Wednesday, March 31, 2021

This Date in History - March 31

 

Happy birthday to Herb Alpert.  My parents played his music all the time.   I stared at this album cover all the time.

307:  AFTER DIVORCING HIS WIFE MINERVINA, CONSTANTINE MARRIES FAUSTA, DAUGHTER OF THE RETIRED ROMAN EMPEROR MAXIMIAN.

A slow news day back in 307.

1492:  QUEEN ISABELLA ISSUES THE ALHAMBRA DECREE, ORDERING 150,000 JEWISH AND MUSLIM SUBJECT TO CONVERT TO CHIRSTIANITY.

And you thought she was this nice lady who liked Columbus.

1717:  A SERMON ON "THE NATURE OF THE KINGDOM OF CHRIST" BY BENJAMIN HOADLY, IS PREACHED IN THE PRESENCE OF KING GEORGE I OF GREAT BRITAIN AND THIS PROVOKES THE BANGORIAN CONTROVERSY.

I missed that day in World History.

1774:  THE KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN ORDERS THE PORT OF BOSTON CLOSED.

So where do you have all that tea hidden?

1885:  POET CHARLOTTE BRONTE DIES.

She wrote all that stuff I never read.

1889:  THE EIFFEL TOWER IS OPENED.

Hold that elevator!

1906:  THE INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION OF THE US (LATER THE NCAA) IS ESTABLISHED.

Brackets invented in 1907.

1918:  DAYLIGHT SAVINGS TIME GOES INTO EFFECT IN THE US FOR THE FIRST TIME.

Spring ahead....whatever.

1922:  ACTOR RICHARD KILEY IS BORN.

Man of La Mancha!

1922:  ACTOR PATRICK MAGEE IS BORN.

Man of Diana Rigg!

1927:  ACTIVIST CESAR CHAVEZ IS BORN.

That reminds me.  I need to buy some lettuce.

1927:  ACTOR WILLIAM DANIELS IS BORN.

Later played one of the most interesting characters on TV...Dr. Mark Craig of "St. Elsewhere."

1928:  HOCKEY STAR GORDIE HOWE IS BORN.

How?  Easy.

1930:  THE MOTION PICTURE PRODUCTION CODE IS INSTITUTED, IMPOSING STRICT GUIDELINES ON THE TREATMENT OF SEX, RELIGION, CRIME, AND VIOLENCE IN FILM FOR THE NEXT 38 YEARS.

So much for going to the movies.

1931:  AN AIRLINER CRASHES IN KANSAS, KILLING EIGHT, INCLUDING NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL COACH KNUTE ROCKNE.

Sure have taken the train.

1933:  THE CIVILIAN CONSERVATION CORPS IS ESTABLISHED WITH THE MISSION OF RELIEVING UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE US.

How about creating some jobs?!

1935:  MUSICIAN HERB ALPERT IS BORN.

Have I mentioned that "Whipped Cream" album cover?

1942:  JAPANESE FORCES INVADE CHRISTMAS ISLAND, A BRITISH POSSESSION.

Okay, we'll let you have fun for now.

1948:  POLITICIAN AL GORE IS BORN.

Inventor of the Internet.   Yeah, right.

1948:  ACTRESS RHEA PERLMAN IS BORN.

Carla on "Cheers."

1959:  THE 14TH DALAI LAMA CROSSES THE BORDER INTO INDIA AND IS GRANTED POLITICAL ASYLUM.

Wait!   You mean there were 13 others?

1968:  IN A TELEVISED SPEECH, PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON ANNOUNCES THAT HE WILL NOT RUN FOR ANOTHER TERM.

Good move, because he would have died in office.

1980:  OLYMPIC STAR JESSE OWENS DIES.

Only death could stop him.

1985:  THE FIRST WRESTLEMANIA IS HELD IN MADISON SQUARE GARDEN.

It wasn't the same without Bobo Brazil.

1986:  ACTOR JERRY PARIS DIES.

Jerry Halper on the old "Dick Van Dyke" show.

1990:  APPROXIMATELY 200,000 PROTESTORS TAKE TO THE STREETS OF LONDON TO PROTEST THE NEW POLL TAX.

You mean you get taxed to vote??

1995:  SINGER SELENA IS MURDERED BY HER FAN CLUB PRESIDENT AT A DAYS INN IN CORPUS CHRISTI.

Dead....and in a Days Inn.  How redundant.

1998:  POLITICIAN BELLA ABZUG DIES.

Yenta.

2005:  BUSINESSMAN FRANK PERDUE DIES.

Plucked.

2019:  RAPPER NIPSEY HUSSLE DIES.

I'd write a poem here but that's for the other Nipsey.

Dinner last night:   Grilled bratwurst.




Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Filthy Hippies

 

If my grandmother was still around today and reviewing movies, today's blog title might sum up her entire review of "The Trial of the Chicago 7."   

Yep.  Filthy hippies.

I finally caught up to this on Netflix where it has lingered for several months.   It opened October 16?  Oh, well, I took my sweet time getting around to it.   The Oscar nominations is what ultimately got me here.   I pretty much got what I expected to see when it first opened.

The expectation was predicated by who the writer and director was.  Aaron Sorkin.   I am not a fan.  Never have been.   Never will be.  And I am likely to despise his work even more when he finishes that biopic of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.   

Sorkin is a left leaner and it is readily apparent in every single word he puts on his computer screen.  Indeed, I'd always like to embrace balance and see both sides of every argument.   That is becoming more and more difficult in what comes out of Hollywood these days.  "The Trial of the Chicago 7" is a perfect example.

This film is all about the riots surrounding the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago.  You might remember.   Cops vs. Vietnam protesters who were egged by the likes of such domestic terrorists as Tom Hayden, Jerry Rubin, Abbie Hoffman and Bobby Seale as represented by sleazeball lawyer William Kunstler.  An ugly day in American history.   But, by the time the movie has meandered through all the court proceedings, Rubin and the like are depicted as heroes.   No surprise.  If Aaron Sorkin was a little younger, he would have been right there throwing a brick or two.

Since the court proceedings are pretty much documented, I wonder how much attention to detail was paid by Sorkin.   I sense not a lot, because, ultimately, the rioters come off as American patriots.   The literary license was likely stretched like a piece of Turkish taffy.  The presiding judge, expertly played by a no-nonsense Frank Langella, doesn't tolerate the in-court histrionics from the folks on trial.   He himself winds up being depicted as a villain.  And, in my humble opinion, the best thing in the whole picture.

