Sunday, April 19, 2026
The Sunday Memory Drawer - If Only
"People Who Come Up With Ridiculous Stuff" Day.
And, of course, in our Facebook-laden worlds, these days and even more are regularly celebrated there. Is there actually a schedule available that I can access? Who is in charge? Do they have a cell phone number?
And Facebook itself now has its own days. The most notable of them is some dribble called "Throwback Thursday." You're supposed to upload posts of you in previous times. It's a fruit salad of big hair, curly moustaches, and bad acne. Personally, I call it "Throw Up Thursday." Because if I indeed showed you evidence of my past, that would be the reaction your body would have.
But I digress from Memoryland....
Recently, there was a mash-up of some national day and Throwback Thursday. National Siblings Day. Of course, Facebook went nuts. Everybody and literally their brother posted old photos of siblings. Brother and sister. Sister and sister and sister. Brother and sister and brother. All with their arms around each other. How special!
I salute all of you who have siblings. Enjoy them until the day comes when your parents die and you wind up fighting over Dad's money or what dress Mom should be wearing in the casket.
Of course, this got me to thinking. On the very next day, I posted my own remark on Facebook.
"Can I respectfully ask as to when we will be celebrating Only Child Day?"
Is that anywhere on Hallmark's calendar? Anybody?? There is no response. But a Google search tells me it was on April 12. With little fanfare.
And our loneliness continues.
But, truth be told, I have lived to tell the story. It's not so bad.
Well, some of the time.
There's a natural stereotype that only children are spoiled rotten. The popular argument is that these kids get all of the attention and don't have to share their toys. Well, not true. My parents did give me a lot of attention and that definitely did not work to my advantage. I was focused on continually. As a result, I frequently didn't have room to breathe. I'd hide out in my grandparents' part of the house downstairs where there was always safety in their big couch next to the black-and-white television.
Yeah, I might have wanted a brother or a sister. Just so my folks would have somebody else they could yell at.
There was one day where I asked the question. And, please keep in mind that this was the era where children didn't necessarily ask their parents anything. But I wanted to know if there was a brother or sister in my future. I might have been four or five. And, given my age, I got the scrubbed-down answer.
"God had only one seed to put on your mother's plate."
Oh, seriously????
In retrospect, I think about my parents' ages when I was born. Both were already in their thirties. Years and years later, my father made an out-of-left-field remark that my mother had a tough time getting pregnant.
Okay, too much information. Let's head back to the more innocent years and focus on how I managed without.
On snowy or rainy days when I couldn't venture out to play with my friends in the neighborhood, I didn't necessarily need to have a brother or a sister to keep me occupied. I had my fertile imagination.
I've written before of the adventures I concocted all by my lonesome. I would take all the lawn furniture or party chairs and do my own personal set design. Sometimes, I'd arrange it like a TV talk show with me as host. Or I'd dream up a standard sitcom set that could easily be shot in front of a live studio audience with Yours Truly as Dick Van Dyke.
It helped to mold me into who I am today.
There were isolated and lonely moments when I was a kid, but very infrequent. I had television. I had Colorforms. And I had good friends "up the block" and at school. Indeed, only children have the capacity to form tighter and closer bonds with others. We might even appreciate relationships even more.
It's not a scientific study but I have concluded that only children gravitate naturally to other older children. Or the eldest child in a family who would have the same sensibilities as they can easily remember what it was like to be the only kid in a household. As I look through my Filofax of addresses from my life, I think most of my really good friends fall into one of those two categories.
So, childhood as an "only" wasn't so hard. But you feel it more as you get older. And your parents get older. You suddenly realize that you're it on that day when the evolution of life intervenes and your role does reverse. When health issues come into play and your mom or dad becomes the child and you are thrust into the parental position.
You come to grips that it's up to you and nobody else to make a life decision. The bad news is that it's all you. The good news is that it's all you. There is no one to argue your choice with. There is no need for compromise. It's all your responsibility. And you live with that.
I have quite a few friends who have siblings. In a lot of cases, there have been skirmishes that tear apart the whole family. They fight over issues involving their parents. Some wind up not speaking for years. My father and his own brother did exactly that. Ironically, all of that drama got them nowhere. They both died within days of each other. Not speaking.
I had nobody to fight with. And I did get support during those times of crisis. From my closest friends. Some of them only children. They get it.
Of course, the solitude can get compounded when you don't even get the benefit of that extended family called the "in-laws." If you're not married, it's even quieter. A bad thing. But, in the ying and yang of our cluttered worlds, sometimes a good thing.
You hold those closest friends then even tighter. Those are relationships to savor.
A few years ago, a good friend of mine lost his only brother to an extended illness at a very premature and sad age. At that time, my friend announced to me that he now was just like me. An only child.
Oh, no, you're not.
While his loss was great, he did, even for an abbreviated time, have a sibling relationship. Something I will never have or come to appreciate. It is truly a different world when that's been your whole life.
So, as an only child considers his life, I see it neither as good or bad. It has aspects of both. They combine to offer the standard color of all of our lives.
Gray.
