Friday, October 02, 2009

I'm leaving

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Follow me here http://shadowferret.wordpress.com/

I am leaving Blogger. Why? I'm having issues with Google. It seems that Google has decided, for whatever reason, that they want us to use our Google Account with Blogger. I signed up using a non-Google email because at the time I didn't have a Google Account. (I have since signed up for Gmail.)

So I've been content to login using this non-Google email. Well, in the last week or so, Google has started to yell at me about it. I log-in and it doesn't recognize me, making me log-in several times. But it doesn't log me in. Instead, I get to another log-in page that also allows me to sign in using my old Blogger account.

So I click on that and get to a "Get started with the new Blogger" page. I fill in my log-in information, clicked Continue and it says "User account not found." WTF? Asshats.

At one point I tried to sign up using my Google Account, but it didn't recognize that I had a pre-existing Blogger account! It wanted me to start from scratch and I couldn't' figure out how to associate the Google Account with my old Blogger account.

And anyway if I do try to login with my Google Account, I get a message that says something like, you are trying to access Blogger using a Google Account but you're already logged in with a different Google Account.

But I'm NOT logged in!

So I keep trying to sign in with my old Blogger information. Today they threw something new at me. Today while doing my ritual of signing in, don't exist, sign in, still don't exist, I got a new page. "We've detected suspicious activity on your Google Account. Please create a new password to continue using your account." Asshats! The only suspicious activity is the fact that you won't let me into my freaking account!

The really funny thing is, if I try to find out which account my Blogs are associated with, I get an email telling me it's the old Blogger Account name. Gah! And yet it won't let me in. It's a vicious circle!

And I haven't found anyway to contact either Google or Blogger. There is no tech support email addy.

This morning alone I've wasted 45 minutes of my time trying to get in so I could post this.

So fuck them. I don't need this kind of stress. So I've moved everything to a Wordpress account.

http://shadowferret.wordpress.com/

Please update all your links. See you there! :)

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Thursday, October 01, 2009

Happy Birthday, Valentin Blatz

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I'm from Milwaukee, and I oughta know, that Blatz beer tastes great, wherever I go...

Happy Birthday, Valentin Blatz

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Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Milwaukee street names have Chicago ties

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Somewhat disturbing to Milwaukeeans who love to hate Chicago, several Milwaukee streets are named after famous Chicagoans.

Milwaukee street names have Chicago ties

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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Packers' new City Stadium dedicated

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Packers' new stadium dedicated this day in 1957. Soon to become known as "The frozen tundra of Lambeau Field."

Packers' new City Stadium dedicated

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Monday, September 28, 2009

Books don't hurt people, banning books hurts people

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Banned Book week runs from September 26 to October 3rd this year. Call me naive, but I always thought Wisconsin was a rather progressive state, we've worked for the advancement of human rights, workers' rights, and so on. So color me surprised when I discovered that ignorance and prejudice are alive and well here in Badgerland. The list below shows some of the book challenges here. (All information was found on BannedBooksWeek.org.)

1) What My Mother Doesn't Know by Sonya Sones
Banned in Spring Hill, Wisconsin (2007)
Reason it was banned: The book was restricted to just the 7th and 8th grade students after some narrow-minded, prudish parent wanted the book removed from the library and the accelerated reading program because it deals with (shocking!) masturbation, groping and sexual fantasy.


2) The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky, Geography Club by Brent Hartinger, Baby Be-Bop by Franscesca Lia Block, among many others
Banned in West Bend, Wisconsin (2009)
Reason they were banned: The of content was viewed by some puritanical community members as obscene or harmful to minors, although I'm sure they couldn't offer any evidence supporting this backwards belief. Many of the challenged books had OMG! LGBTQ (which I believe stands for Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual/Transgender/ and the Q is either Queer or questioning. I'm not sure which) themes. On May 18, 2009, the West Bend Common Council, in their divine stupidity, voted not to reappoint four members of the Library Board because of their views and adherence to library policy. The National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC), American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE), the Association of American Publishers (AAP), and PEN American Center joined to urge the council to reconsider their moronic decision and retain the books. The American Library Association (ALA) also issued a letter and statement. Additionally, the Christian Civil Liberties Union filed a legal claim whining that its plaintiffs suffered mental and emotional damage from the mere presence of these books in the library's young adult section. Somehow, I guess, the books send out this vibration that effects prudes. On June 2, the West Bend Library Board, in a display of enlightenment, voted unanimously to retain the books in its YA Zone, without removing, relocating, labeling, or otherwise restricting access. Though no subsequent challenges were submitted, the library has faced ongoing pressure to remove or restrict access to online content and library materials for young people. Coverage of the West Bend case can be followed on the NCAC blog, Blogging Censorship.
More Info:

3) The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
Banned in Oshkosh, Wisconsin (2007)
Reason it was banned: The book was removed from shelves by some idiotic and misguided librarian in both middle and high schools in Oshkosh because she happened to hear the news about the controversy, and one wonders if she actually read the book. Ironically, the school district's policy reads: "The primary objective of the library media program is to implement, enrich and support the educational program." Enrich, by banning books?

4) Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging: Confessions of Georgia Nicolson by Louise Rennison
Banned in Menasha, Wisconsin (2008)
Reason it was banned: The book was put on limited access at the Maplewood Middle School in Menasha after a stuffy, tight-laced parent objected that the book offensive. Once again one priggish person fucked things up for everyone. The book was retained, but board members voted unanimously(which showed none of them had any balls) to adopt procedures that would make students wanting the book to have to jump through parental consent hoops.