Somewhere in the middle of all this one-sided nonsense is likely the real truth.  But, as interested as this movie can be from time to time, you know fully well that you're not getting the whole motion picture.  

My review is not as harsh as what my grandmother might have said.   But, indeed, she might be closer to the real story than Aaron Sorkin could ever be.

LEN'S RATING:  Two-and-a-half stars.

Dinner last night:  Leftover Chinese food.

Monday, March 29, 2021

Monday Morning Video Laugh - March 29, 2021

Wrapping up our blog anniversary month with one of the most popular video laughs.  Welcome back, Scarlett.

 

Dinner last night:  Filet mignon and Caesar salad.

Sunday, March 28, 2021

The Sunday Memory Drawer - Spirituality Goes West

 

Wrapping up my Lenten journey that tells the history of my own spirituality.  Let's pick up where we left off last Sunday.

For years after I left my childhood church in the Bronx, my only forays into any kind of worship were via weddings or funerals. And, most of the time, these were held in Catholic churches. Each time, I could feel the disdain of my grandmother from wherever her spirit now resides. But, as strong as my worship habit was when I was a kid, I just as easily fell into several decades of laziness. I became a card carrying member of that worldwide group.

"Spiritual But Not Religious."

I was sleeping in on Sunday mornings. I was reading the paper and doing the crossword puzzle. I was reveling in the comic strip exploits of Blondie and Marmaduke.

I wasn't going to church. Just like my parents, I had inexplicably and perhaps irrevocably shut down my religion.

Until I moved to Los Angeles.

Well, actually, the thoughts of returning to a church had begun during my last years in NY. I had looked around a little for a new Lutheran church that I could call home. The only problem was that most in my area were not fulltime organizations. You could show up at the building at certain times and find a Lutheran service. If you read the sign wrong, you'd wind up at a Chinese Buddhist service. Most of the Lutheran churches around me had to rent out their facilities to anybody and everybody.

After I moved west, the nagging desire for a bit more religion became a bit more acute. And I wanted to use the experience as a means of meeting some new friends.

Easter Sunday 1998 seemed like as good a date as any to begin the process.

On the Saturday before, I set out to find myself a church for the next day. By simply going through the church directory that is always printed in the Los Angeles Times. I knew that I wanted a Lutheran church not affiliated with the Missouri Synod, which is just an inch or two removed from the Third Reich. Location was also an issue. I didn't want to drive more than fifteen minutes. God was important, but he also needed to be damn convenient.

I literally reviewed the names of the churches in the directory. Hmm, that one sounds boring. Hmm, that one sounds a little too big. I was Goldilocks sipping the porridge of the Three Bears. Suddenly, a name sang out to me.

Village Lutheran Church.

Awwww, how homey.

On a street called Church Lane.

How hokey can you get?

I was sold.

An amazing thing happened as I entered Village Lutheran Church in the Brentwood Glen area of Los Angeles that Easter Sunday morning.

It looked just like St. Peter's in the Bronx. Almost eerily the same. I began to wonder if this was just another stop on the BX 41 bus route. And was my dad outside in the car reading the newspaper?

Oh, there were some head spinning differences. A lady pastor, for one. That alone would have sent the oldtimers at St. Peter's in the Bronx into cardiac arrest. But, other than that, the actual worship service was exactly as I had left it years ago. This was an extremely comfortable old sweater that still fit perfectly.

Nevertheless, I was completely self-conscious walking into this new unchartered territory. I sat way in the back.

And then another miracle happened. The Sunday after Easter, I yearned to go back.

I sat one row closer to the front. And felt an even warmer feeling. Even though I talked to no one. This was my equivalent of stepping into a swimming pool. I was going to get wet one skin pore at a time.

Each week, there was a coffee and cake hour in the fellowship hall after service. I was always invited in. And, each week, I always had something to do.

This was starting not to sit well with Florence, the old lady in the pew across from me. During the always uncomfortable "sharing of the peace," she'd always grab my hand a little harder.

"What's your name again?"

I'd tell her.

"So, Glenn, when are you coming in for coffee?"

Errrrrrrrr.

"Glenn, we're expecting you next week."

Errrrrrrrrr.

Florence meant business. I was convinced that, even weighted down with her walker, she could kick my ass. I'd later discover that Florence was an actress. She had done years on Broadway. She knew James Dean. She was one of the only two Broadway cast members to travel west to do the screen version of "The Rose Tattoo." The other was its star Anna Magnani. Later on, she'd be a regular on "The Life of Riley" with William Bendix. She'd play one of the hookers in "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid." And portray Barbara Eden's mother on "I Dream of Jeannie."

But, for now, she was acting as a thorn in my very shy side. And the role was quite convincing.

The next week, I lowered my head and stepped into the lion's den for coffee. Talking to people I didn't know.

It was fine.

And, thanks to a lot of really special friends, I have been at Village Lutheran Church ever since.

And now thinking about leaving it.

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

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Classic Movie Trailer of the Month - March 2021

 Remembering Cloris Leachman's Oscar winning role.

Dinner last night:  Chili from my freezer.

Friday, March 26, 2021

Len's Jukebox of the Month - March 2021

Who cares if it's either a song from a kid's movie or perhaps a subtext sung to your cocaine supplier?   When this song comes on, I cannot turn it off.  Ever.

 

Dinner last night:  Bacon and cheddar omelet.

Thursday, March 25, 2021

Hollywood Then and Now - March 2021

 

If I had been doing this feature on a blog twenty years ago, you would already know that this would have been already covered as I originally visited the Knots Landing cul-de-sac in a visit to LA.

But this location never gets dull and I found myself there again mainly because I needed new orthotics.

Huh?

Well, I did.   And my podiatrist has moved to Granada Hills where the imaginary "Seaview Circle" really existed.   I couldn't resist as "Knots Landing" is one of my favorite shows of all time.

Indeed, the real street is named Crystallaire Place and nestled in this bedroom community.

Now, the name "Seaview Circle" is a bit of a misnomer.  There is no sea view here, even though the original opening credits made you believe there was.

The actual cul-de-sac is nowhere near the ocean.   Probably 25-30 miles away.  

Indeed, all of the homes still exist there.   There are probably different people living there than were getting paid to vacate their homes once a week for thirteen seasons.   Indeed, there must be some renovation work going on at the McKenzie house.  The Port-O-San is a dead giveaway.  

Meanwhile, two cars in Abby's driveway?  Hmmm.
I have to go back for my orthotics in two weeks.   I may stop by again.

Dinner last night:  Leftover (from my freezer) lasagna.


