2000 Archives

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In the past few years, we’ve seen collections of popular serial media collected all in one place at one time — and it is a treasure trove for the consumer (fan).

For example, I bought a multi-CD-Rom set of every MAD magazine published from the very first issue up to about the year 2000.  It not only included all the pages from the magazines, but all the extras that came in those mags over the years — sound files from the flexi records and other great stuff.

I also bought the collection of the entire history of National Lampoon.

In both cases, I bought or subscribed to these magazines at one time, and of course I read them.  However, the originals are long gone.

I’m not a collector.  I don’t care if I have the physical specimen in mint condition.  I’m just that kid who enjoyed funny magazines — all growed up — and I’m able to look at, cross rerference and enjoy them all in so many ways.

Movies are also terrific — all the sequals and originals (Godfather, Star Wars, whatever) and TV series are great to watch a whole season at one time.  I’m several years behind on some of them, but I’m catching up (now on season 3 of “House, MD” and just starting “Weeds.”)

As I often tell my wife, “Ain’t it wonderful to live in the future?”

Wade

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The CAGED system is a handy way of helping you to get to know the guitar and guitar music. Many guitarists have found this way of seeing the notes and chords an easy way to begin to understand guitar music and improvisation. The CAGED system is not for raw beginners. You need to know the location on the fretboard of the root notes of the chords C A G E and D.

Here is a video explaining the simplicity of using the CAGED system:

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Here’s a fun blog — thanks to Joyville.

Someone seems to think Stan Lee gets a little over the top sometimes.  Especially during his (drug assisted?) era 1965-67.

I always thought the Submariner talked like a wannabe Shakespearan ham, but here are some scans of covers and some snarky commentary on Stan’s writing prowess.

Read it and … uh … grin.

WADE

Joyville —

This is the craziest blog related to comics I hit myself against lately.
You know Stan? I’m sure you do! No man can serve two masters: Lee… Stan Lee, The Pretentious. Tittle in comics were never the same after his break in the world. Lo and behold the result, hosted by two of the nicest people you can find in the blogosphere: …LO! And they shall call him… STAN…?

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Although I’ve played the guitar for more than 40 years now, I’m always trying to learn new things to make it fresh and exciting.

I only stumbled upon the CAGED system about a year ago — although I may have heard of it in passing.

It fit in with some other things I was doing and I had enough music theory to make sense of it.

There are a lot of good resources on the ‘net for CAGED, so if you want to follow up, just use your favorite search engine.

Here’s the 2nd part of the intro I started yesterday.

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Victorian illustration of man in a bathtubSo, you like comic strips? You like ’em retro? You like Steam Punk. You like absurd and just plain crazy?

I stumbled across Wondermark, by David Malki, a stupendous effort of gas-lamp era weirdness with a suspicious trace of LSD. The art is impeccable — perhaps scanned etchings of Victorian England, and the sense of humor works on so many levels.

“The Revolution Will Not Be Telegraphed!”

All very proper and tidy, y’know.

Check it out and be prepared to spend a little time there.

WADE

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I learned to play guitar to accompany myself while singing.

It took me a while to work up proficiency to play in any key, but some songs sound better in one key than another.  An “E” chord has a distinctive sound and a “G” chord has a different sound.  If you like the key of E but sing in the key of G — what will you do?

Well, there is this little gizmo called a capo (KAY-poe) that adjusts the guitar strings so that you can play with your fingers on familiar chords, but be in a whole different key.

It also works great if you are jamming and the other folks play a song you know in a key different than what you’ve practiced.

Details and pictures after the jump —

Read more on Play Guitar In YOUR Singing Key…

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I’m always taking notes — when I read a book, talk on the phone — or I often record a workshope or seminar and pay to have it transcribed.

I find it keeps things in my mind more firmly — almost memorized — and I can refer back to my notes on computer with the SEARCH function to find whatever I’m trying to look up.

That’s why I’m so pumped up about this Note-Taking Nerd. He’s a marketing wonk and he is interested in the same people I am — Dan Kenned, Frank Kern, Gary Halbert and that gang.  He’s got lots of his notes on his web site and is very generous about sending things out to subscribers of his blog.

Oh, yeah, he also posts videos.

Check out the Nerd — and you may become a nerd yourself.

WADE

 

 


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Couple cutting turkey with a saw

Windsor McKay's Thanksgiving

I have spent hours browsing throught the oldies-but-goodies comic strips at Barnacle Press.

They have an awesome collection of newspaper comics from the past hundred years or more, and are always adding more.

Some of them are obscure and you’ll delight in discovering them.  Others are familiar — some still printing today — and you’ll be amazed at how long they’ve been around.

I warn you — if you go there, you may not get anything else done the rest of the day.

WADE

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The Caged Guitar Forum is now up and running.

So if you are interested in commenting or questions about the system (Featured in this very blog with a couple of introductory videos this past week) go register — for free — and check it out.

It’s something I wish I’d known about at least 20 years ago … but now I am getting more and more excited the more I explore it.

Wade

Basics Of CAGED Guitar System

Basics Of CAGED Guitar System

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… Interesting —

Estelle and I lived in Palm Springs for a few years, and knew of Jane Russell as one of “The Ladies Who Lunch” — a bunch of Golden-Age stars who got together for coffee, cards, prayer circles and whatever.  They included Lucille Ball, Dinah Shore, Loretta Young, Alice Faye and Jane.  We weren’t really interested in what politics they followed — we just enjoyed their contributions to entertainment.

Jane Russell in The Oxbow Incident

Jane Russell in The Oxbow Incident

Things you usually don’t think about. Doesn’t make me enjoy her work any the less, though.

Throughout her career, Russell was a staunch conservative who considered Democrats in Hollywood “crazy.”

“In my day Hollywood was Republican,” she once said. “All the heads of the studios were Republicans, and we were fighting Communism. You had John Wayne and Charlton Heston and myself and Bob Mitchum, and President Ronald Reagan came right out of that same group.”

She was a vocal supporter of the Iraq war from its start in 2003, a vocal opponent of abortion, even in cases of rape or incest, a tireless fighter to “get the Bible back in schools.” She despised the Clinton administration and was a fan of former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and conservative commentator Ann Coulter.

And in 2003, she described herself as “a teetotal, mean-spirited, right-wing, narrow-minded, conservative Christian bigot,” variations of which she frequently used.

WADE

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