Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Back to School Special: Welcome to High School!

Chatter on the Internet this morning reminded me that it's Back to School Day. "Please, no."

This reminded me of my first day of high school: Tuesday, September 2, 1975.

As I moved somewhat self-consciously down an end hallway a well-dressed young man in flared jeans and matching jacket, and sporting long hair with matching facial hair, approached me with a signature drooping walk. He had what I assumed to be some kind of survey question, the kind dispensed to "minor niners" like me:

"Hey, man. Wanna buy some grass?"

At first I remembered what my parents said to me before I boarded the school bus earlier that morning: "If someone asks you if you want to buy some pot, say 'yes'." Or was it?....was it "no"? Darn. Nobody told me that high school was this hard! I then remembered that my mother gave me twenty dollars, but my memory told me that the money was not for "grass". Wait a minute... no, it was for "pot", not grass.

I told the gentleman: "I want to thank you for your concern and consideration, not to mention your warm welcome, kind sir, but my answer is 'no'."


Sunday, August 31, 2025

In Toronto's Annex Neighbourhood: "Gleam & Sip"



This morning, on a beautifully sunny and warm day here in the great city of Toronto, I strolled up to my local LCBO store, On my way back home I made a discovery, one I'll appreciate very soon. There's a new shop at the southeast corner of Dupont and Madison:

Gleam & Sip
Matcha * Espresso * Bar
Vegan & Gluten Free Bakery

I popped inside for a moment to say hi. The friendly staff was most welcoming — it was me who was entering, after all  — and gave me the attached business card. As I was carrying my small order of Corona beer for this holiday weekend, and had other business planned for the rest of the morning, I could not sit down and partake in what, no doubt, would be a delicious experience.

The lovely lady gave me the shop's business hours: "Nine to five, every day."

As I promised before I left the store: "Soon!"


Postscript: It's important to me that I support local small businesses, hence my post.






Gleam & Sip is located just east of "Dupont" subway station.

Saturday, August 30, 2025

Picturing: Italy Vacation Scenes — Not Mine

My friend Ana spent two weeks in Italy.  Her parents are from there which makes for a powerful draw. While she was showing me samples of pics she took I asked her if I could post a few here.

"Sure!

Given the fact that I studied art history in school — I still have my Frederick Hartt books — I love this stuff. No, I've never been to Italy — the farthest south I've been in Europe is Switzerland, and I might ask Ana if she would be into taking a vacation there and bringing back some photos for me to put up on this website

(Me: "Yep, that's the Matterhorn, all right.")

Almost forgot: Like much of Europe, Italy was very hot: 35 to 40 Celsius. At one point it hit 50.

















Thursday, August 28, 2025

Athot for the Day: I Thot Right

I'm the first one to say that PP Pierre Poilievre will be replaced by his own party come January, but I want him to stay as CPC leader. Watching him and his faithful twist and fizzle is just too much fun... and him remaining as Conservative Party of Canada leader would guarantee yet another Liberal Party of Canada win.



Wednesday, August 27, 2025

The TV Lunch Box Kids

When I was a child in the 1960s and early 1970s TV-themed "tie-in" lunch boxes were a big thing. The colour screen on the box's exterior was probably more important than any nutrients carried on the inside. The graphic was part of your identity: Perhaps you were a Bonanza fan, a "Bat-fan", or you gravitated towards the Irwin Allen fantasy shows such as Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea or Lost in Space. It did not matter whether or not these dramatic television programs were good (they were not) but the lunch boxes were a way of advertising our programming — a statement as to what we little ones thought was cool on television.

I remember sitting on the school bus one day, waiting for the vehicle to finish loading up kids outside of the CFB Baden Elementary School (in West Germany). A fellow traveller in the seat immediately in front of mine had in his possession what must have looked to me like a pretty specimen of a lunchbox: It had a rich green trim; it showed some futuristic vehicle; it was adorned with the title Land of the Giants. ("What's Land of the Giants?", I may have asked, but I learned something new and important.)

My favourite of the TV lunch boxes was the one for Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. The artwork, lame on many themed boxes for some inexplicable reason, was absolutely dynamic here: The front-of-box illustration depicted the submarine "Seaview" approaching a giant (giant!) octopus that was resting, but looking mighty angry, with the Flying Sub in its tentacles, on the ocean floor.

I never did get that lunchbox, simply because I never asked for it. My own box was of no TV-theme. It had a tartan pattern with the thermos inside sharing the same pattern. For all its blandness, that lunchbox served me well. When we moved back to Canada there was no need for this piece of school equipment as my school, Frederick Campbell Elementary in CFB Borden, was a few minutes walk from the house. I'd go home, eat, and pop on CFTO and meet The Flintstones.