Wednesday, March 24, 2021

This Date in History - March 24

 

Happy birthday to Peyton Manning.  Even I know he is a big deal in football.

1199:  KING RICHARD 1 OF ENGLAND IS WOUNDED BY A CROSSBOW BOLT WHILE FIGHTING IN FRANCE.

Do they even make Band Aids that big?

1401: TURCO-MONGOL EMPEROR TIMUR SACKS DAMASCUS.

For a ten yard loss.   See, I can make football jokes.

1829:  THE PARLIAMENT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM PASSES THE ROMAN CATHOLIC RELIEF ACT, ALLOWING CATHOLICS TO SERVE IN PARLIAMENT.

As long as the Parliament cafeteria features tuna salad on Fridays.

1832:  IN OHIO, A GROUP OF MEN BEAT AND TAR AND FEATHER MORMON LEADER JOSEPH SMITH.

Just a reminder of the persecution the Osmonds had to suffer.

1854:  PRESIDENT JOSE GREGORIO MONAGAS ABOLISHES  SLAVERY IN VENEZUELA.   

It's a shame that there's no other reason to live there.

1874:  MAGICIAN HARRY HOUDINI IS BORN.

And he suddenly appears.

1882:  ROBERT KOCH ANNOUNCES THE DISCOVERY OF MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS, THE BACTERIUM RESPONSIBLE FOR TUBERCULOSIS.

Okay, so now what are you going to do about that?

1887:  ACTOR ROSCOE ARBUCKLE IS BORN.

It sucks that his nickname was "Fatty."

1900:  NYC MAYOR ROBERT ANDERSON VAN WYCK BREAKS GROUND FOR A NEW UNDERGROUND "RAPID TRANSPORT RAILROAD" THAT WOULD LIKE MANHATTAN AND BROOKLYN.

Watch the closing doors.

1902:  POLITICIAN THOMAS E. DEWEY IS BORN.

Truman Wins!

1905:  AUTHOR JULES VERNE DIES.

Journey to the Bottom of the Cemetery.

1911:  ANIMATOR JOSEPH BARBERA IS BORN.

Paging Hanna.

1930:  ACTOR STEVE MCQUEEN IS BORN.

I've read ahead and it's fitting he was born on this date.   You'll see on the very next entry.

1944:  IN AN EVENT LATER DRAMATIZED IN THE MOVIE "THE GREAT ESCAPE," 76 ALLIED PRISONERS OF WAR BEGIN BREAKING OUT OF A STALAG.

A movie that starred Steve McQueen!!!

1958:  SINGER ELVIS PRESLEY IS DRAFTED IN THE U.S. ARMY.

NO!!!!!!  Said millions of teenage girls.

1976:  FOOTBALL STAR PEYTON MANNING IS BORN.

I was at the very first game his brother Eli played in the pros.

1980:  EL SALVADORIAN ARCHBISHOP OSCAR ROMERO IS ASSASSINATED WHILE ATTENDING MASS.

Before or after the offering basket?

1984:  ACTOR SAM JAFFE DIES.

Man, woman, birth, death...okay, you can stop there.

1989:  THE EXXON VALDEZ SPILLS 240,000 BARRELS OF CRUDE OIL.

Okay, who's going to clean that up?

2008:  BHUTAN OFFICIALLY BECOMES A DEMOCRACY.

Is that the Italian word for a prostitute?

2008:  ACTOR RICHARD WIDMARK DIES.

For a brief time, he was Sandy Koufax' father-in-law.

2010:  ACTOR ROBERT CULP DIES.

I No Longer Spy.

2016:  COMIC GARRY SHANDLING DIES.

From a blood clot a day after taking a long plane flight.   An advertisement to get up and walk once an hour while flying.

Dinner last night:  Bacon, lettuce, and tomato salad.





Tuesday, March 23, 2021

Dirty Laundry

 

Maybe you've seen it.   The HBO documentary called "Allen V Farrow."   A four-hour extravaganza that is the television equivalent of listening to your neighbors argue next door.  It's like a train wreck or one of those famed California car chases.  You watch and watch and watch...eyes riveted.  Then when you're done, you exclaim...

"I spent four hours watching THAT?!!!"

To say that Woody Allen and Mia Farrow have issues is sort of like saying Nancy Pelosi is a Democrat.   Duh.   Here are two ultra-entitled people who don't know the first thing about life's struggles.   I mean, a hardship for Woody is probably finding gum underneath his season seat at Knicks games.  And Mia, who is at best a C level actress, has had a charmed life since Mom was swinging around the vines with Johnny Weissmuller.  

So, witnessing "their issues" should be taken with about three or four boxes of Morton's Salt.  There are a lot of other people with problems one hundred times worse than these two idiots.

Okay, I am a fan of Woody's film work and always have been.   Even his worst efforts are superior compared to some of the other junk released by Hollywood.  I enjoy his talent despite the fact that I know he is probably a creep in real life.  I mean, look at the movie "Manhattan" and that very true-to-life romance with teenager Mariel Hemingway.   You know that's a page from his real life.  And then really taking up with one of Mia's young daughters, Soon Yi.

Yeah, he's weird and bizarre and mentally ill.

And that's the message that hammers at your head constantly over the course of this four hour documentary.  Woody is bad.  And that's because all of the talking heads come from Mia's side of the bed.   Her society friends.  Her doctors.  Her own children.  Even if he's as guilty as sin, Allen doesn't stand a chance to defend himself.   Indeed, the only time you hear his voice is in excerpts from the audio book of his memoirs.   Or because Mia taped their phone conversations.  There is not a single person who comes out in his defense.  Maybe there are none.   But I'd like to see some form of a balanced look at these two jerks.  Is Diane Keaton suffering from laryngitis?

Because, as my mother used to always say when somebody was getting a divorce...

"There are two sides to every story."

And most well-balanced normal people will tell you that they think Mia Farrow is mentally insane.  Who the hell adopts as many kids as she does?   She's pulled in enough Asian children to staff her own Thai restaurant.  

Who, after her young daughter tells her the story about Woody and "her privates," video tapes the kid endlessly, which forces the child to relive the moment over and over and over???

Who accuses her "husband" (they never really married...another issue for all) of recording their phone conversations just as the "record" button is pressed in her house?

Who, with all this mayhem and possible crime around her, doesn't bother to call the police???

And, by the way, we still don't know who Ronan Farrow's dad is, right?

Yep, Mia is nuts.   And she didn't call the cops because Woody cast her in thirteen movies over the course of a decade.  Trust me, Mia is not getting any work from anybody else.

But you don't get those questions even asked because "Allen V Farrow" is essentially a family home video gone horribly bad.   

