I got nuthin’.
Wow!
October 20th
Today is the birthday
… of William Christopher. M.A.S.H.‘s Father Francis Mulcahy is 77.
… of Hall-of-Fame pitcher Juan Marichal, 72.
The pride of both the Dominican Republic and the Giants, Juan Antonio Marichal Sánchez won 243 games and lost only 142 over 16 marvelous seasons. The high-kicking right-hander enjoyed six 20-win seasons, hurled a no-hitter in 1963 and was named to nine All-Star teams. The Dominican Dandy twice led the National League in complete games and shutouts, finishing 244 contests during his career, while fanning 2,303 and compiling a 2.89 ERA. After his playing days, Marichal became minister of sports in his homeland.
… of Tom Petty; the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee is 59.
In a sense, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers are America’s band. Durable, resourceful, hard-working, likeable and unpretentious, they rank among the most capable and classic rock bands of the last quarter century. They’ve mastered the idiom’s fundamentals and digested its history while stretching themselves creatively and contributing to rock’s legacy. Moreover they are, like such compatriots as Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, a people’s band, writing of everyday struggles and frustrations while offering redemption through tough-minded, big-hearted, tuneful songs.
… of Calvin Cordozar Broadus. Snoop Dogg is 38.
Actor Jerry Orbach was born on this date in 1935.
Hall-of-famer Mickey Mantle was born on this date in 1931 and died in 1995.
Mickey Mantle was a star from the start, parlaying a talent for the game and boyish good looks into iconic status. In spite of a series of devastating injuries, Mantle accumulated a long list of impressive accomplishments, finishing his 18-year career with 536 home runs and a .298 batting average. The switch-hitting Commerce Comet won three MVP Awards (1956, ’57, ’62) and a Triple Crown (1956). He contributed to 12 pennants and seven World Series titles in his first 14 seasons while establishing numerous World Series records, including most home runs (18).
Bela Lugosi was born on this date in 1882. The Romanian-born actor (part of Austria-Hungary then) was best known for playing Count Dracula in the 1931 film. Lugosi died in 1956.
4 cents an acre
On this date in 1803, the United States Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase Treaty by a vote of twenty-four to seven.
France had lost control of Louisiana to Spain at the end of the French and Indian War (1763). In the Treaty of San Ildefonso (1800), Spain ceded the territory back to France (along with six warships) in exchange for the creation of a kingdom in north-central Italy for the Queen of Spain’s brother. Napoleon promised never to sell or alienate the property. His promise was good for about 10 months.
The First Consul of the French Republic desiring to give to the United States a strong proof of his friendship doth hereby cede to the United States in the name of the French Republic for ever and in full Sovereignty the said territory with all its rights and appurtenances as fully and in the Same manner as they have been acquired by the French Republic in virtue of the above mentioned Treaty concluded with his Catholic Majesty [Spain].
The purchase included 828,000 square miles — all or parts of the modern states of Louisiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Wyoming and Montana.
With interest the total cost was $23.5 million, or about 4 cents an acre.
Kind of you to offer, but no thanks
[Y]ou are not required to show a receipt unless you agreed to as a part of a membership contract (like at Sam’s Club, Costco, or BJ’s). In most places in the U.S., if a store employee has a reasonable suspicion that you are shoplifting, they have a right to detain you for a reasonable amount of time and in a reasonable manner. Reasonable is an important word here. …
If you don’t want to show your receipt, just walk around the receipt checker and say “no thanks” if the person asks. If you are stopped, ask if you are being detained and if you are being suspected of shoplifting. If you are prevented from leaving the store, you’ll want to call police and/or your lawyer.
Whatever you do, do not hit the receipt checker ….
The above only valid if in fact you are not shoplifting.
Neutralized
The Consumer Reports Cars Blog has done the homework and …
Whatever the cause of runaway acceleration, there’s a simple solution that could save your life.
Here’s all you have to do:
- Move the transmission to Neutral.
- Use the brakes to come to a stop safely on the side (or off) the road
- Shut off the engine with the transmission in Neutral
- Put the car into Park
. . .
