Category Archives: Uncategorized

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Cover to “Terminal City” Library Edition, Mark Chiarello, 2016

Penguin Random House.

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“View of Lower Town,” Bohumil Jaroš

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Throwback Thursday: “Fletch” (1985) and “Fletch Lives” (1989)!

God, I loved these movies back in the day.  It’s silly, but they were one of the things that made me want to become a news reporter when I was a kid.  I actually saw the second movie first, in the theater — and then found the first movie on VHS at my local mom-and-pop video store.

I’ve heard good things about the reboot with Jon Hamm, though I haven’t seen it yet.  I’ve also never read the original novels by Gregory McDonald, and I feel like I ought to remedy that.



Tuna fish Luddite here.

And in the endless clownish ignominy that defines my mid-life, I now realize I cannot work a handheld can opener.

WTF, is it wireless?

Why is there a button? Why is there a button?



Variant cover to “Future State: Gotham” #11, Simone Di Meo, 2022

DC Comics.

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(Because puns are *MY* superpower.)

You can DO this, Scott Lang.

You’re ANT-Man, not Can’t-Man.



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Promotional poster for Depeche Mode’s “Enjoy the Silence” (1990)

Mute Records.

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Throwback Thursday: The Roosevelt Island Tramway in the early 1980’s!

I found a couple of videos online the depict The Roosevelt Island Tramway around 1980.  (The picture below of the tram arriving in Manhattan dates from 2006, as I couldn’t find any vintage public domain photos.)

The first video I am linking to here was posted by Richard Cortell; he completed it as a long ago student project for The New York Institute of Technology.  Parts of the video are quite dark, but it’s still a terrific glimpse in New York City’s past.

The second video is also Cortell’s; this one is dated 1980.  It focuses more on life on Roosevelt Island — the tram is seen only at the beginning and end.

I’ve never been on the tram — or to Roosevelt Island.  But just seeing it brings back memories of my early childhood.  My Dad used to occasionally take me on trips to New York City, and I remember seeing it depart from 60th Street and Second Avenue in Manhattan.  I was pretty damned awed by it.

But I didn’t ask to ride on it.  My Dad took me to all sorts of places in NYC that were fun for a kid, but the sight of that hanging tram car made me pretty apprehensive.  Hell, I’m not sure I’d want to ride it as an adult.  (There was a malfunction in 2006 that left 80 people trapped up there for around 90 minutes.)

I didn’t know it at the time, but the tram would have actually been relatively new at the time that I saw it (and at about the same time Cortell filmed his videos).  It opened in July of 1976.

Postscript — there is actually a shot of the tram in that old “Million Dollar Movie” intro that everyone loves.  It’s right at the start, five seconds in.



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Photo credit: Kris Arnold from New York, USA, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0&gt;, via Wikimedia Commons

“Mountain Range with Moon,” Caspar David Friedrich

Oil on canvas.

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