Peekaboo

October 7th, 2009

If I had a reader or two, they’d have noticed that WiseAndFoolish appeared to have vanished a week or three ago.

It didn’t go anywhere, really; all posts were available for viewing . . . by direct URL or RSS. If you came to W&F honestly, however, you’d see a blank screen.

I was using an older version of Wordpress . . . one which permitted some putz to award himself admin control over W&F. Removing him from the user database was sufficient to delouse W&F, but I somehow managed to blank the site’s home page.

I actually managed to damage the site’s theme, thus no pretty pictures, no HTML, nada.

During the perceived downtime, no-one mentioned anything. I intended to let W&F stay as-is ’til somebody did. But then, we’d still be waiting . . .

Despite all that, something good came of it (in addition to my upgrading to the latest Wordpress version): No spam.

No kidding. No spam for however long the site’s main page was blank.

As earlier mentioned, all of W&F was up and accessible during this time, indicating spammers’ scripts use home page links to do their dirty work, but aren’t ’smart’ enough to recover from a ‘where the hell did the links at this URL go’ error.

I’ve been thinking of changing the home page here to something more cartoonist-y. We’ll see.

Some Decent Twits About Town

March 16th, 2009

I can’t help but mention here a few artists whose work I’ve been viewing while coughing like crazy on the couch.

Fellow Canuck and National Film Board booster (he works there — I just admire their work) Matt Forsythe has been noticed by more than one group of award-bestowing folk of late. His book Ojingogo (about a girl and her squid, printed by Drawn and Quarterly) is under consideration for a Reuben (not the sandwich), as well as a Doug Wright Awards’ Pigskin Peters Award. Kate Beaton’s extraordinary History Comics is up for the DWA’s Best Emerging Talent.

I’ve just started enjoying Anders Loves Maria (by Swedish illustrator Rene Engström) and am blown away by her brushwork, not to mention her characters. Warning: may contain nudity and coarse language. Does contain excellent writing and drawing. A precis and character bios are found here.

The expressive (but probably NSFW) pin-up work of Ramón Pérez is worth a look, if you’re not at work.

I’m not yet familiar with the Walrus’s David Parker and Jason Sherman, but they’ve done up a fine send-up of Conrad Black here.

When the Past Bites Your Present’s Buttocks

March 9th, 2009

I have done many unusual things in 40-odd years of life.  Typically, people think I am lying when I tell them specifics, so — also typically — I tend not to bring these things up, anymore.

Sometimes, however, keeping quiet — while admireable — is not a viable option.  Such does not work well when you’re about to be whacked with the cold, wet salmon of reality.  And that salmon’s a-comin’, if it isn’t already here.

. . .

At some point in my early teens, I came upon a stash of prurient magazines.  I enjoyed their prurience, of course, but I also caught on to a truth: these magazines printed cartoons.  Looking more closely (for these were worthy reference material),  I came to a teen-aged epiphany: “I can do this!”

I was, of course, referring to

  • drawing cartoons, and
  • getting said cartoons into subsequent issues of my reference material.

I could do it, and I did do it, though I made several mistakes along the way.  I plead the stupidity of youth with a caveat: I have found that I’ve a surplus of stupidity carrying me past middle age.

One said mistake was to sign my cartoons with my stepfather’s last name.  I had assumed his surname with his (and the court’s) blessing, but we had not discussed the rights thereto.  He likely did not expect to see his last name in Sex to Sexty magazine when I was 14 or 15.  When he did (for I was the fool who brought the magazine to him), there was . . . trouble.

I don’t actually know how many cartoons I had in Sex to Sexty, Good Humor and several similarly-slanted magazines, but from 1976 or so through the start of the 80s, there may have been a few, here and there.  Due to a timely intervention by my grandfather, I drew considerably fewer naked folk thereafter.

. . .

So why bring this up? I mean, thirty-something years have passed, right?  Heck, the magazines themselves died, didn’t they?

Um . . . yep.  That’s where the problem lies.

While looking at my BNL indy tape auction on eBay (when you post something for a penny with no reserve, you want to pay some attention over the auction’s timeframe), I thought I’d search for original cartoon art; there are several million cartoonists and illustrators better than I am, and I like looking at their work.  Some of their work I like owning, so I can look more closely.  I mean, if you’ve ever had a chance to look at Gilbert Shelton’s work (e.g. The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers), you have seen the oceans of White-Out he used from panel to panel. Shelton’s work is tactile, f’rcry’nowtloud.  Cool.