Shutting off the engine during an uncontrollable acceleration is another option, but we recommend against that. First, killing the engine will not allow you to slow down any sooner than shifting to Neutral will. Second, you can lose power steering assist, making the car difficult to control. And finally, if you should manage to turn the key all the way off, that could lock the steering wheel mechanism, making a safe stop all but impossible.
Best balloon boy line of the day, so far
[Sheriff] Alderden also said Richard Heene has only a high school education, dispelling the belief that he is some kind of a “nutty professor.”
“He may be nutty, but he’s not a professor,” Alderden said.
The Best Looking
… just got better looking.
The Santa Fe New Mexican has an improved look for its web site.
Albuquerque Journal please, please, please take note.
Some News Factoids
Gleaned from The Reconstruction of American Journalism, mentioned in previous post.
Morning Edition (NPR) has an audience about one-third larger than the Today show.
Public radio has about 28 million listeners each week; public television about 75 million viewers.
A 1999 study of 59 local TV station newscasts “found that 90 percent of all their stories reported on accidents, crimes, and scheduled or staged events.” Anyone think local TV news has improved since then?
205 TV stations around the country have their news produced by another local TV station.
The Future of the Newsroom
It may not be essential to save any particular news medium, including printed newspapers. What is paramount is preserving independent, original, credible reporting, whether or not it is popular or profitable, and regardless of the medium in which it appears.
Above from Leonard Downie, Jr. and Professor Michael Schudson in their long look at The Reconstruction of American Journalism. Among the continuing stream of narcissistic reports, this is seen as an important one.
I found the report worth skimming, but dull and not much new, except perhaps a push for public radio and TV to get more involved with local news reporting.
UPDATE:
An excellent critique of the report — Follow the Breadcrumbs — “mile-wide, inch-deep.”
There's a Rep for That
Thanks to Karen and The Good Man for the link.
October 19th
Today is the birthday
… of Bob Strauss, the politico and diplomat. Ambassador Strauss is 91. Once upon a time NewMexiKen’s boss was Bob Strauss Jr.
… of John LeCarre. The author is 78.
… of Peter Max. The artist is 72.
… of John Lithgow. He’s 64. He’s become somewhat a buffoon on TV in the sitcoms and commercials. Makes it hard to remember that he’s twice been nominated for the best supporting actor Oscar — Terms of Endearment and The World According to Garp.
… of Jeannie C. Riley, singer of the hit “Harper Valley P.T.A.” She, too, is 64.
… of Jennifer Holliday. The Tony Award winner is 49.
… of Evander Holyfield, 47.
… of one-time first daughter Amy Carter. Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter’s little girl is 42.
… of academy award nominee for directing Jason Reitman. He’s 32. The nomination was for Juno.
Robert Reed was born on this date in 1932. A fine actor but one who will always be remembered most as the dad on The Brady Bunch. Reed’s best TV role was as Kenneth Preston, son in the excellent early 1960s father-son lawyer drama The Defenders. His father was played by E. G. Marshall. Reed died in 1992.
Winston Hubert McIntosh was born on this date in 1944. A founding member of The Wailers, Peter Tosh also was an international solo star and songwriter. He was shot and killed along with five others by a friend during an argument on September 11, 1987.
Fort Scott National Historic Site (Kansas)
… was authorized on this date in 1978. It is one of four national historic sites in Kansas; there is also a national preserve in Kansas.
Promises made and broken! A town attacked at dawn! Thousands made homeless by war! Soldiers fighting settlers! Each of these stories is a link in the chain of events that encircled Fort Scott from 1842-73. All of the site’s structures, its parade ground, and its tallgrass prairie bear witness to this era when the country was forged from a young republic into a united transcontinental nation.
228 Years Ago Today
… the British army surrendered to the Americans and French at Yorktown, Virginia, in essence ending the War for American Independence.
