Check out the money behind the message courtesy of comic Ryan Long.
Monday, December 27, 2021
Sunday, December 26, 2021
Chicago Marathon 2007: Too Hot to Handle
Working on my ebook re. a 13-year journey to run a marathon. I happened across this clip from the 2007 Chicago Marathon. A true rendering of events. For the 8:00 AM start, the temperature was 88 degrees with 80 percent humidity. Naturally, the event ran out of water for the runners. Here's my race report chronicling this back-in-the-day sultry event.
Saturday, December 25, 2021
Merry Christmas 2021
wallpaper.com |
Seasons greetings to all. Our household is ill this fine Christmas day, but mending rapidly. Best to you and yours on this special day.
Friday, December 24, 2021
Large Stinking Winter Storm
Patabook News |
Oh, what a merry time to write. The heating bill is paid, the roof doesn't leak, and we have glass in our windows. In addition, our supply of coffee is ample. Under such conditions, working on my marathon book is a delight.
What if I lived in Seattle? Under such conditions, I'd be familiar with rainy weather and spend the time web surfing. A pleasant Christmas eve to one and all.
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
5k Training and Golf Balls
ebay |
My next goal is to build up speed. I'd like to run 3.1 miles in under 30 minutes as if it were 2010. So striders and other forms of quickness-building exercises join my training regimen.
I've been stretching out in a new location within sight of the Wilson-Harding Golf Course. It is absolutely golf ball heaven. On Monday I collected seven—a new record. Do I golf? No. Do I give them to golfers? Sometimes. Do I throw them at rude drivers? Not yet.
There's a site online that offers seventy cents a ball. This could be a nice cottage industry to supplement my golden years. A Merry Christmas to all!
clipartbest |
Tuesday, December 21, 2021
Saturday, December 18, 2021
Paul Rugg and Lucky Aid the Elderly
Lucky the Therapy Dog has passed but his memory remains among the old.
Thursday, December 16, 2021
Paul Rugg and I are Hired at Warner Bros. v. 5
And I Have the Memories to Prove It
A little hyperbole last year. I have plenty of life events and more on the way. Now then, Paul's episode was about a pet shop, I believe. In 1991 I wrote on a Mac Classic. (They look so quaint now, like a fancy radio from 1938.) Jeffrey Dahmer, Silence of the Lambs, Thelma and Louise, the unraveling of the Soviet Union and the number of computers on the newly commercialized Web reached one million.
Not mine, but similar. |
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
Book Review: Paths of Glory
Paths of Glory by Humphrey Cobb
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
Author Humphrey Cobb knew his subject matter. Wounded while serving with the Canadian Army in World War I, his tale of a vain general, a failed attack, an unjust trial and the fate of three soldiers was compelling enough for filmmaker Stanley Kubrick to adapt into his classic film Paths of Glory.
Fast and compelling, Cobb's book captures the brutality and carnage of the Western Front as well as the army's indifference and passive obedience that allows the perpetuation of a cruel injustice.
Under three hundred pages, the book is told from multiple points of view, with grim details of trench warfare and the doomed outlook of the soldiers underscoring a dark tale of military injustice and the reduction of men to chips in a vast rigged game.
View all my reviews
Monday, December 13, 2021
Book Review: The Afghanistan Papers
The Afghanistan Papers: A Secret History of the War by Craig Whitlock
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
It seems everyone in the government wants to chat about their work as long as they aren't on the record. Thanks to a pair of lawsuits by the Washington Post we now have insight into 0fficial thinking by politicians, generals, and assorted bureaucrats on America's longest conflict. It is maddening.
Former Ambassador Richard Boucher: "First we went in to get al-Qaida and to get al-Qaeda out of Afghanistan . . .we did that. The Taliban was shooting back at us so we started shooting at them . . . . Ultimately, we kept expanding the mission."
Army General Dan McNeil "quickly judged that the United States and NATO didn't have a coherent war strategy."
"U.S. and NATO officials belatedly recognized that drug-related corruption was . . . threatening to turn Afghanistan into . . . a 'narco-state.'"
[General} McKiernan had violated an unspoken rule . . . he did not deceive the public with specious language . . ."
McKiernan was fired in 2009 for telling the truth and the lesson was not lost on later generals. Happy talk or face retirement.
And on it goes. Two generations of government officials lied and dissembled. And only McKiernan lost his job. (General McCrystal was fired for making fun of civilian officials such as Joe Biden.)
Author Whitlock published the book before the chaos of our departure. He mentions President Biden visiting Arlington National Cemetery, Section 60, where the dead of Iraq and Afghanistan are buried. ". . . he [the President] gazed into the distance, surveying row upon row of white marble gravestones. 'Hard to believe," he murmured. 'Look at them all.'"
A little later he added thirteen more.
View all my reviews
Sunday, December 12, 2021
FakeMask USA
Unfogged Glasses?
Featured Post
John P. McCann Sizzle Page
'Twas suggested I post a few episodes of my work in a pleasant spot. I've chosen here. Sadly, not everything I've written has y...
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Twice in the last eight years I've run the Santa Clarita 5k on Independence Day. Back in 2007 it was sizzling hot. Three years late...
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More memories from the boxes . Here's my life at Warner Bros. that year. Cleaned up my office after the Northridge earthquake rearranged...