A Conversation for Ask h2g2

Predictions for 2014

Post 41

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

"I predict that by this time next year, we will all have forgotten what a fantastic summer we had in 2014" [Pink Paisley]

With less than a month to go, your prediction is likely to be correct


Predictions for 2014

Post 42

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

The groob made many predictions on 12/16/13. The following probably did not pan out:

"Peter Capaldi gets a third eye surgically implanted in the middle of his forehead."
"The Pope will die or something."

The following probably did pan out:

"Hollywood remakes a film that really didn’t need remaking."
"The music industry remixes an old track that really didn’t need remixing."

I can't tell about the one about mastering circular breathing. smiley - erm


Predictions for 2014

Post 43

Hoovooloo

"Has Hollywood ever remade a film that needed remaking?"

John Carpenter's "The Thing".


Predictions for 2014

Post 44

Pastey

No. The original was far better.


Predictions for 2014

Post 45

Pastey

Little Shop Of Horrors though, the original black and white with Jack Nicholson wasn't as good as the colour musical smiley - biggrin


Predictions for 2014

Post 46

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

The upcoming remake of "Annie" does not reassure me, based on the trailers. It's not that I can't imagine an all-African-American cast [that worked beautifully with Pearl Bailey and company in "Hello Dolly"], but rather that the score was specifically written to highlight a 1930s musical idiom. The contemporary music scene is far removed from that.


Predictions for 2014

Post 47

~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum

smiley - snowman
...and the richest black man in 1930s America couldn't begin
to keep Annie in the custom to which she was mannered. The
inventor of Thermo King (transport truck freezer units which
changed the way USAsians eat and live) didn't really become
the richest black man in the US until the 1950s.
smiley - brr
smiley - cheers
~jwf~


Predictions for 2014

Post 48

Mr. X ---> "Be excellent to each other. And party on, dudes!"

Doesn't matter. Film takes place in the modern day.

smiley - pirate


Predictions for 2014

Post 49

~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum

smiley - bigeyes
Ah, ha-so! So Dylan was right;
the times they are a changling.

smiley - ok
~jwf~


Predictions for 2014

Post 50

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

There's a son about Herbert Hoover in the original score for "Annie." "You're never fully dressed without a smile" is so determinedly 1930s that it would seem wildly misplaced in the 2014 movie. On the other hand, "I'm going to like it here" would be perfect for these days on mcmansions and trophy homes and conspicuous consumption. So, I can imagine some of the film seeming topical.

I seem to recall that Harold Gray started penning "Little orphan Annie" in 1924 or thereabouts. Annie traipsed through numerous adventures until about 1968, when Gray died and was replaced by more than one successors. The overall flavor of the original strip was lost. I doubt that anyone is trying to do new strips any more, but a 44-year span is pretty good. The musical itself came out in 1977, which makes it vintage too. smiley - smiley And, yeah, orphans exists in every era. But orphanages are rarer in America and Europe than they used to be.


Predictions for 2014

Post 51

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

[Please forgive my numerous typos in the previous post. smiley - blush]


Predictions for 2014

Post 52

~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum

To air is humane. Forgiveness comes with a price.
smiley - winkeye
Your punishment shall be to locate images of Walt Kelly's
POGO characters doing their impressions of Lil Arfin Fannie
with the blunked out eyeballs. And post some appropriate linx.
smiley - blackcat
No doubt you have your favourites but I can never 'unsee'
the picture of Albert the Alligator all blunked out.
smiley - cheers
~jwf~


Predictions for 2014

Post 53

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

You will not believe this, but I have just about all the Pogo strips in the form of paperback reprints. They're not online, though, so how would I give links?


Predictions for 2014

Post 54

~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum

Well I knew you were a big POGO fan and hoped you might know
how to access some images. Any attempt I make to search POGO
results in bad scans of isolated pages which won't even blow
up enough to read the text in the speech balloons. Google gets
very confused and shows lots of other images from Vampirella
to Captain America and Playboy's Little Orphan Fanny but either
the copyright holders of Walt Kelly materials seem to police
the web thoroughly or there just aren't that many serious fans
with the skills to post scanned images. Pogo is for old farts
like me and thee these days.
smiley - cheers
~jwf~




Predictions for 2014

Post 55

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

If I reach the point where I have absolutely nothing else to do, I will leaf through my Pogo collection and try to find the images....


Predictions for 2014

Post 56

~ jwf ~ scribblo ergo sum

POGO did two very daring (for the time) parodies
of venerable American comic strip icons - Annie
and Dick Tracy.
Back then only intellectuals were said to be able
to understand satire. Others simply ignored POGO.
Today there would be inquiries, threats, marches...
Hmm..
smiley - biggrin
~jwf~


Predictions for 2014

Post 57

paulh, vaccinated against the Omigod Variant

There were inquiries and threats back then, too. When Kelly satirized Joe McCarthy, the Providence Journal refused to publish the strip. Kelly struck back the next day by putting the character's head in a paper bag smiley - laugh.

I loved the high-spirited nonsense of "Pogo." Beauregard the Dog was the one who played Lulu Arfin Nanny, the star of the silent scream. He also had his own version of the "Deck us all with Boston Charley" song. His version started "Bark us all bow wows of folly." In all there were seven variants of the song.

Speaking of variants, in the concert I sang in this past Friday, we sang music by Irish and Scottish composers. Our encore used the tune for "Danny Boy" and the words for "Oh Holy Night." Apparently someone had done this on YouTube, and we copied the idea.

Our concert did not use a big orchestra. We got by with snare drums, a violin, a flute, and an organ.

At the end, we had an audience sing along with the carols "Silent Night" and "God rest ye merry, gentlemen." This selection was a tribute to the Christmas ceasefire of 1914, when the Germans offered the first one, and the English responded with the second.

Wait, there was one more instrument at our concert: chimes. You can always count on a church to have a good set of chimes.


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