Sunday, May 10, 2026

The Sunday Memory Drawer - Mom Sings

 

I just looked at that title.  It sounds like my mom was Rosemary Clooney.   Or Taylor Swift.  And the latter would mean I have no idea who my father is. 

But, I digress...

It's Mother's Day and those of you who are missing your moms today are probably doing your own version of sensory perception to bring her near to you one more time.   It might be a perfume or the scent of something good cooking in the kitchen or the aroma from her favorite flower bouquet.

For me, it's always music.  Indeed, every Saturday, I indulge a bit in bringing back the sense of the past.  Back when I was a little tyke, my grandmother would bake a cake or a pie every week.  I now do the same and the same flavors waft throughout the house.

And the soundtrack while I do this every week?  The 60s Channel on Sirius/XM.  Because nothing brings my mother back to me more than some big hits of that decade.  It's not aromas that spark these memories.   It's the music.

My mother was a rarity back in the day.  She listened almost exclusively to Top 40 radio.  The countdown surveys.  The sure shots.  The #1 hit of the land.  My mom was all this.  And it played completely in the background of our lives.

When I got up for breakfast and got ready for school, it was either WMCA (The Good Guys) or WABC on the radio.  Giving us the weather and the latest hit from the Beatles.  My mom actually called in once and won a Good Guys sweatshirt.  I might have been the only kid in the neighborhood with a mother wearing this.
It didn't stop with the radio.  If my mother really like a song, she'd make sure to stop at Brodbeck's Record Store on Fourth Avenue in Mount Vernon, NY, to buy the 45 RPM platter.  Then she'd take it home and play it on our record player.  Over and over and over and over.  Mom had a record case with probably over 200 of those little vinyl coasters.

One that predated me by a lot of years still found its way to that turntable at least once a week.  Not that it was played once.  My mother listened to it at least ten times in one setting. 


I can hear my mom singing along.  I can also feel cavities taking root in my teeth from the sickening sweetness.

Another popular song that ran through our house endlessly came from Bobby Rydell.  I knew him from "Bye Bye Birdie" but, admittedly, I was focused on co-star Ann Margret.  I accidentally sat on this record and was punished.  I also had to replace it with my own allowance money.

My mom had no language skills beyond English.  Yet, that didn't stop from amazingly singing along to "Sukiyaki."

This song was hot on the radio during a summer road trip.   On a rare moment where the car radio wasn't being commandeered by my dad, this tune came on.  And my mother sang it perfectly in Japanese.  The look on my father's face was priceless.  It asked one burning question.

"What the hell have I married?"

Okay, and whose mother danced while vacuuming the living room to this little ditty?
 
Yeah, mine did.  And I confess that quite uncomfortably.

Now, there was a bit of a music rivalry between my mom and my aunt, her sister who lived out in Deer Park on Long Island.  They were the first relatives to get a "high fidelity" console.  While my mother was spinning the platters on a crappy little record player, Aunt Anne was blowing the windows out every time we visited.  And the one song that they played over and over was a Lawrence Welk record.

 On one visit where "Calcutta" was played over and over and over, there was one of those parental "conversations" in the car going home.  Mom started it.

"We need to get a hi-fi."

"What the hell for?"

"So we can play records like they do."

"What the hell for?"

"You could play your Polka records on it."

Mom won.  Dad had no rebuttal.

We didn't get the big contraption that my aunt and uncle had on Long Island.   Our stereo was portable.  And my mother took it more places than she took me.  To peoples' houses.  To work.  To parties.

We were now one bitchin' family.

That used the new stereo to play nothing but Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass. 

There we were.  My family all the way up in the northeaster part of the United States.  Playing nothing but music from the opposite end of the country.  Mexico, which might as well have been on the moon.  Even my father got into this genre.  So, whenever my folks went out with the portable stereo, they now brought along their own records as well.  As if nobody else had them.

 I can't say I didn't like the music myself.  It certainly made homework go by a lot faster.   I sure did like one of the Tijuana Brass album covers best.

 At some point in my house, the music died.  Not like when Elvis or John Lennon or Buddy Holly died.  It's just that the house became divided.  Everybody went their own separate ways.  And, once my mom went back to work and started commuting downtown to Manhattan, it got very quiet. 

All that was left were the memories of my mom.  Wearing a Good Guys sweatshirt.  Vacuuming and twisting her hips.  And getting annoyed over the fact that her sister had a better stereo than she did.

Dinner last night:  Korean chicken from Chin Chin.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Classic Newsreel of the Month - May 2026

 It must have been a slow Mother's Day back when.


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

Friday, May 8, 2026

Remembering Mom on Her Special Day








Dinner last night:  Lasagna from my freezer.
 

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Two Decades Later

 

Let's all flashback our little selves to 2006.   It was so long ago that I never got to review the first Prada movie on my blog.   That's because I didn't start the blog till a year later.