Also, by this time Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea and Land of the Giants had been cancelled. Suddenly their tie-in lunch boxes had become worthless....


Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Film & Television Design Comp 1



I comped the above some time ago along with another. My archives are calling me to release more bits and bites of film and television design. (I don't say "production design" as it's redundant. It would be like saying "production cinematography" or "production direction".) I'm working on new art and design work and will get some of that up here soon. Believe me, I'm as excited as you are.

Coffee? How 'bout a bowl of popcorn? Together would be perfect!

Sunday, August 24, 2025

Picturing: Ferry Line Drop at the Port of Calais



Canon AE-1
100mm Canon lens
Kodak 35mm film - 100 ASA

Sunday Fun: Miller Lite ― a Great Canadian TV Ad



While I do not like television commercials, especially those from this great country of Canada, certainly those produced here in Toronto, there is one I loved when it aired many years ago: an advert for Miller Lite beer, Canada — and one loaded with former National Hockey League goaltenders.

The headliner is former St Louis Blues and New York Rangers netminder John Davidson. A natural actor, he carries the continuous 30-second shot, and a beer, a Miller Lite, as he makes his way through a crowded bar.

"Hi ya, Eddie!"

That's Eddie Giacomin, former goaltender with the New York Rangers, where, for a few years, he shared puck-stop duties with....

"Good to see ya, Gillie! How ya doin'?"

That's Gilles Villemure!

The main conceit in the advert is the fibreglass goalie mask, which these men would paint over with a graphic, one to reflect their respective personalities. Actually, Mr Villemure left his as a natural yellow-white finish. The masks' airhole cuts would be another identifying 'mark'.

I won't give away the ad's ending... it's fun, and I laughed out loud the first time I saw it.  And three years ago I laughed uproariously again. And I laughed yet again while prepping this post.

Those were the days when I loved the NHL.

Saturday, August 9, 2025

Athot for the Day: Taking it Day to Day

Please forgive those of us who feel that, to Conservatives, every day is the worst day.



Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Nick Zedd on One's Destiny

"Unreasonable expectations were planted in my brain when I was five years old and saw Voyage to a Prehistoric Planet. I was stunned and traumatized by the thought of being shipwrecked on a planet of dinosaurs and cavemen. Little did I know this was to be my destiny."

I first saw that flick on television when I was in my early teens, and understood then and there that my destiny had already greeted me.



Monday, August 4, 2025

Movie Matinee: Attack of the Crab Monsters

I've never graded a film by way of its budget — big Hollywood films don't necessarily suck and low-budget or super-low-budget films don't automatically engender raves — but there are times, especially these summer days, when I feel I have to go after what I think is a known quantity. In the amazing year of 2013 I watched movie-meister Roger Corman's 1957 "epic" Attack of the Crab Monsters.

I was aware going in that it was, to that point in his career, Corman's biggest box-office hit. It's easy to see why. Viewed today, understanding a little about North American film history, Attack is appreciated for what it is and tries to be — pure unaffected movie matinee entertainment. While not without flaws, the flick is propelled to its inevitable conclusion (guess who wins), not only by director Corman, but through brisk scripting courtesy of the ever dependable Charles B. Griffith. This may be the film's real flaw although one common for feature films of slight running time; Attack of the Crab Monsters, while a lengthy enough title, is only 62 minutes long. With a single-minded propulsion there is little room for anything else, story-wise. (Young people attending the matinees and drive-ins would not have cared too much. Also, I can think of a few recent films, more than a few recent films, actually, that would benefit immensely from a 62-minute "cut".)

The plot is simple: A cadre of personnel — scientists and military men — land on a small Pacific island to investigate the disappearance of an earlier expedition. The team, of whom Russell Johnson is a member, but not one of the scientists, studies the results of the 1946 Bikini Atoll atomic tests and in the process discovers what happened to the previous researchers. If you don't like seafood, don't ask.

(I popped out of the film just once the other night: Russell Johnson plays a couple of sequences without wearing his shirt. The actor said in an interview years ago that while auditioning for the role of the "Professor" in Gilligan's Island, he was asked by the show's producers if he would mind taking his shirt off... to see what he would look like without his shirt on. He was not too keen on the idea.)

The strongest attribute of Attack of the Crab Monsters, for me, is the film's tone: it kept me on edge from beginning to end; a sort of dramatic tinnitus; as though a scary, if somewhat expected given the matinee title, surprise was forever lurking just around the corner.