As we get older, I've been thinking about the friends I have held dear for many, many years. Some still with me after we met at the age of five. Others still joking and mailing after our first collision in college or at an early job. In future Sundays, I'm going to be writing about some of these cherished relationships and then asking that person to do his or her version on the following Sunday. As lives get shorter, you want to spend them with people who...well...get it. They might be only children or the oldest of five. But, friends, nevertheless.
In the meantime, this particular Sunday is all about the only children. So, in our very exclusive club, I invoke a roll call. And recognize the uniqueness that we all share.
Here's to you. Barbara, Dolores, Donna, Patti, Lorraine, Elyse, the Bibster, Bob, Gary, Larry, Amy, Djinn from the Bronx, Lauren.
And anybody else who didn't have a sibling photo for "Throw Up Thursday" on Facebook.
Dinner last night: Chicken Lo Mein from PF Chang's.
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Classic TV Theme Song of the Month - April 2026
Every once in a while, I am surprised. I never saw this "original" opening for "The Honeymooners."
Friday, April 17, 2026
Thursday, April 16, 2026
Going Up? Going Down?
The following video turned up in my YouTube queue despite the fact that it was shot over 26 years ago.. Apparently, some knucklehead working for Business Week in NY was working late on a Friday and went downstairs for a cigarette break. On his way back, the elevator gets stuck between floors. And he winds up there for practically two days.
The surveillance cameras capture it all. Amazingly, the maintenance staff in this building is clearly working on the other three elevator banks. But, not the one this guy is jammed in. You watch as he calls for help. Nothing. He climbs up and tries to get out the top. Several times. He opens the door and then closes it several times. He naps frequently in a fetal position. At one point, he needs to pee and does so. Right down the elevator shaft. Miraculously, after 40 hours, they finally find the dude. And then, at last, the "out of order" sign is placed outside the elevator.
I can sympathize with this guy. Been there, done that. Twice.
The first time I took up temporary residence in an elevator was years ago when I was at Fordham and working at the school radio station. I was set to be one of the co-anchors for the 530PM newscast and decided to get a pre-broadcast soda at the vending machine downstairs. Why anybody took that elevator was beyond me? The thing had been built long before Martin Luther had posted his 95 theses. And the whole mechanism was nothing but two pieces of plywood and some old chewing gum. So, it should have been no surprise that, on the way back upstairs, I got jammed all by myself. In the black darkness of Keating Hall. With a bunch of good friends about twenty feet above me---laughing their ass off. Of course, there is never any comfort when you press the red "HELP" button. First of all, whoever is on duty takes forever to answer. And, then, when they do...
"Si?"
I never did get to the newscast. I was stuck in that motorized casket for either two hours or six days. And I insisted that those hyenas/friends buy me dinner.
Eons later, it was a little scarier. It was my office building in Los Angeles---a first class run operation. Except I was going into work at 6AM on a very hot Monday morning when the air conditioning had been turned off for the weekend. Something didn't feel right as I was propelled, once again alone, to the twelfth floor. As we arrived at the top of the elevator bank, the door never opened. Of course, the red "HELP" button was useless at this early hour. The overnight staff was probably still in their seventh or eighth dream of the night. So, I just held my finger on the buzzer until....
"Si?"
I was assured that help was on the way. The janitor was due into work in about 90 minutes. Meanwhile, I could feel freedom coolly blowing in through the crack in the door. So, I pried open the door by myself and groped for a lever that opened the outer door. By myself. The elevator was about four feet off the floor, which became a quick jump and roll for me.
I have no idea when they figured out that I had gotten out of the elevator by myself. But, my two elevator experiences clearly proved one thing to me.
The quickest way to find the dumbest Hispanic in the world is by getting stuck in an elevator.
And, hopefully, that clown from Business Week also extracted one more lesson from his ordeal.
Don't smoke.
Dinner last night: Sandwich.
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
This Date in History - April 15
769: THE LATERAN COUNCIL CONDEMNED THE COUNCIL OF HIERIA AND ANATHEMATIZED ITS ICONOCLASTIC RULINGS.
I have no idea what I just typed.
1450: TOWARD THE END OF THE HUNDRED YEARS' WAR, THE FRENCH ATTACK AND NEARLY ANNIHILATE ENGLISH FORCES, ENDING ENGLISH DOMINATION IN NORTHERN FRANCE.
Hard to believe that the French could put up a strong fight for anything.
1452: PAINTER LEONARDO DA VINCI IS BORN.
Hey, Lenny, come on down from the ladder. We've decided to wallpaper.
1638: TOKUGAWA SHOGUNATE FORCES PUT DOWN THE SHIMABARA REBELLION WHEN THEY RETAKE HARA CASTLE FROM THE REBELS.
What about the local White Castle?
1715: THE POCOTALIGO MASSACRE TRIGGERS THE START OF THE YAMASEE WAR IN COLONIAL SOUTH CAROLINA.
Yamasee, Go Home.
1755: SAMUEL JOHNSON'S DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE IS PUBLISHED IN LONDON.
When it was actually chic to speak English.
1783: PRELIMINARY ARTICLES OF PEACE ENDING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION ARE RATIFIED.
Also written in English. The good old days.