The search proved worrisome.  What seemed to come up a lot was the work of cartoonists I knew . . . cartoonists represented in the 1970s in Sex to Sexty, Good Humor, and . . . uh oh.

. . .

Yep.  The once-publisher of Sex to Sexty is selling decades of content, which means my stuff will come up soon, if it hasn’t already.  I’m not going to give a link nor a photo ’cause I have no idea how old a given reader here is.

For those of you who are of legal age in the jurisdiction you’re currently occupying, I’d recommend looking for ‘rudzinski’ and/or ‘henn’.

Note: I will probably be bidding against you. If I’m not, shoot me an email and I’ll remedy that ASAP. :)

Cleanup at Checkout

January 23rd, 2009

It’s been a few months (about half a year or so) since I last posted here.

In that timeframe, some decent people passed away, greedy American mortgage lenders managed to collapse the world’s economies, I was laid off, and a black man became the President of the United States.

You’d think I’d have mentioned a few of these.  I didn’t, though — mostly because I couldn’t think of anything to say that millions of others didn’t.  And the laid-off thing?  Cry me a river; things’re tough all over.

The good news?  George Bush is out of office.  The bad?  America will never recover from his legacy:

(the list below was compiled at Reddit, a site of some interest)

  • Misleading us, saying Iraq had “weapons of mass destruction”
  • Breaking the Geneva Conventions by using torture
  • Telling the 45 million uninsured Americans to just go to the emergency room
  • Repeated implying a connection between Saddam and 9/11, ignoring clear contrary evidence
  • Failing to respond to Hurricane Katrina
  • Launching a war that’s killed 4,150 Americans and wounded more than 30, 000
  • Challenging Iraqi insurgents to attack U.S. troops: “Bring ‘em on”
  • Granting no-bid contracts to Halliburton in Iraq
  • Hiring an unqualified crony to run FEMA
  • Praising crony’s performance: “Brownie, you’re doing a heckuva job”
  • Neglecting reconstruction of New Orleans’ homes and levees Promising American troops would be greeted as liberators
  • Declaring “Mission Accomplished” and later blaming the banner on troops
  • Cherry-picking facts about WMDs in Iraq, then blaming the CIA
  • Promising the Iraq war would lower gas prices
  • Claiming the Iraqi insurgency was in its “last throes” in 2005
  • Allowing Osama Bin Laden to escape
  • Launching a war that’s killed countless Iraqi civilians
  • Using Terri Schiavo for political gain
  • Attempting to alter Constitution to allow discrimination against gay people
  • Wiretapping our phones without court order
  • Stealing the 2000 election (remember Katherine Harris, voter purges, and the Supreme Court?)
  • Ignoring, then concealing the pre-9/11 Presidential Daily Briefing entitled “Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S.”
  • Enforcing abstinence-only programs in public schools
  • Rejecting the Kyoto Treaty to stop climate change
  • Giving tax cuts to the rich while spending record amounts
  • Failing seniors with the costly Medicare prescription drug benefit
  • Swiftboating John Kerry
  • Outing CIA agent Valerie Plame to retaliate for truth about Iraq’s WMDs
  • Spending $341 million a day in Iraq (Iraq has a budget surplus)
  • Neglecting wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Medical Center
  • Allowing Afghanistan to fall into chaos, with the Taliban and al Qaeda regaining control
  • Holding prisoners without trial at Guantanamo Bay
  • Covering up torture at Abu Ghraib
  • Turning a budget surplus into massive budget deficit
  • Letting more than a million homes go into foreclosure—the highest rate ever recorded
  • Holding secret meetings with Exxon Mobil, Conoco, Shell, and BP to set energy policy
  • Letting gas prices double while resisting fuel efficiency and clean energy
  • Setting the record for most days on vacation (1020 days, or more than one-third of his entire eight years!) by any president in U.S. history

Please feel free to copy any or all of the above and spread it around. [Source: Reddit]

Two Bozoes Down

July 4th, 2008

 

Both Bozo the Clown (Larry Harmon) and Jesse Helms died this week. 

