Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Author: admin (Page 199 of 220)

Leave it to Bieber

Oooooo…that evil little smirk, the shifty eyes peering out from the 1960’s moptop (no kidding that’s the way the haircut was described back then…). It was hearthrob Justin Bieber playing a unibomber on CSI: Las Vegas. Remember hearthrobs?

I think Michael Jackson was one once, before Wacko Jacko. Who remembers David Cassidy? Will Justin Bieber be remembered in twenty years? It doesn’t seem like it now, but twenty years is almost forever. I remember “the Beave.” Don’t know much about “the Biebe.”

Dancing with the Stars (a show I never thought would be successful – proving my lack of TV skills!) is featuring Michael Bolton, a posterboy of the fickle fan movement. Once, his raspy, heartfelt singing made the songwriter a star. One night, he stepped out onstage and discovered he had gone from singer to zinger – the butt of jokes nationwide, alongside Barry “I write the songs” Manilow.

Same thing happened to a guy named Eddie Fisher. He had his own TV variety show, recorded hit records, and was in a couple of movies. He married several famous movie stars. Oh yeah, his daughter, Carrie, played Princess Leia in the Star Wars movies.

Eddie Fisher died yesterday, wheelchair bound, at age 82. He suffered the same Bolton, Manilow, Cassidy fate: fab-famous one day, late-night show joke the next. He tried a couple of comebacks, but the public voted him off his own concerts. No one showed. There will probably be a mention on the evening news, and most will think “Who?” You know, Princess Leia’s dad.

I’m working on the “opposite of” theory. I figure if the big stars can just drop off the map, then maybe one day I’ll wake up and find the tide has turned and my “famous time” will have arrived!

Too late now, for the moptop.

And what did Justin Bieber have for lunch? Now, you can know that, too!

Is Your Name Famous?

Techno-trash

No, it isn’t a new German electronic music-fusion. It is the output of the sinister new time-waster. Anyone tending a blog that offers the readers an opportunity to leave a written comment will find droppings such as this one, waiting in the electronic mailbox:

I can imagine hard do the job it has to happen to be necessary to study with this write-up. Just about all what i can tell is definitely preserve submitting these kinds of posting of course you like that.

This one is actually a little more coherent than others.

I love the names of the supposed comment-leavers, people like Dorothy Spoodlepuppy and Lorian Gagglesnacket. I’m thinking I should keep them on file and work them in to a Charles Dickens type novel.

“I can imagine hard do the job,” said Dorothy Spoodlepuppy, sighing as she tapped at the keyboard. “It has to happen to be necessary to study with this write up.”

“Right on,” answered Lorian, the cheerful son of Mrs. Gagglesnacket.

Each morning I spend a little time taking out the electronic trash. It’s the equivalent of garbage disposal. I push the delete key and – whirrwhisk! – the stuff is gone, probably reduced to microscopic electronic shavings that will one day clutter the bottom of my laptop.

I Googled (I am a language purist, but I have embraced the addition of this verb) blog-spamming and found that it is apparently an attempt to draw the attention of search engines (such as Google) to have a website ranked higher in search results.

Extra traffic to the website would be a good thing. Maybe I need to change my name to Aloysius Babblebum and dive into the blog-commenting.

Discover your inner Dickens with a book of names (shameless self-promotion):

Is your Name Famous?

Ch-ch-ch-Changes…

I scare people. Don’t mean to.

I’ve dropped by some independent bookstores, where the owner or clerk is sitting behind a tall stack of books, peering all glowy-faced into the screen of a computer. I’m in and out before a word is ever spoken.

Me? I call out Good Morning! and people grab their throats and exclaim “You surprised me! I didn’t see you there!” Admittedly, I was behind the counter – but I thought that is where clerks are supposed to be.

I sometimes don’t get all my work done, getting caught up in talking to one person or another. Talk about anything, just about. More and more though, I hear people bemoaning the way the world has become. They’re missing the simpler times and places. I’m not giving up the computer, but I understanding their position.

Imagine the changes seen by Walter Breuning, who was born on Sept. 21, 1896, in Melrose, Minnesota, and moved to Montana in 1918, where he worked as a clerk for the Great Northern Railway for 50 years. Even today, it must be like stepping back in time in some parts of Montana. Walter celebrated his 114th birthday yesterday.

He remembers living out there with no running water and no electricity. Just like I did in Joplin, Missouri, where I’d landed my first out-of-state radio job, but quickly had my utilities disconnected for lack of payment. As Walter said yesterday, “That’s not very pleasant.”

Walter was there before cars. Before many US cities. Before Mountain Dew and Hostess Twinkies. Talk about roughing it. He regrets the railway jobs that were lost when computers were installed, but other than that, Walter admits change is good. And even the change in his pocket is different. After all, he had pockets before Lincoln was on the penny.

Just remember – when it gets to the point where you’d don’t like change, you can always change your mind.

When it seems overwhelming, you can change that, too! Try this:

IS YOUR NAME FAMOUS?

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