All posts by Eric Robert Nolan

Eric Robert Nolan graduated from Mary Washington College in 1994 with a Bachelor of Science in Psychology. He spent several years a news reporter and editorial writer for the Culpeper Star Exponent in Culpeper, Virginia. His work has also appeared on the front pages of numerous newspapers in Virginia, including The Free Lance – Star and The Daily Progress. Eric entered the field of philanthropy in 1996, as a grant writer for nonprofit healthcare organizations. Eric’s poetry has been featured by Dead Beats Literary Blog, Dagda Publishing, The International War Veterans’ Poetry Archive, and elsewhere. His poetry will also be published by Illumen Magazine in its Spring 2014 issue.

USAC Amateur Road National Championships in Roanoke, Virginia

June 17, 2023. Franklin Road.

If you look closely at the video — you can see that the winner is cheating. The guy in the lead is CLEARLY riding a motorcycle and not a bicycle.



“Sleeping Girl on a Wooden Bench,” Albert Anker

Oil on canvas.

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They shoulda called him “Wilford Grimly.”

Yeah, I challenge you to name ONE person who was actually persuaded to eat Quaker Oats because of those weird appeals by Wilford Brimley.  This was the weirdest ad campaign ever.

“It’s the right thing to do.”

Was it a f***ing moral dilemma?

Postscript: no disrespect to the actor himself; Brimley was a sublime thespian.  He was a key part of what is arguably the greatest science-fiction horror film of all time — John Carpenter’s 1982 masterpiece, “The Thing.”  (I was actually unaware until writing this that he passed away back in 2020. )  THAT AIN’T FUCHS.



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A short review of the series premiere of “The Walking Dead: Dead City” (2023).

I hate to say this, guys, but the first episode of “The Walking Dead: Dead City” (2023) doesn’t exactly leap off the screen as a a bold new narrative step for the franchise.  I need to damn it with faint praise — it was one of those forgettable outings that we kindly describe as “good but not great.”

Sure, it’s got some great things going for it.  The terrific Lauren Cohan and Jeffrey Dean Morgan are predictably charismatic and their characters remain interesting.  And the show’s biggest coup so far might be landing the priceless Željko Ivanek as its first big-bad.  (Željko Ivanek is a lot like the alien “Predator” — virtually any film or TV show is radically improved by his inclusion there.)

And its New York City setting is exciting.  I always thought that “The Walking Dead” (2010 – 2022) was more exciting when it took the action away from its ubiquitous pine forests and explored a place like Atlanta or Washington, D.C.

But “Dead City” isn’t high art.  Its inaugural episode is still weighted down with the same clunky storytelling and directing that costs its predecessor a lot of fans over the years.  (We even retread some character arcs and motivations that we thought were resolved on “The Walking Dead.”)

Oh, well — maybe it will improve!  How many tv shows have we all watched in which the first episode (or even the entire first season) paled in comparison to the show after found its footing?  I’ve still got my fingers crossed that this will turn into something to look forward to every week.



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Silent Hill, Roanoke.

Nothing to see here.  Just the Wells Fargo Tower in Roanoke, Virginia rising into a goddam otherworldly mist.

No photo filters.



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“La Nuit de Walpurgis,” Constantin Nepo, 1864

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Squirrel in Huff Lane Park.

Roanoke NW.

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“Bouquet of Flowers,” Odilon Redon

Pastel on paper.  Circa 1905?

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Training Day.

Northern edge of downtown in Roanoke, Virginia.

“Cityscape,” Franklin Booth

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