Maybe that's why I spent four hours watching THAT!

LEN'S RATING:  Two stars.

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




Monday, March 22, 2021

Monday Morning Video Laugh - March 22, 2021

Happy Anniversary month, Len Speaks.   Here's another super popular video laugh.  And who doesn't find dogs funny?

Dinner last night:  Sausage, peppers, and onions.

Sunday, March 21, 2021

The Sunday Memory Drawer - Spirituality Goes To College

 

And the Lenten journey of my spirituality continues

Here is a great black and white photo of my childhood church, St. Peter's Lutheran Church in the Bronx. 

So, after I got confirmed, it was really more than just my hormones (and my feelings for my fellow Sunday School classmate) that propelled me to start going to Sunday church services. Once you had received and swallowed begrudgingly the wine and wafer, you were technically allowed to worship like an adult. You could even skip Sunday School and show up at 10AM for the regular service. This gave me one more hour to sleep. And, in those days, there was nothing wrong with a fourteen-year-old making the bus trip from Mount Vernon to East 219th Street all by himself. This all got my dad off the hook. He no longer had to sit in the car outside of church for an hour. He could actually now stay home and read "Dondi" and "Dick Tracy" over coffee and a jelly donut.

So, around 9AM every Sunday, I walked myself down four blocks to get the BX41 bus. Back in those days, it was imperative that you "dress up" for church. I had my own personal wardrobe mistress, AKA my mother, who required nothing less. I was groomed to the nines. Standing at the 241st Street bus stop in a navy blue double breasted sport jacket and matching tie, I looked like that week's co-host on "The Mike Douglas Show." Or maybe I was opening for Joey Bishop at the Sands Hotel. I certainly didn't look 14.

Of course, once at church, I spent my first moments trying to maneuver myself into proximity to the love of my life. But, as I related last week, her presence in an adjacent pew was destined to be shortlived as her family moved to New Jersey. I looked around the chapel and asked a question for the ages.

"Now what?"

To think that I might have to go to church service and actually pay attention?

Luckily, I had, for lack of a better term, a savior. A guardian angel. My father's cousin, who we all called Aunt Ollie.

While my parents and all my aunts and uncles had long since eschewed Sunday church services and chose instead to sleep in, Aunt Ollie was the only one in their generation who kept at her worship. She was there at St. Peter's every single week. Something still drew her in. And, when Cupid cast me adrift, Aunt Ollie pulled me in.

"Come sit with me."

Wow, I was an adult.

Even better, I began to listen to the service. The readings. The sermon in broken English by our German Pastor Hoeniger. And it started to all make sense.

To enhance the experience even more, Aunt Ollie treated me like an adult. A young one, but an adult nevertheless. She always drove me home afterwards and, frequently, our in-car chat had something to do with what we had heard in church minutes before. Aunt Ollie truly enjoyed her religion and her beliefs. And, thanks to her, I began to finally form my own faith. For all of the above reasons, those two hours every Sunday became the highlight of my week. An odd thing for a teenager to admit. Oh, sure, I was doing all the nonsense stuff. But, at least for a little while every weekend, I was grounded. In a very good way.

Sadly, it didn't last forever. I began college. And Pastor Hoeniger, the only minister I had ever known, decided to retire.

There was the usual congregational call for a pastor. There needed to be some pre-requisites. The new guy had to speak German, as there was still, albeit dwindling, a German-based congregation and a weekly service in that language. After several months, we finally got the word. Our new pastor would be Pas

tor Bill Paulsen. Good Lutherans that we were, Aunt Ollie and I eagerly awaited his installation ceremony which was held on a Sunday night. We thought nothing of making an extra church appearance that week.

Except I got a bad vibe as soon as I met the dude. He was barely 30 years old and his hairline had already retreated to the rear. Although it was years before I would make this connection, Pastor Paulsen was a carbon copy of Kelsey Grammer. There was just something that always seemed to be a little off with him. One of his initial Sundays there, he set off his very first stink bomb.

He introduced the concept of "sharing the peace."

It's certainly commonplace in church services now. But, back then, it was scandalous.

"You want me to shake hands with the people next to me?"

The question reverberated over and over throughout the congregation. Obviously, thick-skinned Germans liked their personal space. And felt even more strongly about violating somebody else's. It took weeks for the folks around me to get the hang of this.

Clearly, Pastor Paulsen was looking to change the dynamic of our little church. And he next set his spiritual crosshairs on somebody else.

Me.

Obviously, the right reverend had looked around our church and realized that this was a congregation that was dying. Literally. The average age of our parishioner was probably around eighty. And Paulsen knew that he had to expand the youth ministry of our place.

Enter me.

The Pastor was relentless in trying to involve me in church activities. Brainstorming on events. Stuffing and licking envelopes at his house. For me, it was all starting to feel forced. And, unfortunately but conveniently, I was now a freshman at Fordham University. Doing all the things that college freshmen do. Many of them involved late hours on a Saturday night.

Pastor Paulsen didn't stand a chance.

And, after Aunt Ollie and her family moved upstate, there was no reason for me to show up at St. Peter's. Ever again.

My church going, save for a wedding or a funeral, would be nil for years.

Until I moved to Los Angeles...

Dinner last night:  Pepperoni and mushroom pizza from Maria's.


Saturday, March 20, 2021

Classic TV Theme Song of the Month - March 2021

Yikes!   This show was wrapping up its first season...40 years ago!

 

Dinner last night:  Grilled Taylor ham on English muffin.

Friday, March 19, 2021

Your Weekend Movie Guide for March 2021

Just one year ago, this was the weekend movie guide I ran for our brave new and shutdown world.   Fifty four weeks later...well, at least, there is the faint glimmer of a movie marquee in the near future.  But last year?   It was all new.   And you haven't heard of any of these movies.  Some never opened.   Some just disappeared.  The good news is that some LA theaters have re-opened to limited capacity this past week.  Perhaps, this will be the last of my monthly movie guide reruns.

But, for now, let's go back a short year and reminisce....

What memories are at the multiplexes this weekend?  Actually, in light of America's shutdown, none.   But let's pretend that we can go out and see a movie.  You know the drill, gang.  I'll saunter through the movie pages of the LA Times and give you my knee jerk reaction to what's on those silver screens.   I'm thinking we all might be marooned.  At home.

Oh, and on second glance, "Marooned" played at the wonderful Egyptian Theater on Hollywood Boulevard.   Perhaps the folks there will screen it this year some time.  Well, actually, they're not screening anything at the moment.  Coronavirus, you know.