The siege of Yorktown was conducted according to the book, with redoubts, trenches, horn-works, saps, mines, and countermines. Cornwallis had about 8000 men in the little town on the York river, which French ships patrolled so that he could not break away. The armies of Rochambeau and Saint~Simon were almost as numerous as his, and in addition Washington had 5645 regulars and 3200 Virginia militia. The commander in chief, profiting by D’Estaing’s error at Savannah, wasted no men in premature assaults. There were gallant sorties and counterattacks, one led by Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Hamilton. Casualties were light on both sides, fewer than in the naval battle; but Cornwallis, a good professional soldier, knew when he was beaten. On 17 October he sent out a white flag, and on the 19th surrendered his entire force. Pleading illness, he sent his second in command, Brigadier Charles O’Hara, to make the formal surrender to General Lincoln, whom Washington appointed to receive him. One by one, the British regiments, alter laying down their arms, marched back to camp between two lines, one of American soldiers, the other of French, while the military bands played a series of melancholy tunes, including one which all recognized as “The World Turned Upside Down.”
Lafayette announced the surrender to Monsieur de Maurepas of the French government, in terms of the classic French drama: “The play is over; the fifth act has come to an end.” Lieutenant Colonel Tench Tilghman carried Washington’s dispatch to Congress at Philadelphia, announcing the great event. Arriving at 3:00 a.m. on 22 October, he tipped off an old German night watchman, who awoke the slumbering Philadelphians by stumping through the streets with his lantern, bellowing, “Basht dree o’gloek und Gornvallis ist gedaken!”
Windows flew open, candles were lighted, citizens poured into the streets and embraced each other; and after day broke, Congress assembled and attended a service of thanksgiving.
— Samuel Eliot Morison, The Oxford History of the American People, 1965.
October 19th really ought to be a national holiday.
And the hits just keep comin'
CUPERTINO, CA – Amid fears that publicity-starved parents may try to convince unwitting viewers that they have launched giant balloons with their children inside, Apple today introduced a new iPhone app that detects balloon hoaxes.
Sometimes I'm just easily amused
This would be one of those times:
Last night in a club I stumbled drunk into the ladies’ toilet and stepped aside to let a girl pass. She stepped to the same side to let me pass though and we did so humbly smiling for a couple of times before I realized I was standing in front of the mirror.
Idle thought
Balloon kid’s parents to be in TV show after all.
Law & Order.
It ought to be a national holiday
It’s Chuck Berry’s birthday. He’s 83.
While no individual can be said to have invented rock and roll, Chuck Berry comes the closest of any single figure to being the one who put all the essential pieces together. It was his particular genius to graft country & western guitar licks onto a rhythm & blues chassis in his very first single, “Maybellene.” Combined with quick-witted, rapid-fire lyrics full of sly insinuations about cars and girls, Berry laid the groundwork for not only a rock and roll sound but a rock and roll stance. The song included a brief but scorching guitar solo built around his trademark double-string licks. Accompanied by long-time piano player Johnnie Johnson and members of the Chess Records house band, including Willie Dixon, Berry wrote and performed rock and roll for the ages. To this day, the cream of Berry’s repertoire—which includes “Johnny B. Goode,” “Sweet Little Sixteen,” “Rock and Roll Music” and “Roll Over Beethoven”—is required listening for any serious rock fan and required learning for any serious rock musician.
And, if that weren’t enough, Keith Jackson is 81. Whoa, Nelly.
Idle thought
I only ask one thing: Put the parents in the balloon and release it.
OK, two things: Release it with an embargo on news coverage.
Idle thought
I’ve been watching the ads and I think if I switch from Geico to Allstate to State Farm and then back to Geico again I can save over $1200 on my car insurance.
A Consumer Story with a Happy Ending
I picked up two prescriptions at CVS this afternoon. They had the price wrong on one so I had to wait a few minutes for the correction, but no big deal. Later however, after driving to Santa Fe, I remembered I needed to take one of the pills today. When I opened the bag, that bottle, the one with the price discrepancy, was missing.
I called the pharmacy. They were aware they hadn’t included the pills and apologized. They would be closed when I could get back by, but they said they would leave the prescription for me at the front check out counter, which is open until 10.