5) Vibe magazine
Banned in Randolph, Wisconsin (2009)
Reason it was banned: Vibe Magazine, which provides coverage of urban music and fashion, cars, and electronic gadgets, was removed from the Randolph High School library after the school's principal, Tom Erdmann, who it would seem is secretly afraid of anything black, complained about the magazine's gang violence and activity. The Kids' Right to Read Project (KRRP) sent a letter.

So let's all celebrate banned books week by showing intellectual enlightenment and freedom: Read a Banned Book.

By doing so you'll be giving the cerebral finger to all those mindless, kneejerk puritans who would deny the world of any writing that doesn't fit their narrow worldview.

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Friday, September 25, 2009

Happy Birthday, Vinnie Ream

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The first woman, and youngest artist, to receive a federal commission for a work of art.

Happy Birthday, Vinnie Ream

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Thursday, September 24, 2009

Irwin Allen's The Time Tunnel

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I just finished watching the entire first season of The Time Tunnel. Never heard of it? That's because there was only one season, back in 1966. The show starred James Darren as Dr. Tony Newman, Robert Colbert as Dr. Doug Phillips, and Lee Meriwether (Catwoman) as Dr. Ann McGregor.

It was produced by Irwin Allen who also produced some other classic 60s shows like Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and Lost in Space, which in fact, were also running on television the year Time Tunnel premiered.

The Time Tunnel was a super-secret government science project, but the project was about to be shut down because it was a huge taxpayer money pit producing no results. In the first episode the Time Tunnel facility is being inspected by a senator for the budget committee who doesn't believe the tunnel actually works since all they sent back in time were mice and monkeys, which never returned. He sets them a deadline, send someone back in time or he'll cut the funding.

Dr. Tony Newman, the junior scientist on the project, volunteers to go, but Dr. Doug Phillips, the head scientist, tells him no, they aren't ready. Tony sneaks into the top security facility and uses himself as a guinea pig to test the project. He ends up being sent back in time, but in doing so, causes damage to the tunnel, so he can't be brought back.

The special effects are kind of cornball, flashing multi-colored lights as Tony moves in freefall, then he ends up falling in slow motion onto the deck of a ship. It turns out to be the Titanic on her maiden voyage. Tony tries to warn the captain, but gets locked up.

The Time Tunnel team tries to find where he went, finally makes visual contact through the tunnel's viewing projector. They realize he's on the Titanic, locked in a forward cabin that will get slashed open by the iceberg.

For some reason, the tunnel doesn't have the power to retrieve Tony, so his partner on the project, Dr. Doug Phillips suggests that the only chance Tony has is if he can escape the cabin, then he'll have a fighting chance to get to a life raft.

Doug decides he'll be the one to go back in time to help his friend escape. Dressed in period clothing with a newspaper that has the headline of the Titanic disaster, Doug time jumps too.

Through a series of adventures, the two end up on the deck as the ship is sinking, an explosion hurls them toward the sea but the Time Tunnel team is able to catch them in midfall, suspending them in time. But again, they don't have the power to bring them back, so to keep from killing them, they have to transfer them somewhere else in time. Which becomes the storyline for the rest of the first season. Unable to get back, they keep getting bounced through time ending up on a moon mission, Pearl Harbor, the War of 1812, on Krakatoa, in Troy, with General Custer, meeting Rudyard Kipling, Marco Polo, and so on.

For the entire first season, Tony is always dressed in his green turtleneck and Doug is dressed in the turn of the century suit he was sent to the Titanic in.

Like all of Irwin Allen's television shows, they started out serious, but gradually degenerated into entertaining nonsense. The first season of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea was about the cold war and espionage until it degenerated into the monster of the week. Lost in Space also started out rather seriously. Doctor Smith was evil, always trying to destroy the Family Robinson, until later episodes when he became a cowardly buffoon and they faced the silly alien of the week. So too with Time Tunnel. The majority of episodes were interesting takes on history, striving for realism and accuracy of past events, however, several episodes, including the last few started to feature aliens and silver skinned humans from the future. Some people blame the success of Adam West's "Batman" for the shift. If camp was what the people wanted, then Irwin Allen was sure they'd get it. High camp was in.

But it wasn't the silliness that eventually killed Time Tunnel, nor was it bad ratings. In fact, for ABC, which had no shows in the Top 20 that year, Time Tunnel came the closest. So what killed it? The cost. Just as the fictional Time Tunnel project was costing the government too much to run, so too was the television show. At the time it was the most expensive show on television, the pilot alone costing $500,000. And politics. Someone else at ABC had a pet TV show they wanted on called "The Legend of Custer." Poetic justice befell Custer, however, because it was skewered by the critics and by Native America groups and was canceled after only one season.

Time Tunnel is available in 2 volumes, with a total of 4 discs. Included is the original unaired Irwin Allen pilot, some interviews with cast members, and an unaired pilot for a 2002 revised Time Tunnel. I'm glad that one never made it, aside from the fact that they made Tony Newman a girl, it was just boring. The Department of Energy is trying to create hot fusion and instead creates a time storm. They manage to shut down their end of the storm after 4 hours, but when they leave the facility, they discover that history has been changed randomly. Now their mission is to go back in time to correct these anomalies and restore history. To me it sounds more like a new take on "Voyagers!" a horrible 1982 time travel television show that starred the late Jon-Eric Hexum.

For more information on the original Time Tunnel go to TVParty! For info on the newer one, you're on your own.

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Newhall House fire of 1883

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Newhall House fire of 1883

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