A Quiet Place, Part 2:  I loved the first one, but can't figure out how they could squeeze another movie out of this. And, realistically, any theater playing it might be a quiet place indeed.  Coronavirus, you know.

Never Rarely Sometimes Always:   Well, that covers it all really.

The Roads Not Taken:   I thought Bob Hope and Bing Crosby used all of them.

The Burnt Orange Heresy:   Way too much to say when somebody asks you what movie you just saw.

Emma:  Saw the trailer and..................zzzzzzzzZZZZ.

First Cow:  Wasn't that Elsie of the Borden's Milk company?

The Way Back:  Ben Affleck deals with alcoholism and being a basketball coach.   At the same time?

Hope Gap:  Annette Bening and Bill Nighy play a couple that has lost its way after 29 years of marriage.  Don't they all?

Portrait of a Lady On Fire:  France, 1770. Marianne, a painter, is commissioned to do the wedding portrait of Héloïse, a young woman who has just left the convent.   This movie has my name all over it.   Not.

Onward:  Have we previously discussed the fact that I am generally bored with most Pixar movies??

Greed:  I have no idea, except this is not to be confused with the 1924 silent movie of the same name that starred Zasu Pitts.

The Invisible Man:   Given the box office receipts as a result of the current health scare...well, you finish the joke.

The Climb:   Two best buds feud when one sleeps with the other's fiancee.  So that kind of stuff is off limits?  Good to know.

The Etruscan Smile:  Brian Cox as a Scotsman trying to connect with his estranged son.   Haven't we seen that...like...a thousand other times??

Hooking Up:  A female sex addict connects with a guy who's got testicular cancer.   Yep, folks, that's the elevator pitch.

Human Capital:  A young romance is marred by a tragic accident.   That's all I got.

International Falls:  Two stand-up comics are stranded in a snowstorm.  With a rabbi, a priest, and a farmer's daughter?

Phoenix, Oregon:  Two pals open up a pizza parlor in a bowling alley.  How's that for enticement to see the movie?

The Truth:  I see Catherine Deneuve listed in the cast.   So, I guess, if you're a fan of Catherine Deneuve and you bring your hand sanitizer...

Swallow:  A young housewife in a seemingly perfect marriage develops pica, the irresistible urge to ingest inedible objects and material. I find that hard to...well...swallow.

I Still Believe:  The true story of Christian music star Jeremy Camp and his journey of love and loss.  Who???

Big Time Adolescence:  A drug-dealing college dropout becomes a mentor to his best friend -- a straight-laced teen who idolizes him.  Strictly for the younger crowd who only knows how to communicate with emojis.

Bloodshot:  Vin Diesel stars, which mean I will be keeping my social distance away.

The Hunt:  Twelve strangers wake up in a clearing. They don't know where they are -- or how they got there.   Hmm, that's called the New York City subway system.

Extra Ordinary:  A woman who has supernatural abilities must save a possessed girl.  Um, you could watch "The Exorcist" instead as a tribute to the late Max Von Sydow.

Dinner last night:  Salad.

Thursday, March 18, 2021

Len's Recipe of the Month - March 2021

 

Summer is coming.   Well, eventually.  And if you're looking to make a decadent dessert without flipping the oven switch, this no-bake Nutella cheesecake is for you.  I made it for a dinner party and you can see how much of it disappeared as soon as I put it on the table.

Even the crust is easy.   Take a box of chocolate graham crackers or wafers and put it in your food processor.  Pulse it until it is a fine grain.   Put it in a bowl and mix in four tablespoons of melted butter.  

Spray a springform pan with some non-stick spray.  Pour the smashed cookies into it and spread it to all sides of the pan.   A plastic cup is a good tool for this.  Put it in the freezer for an hour or so.

In a stand mixer, whip up 16 ounces of softened cream cheese which you had out at room temperature.   Now blend in a cup of Nutella spread.   Mix thoroughly.  Now do the same with a 1/2 cup of confectioner's sugar.   Finally, add one 12-ounce tub of thawed Cool Whip.   

Pour it into the pan.   Cover with Saran Wrap.   Chill in the fridge, ideally overnight.

Take the compliments from your guests.

Dinner last night:  Leftover chicken.

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

This Date in History - March 17

 

Happy birthday and St. Patrick's Day to Patrick Duffy.   We should all age as well.

45 BC:  IN HIS LAST VICTORY, JULIUS CAESAR DEFEATS THE POMPEIAN FORCES OF TITUS LABIENUS AND POMPEY THE YOUNGER.

What was the spread?

180:  COMMODUS BECOMES SOLE EMPEROR OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE.

And the inventor of the toilet.

1337:  EDWARD, THE BLACK PRINCE IS MADE DUKE OF CORNWALL.

BlackPrincesMatter.

1776:  THE BRITISH ARMY EVACUATES BOSTON, ENDING THE SIEGE OF BOSTON DURING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.

The next siege would be led by Bucky Dent.

1780:  GEORGE WASHINGTON GRANTS THE CONTINENTAL ARMY A HOLIDAY "AS AN ACT OF SOLIDARITY WITH THE IRISH IN THEIR FIGHT FOR INDEPENDENCE."

I bet it was a Monday so they could have a three-day weekend.

1861:  THE KINGDOM OF ITALY IS PROCLAIMED.

So that thing with Commodus really did get flushed.

1891:  THE SS UTOPIA COLLIDES WITH HMS ANSON IN THE BAY OF GIBRALTAR AND SINKS, KILLING 562 PASSENGERS.

Um, how hard is it to steer a big boat like that??

1919:  SINGER NAT KING COLE IS BORN.

And immediately had a cigarette.

1941:  THE NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART IS OFFICIALLY OPENED BY PRESIDENT FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT.

Hope there weren't a lot of stairs.

1942:  THE FIRST JEWS ARE GASSED IN EAST POLAND.

If you're a reader of the New York Times, you never saw this news.

1949:  ACTOR PATRICK DUFFY IS BORN.

Those scenes with Victoria Principal had to be annoying, eh?

1950:  RESEARCHERS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY ANNOUNCE THE CREATION OF ELEMENT 98, WHICH THEY NAME "CALIFORNIUM."

Knowing those kooks up there, I bet it's something they can smoke.

1951:  ACTOR KURT RUSSELL IS BORN.

Goldie is still waiting for her ring.

1956:  COMIC FRED ALLEN DIES.

Dropped dead on 57th Street in Manhattan which was a big deal for the Daily News.

1964:  ACTOR ROB LOWE IS BORN.

Always smirking in photos, so I guess he gets laid a lot.