So much has happened since then.  The hard drive of my brain is totally full and that explains why, despite having seen the first Prada film, I don't remember a single detail about it.   Oh, sure, it starred Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway, and Stanley Tucci.   I sort of remembered that the movie was riotously funny.  But, other than that, I never bothered to see it again.* And maybe I should have.  Because a dearth of seeable movies at the cineplex led me to see the second Prada film, which just opened.   And I sat there stonefaced for most of the movie.   What I did recall as bitingly funny was a toothless mess.   Is this how funny the original was?   Or did I just mis-remember.

Meanwhile, I gaped at the characters on screen and rattle my brain for any sort of recognition.  Who is this?  What did that mean?   Were senses of humor more prevalent in 2006?

I think the sum total here is basically...20 years is too long a time between original and sequel.

LEN'S RATING:  Two stars.

Dinner last night:  Long travel day.


Wednesday, May 6, 2026

This Date in History - May 6

 

May 6 is a robust day for heavenly birthdays as you will see.   But I would be remiss if I didn't spotlight Willie Mays.  Say hey!  And you will note that the picture I used has him in a Mets uniform.

1527:  SPANISH AND GERMAN SACK ROME.   SOME CONSIDER THIS THE END OF THE RENAISSANCE.

And who are those people who don't?

1536:  KING HENRY VIII ORDERS ENGLISH-LANGUAGE BIBLES BE PLACED IN EVERY CHURCH.  

And lots of motels.

1542:  FRANCIS XAVIER REACHES OLD GOA, THE CAPITAL OF PORTUGUESE INDIA.

I read this so fast that I thought Aunt Bee from the Andy Griffith Show did this.

1659:  A FACTION OF THE BRITISH ARMY REMOVES RICHARD CROMWELL AS LORD PROTECTOR OF THE COMMONWEALTH AND REINSTALLS THE RUMP PARLIAMENT.

Rump is a funny word in any sentence.

1682:  LOUIS XIV MOVES HIS COURT TO THE PALACE OF VERSAILLES.

Don't touch anything.

1757:  ENGLISH POET CHRISTOPHER SMART IS ADMITTED TO ST. LUKE'S HOSPITAL FOR LUNATICS IN LONDON.

If they started a chain like this in America, there would be more outlets than Starbucks.

1835:  JAMES GORDON BENNETT SR. PUBLISHES THE FIRST ISSUE OF THE NEW YORK HERALD.

Extra.  Extra.  Read all about it!

1840:  THE PENNY BLACK POSTAGE STAMP BECOMES VALID FOR USE IN GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND.

I suppose there are about five stamp collectors who think this is a big deal.

1844:  THE GLACIARIUM, THE WORLD'S FIRST MECHANICALLY FROZEN ICE RINK, OPENS.

Somebody call that Zamboni guy.

1861:  DURING THE CIVIL WAR, ARKANSAS SECEDES FROM THE UNION.

Who let these peckerwoods back in?

1861:  DURING THE CIVIL WAR, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA IS DECLARED THE CAPITAL OF THE CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA.

And how long did this last?

1862:  AUTHOR HENRY DAVID THOREAU DIES.

Under Walden Pond.

1877:  CHIEF CRAZY HORSE OF SIOUX SURRENDERS TO US TROOPS IN NEBRASKA.

Sioux?  Si.

1882:  THE US CONGRESS PASSES THE CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT.

And who's the one who rescinded it.  Because COVID-19 is here.

1895:  ACTOR RUDOLPH VALENTINO IS BORN.  

He doesn't last long.  He dies in 1926.

1903:  BUSINESSMAN TOOTS SHOR IS BORN.

Seriously, Mrs. Shor.   Toots?

1904:  ACTOR RAYMOND BAILEY IS BORN.

Milburn Drysdale on the Beverly Hillbillies.

1907: FOOTBALL COACH WEEB EWBANK IS BORN.

Seriously, Mrs. Ewbank.  Weeb??

1910:  GEORGE V BECOMES KING OF THE UNITED KINGDOM UPON THE DEATH OF HIS FATHER, EDWARD VII.

And the Royal family just keeps chugging along.

1911:  ACTOR FRANK NELSON IS BORN.

Yyyyyessssss???

1915:  ACTOR ORSON WELLES IS BORN.

The baby weighed in at 33 pounds and 12 ounces.

1915:  AUTHOR THEODORE H. WHITE IS BORN.

The Birth of an Author.

1917:  BUSINESSMAN JILLY RIZZO IS BORN.

Sinatra's pal.   But mentioned here for one reason that you will read later.

1919:  AUTHOR L. FRANK BAUM DIES.

We're off to see....oh, never mind.

1924:  PATRICIA KENNEDY LAWFORD IS BORN.

Well, she technically wasn't a Lawford yet.

1931:  BASEBALL STAR WILLIE MAYS IS BORN.

No way he appears in a Giant uniform on this blog.

1935:  EXECUTIVE ORDER 7034 CREATES THE WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION.

Just in case you thought Al Gore invented these things along with the internet.

1937:  THE HINDENBURG CATCHES FIRE AND BURNS IN NEW JERSEY.