The crab get-ups are not bad, actually. Physical effects and visual effects are the killer for low budget producers — then a lot more than now — but the filmmakers get away with a spoonful in this department. Corman tech regulars Ronald Stein (music) and Floyd Crosby (cinematography) add their rock-solid touches and, as per usual in that relationship, elevate the whole show a little above a low budget film's expected ceiling.

I'm not suggesting that Attack of the Crab Monsters is a great film, but: A friend told me a few years ago that he cares not for intellectual art... he just wants to be entertained when he goes to the movies. I'm tuned a little differently than my fast-food pal, but I could give him an answer in regards to what was in my soup bowl two nights ago: "Yes, I was entertained. And it was delicious!"

Nick Zedd on Future Reality

"I'd start crying when I'd see children on the street — their innocence awaiting the rot of society's touch."

I too 'start crying', even though I have no kids of my own... which is why I have no kids of my own.



Sunday, August 3, 2025

Friday, August 1, 2025

Filmmaker Robert Rodriguez on That Look

"Trust me, there are extreme benefits to being able to walk into this business and be completely self-sufficient. It scares people. Be scary."

Being scary is a lot of fun.



Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Baden-Baden, Germany, Guidebook — Circa 1970

Baden-Baden, Germany, is beautiful. It was near that historic town where I spent four years of my childhood, and the memories are strong, especially when I look at pictures in this guidebook from the time I was there.

Welcome to Baden-Baden in "Der Schwarzwald", and these sample pages:

(click to enlarge)















The photo immediately above is of the Rastatt pool complex. It is where my swimming skills were fine-tuned by my swim coach mother. The pool complex was, and still is, I'm sure, a great place. (If the kid who stole my Fina swim ring reads this he/she should feel bad. At least he/she had the decency to replace my new one with his/her old one.)

The racetrack (Rennbahn) above is in Iffezheim and it's just a few minutes' walk from where I lived. Not only did I see a few horse races at the track, but there was a smashup derby held one night by members of the Canadian Armed Forces which was a lot of fun. (Cars smashed up, not horses.)


Postscript: An older lady who followed me — and I, her — on Twitter, blocked me when I had the temerity to say something along the lines of: "I loved living in Germany. Beautiful country." She was a real lefty... too far left. I'm left-of-centre, and we generally got along. Her father fought in World War Two — as did my father — and she often trumpeted the fact that he fought Nazis. I'm guessing she could not let it all go. I loved living in Germany. Beautiful country.

Monday, July 28, 2025

Athot for the Day: Rebranding

How long will it be before Shoppers Drug Mart rebrands as SDM? (KFC and KD, right? No, Kentucky Fried Chicken and Kraft Dinner.)

Nah, "Shoppers" comes off the tongue really nicely.



Sunday, July 27, 2025

'Khan Noonien Singh' on Little Progress

"Oh, there has been technical advancement, but, how little man himself has changed."

As is being demonstrated at the moment....



Friday, July 25, 2025

Mr Spock on Transformation

"Change is the essential process of all existence."

This tends to get forgotten by too many people.




Nick Zedd on That Basic Mindset

"The root of conservatism — fear of change — is a form of cowardice which affects nearly everyone now."

Right on, brother. Too right.



Monday, July 21, 2025

Jerry Goldsmith Obituary — The Toronto Sun, 7/23/04





Late this afternoon I was reminded that the late great film composer Jerry Goldsmith died twenty-one years ago today. It seems like ten years ago.

The news of his passing had been given to me through a telephone call one sunny morning: "Hey, man. Goldsmith died."

This fan since high school was saddened by the news. He was an artist who I greatly admired, and consider him to be the greatest craftsman to have practiced the art of film scoring.

What impresses some of us most about the stellar scorer is his body of work. Take a step back and look at the variety of scoring. From horse operas to space operas, with small and intimate films in between: Wild Rovers to Star Trek - The Motion Picture, with A Patch of Blue, a Papillon, some Gremlins, and The Mummy. From television: signature themes for Dr. Kildare, The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Barnaby Jones, and The Waltons.

My brother and I met Goldsmith at Toronto's Roy Thomson Hall in November of 1990. He had three concert dates where he played a sampling of his movie and television material. While I chatted with some people in the lobby after the concert I overheard an older gentleman telling another regular concertgoer — they were dressed like season ticket-holders — his feelings: "I was very impressed . . . it must take an incredible mind . . . that's a lot of music."

"Mister Goldsmith, I finally get to meet you. I've been a fan for twelve years." I remember the slight smile on his face. Oh yes, another nutty fan. (I was one of many nutters in that lineup.)

I was uncharacteristically a little nervous. Big name, small name, I don't care. But. I'm thinking: "This is the guy who wrote Ave Satani !"

Genius!