Category Archives: Shorter Works

Paladin, Kirk, & Danger Mouse

The DVD is a marvelous thing: opalescent, round, and covered with data — data which rarely serves the dark soul of the average pre-adolescent. You know the age: Disney movies are pabulum, Harry Potter gives them the trots, and they’d love Sartre if only they’d give him a chance. Let us turn to the golden age of television which offers myriad possibilities for diversion. They reward longer attention spans, provide conversation starters with grandparents, and quench the thirst for something with a little more oomph.

Have Gun, Will Travel (1957-1963): Richard Boone starred as Paladin, a gunfighter-for-hire working from a ritzy hotel in old west San Francisco. He knew everything, fought the good fight, and hosted a parade of future movie stars.

Danger Man (a.k.a. Secret Agent Man) (1961-1968): Patrick McGoohan is John Drake, NATO secret agent. Later in the series, he officially works for Her Majesty’s Secret Service. The early episodes are shorter, more realistic, and well-plotted.

Star Trek (1966-1969): For fans, your offspring saw this when they were in diapers. For everyone else, the series can actually inspire intelligent conversation between generations.

The Muppet Show (1976-1981): Start with the first episode and before you know it, you’re invested in the travails of the entire company as they struggle to put on shows.

Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (1981): Unlike the recent film, all the humor and plot of the radio series and books is included. It’s the story of the sole remaining earthling after the Earth is destroyed to make way for an interstellar bypass. It’s philosophy the way it should be introduced to kids: with a wink and a smile.

Danger Mouse (1981-1992): Absolutely ridiculous adventures of the greatest secret agent mouse ever. It was a cartoon, but it’s the twisted humor in the narration that maintains the interest.

January, 2007

Oh, ¢®@¶!

Obscenity is like humor, in that both are subjective.  Humor is like obscenity, in that both are part of the foundation upon which human culture has been built.  One of the more obvious places that the two meet is in comic books, an art form that is often laughably obscene (see Omaha the Cat Dancer, Get Fuzzy, etc.).  Should we censor the bondage in early Wonder Woman comics or make Robin wear bicycle shorts under his costume?  Perhaps those are the best examples.

As a result, some exceedingly strange lawsuits have arisen in recent years.  Benevolent java-pusher Starbucks sued the artist Kieron Dwyer for copyright infringement when he parodied their mermaid logo.  The resulting court decision prevented Dwyer from printing his parody or displaying it on his website or linking to a website that displays his parody.

How can a lone artist stand up to such massed power (corporate or political)?  The Comic Book Legal defense Fund (cbldf.org) was formed in 1986 to fight for freedom of speech in their corner of the world.  While they often represent the creators of comics, the Fund has more often found itself defending retailers who face prosecution from local authorities defining their political convictions with a few public convictions.

Self-appointed watchdogs have long tried to force all media through a filter of their own design.  Pegged as a children’s medium, comics have consistently faced censorship.  As the funny books strive to shake off the juvenilia label, creators step into adult waters.  The CBLDF was founded by publisher Denis Kitchen, reacting to efforts to push comics back into the kiddie pool.

Currently, the fund is defending shopkeeper Gordon Lee, who is charged with distributing obscene material when a nine-year-old found himself in possession of a free copy of Alternative Comics #2 last Halloween.  Within that anthology, the youth found an excerpt from a tale about the early Cubists.  Pablo Picasso is portrayed painting in the nude in three panels.  One can only imagine the trauma.

September, 2005

NeXT

The world was not ready in 1988.  Ousted by the Board of Directors, Steven Jobs had left Apple Computer, the company which he had co-founded.  With money from Ross Perot, among others, Jobs identified then-current technologies which he saw as the paths to the future.  From extensive research came a grand leap of faith: NeXTStep.  Jobs was not new to running a company other than Apple.  He had bought Pixar Animation Studios from George Lucas a couple years earlier.

If you happened to wander into the student computer shop at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1989, you saw an array of Apple products lining the walls- monochromatic Cyclopes all.  Walk past them for in the small, dark room off to the side sat one black computer on a pedestal beneath a spotlight.  This was the NeXT computer, too special for mere test drives, though the employees would be only too glad to demonstrate its glorious qualities: built in a completely automated factory; housed in a magnesium case; usable memory on a 256 MB magneto-optical device (10-20 times larger than anything commonly used at the time); 8 MB of RAM (when 1 MB was extensive).  And it cost many thousands of dollars.

Over the succeeding four years, NeXT made extensive improvements to their product line, dropping the price and replacing much of the basic hardware with more practical items.  Concurrently, a gentleman named Tim Berners-Lee did develop a little thing called hypertext on the NeXT computer (the ht in your http).  In 1996, Apple bought NeXT in order to capitalize on its operating system and brought Jobs back into the fold where he remains to this day.  Colorado-based Black Hole, Inc., will gladly sell you a used NeXT computer for significantly less than the original price.

May, 2006