Some more-flattering Helms quotes may be seen in a 2001 New York Times article by Kevin Sack.   Less-flattering quotes here.  My opinion of the gentleman may be seen in this cartoon (“One Trick Pony”).

Signs and Wonders?

June 10th, 2008

The extremely unusual is going on. And not all of it is Canadian.

Ordinarily, these copyright-kinda things blow over, but this won’t; too many Canadians associate the song with the sport. Problematically — and probably why television network CTV bought the song’s rights in perpetuity — two generations of Canadians associate the song with CBC’s television and radio hockey broadcasts.
Is the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation going to take this lying down? Probably.

  • Example two: Lynda Carter — the 1970s Amazon ‘Wonder Woman‘ to her friends — was canoeing on the Potomac when she sighted a floating body and had the presence of mind to enlist the aid of nearby fishermen in contacting authorities.

Ms Carter mentioned she didn’t have a cellphone, but doesn’t the invisible canoe have a powerful invisible communications system?

  • Example three: Apple Inc. has taken their expensive iPhone and have

a) made it twice as fast, and

b) made it affordable(!).

No kidding. Check it out!

Peace Out, Redux

March 20th, 2008

Fifty years go by like nothing . . . and so it is with the famed peace sign, whose 50th anniversary was recently observed.

. . .

Filipino Good Friday re-enactors have been admonished by local health officials to get tetanus inoculations before

a) flagellating themselves, and
b) having nails hammered into their hands and feet while tied to crosses.
They also recommend that the whips utilized be hygienic and “well-maintained.” Good advice all around.

. . .

Take Pork Off Your Fork?

Almost 10 per cent of packaged pork chops and ground pork purchased by researchers in four Canadian provinces were infected with MRSA — Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus — a ’super’ bacterium once primarily seen in hospitals.

The good news? MRSA doesn’t survive cooking. Providing pork is properly cooked (no pink within) and properly handled prior to cooking (wash your hands after touching any raw meat — especially pork and chicken — or use an alcohol-based hand-sanitizer), eating your chops and porkburgers shouldn’t kill you.

Better news? Pork roasts purchased by the researchers were uninfected.

. . .

Happy Easter, y’all. :)

Welcome to 2008, Whomever You Are

January 3rd, 2008

I imagine you’re aware that the year changed. Famously, this is noted by whack-jobs in New York City looking in abject glee at a big lighted ball crawling down a pole in Times Square. As they’ve been doing it for a century (judging by Dick Clark, alone), much of North America is content to watch along with ‘em. I don’t see the attraction, but there must be something thrilling about it all — throw me a note or comment if you have a reasonable explanation for all the hoo-haw.

Speaking of comments, WiseandFoolish gets about 150 or so spam ‘comments’ daily. Happily, I typically don’t have to deal with them; Akismet, a life-saving WordPress plug-in, just shovels the digital feces into a ‘Caught Spam’ section, which can be viewed (if necessary) and trashed in a second. Highly recommended.

After poring over W&F’s 2007 logs, I’ve come to the realization that no-one’s reading this. I’m not completely convinced of this, but I do suspect most — if not all — of this site’s ‘hits’ are spambots. There are advantages to this . . . I could run a contest, for instance, and keep the prize. ‘Bots have been known to enter contests, however, and I don’t want to have to ship a prize to a dark alley in China’s Hunan province.

I think instead over the next few months I’ll scan and post some of my published work from the 1980s and ’90s.

That’ll fix ‘em.

Monday Miscellany

December 17th, 2007

Excess money? A remedy for that could be a whack of movies from United Artists. The United Artists 90th Anniversary Prestige Collection provides you with enough entertainment to last you into your dotage.

. . .

We Get Spam

A mister ‘Alfonzo Rosa’ entitles his sales pitch, “You won’t need to furtively put socks into your trunks anymore!”

Oh, goody!

. . .

Dan Fogelberg died of prostate cancer today.  He was 56.  I remember him through songs of haunting melody: Run for the Roses and Longer among them.

That’ll Teach Her

December 15th, 2007

Quick-thinking Florida school officials, seeing a 10-year-old student actually cutting her lunch with a steak knife,
called police, who naturally arrested and charged the child with felony possession of a weapon on school property.