Four hours later I stopped to get the pills. And sure enough they were at the front counter — along with a $25 gift card for my inconvenience.
I thought CVS deserved a shout out.
Definition of Sourpuss
Little boy to man sitting across from him: It’s my birthday!
Man: Well, you know what? Now you have to wait 12 months till your next birthday. I don’t have to wait 12 months till my next birthday.
–R Train
Most Popular News Web Sites
Yahoo! News — 42,649,000 — 12%
CNN Digital Network — 38,266,000 — 3%
MSNBC Digital Network — 36,511,000 — (-16%)
AOL News — 25,733,000 — 20%
NYTimes.com — 21,530,000 — 7%Fox News Digital Network — 17,909,000 — 20%
Tribune Newspapers — 16,453,000 — (-9%)
ABCNEWS Digital Network — 14,631,000 — (-15%)
Google News — 14,555,000 — 8%
Gannett Newspapers and Newspaper Division — 12,272,000 — (-10%)CBS News Digital Network — 10,575,000 — (-5%)
McClatchy Newspaper Network — 10,543,000 — (-1%)
USATODAY.com — 9,908,000 — (-13%)
Advance Internet — 9,530,000 — 21%
TheHuffingtonPost.com — 9,474,000 — 26%
Figures are for September, ranked by number of unique visitors and including change from one year ago. Click on link to Editor and Publisher for the top 30.
I routinely go to just two of these.
October 17
Arthur Miller, the playwright (The Crucible, Death of a Salesman) and one-time husband of Marilyn Monroe, was born on this date in 1915.
In the period immediately following the end of World War II, American theater was transformed by the work of playwright Arthur Miller. Profoundly influenced by the Depression and the war that immediately followed it, Miller tapped into a sense of dissatisfaction and unrest within the greater American psyche. His probing dramas proved to be both the conscience and redemption of the times, allowing people an honest view of the direction the country had taken.
Miller used the money he made from All My Sons to buy 400 acres of farmland in Connecticut. In 1948, he moved to Connecticut by himself and spent several months building a 10-by-12-foot cabin by hand. As he sawed the wood and pounded the nails, he thought about the main characters of his next play: a salesman, his wife, and his two sons. He knew how the play would begin, but he wouldn’t let himself start writing until he had finished the cabin. When it was finally completed, he woke up one morning and started writing. He wrote all day, had dinner, and then wrote until he had finished the first act in the middle of the night. When he finally got in bed to go to sleep, he found that his cheeks were wet with tears, and his throat was sore from speaking and shouting the lines of dialogue as he wrote.
The play was Death of a Salesman (1949), about a man named Willy Loman who loses his job and realizes that he doesn’t have much to show for his life’s work. Miller wrote, “For a salesman, there is no rock bottom to the life. He don’t put a bolt to a nut, he don’t tell you the law or give you medicine. He’s a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine.”

Margarita Carmen Cansino was born on this date in 1918. That’s her in the photo known by then as Rita Hayworth. She was married five times including Orson Welles and Prince Aly Khan (she had a daughter with each of them). That’s Rita in some excerpts from Gilda (1946) below.
Montgomery Clift was born on October 17 in 1920. Clift was nominated for the best actor Oscar three times and supporting actor once. He played Prewitt, the bugler who won’t box, in From Here to Eternity.
It’s also the birthday
… of Jimmy Breslin. The columnist is 79.
… of Margot Kidder. Lois Lane is 61.
… of George Wendt. Norm is 61.
Sam: What’ll you have Normie?
Norm: Well, I’m in a gambling mood Sammy. I’ll take a glass of whatever comes out of that tap.
Sam: Looks like beer, Norm.
Norm: Call me Mister Lucky.
… of country singer Alan Jackson; he’s 51.
… of golfer Ernie Els, 40.
And of Marshall Mathers, better known as Eminem. He’s 37.
Best line of the day
“Knowing that you are watching our children gives us a level of comfort that is only matched by the extreme joy that we are not watching them.”
Byron in an email confirming an anniversary trip to Rome and Paris with Jill next month.





