about five years of photo slides in projector loaders that have long since stopped being used by all of us.  I have already taken those slides and had them converted to a DVD.  You frequently see the screen shots here on a Sunday.  I want to pull it down and haul it over the terrace.  But, then....

"You threw out my Technicolor slide carrier."

Yeah, well.  My trip ended and I still had not moved it from the top shelf perch.

You can plainly see a Christmas tree.  Yep, the artificial one that I put up for about twenty years before moving to Los Angeles, where an honest-to-God real tree goes up every year.  The New York tree was one of those snap-together quickies, although I always seemed to have an issue with one of the middle branches.  It was green as I remember it.  If I opened the box now, why color would I find?

Meanwhile, there's another box on the bottom of this closet that goes hand-in-hand with the Christmas tree.  A box of ornaments from my mother.  I still would use them on my tree.  Most were tarnished.  Angels were missing wings.  Reindeer were missing limbs.  And, as I have documented during Christmas posts, one elf's head came off the rest of his body.

The box is still there.  Because there's another voice in my head.

"You can't throw that out.  Do you know how much I paid for those decorations?"

I see my mom's jewelry box in there and that certainly would have been cleaned out by yours truly if there was anything valuable in there.  But, my mother was big into the costume bauble stuff, which made the junk on the Home Shopping Network look like it was from Harry Winston.

Ah, we see some board games.  Monopoly.  Trouble.  Scrabble.  All came to me from my childhood home in Mount Vernon, New York.  These were trucked out every holiday. Trouble always seemed to be particularly competitive for my relatives and, invariably, accusations of cheating would be flying across the table as the rhubarb pie was being served with coffee.

As I look at the shelves, I see them starting to cave in.  Perhaps my decision will be made for me by the next trip.  When I find that the contents have spilled out onto the floor.

Moving on, I see tucked away on the top of this closet a relic that I have looked at in the past. 

My grandmother's strong box.

Again, I open it.  And revisit the contents one more time.   Because I can. 

I often lament that, as most of my parents' generation has passed on, I have fewer and fewer connections to my family's history. And most questions don't have answers.  Little information was shared then.  Even less is available now.  But this strong box always gives me a little something to chew on.  Even if they are stories told to me previously.
Somehow, I wound up being the keeper of this metal mini-file cabinet.   It's not large, but Grandma had everything neatly sorted.  Typical.
 

There's lots of correspondence with the War Department following the WWII death of what would have been my uncle. He was killed in the south of France in early May, 1945...just a few days before V-E Day.

And another captivating passport to a different place and time.
 

The original deed and mortgage to the Mount Vernon, New York house that my grandparents bought in 1948.

This would be my first home and the place I lived up until college. My grandparents (Father's side) had lived most of the time in the Bronx on Paulding Avenue. I suppose this was their Jeffersons move. To that deluxe home to the north. The fancy shmancy suburbs. 


Mount Vernon when it was elite. Mount Vernon when it was clean. Mount Vernon when it was actually livable.
 

The thing that always grabs my attention is the price of the house.

$3,000!

Probably a lot of jack back then, but I spent almost that on the plasma TV and sound system in Los Angeles. There's also an invoice from their lawyer on the sale.

For his services rendered....$29.50.

 

But, it really isn't the lesson in economic inflation that is my continual takeaway from peering into these papers.
 

Because, you see, the mortgage on the house was not held by a bank, but one of my grandparent's friends. In-laws twice removed. The parents of the woman that my father's other brother, Scary Uncle Fritz, married.  I remember these old codgers vaguely. Actually, the only true memory I have of the man was that he later would become the first person I would ever see laid out in a casket. Okay, that was last week's saga.
 

I always imagine how this all unfolded. These people were pinochile buddies of my grandparents. They lived in Mount Vernon. They probably were after my grandparents to get the hell out of the Bronx...even then. I can hear my grandparents say that they didn't have the dough for the housing upgrade.

And they probably said they wouldn't trust a bank for a mortgage, since the recovery from the crash of 1929 was still a fresh wound in their passbooks. So, the other half of the pinochile quartet said that they would front the cash.

And, so it happened...

 

Of course, there was left nothing to chance. There were extensive documents heralding this loan of $3,000. And, also in the strongbox, there are almost five years of monthly receipts that acknowledged my grandparents were paying back the loan.

At the lofty clip of $ 60 per month at 4% interest.

By 1953, they were done.

 

It was amazing to see how civilized they all were about this.   It truly was another time, another place, and another generation.

I closed the lid of the strongbox one more time.

 

I don't accomplish nearly as much cleaning out as I wanted to do.  I think about my next sojourn East and a potential call to 1-800-JUNK.  

And then there's a third voice in my head.  This one has a German accent.

"Junk???  This isn't junk."

Dinner last night:  Orange chicken from PF Chang's.

Saturday, April 15, 2023

Classic TV Theme Song of the Month - April 2023

I still miss this TV show from the early 90s that didn't last as long as it should have.    But who remembers World War II anyway? 

Dinner last night:  Grilled ham and gruyere sandwich from Clementine's.

Friday, April 14, 2023

Liquor is Quicker

 










Dinner last night:  Grilled Taylor Hamburger.

Thursday, April 13, 2023

Len's Recipe of the Month - April 2023

 

This month's recipe is proof positive that this old dog...me...can be taught a new trick.

Okay, so the photo looks like an ordinary plate of spaghetti in red sauce.   Aha. But it is the red sauce...or gravy...that is the star here.   Because I learned all about the late Marcella Hazan's three ingredient pasta sauce.

For those not in the know like I was, Marcella Hazan was to Italian cooking what Julia Child was to French cooking.  Indeed, when you look at her recipes, you figure that it's the butter that ultimately killed her.  And, yes, butter is one of the three ingredients in this sauce.

I learned about this second-hand from a YouTube channel I follow called "Sip and Feast."   He introduced me to this recipe with one small spin on one of the ingredients.   I opted for his version and the result was the best red sauce I have ever tasted.   Better than stuff I made on my own.   And, once you try it, you will never ever open a jar again.

Here goes and if you blink, you will miss it.

Take a large pan or...even better...a Dutch oven.  Put one 4-oz stick of unsalted butter in there and let it slowly melt.

Now Marcella next quarters an onion and places it in for flavor.  She removes the quarters at the end.  But, Jim the YouTube guy dices one onion and leaves it in for the whole ride.  I chose this route and the results were great.

So once the onion pieces get translucent, you add a 28-0z can of plum or crushed tomatoes.   Use Cento...they are the best.

Cover and let it simmer for an hour or two.  You will be amazed how good this is.

With three freakin' ingredients.

Buon appetit.

Dinner last night:  Salami and cheese crackers at the Geffen.