1802: WILLIAM WORDSWORTH AND HIS SISTER DOROTHY SEE A LONG BELT OF DAFFODILS, INSPIRING THE FORMER TO PEN "I WANDERED LONELY AS A CLOUD."
In 2020, he could save all his poetry on the Cloud.
1861: PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOLN CALLS FOR 75,000 VOLUNTEERS TO QUELL THE INSURRECTION THAT WOULD BECOME THE CIVIL WAR.
75,000....or essentially the paid attendance to one month's worth of Met games at Citi Field.
1865: PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOLN DIES AFTER BEING SHOT THE PREVIOUS EVENING BY JOHN WILKES BOOTH.
That's the last time I'm going to order those box seats.
1892: THE GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY IS FORMED.
That's a bright idea.
1896: CLOSING CEREMONY OF THE GAMES OF THE FIRST OLYMPIAD IN GREECE.
Well, they had to start some time.
1912: THE RMS TITANIC SINKS TWO HOURS AND FORTY MINUTES AFTER HITTING AN ICEBERG. ONLY 710 ON BOARD SURVIVE.
What iceberg?
1917: ACTOR HANS CONRIED DIES
Uncle Tonoose!
1920: TWO SECURITY GUARDS ARE MURDERED DURING A MASSACHUSETTS ROBBERY. ANARCHISTS SACCO AND VANZETTI WOULD BE CONVICTED AND EXECUTED FOR THE CRIME.
If they lived today, they'd have a show on MSNBC.
1923: INSULIN BECOMES GENERALLY AVAILABLE FOR USE BY PEOPLE WITH DIABETES.
Wow, that drug's been around a long time.
1924: RAND MCNALLY PUBLISHES HIS FIRST ROAD ATLAS.
Way to go. Or...maybe...there's another way to go.
1927: THE GREAT MISSISSIPPI FLOOD, THE MOST DESTRUCTIVE RIVER FLOOD IN US HISTORY, BEGINS.
That's why my ankles are wet.
1936: AER LINGUS IS FOUNDED BY THE IRISH GOVERNMENT AS THE NATIONAL AIRLINE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND.
O'fly me.
1945: THE BERGEN-BELSEN CONCENTRATION CAMP IS LIBERATED.
Whoa! What happened here???!!!
1947: JACKIE ROBINSON DEBUTS FOR THE BROOKLYN DODGERS, BREAKING BASEBALL'S COLOR LINE.
And all of MLB wears 42 today.
1955: THE FIRST MCDONALD'S RESTAURANT OPENS IN DES PLAINES, ILLINOIS.
One Served.
1964: THE FIRST FORD MUSTANG ROLLS OFF THE SHOW ROOM FLOOR, TWO DAYS BEFORE IT IS SET TO GO ON SALE.
And immediately depreciates in resale price.
1980: ACTOR RAYMOND BAILEY DIES.
Milburn Drysdale!
1980: WRITER JEAN-PAUL SARTRE DIES.
Existentialism kills.
1982: ACTOR SETH ROGEN IS BORN.
You miserable, talentless piece of shit.
1989: A HUMAN CRASH OCCURS AT A SOCCER MATCH IN LIVERPOOL. 96 FANS WERE KILLED.
What's the over/under on how many of them were drunk?
1990: ACTRESS GRETA GARBO DIES.
You want to be alone? Wish granted.
2001: SINGER JOEY RAMONE DIES.
You're more than sedated now.
2018: ACTOR R. LEE ERMEY DIES.
That creepy sergeant from "Full Metal Jacket."
2019: THE CATHEDRAL OF NOTRE DAME IN PARIS IS SEVERELY DAMAGED BY FIRE.
Is there such a thing as "Catholic lightning?"
Dinner last night: The pre-game buffet at the Dodger Stadium Club.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Len's Recipe of the Month - April 2026
Well, not so much a recipe but a cooking epiphany. I am here to discuss the great and sundried uses of an air fryer. Look at the fingerprint marks on the touch screen. Obviously, it's getting a lot of use.
It was, at the time, an emotional purchase tied into one of those Amazon Prime days. Did I need another gadget taking up counter space in the kitchen? No. But I heard it cooked up some dynamite frozen onion rings so I was in.
And, for the longest time, it did collect dust. Yes, the onion rings were amazing but could it do anything else? A little on-line research and I was suddenly an air frying fool.
Ninety percent of the recipes for anything are the same. Air fry for 10-12 minutes at 400 degrees. So what did I try with great success?
A medium rare burger. Delish.
Searing Italian sausages for use in a SPO recipe. Perfect.
A medium rare ribeye steak. Amazing.
Chicken tenders in orange sauce. Ideal.
Korean chicken thighs. On point.
The standard French fries and onion rings. Crispy.
Grilled cheese sandwich with bacon. Gooey but good.
BBQ Baby Back ribs. See the photo below.
Actually any frozen meal entree. You're lazy but eating within ten minutes.
Do the research. You can make almost anything in this damn thing in a fraction of the usual time.
Try it. You'll like it.
Dinner last night: Leftover ribs.
Monday, April 13, 2026
Monday Morning Video Laugh - April 13, 2026
There's nothing like live TV.







