Caliboy in Brooklyn
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
UCLA vs. Oregon
Thursday, December 4, 2025
More Irony Found Deep in America's Family Tree
I found another track in American history that seems as unlikely as it seems a necessary part of our nation's identity.
It all started with a conversation with Corrie about an activist she'd heard about. His name was Walter Francis White. He was a Black American, but had very light skin, blond hair and blue eyes. He passed for a white man in most places, but was raised by his Black parents---his mother, though, was very fair skinned with light eyes. He used this ability while younger to do research on lynchings, as police and witnesses would never hesitate tho tell him the details.
Eventually he was found out, and after being run out of town with his life intact, he parlayed his leadership skills into helping run the NAACP and working with both FDR and Harry Truman.
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Slater Barron Across the Street
Wow. We were passing by the Art Exchange, or whatever they call it today, a gallery across Elm from us, and a large painting inside caught my attention:
Tuesday, December 2, 2025
Thanksgiving in Solvang Once Again
Last year was possibly the first part of a tradition? Possibly?
Anyway, we made the trip to Solvang to celebrate Thanksgiving once again with my Auntie Anne and Uncle Val. Once again I made turkey and broccoli and greens and buttermilk pie. Once again we watched football and movies at unseemly decibel levels, and once again Uncle Val showed Cass a few pointers and then let him run amok on a video game, this time the FPS Battlefield 6. Cass may prove to be a natural.
Events with the Boy
Corrie suggested that Cass and I do this thing together, and I thought it would be a fun time and was a great idea, so I got the tickets and we decided to have a date night, just Cass and me:
- His two kids love Home Alone, but neither know that he was Kevin McCalister; but, his oldest was looking a family photo from the early '90s and said, "Hey, that little boy looks like Kevin."
- Macaulay still seems to have beef---or rough feelings---about Jon Lovitz and gladly talked what seemed like legitimate shit about him at this sit-down.
- To dispel the rumors that Joe Pesci bit his finger during the shoot---when they have him stuck up on the door and Pesci's Harry is ready to bite his fingers off---Macaulay spilled the beans: Pesci did NOT bite him during the take, he bit him during rehearsal, and Big Mac still has scars/marks from it.
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
Life Day Celebration at Gardena Cinema
Last time it was for the Temple of Doom.
That was two years ago, back in November of '23. This year the invite was for an endurance double feature, our boy Mike, the erstwhile comic shop owner, current comic-book writer, comic book writing professor, and drug counselor, having the itch to return to his friend's family movie theater.
In 2023, it was Mike's favorite movie, Indian Jones and the Temple of Doom. Last year he had festivities at a different location. This year, the party was a few days after the proper birthday, and the first film of the double feature was "A Disturbance in the Force." This is a very entertaining documentary about the infamous "Star Wars: Holiday Special."
I learned so much. I picked up a bootleg of the Holiday Special at a comic convention back in 2012 as a gift for my brother. I watched as I drank gin, and, if you read the link above about that bootleg, you'll see all the cliches about trashing that program. Had I seen the documentary, I would have said different things.
Not to spoil ALL the conclusions from the documentary, but: back in 1977, when the movie became the biggest things EVER (it seemed), studios had very low opinions about audiences and, therefore, had the characters and costumes and masks in all sorts of shows that are, eh, regrettable by how serious the universe is taken today. Some were laughable (Donnie and Marie), some cringy (all of them, but Lawrence Welk!), and some made sense (Richard Pryor and the costumes of Mos Eisley).
Anyway, two groups---George Lucas and the filmmakers team vs the variety show team---began work on the project. Lucas was there for one day, for a total of 12 hours, and they were, by all accounts, very productive and inspiring. It didn;t take very long before all of the filmmaking side were gone, and the variety show people were the only ones left.
In the end, the length of the special went from an hour (so, about 46-47 minutes of content), to an hour and a half, to two hours. Yikes! Harvey Korman plays 3(!) separate characters! Bea Arthur sings a song! Art Carney saved the production when he was sober!
So, after this funny and engaging documentary, we sat and watched the Holiday Special, having the knowledge of what was happening and who was making the scenes and the feelings of most people who worked on it...and it wasn't terrible!
Okay...it's kinda terrible. But it isn't as incomprehensible as I remember. It follows a structure that makes a level of sense, and isn't so wrong as to wreck the sacred canon. It's not...good, but it's certainly not as bad as my post about the bootleg makes it sound. And seeing it on the big screen was a treat.