1969:  GOLDA MEIR BECOMES THE FIRST FEMALE PRIME MINISTER OF ISRAEL.   

Yenta.

1985:  SERIAL KILLER RICHARD RAMIREZ, AKA THE NIGHT STALKER, COMMITS THE FIRST TWO MURDERS IN HIS LOS ANGELES MURDER SPREE.  

If he was still alive today, he'd probably have a podcast.

1990:  ACTRESS CAPUCINE DIES WHEN SHE JUMPS OUT OF A WINDOW IN HER EIGHTH FLOOR APARTMENT.

Well, that will do it.

1993:  ACTRESS HELEN HAYES DIES.

For all the famous roles she had, it's amazing she got an Oscar for playing a stowaway in that cheesy movie "Airport."

2000:  530 MEMBERS OF A UGANDAN CULT DIE IN A FIRE, WHICH IS SUSPECTED TO BE A MASS SUICIDE.

Or simply somebody smoking near a curtain.

2002:  TV PRODUCER PAT WEAVER DIES.

A big deal in the industry and also Sigourney's dad.

2006:  DESIGNER OLEG CASSINI DIES.

Oh, great.  Now I have nothing to wear.

2013:  JOURNALIST A.B.C WHIPPLE DIES.

I have no clue who the hell is he, but the name gets him a mention here.

Dinner last night:  Leftover chicken scarpariello.





Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Wait! You Watched What??!!!

 

Give me a break, will ya?   After the last twelve months of being cooped up without a movie theater to go to, I was bound to make a bad choice sooner or later.

Maybe I was feeling a little nostalgic for the old days...not that I was around for them.  Back when feature films came with cartoons.  Now, truth be told, I was always partial to Bugs and Daffy.  But, from what I have seen from Tom and Jerry on TCM, they could be fun, too.   And now they're getting their own movie albeit in the ten or so open theaters and on HBO Max.   I figured this was going to be 12 or so 7-minute cartoons stitched together.

Well, guess what, folks.  This ain't a cartoon.  Not hardly.  It's essentially a live action movie with live action actors and the occasional computer graphic of an animal.   Any resemblance to Tom and Jerry of days gone by....well, from the small print at the end of any movie...is hardly co-incidental.   In fact, cat and mouse should sue the trousers off the clowns that made this mess.

Okay, yes, Tom and Jerry did interact with real actors in the past.  Dancing with Gene Kelly.  Swimming with Esther Williams.   Here they are supporting players to some inane story about a fancy New York hotel and its workers played by a bunch of people I have never heard of save for the annoying Colin Jost.  The way the stars get played is almost a subplot.   The hotel has a resident mouse and they bring in a cat to catch him.  

So, there are moments that are vintage Tom and Jerry with anvils to the head, etc..  But with all the real life scenery, the so-called animation looks like an intrusion.   Watch (well, don't really) the scene where Tom and Jerry go to Yankee Stadium and catch a foul ball.   Oy.

The idiots behind this swill do remember that you never really heard Tom and Jerry back in the day.  And they don't talk here and convey messages by playing countless games of charades with the actors.  But when Tom is playing piano in a night club, he can suddenly sing.  What?   And how come all the other so-called animated animals can speak???   Hello?  Is anybody out there?

And, of course, in ultra-self conscious 2021, we've got diversity coming out of the ears in this one.   Tom's consciences?  Black voices.   Seagulls do rap and hip hop.  There is a multi-cultural wedding and I have no idea how the powers that be missed the opportunity to include a transgendering duck.

Forgive me.  I was curious.   And consider this your official warning.   This is not Grandpa's Tom and Jerry.

LEN'S RATING:  One star.

Dinner last night:  Leftover Chinese food.


Monday, March 15, 2021

Monday Morning Video Laugh - March 15, 2021

It's Blog Anniversary month!   Here's another classic video laugh. Beyonce....n'yuk, n'yuk, n'yuk.

Dinner last night:  Chicken Scarpariello.

Sunday, March 14, 2021

The Sunday Memory Drawer - My Spirituality...Oh, And Puberty - Part 3

 

And the Lenten season of COVID continues with a story that I have told here several times.   But it fits with the church-going history of my life.   

You see, sometimes it's about spirituality.  Other times, it's about...ahem...puberty.

The door to my childhood church, St. Peter's in the Bronx, still features the German words over the door. But it says that God is there in this building. Even though the congregation these days is mostly Caribbean and Black, the German roots still preside in a fashion.

Last week, I graduated to my confirmation class. Soon I would become a full fledged Lutheran. And a young adult.

And one with hormones. This is the place where I encountered the first girl I ever liked. I've told the story here twice before. The white background below signifies repeat text.  But, the church theme of the past several Sundays in this Lenten season lends to its retelling one more time.

And, fittingly, it has its roots in my other childhood love. The New York Mets.

Don Cardwell was a right-handed journeyman pitcher who had floated around the major leagues starting in 1957. He wound up being traded to the Mets in 1967. When you look at his stats for his three plus years at Shea, they are quite impressive compared to today's hurlers. In 1967, his ERA was 3.57. It dropped to 2.95 in 1968. At an ERA of 3.01 in 1969, Don was indeed one of the unsung heroes of that miraculous season. He only got into one inning of the World Series, but he certainly was one of the main reasons they got there in the first place. I'm remember one twi-night doubleheader in Pittsburgh during that surging September. The Mets won both ends, 1-0. And it was noteworthy because, in both games, the pitchers drove in the lone run. The second game was won by Don Cardwell.

So what was behind my attraction to him? Well, I thought it was really cool that a veteran pitcher like Cardwell was finally getting to enjoy winning baseball after such a long career.

Oh, yeah. And he was also the favorite Met of the first girl I ever liked.

She had first appeared in my Sunday School class somewhere around the era of Cardwell. And my first meeting was certainly a memorable one. Before the Bible studies began, one of the assistant pastors of my Bronx church would conduct a little mini-service for all the kids enrolled in Sunday School. For some bizarre reason, I had left the house that morning without eating breakfast. Perhaps my father had been a little late with his Sunday morning ritual of stocking up with enough jelly donuts to choke a diabetic horse. Nevertheless, the emptiness of my stomach somehow floated up to my head. Because, as the assistant pastor led us in the Lord's Prayer, my mind started to drift into a catatonic blackness.

"And the power and the glory, forever and ever."

I started to weave forward.

"Amen."

Clunk.

I apparently landed on my face and cut my chin.