Oh, the humanity!  Don't you think this radio reporter was overreacting a bit?  I mean, 36 people died.   We've seen bigger disasters.  Like what's happening now.

1940:  JOHN STEINBECK IS AWARDED THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR HIS NOVEL THE GRAPES OF WRATH.

If Barnes and Noble has it, I'll be there.

1941:  AT CALIFORNIA'S MARCH FIELD, BOB HOPE PERFORMS HIS FIRST USO SHOW.

You know this was just an excuse to get on the road and sleep with Marilyn Maxwell?

1942:  DURING WORLD WAR II, THE LAST AMERICAN FORCES IN THE PHILIPPINES SURRENDER TO THE JAPANESE AT CORREGIDOR.

Now that warrants a "oh, the humanity."

1954:  ROGER BANNISTER BECOMES THE FIRST PERSON TO RUN THE MILE IN UNDER FOUR MINUTES.

And done without police chasing him.

1960:  MORE THAN 20 MILLION VIEWERS WATCH THE FIRST TELEVISED ROYAL WEDDING WHEN PRINCESS MARGARET MARRIES ANTHONY ARMSTRONG-JONES.

Yeah, there will be others.

1961:  ACTOR GEORGE CLOONEY IS BORN.

He turned out to be some sort of a big deal.

1963:  ACTOR MONTY WOOLLEY DIES.

One less man for dinner tonight.

1975:  DURING A LULL IN FIGHTING, 100,000 ARMENIANS GATHER IN BEIRUT TO REMEMBER THE 60TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE.

If you think that's a lot of Armenians, try going to the Glendale Galleria on a Saturday afternoon.

1990:  ACTOR CHARLES FARRELL DIES.

"But, Dad....."

1991:  ACTOR WILFRID HYDE-WHITE DIES.

Colonel Pickering!

1992:  ACTRESS MARLENE DIETRICH DIES.

Ya, ya, ya, ya...

1992:  BUSINESSMAN JILLY RIZZO DIES.

See!  A perfectly symmetrical life.

1994:  QUEEN ELIZABETH II OF ENGLAND AND FRENCH PRESIDENT FRANCOIS MITTERRAND OPEN THE CHANNEL TUNNEL.

EZ-Pass lanes to the right.

1994:  PAULA JONES FILES A LAWSUIT AGAINST US PRESIDENT BILL CLINTON, ALLEGING THAT HE HAD SEXUALLY HARASSED HER IN 1991.

Yeah, there will be others.   Lots more.

1998:  THE CHICAGO CUBS' KERRY WOOD STRIKES OUT 20 HOUSTON ASTROS TO TIE THE MLB RECORD HELD BY ROGER CLEMENS.

Even better...no walks.

2001:  DURING A TRIP TO SYRIA, POPE JOHN PAUL II BECOMES THE FIRST POPE TO ENTER A MOSQUE.

Glad he got this out of the way before September.

2004:  THE SITCOM FRIENDS AIRS ITS SERIES FINALE AND BECOMES THE FOURTH MOST WATCHED TV SERIES FINALE IN HISTORY.  

I was there for you.

2010:  BASEBALL PLAYER ROBIN ROBERTS DIES.

Not to be confused with that hen on Good Morning America.

2012:  ACTOR GEORGE LINDSEY DIES.

Hey, Goober!

Dinner last night:   Roast beef and potato salad.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Moron of the Month - May 2026

 

Well, this is long overdue.   Mainly because this guy has been a moron so long that he probably gets frequent moron miles.  

Yes, this is Eric Swalwell who has been infecting political circles all over California and Washington DC as a combination Congressperson, dog catcher...and most notably professional sex worker.

The dummies in California have been electing him to anything he chooses to run for, largely because they're as moronic as he is.   Trust me, if you go on YouTube and pull down some of his public comments, you will be wondering if his IQ even makes it to double digits. 

A while back, he allegedly traded government secrets with a spy called Fang Fang while both were wrapped in linen from Wamsutta.   Of course, nothing happened to him because...well...he hates Trump.   Indeed, he seems to have an eternal hall pass when it comes to anything in the political world.  I mean, why else would he then announce that he was running for Governor.

But, in some small doses, logic finally prevailed in the person of several female staff workers who attested to harassment, a little groping, and even a healthy dish of rape.   Out they came one by one and it was all Swalwell could do but to deny every charge.   None of it is true, he swears.

Yet, who suspended his race to be California Governor?   Ah, there is some facts in dem there hills.   

So, I am jumping on my last opportunity to call Eric Swalwell a monthly moron. Largely because I think he is finally disappearing for good.

Dinner last night:  Rigatoni bolognese at Basilico in Pelham.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Monday Morning Video Laugh - May 4, 2026

This month, I will spotlight those wonderful animal segments that used to show up on  Johnny Carson's Tonight Show.   First up...the marmoset with the leaky bladder.


Dinner last night:  Fried chicken sandwich at the Dickens in Manhattan.