Shot:
Chaser:
Tom Verlaine, musician.
In 1972, inspired by the New York Dolls, they started a band called the Neon Boys. Mr. Verlaine bought an electric Fender Jazzmaster guitar for himself and picked out a $50 bass for Mr. Hell; their friend Billy Ficca joined them on drums.
In 1973 they added Richard Lloyd, a guitarist, and renamed themselves Television. They chose the name because they had a distaste for the medium and hoped to provide an alternative. Mr. Verlaine also enjoyed the resonance with his initials, T.V.
After seeing a performance by Television in 1974, David Bowie called the group “the most original band I’ve seen in New York.” However, Mr. Hell’s emotive, chaotic outlook on music clashed with Mr. Verlaine’s more controlled approach. Mr. Hell was replaced by Fred Smith in 1975 and later went on to form the punk band Richard Hell and the Voidoids.
Television signed with Elektra Records and in 1977 released its first album, “Marquee Moon,” which featured hypnotic guitar work that ranged from mournful to ecstatic.
…
Television is one of those seminal ’70s bands…that I just never got into.
Lisa Loring. Other credits include “As the World Turns” and “Barnaby Jones”.
Barrett Strong, Motown singer and songwriter.
Annie Wersching, actress. She was only 45: cancer got her.
Hattip on the previous two to Lawrence, who also sent over this article that’s not quite an obit, but as he put it, “is the sort of thing you like to link to”. Which is true.
Breaking: Bobby Hull, hockey player. I’m going to go ahead and link to the NYT directly, since this is just a preliminary obit: if I end up doing an obit watch tomorrow, I’ll link to an archive version of the full obit.
(This is a guest post from FotB RoadRich, speaking in his capacity as a private citizen, and not representing any organization or group. -DB)
In this article that I found after following links from the Michigan helicopter one, it is revealed that the old man who shot up two California farms had mental problems. But of course the problem is the guns.
Set aside the fact he tried to kill his roommate with a pillow.
It’s not mental illness, it’s the guns.
Oh, and later threatened the same roommate with a knife.
It’s the guns.
And also made a thinly veiled threat to bring his vengeance to work.
Can’t be mental illness.
Must be something we can take away from people so they can’t defend themselves when one of these lunatics snaps. So that we look like we’re doing something.
I know, we will just fight back with some paper laws and voluntary-only social programs.
Because people with mental illness will naturally sign up for those on their own, they know they need help.
I hadn’t been buying anything for a while, because I was in the “no purchasing anything for yourself” holiday period.
But we went out for a bit over the MLK weekend, and I ran across some things at Half-Price Books. After the jump, some previously undocumented purchases…
Lawrence sent over a link to this item that’s currently up for auction at Heritage Auctions.
Sometime between 1970 and 1972, Ernest Tidyman, who was riding high on the success of “Shaft”, thought it’d be a cool idea to do a “Shaft” newspaper comic strip. So he got together with Don Rico, who was an old-time Marvel Comics guy. Rico did a lot of work for Marvel’s precursors (Timely Comics and Atlas Comics) during the 1940s and 1950s, and is credited as a co-creator of Natasha “Black Widow” Romanova.
The comic strip never sold, unfortunately. Which is a shame, as I think I would have read the heck out of a “Shaft” newspaper comic when I was a small boy. It almost certainly would have been more interesting than “The Amazing Glacial Spider-Man”.
And think of the crossover opportunities with other strips! Mary Worth suspects one of her neighbors is selling smack, so she calls her old friend John Shaft to investigate. Shaft goes back to Africa…and teams up with The Phantom.
To give you some idea of the way my mind works, I had a terrific idea last night. Casca, the Eternal Mercenary, winds up in Harlem in the 1970s…and teams up with Shaft to fight crime. Sadly, this idea is probably infeasible for intellectual property reasons, but if the current authors of the Casca series want to take a run at it, they have my blessing.
Wally Campo, actor.
Other credits include “Shock Corridor”, “Ski Troop Attack”, and “Hell Squad”.
Sylvia Syms, British actress.
Other credits include “Doctor Who”, “Dalziel and Pascoe”, “The Poseidon Adventure” (the TV movie), “Doctor Zhivago” (the TV series), and “EastEnders”.
This is another rabbit hole that I attribute to McThag: the Casca book series.
I remember the Casca books from when I was a teenager: I never bought any, but I remember seeing them around.
I actually saw a bunch of them (if memory serves, it was eight or nine out of the first dozen) at Half-Price Books a month or so ago. I thought about buying them, but there were a little expensive, and this was during the “not buying anything for myself” time period.
Things I did not know until I read McThag’s post and looked up the books:
I may have to go back to Half-Price and see if they still have those Casca books.
Paul La Farge, author. He wasn’t someone I’d heard of before, but he sounds interesting:
Mr. La Farge’s novels and short stories defied easy categorization, but they were all characterized by a sort of writer’s derring-do.
“With each novel he would set out, and then it would become clear to him that he had set what seemed like an impossible formal challenge for himself,” Ms. Stern, the artistic director of the Vineyard Theater in Manhattan, said by email, “but he would keep on, wrestling forward and sideways and backwards, and eventually the story and its form would be inextricable in a way that was awe-inspiring and yet felt inevitable.”
…
Mr. La Farge began “Haussmann: Or the Distinction” (2001) by presenting it as a translation of an unearthed French text from 1922. The novel goes on to tell a made-up tale about the real-life French official Georges-Eugène Haussmann, who oversaw the redesign of Paris in the 1800s.“The Facts of Winter” (2005) was another exercise in fiction-as-reality. Mr. La Farge presented it as his translation of a minor French poet, Paul Poissel, whom he had invented out of whole cloth.
…
“Luminous Airplanes” (2011), about a San Francisco programmer who returns to upstate New York to sort through his dead grandfather’s possessions, is perhaps the most realistic of Mr. La Farge’s novels, but it had its own unexpected element: Readers were invited to go to a website where Mr. La Farge posted elaborations on and continuations of the story.
His most recent novel, “The Night Ocean” (2017), again takes a real historical figure — the writer H.P. Lovecraft — and weaves a story around him.
…
Lance Kerwin. Other credits include “FBI: The Unheard Music The Untold Stories”, “The Fourth Wise Man”, and “Young Joe, the Forgotten Kennedy”.
Victor S. Navasky, former editor and publisher of The Nation.
I haven’t forgotten about part two of Day of the .45. I do want to get that up. Unfortunately, the weather on Saturday was bad for photo taking, Sunday was entirely consumed by battleship, and the weather so far this week is also kind of hinky.
This weekend is looking less busy, so if the weather holds up and we get some sunlight, I may be able to take some photos and get a post up.
Also have some more books to post about as well, but that should be an easier process as it does not depend so much on good weather. Possibly Thursday?
And I also have not forgotten that I need to update the City Council/Commissioner’s Court/Congressional Representatives lists. That is, for sure, on the agenda, especially in light of recent events. As I think everyone knows, I try to wait until after January 20th to update those lists, as it takes time for people to get sworn in and websites to get updated. Updating those lists is also part of my evil master plan for this week.
Yoshio Yoda, actor.
He only has five acting credits in IMDB, but one of those was 163 episodes of “McHale’s Navy” as “Fuji Kobiaji”. He was also in two “McHale’s Navy” movies.
Betty Sturm, actress. “The World’s Greatest Sinner” is her only IMDB credit. (I have not seen “Sinner”, and I’m not aware of anyone ever screening it while I’ve lived in Austin. Apparently it is on Amazon Prime. I have seen “200 Motels”, and would have to think hard about repeating that experience. And I’m a Zappa fan.)