When I came to, the assistant pastor was already attending to me as I was seated back in my chair at the table. In my woozy state, I peered down at the end of the table at my new friend. Her look of concern made me weak in the knees all over again.

I immediately made two mental notes. Always eat something before church. And find out what this girl thing was all about.

We wound up in confirmation class together, which ate up two years of Saturday mornings. There were lots of walks to the bus stop. I remember once getting an ice cream cone with her and that was tantamount to heading out to a furniture store and picking out a sofa. There was another girl in the class who also seemed to drift into our midst (translation: got in my way) and I tolerated her, all the time trying to figure out how to "accidentally" throw her in front of the BX 41 bus.

My friend was gold. She seemed to like me. I seemed to love her. And she was the pinnacle of what boys looked for. She could talk baseball with the best of them. Even better, she could talk Met baseball like she was the daughter of Lindsey Nelson. And she loved Don Cardwell for all the reasons I did. This was my Winnie Cooper.

"I now pronounce you boyfriend and girlfriend."

My feelings for her were unfortunately outed by a very unlikely accomplice. My own father.

Her grandfather would pick her up after church every Sunday. He would wait for her in pretty much the same spot as my dad would. One Sunday, she got into her car. I got into mine.

It took a few blocks before I noticed that, as her grandfather bobbed and weaved through the streets of the Bronx, my father was making all the same moves. It suddenly became illogical to me. I wanted to ask my father what the hell he was doing, but I was afraid it would wind up as a protracted dialogue about something serious that I wasn't ready to share with a parent. So I say quietly in horror as he followed her car.

Left turn. Right turn. Right turn. Left turn. Right turn.

WTF, Dad!!!

About one car length forward, she was starting to have the same realization. As she looked out the back window of her car, she had this concerned look. It was as if Princess Diana saw the paparazzi tailing her limo. My friend's look said it all.

"What the heck are you doing?"

What these two unsuspecting 12 year-olds did not know was that, the very night before, Mayer's Restaurant, the premier restaurant and reception hall of the Bronx, had burned to the ground. It was all over the radio that morning, and my father, being the deluxe rubber necker of all time, wanted to see the cinders. Apparently so did her grandfather.

The following Sunday, she asked me why we had followed her car. I stammered like Ralph Kramden and told her the truth. It sounded like a lie.

The two years of confirmation study was an exercise in how a young male calculates endlessly to always someway wind up in a girl's vicnity. I timed my entrances and exits to hers. I always figured out just how much available pew space there was so we could sit next to each other. Most people would come home from church feeling cleansed and renewed. I would crawl in with my head aching from all the strategy I needed to formulate just to be near her.

When we were finally confirmed, the pastor took the whole class to Rye Playland for a day. That presented a whole new world of dating architecture. Now I had to time everything so we wound up on rides together. I suddenly realized that day how easy it was becoming.

Because she was doing the same thing.

My mother had forgotten to pack me a lunch that day. So, when it came time for the midday sustenance, I sat there at the picnic bench like Oliver Twist. The pastor offered to buy me a hot dog. She jumped in quickly.

"He can have half of my bologna sandwich."

We might as well have consummated it right then and there on the grass outside the Dragon Coaster.

And I hated bologna.

But not that day. It was Oscar Meyer's finest nitrate production ever.

We got a little older, but, unfortunately, it ended before all the good stuff. After one summer away from church, I discovered her family had moved to New Jersey.

And the Mets sold Don Cardwell to the Atlanta Braves on July 12, 1970.

Years later, I was in college but still hanging onto my childhood church. As I snooped around the guestbook in the vestibule one Sunday, I saw an eyepopping entry dated the previous Christmas Eve. Her family had been there! And where had I been? At some relative's house watching a family argument.

Crap.

Of course, in college, I was already dwelling on the lost opportunities of my life. And there was nobody at Fordham who could hold a candle to her. I started to think. If her family had visited their old church one Christmas Eve, maybe it was a new tradition. It might have been July, but I already started to plan my outfit for December 24.

It couldn't have arrived more quickly. At Christmas Eve, I sat with my father's cousin, but she would easily be dispensed with if luck would....

....have it. There she was! Two pews over to the left.

"Joy to the World!"

After service, everyone mingled on the icy 219th Street. Even in the cold night air, she immediately recognized me. It was probably the first time she had ever seen in my shaving era. Lou Brock couldn't have moved faster as she came over. The hug couldn't have been warmer.

Her family busied themselves off to the side as we caught up. On high school. On college. She was going someplace in the boondocks of Pennsylvania. It was nice. It was easy. It was special. I asked for her address (pre e-mail days, sports fans) and she offered it willingly so we could stay in touch. Making more seasonal small talk, I inquired what she got for Christmas.

"Engaged."

She held up the ring for me to see.

Oh.

The snow flurries around me picked up with intensity as if my life was being orchestrated by a production manager for a Lifetime movie.

We parted company, pledging to stay in touch. After one written volley in the mail, it all ended.

When Don Cardwell passed away in January, 2008, I reran this story for the second time. And, since she was on my mind again, I did something really creepy.

I went into one of those background check websites and paid $14.95 to get more information on her whereabouts. Allegedly, she's again in New Jersey. Still using the same last name. But, just what does one do with that type of information?  

Nothing.

And when years later, you find her on the world's current detective agency, Facebook, what do you do?

Repeat the above answer.

Dinner last night:  Tangerine beef from Chin Chin.


Saturday, March 13, 2021

Classic Newsreel of the Month - March 2021

March 1963.  Back in the day when you could trust Presidents to talk with foreign leaders.  And this might have been the last President I could trust.

 

Dinner last night:  Grilled Taylor ham and macaroni salad.

Friday, March 12, 2021

Happy Birthday, Little COVID

 

Dear COVID----

Look at you all grown up.  Your first birthday.  Well, at least, as far as the United States is concerned.   We know you leaked out a test tube a little earlier than that.  Oh, by the way, that wasn't a nice thing---telling people you got here because of infected bats and dogs.   What did those animals ever do to you?

But you certainly had an active first year.  Taking down whole countries like Italy and England.  And thanks to some tourist, you were also able to hop into some luggage and make the trip all across the big ocean and visit America.

You certainly made your presence known, especially with some of our senior citizens.   If you didn't like them, you could have simply avoided them.  You didn't have to go through the trouble of killing them.  But that's what a learning curve is all about.   I mean, if you wanted to make yourself known among people over the age of 75, you could have asked us for a list of possible candidates to visit.  We were really hoping you would go make a call on folks like Nancy Pelosi and Maxine Waters.   

