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September 3, 2024
1994 Outer Limts CD 2014 Outer Limits 3 CD
  • On the left, the 1993 'Outer Limits' first season soundtrack offering; which, although rather unsatisfactory, was all we had. Or so I thought -‌- turns out a complete 3-CD set was released in 2014, which now commands prices of hundreds of dollars on eBay. But someone with the handle spetragl has posted soundtracks from those early episodes to YouTube, with all the missing tunes & cues and detailed track listings. Two of these labeled and indexed soundtracks: The Architects of Fear and The Human Factor.

  • Harvey Pekar at Wall of Celebrities.com.



August 31, 2024
cats using laptops in cubicles
I follow Kimono Mono on Facebook; she posted this sample of a crazy new fabric she found in Japan. Click to expand.
  • Tapedeck.org has many photos of cassette tapes but the motivation for putting their collection online seems to be selling you Tapewear: a T-Shirt with a cassette image, no thanks. My favorites were the TDK metal-bodied, which can be found here although the interface doesn't allow for display of a single entry, so no link.

  • In the Washington Post, a multi-media travel diary: Seeing America by train, What it's really like to travel cross-country by rail, by Christine Mi. Intriguing, but having taken Amtrak to Reno, you go ahead -‌- sitting motionless for long periods with a view of traffic whizzing by on the adjacent freeway is infuriating.
    (gift link)

  • Mental Floss: Why Do People Call Rock-Paper-Scissors "Roshambo"? Dunno about people, the only person I know who calls it that is my brother; all my Japanese buddies call it Janken. (And that other term is too close to the tasty Chinese 'hamburger' I first had in Xi'an called Roujiamo.)

  • In the BBC, Japan was the future but it's stuck in the past.



August 26, 2024
the Beishan Broadcast Wall, built in 1967, a three-story concrete structure with 48 loudspeakers built into it.



August 25, 2024



August 19, 2024



August 15, 2024
October 1972 National Lampoon



August 10, 2024
two frames from Punk Rock & Trailer Parks
from Punk Rock & Trailer Parks (2010)
  • Derf. Back in the day I'd read his strip, The City, in the weekly counter-cultural rags; now catching up on his graphic novels, 'My Friend Dahmer' and 'Punk Rock & Trailer Parks.' Note that for an alter-ego Facebook profile, I use a photo of Junior Samples.

  • In Slate, Some Questions About the Olympics. Many, actually. My only Olympic interests are the Opening Ceremony (which sucked in Paris, IMHO) and any political aspects, like when DPRK and South Korean athletes march in together.

  • The Internet Archive has a video which shows some of the differences between the US and Australian broadcasts of the 2024 Opening Ceremony.

  • From NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, 133 Days on the Sun, compressed into an hour with music by Lars Leonhard.



August 7, 2024

A challenge I responded to on Mastodon, 20 books that have had an impact on who you are. One book a day for 20 days. No explanations, no reviews, just book covers and I consolidated all of mine into this, click for bigger.



August 6, 2024



August 4, 2024



July 31, 2024
several kids and luggage in back seats with sunset view through the windows: 'In the past...we could all cram into a station wagon like so much baggage'
from Mexikid, by Pedro Martín



July 28, 2024



July 24, 2024



July 23, 2024
      Confederate Flag Proposal by Samuel White   Confederate Flag Proposal by Mrs EG Carpenter
  • Extensive Wikipedia page, Flags of the Confederate States of America. Scroll way down for two dozen proposals, followed by another dozen variants -‌- some wild red-white&blue stuff there. A couple examples, above; Samuel White's on the left, and EG Carpenter's hideous -‌- what's with the extra blue star at the lower right? And a prize for the most boring, not shown here: that blue circle on a red field, one of the three finalists!?

  • About the Okinawa Confederate Flag flying over Shuri Castle in May, 1945. More, in a 2015 essay by Greg Grandin: How Endless War Helps Old Dixie Stay New (which I've noticed reprinted elsewhere under the title, What Was the Confederate Flag Doing in Cuba, Vietnam, and Iraq?)



July 18, 2024



July 15, 2024
Just a couple long-form documentary YouTubes, for today:



July 12, 2024 1956 San Francisco Chinatown postcard
1956 postcard found during my first solo San Francisco adventure, in 1976, the image familiar as it was a whole page in the souvenir booklet my father brought back from an early 1960s business trip to the Bay Area. So influential, that book to me, with its postcard views of California redwoods, Fishermans Wharf, Lombard Street, cable cars and the Golden Gate Bridge.



July 4, 2024



July 1, 2024
  • Video: mid90s Futurliner photo the General Motors Parade of Progress, with the greatest innovation in tent-making since the days of Omar! I spotted one of the original Futurliners parked on a side street off Ventura Blvd in the San Fernando Valley thirty years ago, been curious ever since. Seen a few articles about restoring the vehicles but this is the first film I've ever seen of the Parade. More about them, another YouTube: the History Of The Ultra-Rare 1930s 'Truck' That Sold For 4 Million.

  • I would see the Cruisin' series of oldies samplers while flipping through the vinyl in the old days, but never actually heard one until this week. Strictly for fans of old radio, now, as the DJs step on most of the tracks. Once again, the Archive provides, if you're curious -‌- all in the series available here, cued to 1969, the year featuring my local, WPGC (which has its own extensive tribute site).



June 30, 2024



June 28, 2024 Detail of Roman standards from Camillus and the Schoolmaster of Falerii by Nicolas Poussin
Detail of Roman standards from Camillus and the Schoolmaster of Falerii by Nicolas Poussin, early 17th century.



June 20, 2024



June 14, 2024
  • Solent Forts for sale, going to auction in a few days. What kind of? Wikipedia: The Solent is a strait between the Isle of Wight and mainland Great Britain; the major historic ports of Southampton and Portsmouth lie inland of its shores. These are refurbished Palmerston Forts, originally built during Victorian times around the coasts of the UK and Ireland. More like artificial islands, and not to be confused with the Maunsell Forts built in the Thames and Mersey estuaries during the War, which were more like deep-sea oil rigs. The latter were home to unauthorized radio stations in the 1960s, as Thomas Dolby sang about and as seen in "The Not-So-Jolly Roger", one of the best and final episodes of Patrick McGoohan's 'Danger Man' (available in that show's 3rd season in the Internet Archive). The Principality of Sealand is also on a Maunsell Fort.

  • MotorTrend: What the Duck Is Jeep Ducking?

  • Two from Hagerty, the classic car insurance company which publishes a glossy magazine. Why Goodyear's bright idea for illuminated tires didn't shine for long. The one car that has them is the Golden Sahara.

  • More collectibles: Eater provides A Brief History of Restaurant Matches. Phillumeny: the hobby of collecting matchboxes & matchbooks.



June 8, 2024
Pachka Cigarettes Just one of the multitudes in ZIGSAM -‌- the Austrian Cigarette Collection, a major time-suck.



June 6, 2024
4x4 Van Gogh matrix Early example of a Photoshop exercise: van Gogh Nights



June 5, 2024




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