80 years ago, The Wizard of Oz was previewed in three test markets. Three days later, on August 15th, it made its Hollywood premiere. The film opened nationwide August 25th, 1939.
Category: Miscellaneous
If Adam and Eve…
Lucy on the Radio
The Bombs Bursting In Air
Joan Crawford celebrating the 4th… be careful out there!
The Age of the Globe, 1919
Some people are sensitive about their ages. The Giddy Globe has never told us hers.
Rude men of science, after careful examination, declare she ant be a day under five billion years old.
Theologians, ever tactful in feminine matters, set her down as a shrinking young thing of barely four thousand summers
From This Giddy Globe, 1919 by Oliver Herford
The Greatest Land-Dragon Ever Known, 1913
From the The San Francisco Call., September 25, 1913
HERE is an astonishing picture of the reconstructed Gigantosaurus Africanus, the most prodigious creature that has come to light. Our special artist has now reconstructed the great land dragon and has set it by a man and Diplodocus Carnegii, to emphasize its enormous size. Recent discoveries have revealed in Africa remains of a land dragon whose length measured some 160 feet, or about the distance from The Call office across Market street to Lotta’s fountain. The monster was discovered by German savants at Tendaguru, in German East Africa. An almost complete skeleton was obtained. The cast of the upper arm bone, or humerus, now at the British Museum of Natural History, South Kensigton, and descriptions of the rest of the skeleton show that this colossal beast was a near relation of Diplodocus Carnegii, in Pittsburgh. Now, Diplodocus was just 84 feet long and stood 11 feet high at the shoulder. His arm bone measured just 3 feet 3 inches long. The arm bone of the new giant, Gigantosaurus Africanus, was as long as the whole leg of Diplodocus; it measures now just 7 feet 1 inch, but during life it was certainly some inches longer, for no allowance has been made for the gristle which must have capped both ends. It may be that Gigantosaurus may lose something of his glory, at any rate as far as his length is concerned, for it is assumed that he was a long tailed dragon, like his American cousin. He may not have been. In height Diplodocus was nowhere; his 11 feet at the shoulder is far eclipsed by the 22 feet of his rival. Naturally, it is difficult, not to say dangerous, to dogmatize on the theme of the habits of Gigantosaurus. 11c lived during that remote period of the world’s history during which the lower cretaceous rocks were formed; a period which antedated the birth of man by several million years. We shall probably be not far from the truth in regarding him as an aquatic, or. at any rate, an amphibious creature. That he was a vegetarian is shown by his teeth, and that he was dull witted is proved by the ridiculously small size of his brain cavity, less than would hold a man’s fist. A man is placed in the drawing (under Gigantosaurus Africanus) merely for the comparison of size.
Black Butterfly
Champions vs. City of Heroes
A comparison of Champions (CO) (2009-current) vs. City of Heroes/City of Villains (CoX) (2004-2012, current).
A little background information, I was a late player getting into MMOs in general, starting with CoX, and played it til the end. Once it shut down I took a break, but then was drawn back in to play Champions Online and eventually became a life time subscriber. Late last month a group called SCORE (Secret Cabal of Reverse Engineers) opened up their private server, which apparently had been running for the last 6 years or so (no hard feelings, good for them!). Once I heard I fired up CoX using the information provided and started playing again. I played with a silly grin on my face for hours, but I wanted to make sure it wasn’t nostalgia speaking when I said that I believed CoH was better than CO, even though they are basically the same engine originally designed by Cryptic Studios.
I’ll just do a side by side comparison and let you be the judge. Continue reading “Champions vs. City of Heroes”
Just an FYI
You may have noticed a slowdown in the number of posts being published lately. There is a good reason, and don’t worry, I’m not abandoning this project.
As you may know this is a support site for the pulp-action rpg Fists & .45s! and for the last several month now I have been working on a few side projects related to that endeavor including a spicy spaghetti western version of Fists & .45s! and two novels.
As you can imagine, those take up a bit of time, considering I also have a full time job. So please be patient, I’m not going anywhere. There are close to 1000 posts on this site already, and my “to do” folder has at least 1000 more.
Thank you for your support!