But you didn't think ahead.  Maybe some of those variant brothers and sisters of yours can take care of the ones you should have visited and missed.  You clearly had your eye on some other mayhem.  Like closing restaurants and theaters and stores and economies.   You showed up and lots of people lost their jobs.   And kids had to go to school on-line.   By the way, a bunch of us figure you bought shares in ZOOM ahead of time.   Come on, you little rascal.  You did, didn't you?

And while we're at it, I bet you have some friends at Amazon because that's really the only business that benefited from your trip around the world.  Yep, you had an amazing first year.

Usually, viruses like you don't last longer than three or four years.   But, some enterprising drug companies apparently really don't like you because they've already invented some vaccines to make sure we don't have to send you a second birthday card.

Enjoy your celebration.  For now.

Dinner last night:  Salad.


Thursday, March 11, 2021

Morons of the Month - March 2021

 

Just when does the lunacy stop?

You may have read about it.   Hasbro Toys announced that they have been pressed to make their famous character of almost 70 years, "gender free."  Yep, no more Mr. Potato Head.   No more Mrs. Potato Head.   And without the two of them, I guess there will be more tater tots.

If I were you, I would throw out these toys immediately.   And while you're at it, toss the Toy Story DVDs in the garbage as well.

It's all around us and not stopping.  Democracy being shaped and formed to match up with special interest groups.

Now, on social media, you list your name with parentheses after it.

He/him.  She/her/them.  They/It.

Who dreams up this shit?

Now if you want to watch movies like "Gone With The Wind" or "Blazing Saddles," you have to sit through a disclaimer with some vomit-spewing Ivy League professor explaining that the images presented are not real.  

Turner Classic Movies is doing the same thing with their host intros.  I was watching a 1940s war movie "Destination Tokyo" which followed an introduction telling me to ignore the racial slurs thrown at Japan in that movie.   Um, just who did bomb Pearl Harbor?  Snoopy and the Red Baron?

You can no longer see the trademark of Aunt Jemina's maple syrup.   You must cringe when you open a box of short bread.  And why are we still identifying M and Ms by their colors?

A few weeks ago, I heard that the word "picnic" was offensive to Latinos.  Huh?  

An even bigger concern.  The top dogs at groups like Black Lives Matters are blackmailing (oops, that word is going to be changed soon, I bet) major corporations.   Even those that initiated diversity programs decades ago.   Er, that's not enough.  We want a check and there better be six zeros.

Is this mike on?

We are policed every second of our lives as "leaders" work under the assumption that we are too stupid to know what is right and what is wrong?

Sorry, I was raised right.  I know the difference.   The sad thing is that future generations won't.

Sure, all these people are morons.   But we all let it happen on our watches and with our votes.   

Stupid is as stupid does.

Dinner last night: Had a big lunch so nothing really. 


Wednesday, March 10, 2021

This Date in History - March 10

 

Happy birthday to Carrie Underwood.  She's the biggest thing to come out of that awful American Idol franchise.

947:  THE LATER HAN IS FOUNDED BY LIU ZHIYUAN.  HE DECLARES HIMSELF EMPEROR.

Better Later than Never.

1629:  CHARLES I DISSOLVES THE PARLIAMENT OF ENGLAND, BEGINNING THE ELEVEN YEAR PERIOD KNOWN AS THE PERSONAL RULE.

When you want something done right...

1814:  EMPEROR NAPOLEON I IS DEFEATED AT THE BATTLE OF LAON.

Shrimp.

1876:  THE FIRST SUCCESSFUL TEST OF A TELEPHONE IS MADE BY ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL.

Please stand by.   Your call is important to me.

1888:  ACTOR BARRY FITZGERALD IS BORN.

Going his way?

1891:  ALMON STROWGER PATENTS THE STROWGER SWITCH, A DEVICE WHICH LED TO THE AUTOMATION OF TELEPHONE CIRCUIT SWITCHING.

Almon's joy.

1913:  ACTIVIST HARRIET TUBMAN DIES.

Soon to be on your 20 dollar bill.

1922:  MAHATMA GANDHI IS ARRESTED IN INDIA, TRIED FOR SEDITION, AND SENTENCED TO SIX YEARS, ONLY TO BE RELEASED AFTER NEARLY TWO YEARS FOR AN APPENDICITIS OPERATION.

Yeah, sure.  Show us the appendix.

1928:  ASSASSIN JAMES EARL RAY IS BORN.

Hey, wait till you see what happens on his birthday later on.

1933:  THE LONG BEACH EARTHQUAKE IMPACTS LOS ANGELES, LEAVING AROUND 108 PEOPLE DEAD.

And millions of other people awfully nervous.

1945:  THE US AIR FORCE FIREBOMBS TOKYO, KILLING MORE THAN 100,000 PEOPLE, MOSTLY CIVILIANS.

And also mostly Japanese.

1957:  TERRORIST OSAMA BIN LADEN IS BORN.

Still unsure why it took so long to get him.   I mean, he was on dialysis.   Find the one extension cord in Afghanistan.

1958:  ACTRESS SHARON STONE IS BORN.

In her honor, no women should wear underwear today.

1959:  FEARING AN ABDUCTION ATTEMPT BY CHINA, THOUSANDS OF TIBETANS SURROUND THE DALAI LAMA'S PALACE TO PREVENT HIS REMOVAL.

Later to be tried in the US Capitol Building circa January 2021.

1969:  JAMES EARL RAY PLEADS GUILTY TO ASSASSINATING MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.  HE LATER UNSUCCESSFULLY ATTEMPTS TO RECANT.

We're going with your first thought.  Oh, and happy birthday.

1970:  CAPTAIN ERNEST MEDINA IS CHARGED BY THE US MILITARY WITH MY LAI WAR CRIMES.

This seems like yesterday.  Except it wasn't.

1977:  ASTRONOMERS DISCOVER THE RINGS OF URANUS.

Leave my anus alone.

1983:  COUNTRY SINGER CARRIE UNDERWOOD IS BORN.

That stupid show actually discovered one of the biggest country stars ever.

1986:  ACTOR RAY MILLAND DIES.

Your lost weekend just got longer.

1988:  SINGER ANDY GIBB DIES.

He died so young, but he dated Victoria Principal, so life didn't suck completely.

1998:  ACTOR LLOYD BRIDGES DIES.

He picked the wrong day to stop living.

2019:  A BOEING 737 MAX CRASHES IN ETHIOPIA, LEADING TO ALL 737 MAX AIRCRAFT BEING GROUNDED WORLDWIDE.

See Agent.

Dinner last night:   Grilled Taylor Ham and egg on pretzel bread.