Zone Out: be bold and leave your marks to be erased

Reid Welch

1 MW
Joined
Nov 18, 2006
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Location
Miami, Florida
NB: these are select, personal favorite YT videos.
The thread title will change to reflect the latest additions.


First, some Twilight Zone episodes: perhaps the finest, smartest TV series ever produced.
This episode is finely condensed, not long at all.
Enjoy! And do please add your own favorites?
I will lard this thread with favorite shows or clips of great TV of the past,
when TV, even in the USA, was pretty smart stuff, some of it.
[youtube]WudBfRa0ETw[/youtube]

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I'm hungry~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
I remember seeing this when it first aired.
We all expected a certain fate, ca. 1960 to '63:

[youtube]qHIxR-D4Evo[/youtube]
[youtube]P29p_HOyyY0[/youtube]
[youtube]y_KtHzrJvUI[/youtube]

The era shaped, or rather, deformed, life-outlooks.
I was there and cannot forget.

PS:
This homespun writer, grandson of a real doctor, and son of a judge who was no judge,
http://www.poetrycritical.net/forum/read/192522/6/
and who is forever now, a high school dropout, cannot forgive that era
of utterly nihilistic, mascerating fear.

R.

____________________________________________
____________________________________________
 
[youtube]qJuo2_pcUsE[/youtube]
Double click the player window if you want the "HQ" version option?

----
The electric streetcar...I read and learned about them from period-original Scientific American magazines.
They were fully perfected before 1890, and made suburban living possible. But they would be doomed
to extinction. But so civilized, clean, comfortable. Miami destroyed its streetcar system by the early or mid 30s. GM finished the job, nationwide, just after WWII. We would become slaves to automobiles and black-smoke belching diesel buses, and minions, unwitting, for Big Oil and Motown's greed to monopolize all forms of transportation. Even trains, most of them, died, in favor of tractor trailers.

[youtube]gGbjbD6VtQA[/youtube]
New York, 1905. The system yet survives there, at least.
 
RUSH to save the g/f from a bigamist.
GET THERE TO THE WEDDING before it's too late to stop the heel!
Harold, our Hero! Streetcars, gasoline buses. HURRY, Harold!
[youtube]PyNQY23RSgE[/youtube]
Final part of a surperb Harold Lloyd comedy.
You can double click on the player and see the entire movie.
Choose "HQ" playback if at all possible.
He did all of his own stunts, and how he lived!
One of the three great comics of the golden era of silent film;
imo, the best, because, unlike Keaton, Lloyd was Everyman.
You could not not like him, then nor now.
 
Rudy Vallee's first major hit--a bit of Yale whimsy given national popularity by the charismatic crooner.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THE WHIFFENPOOF SONG
(words Meade Minnegerode; tune attributed to Tod Galloway)

To the tables down at Mory's,
To the place where Louis dwells,
To the dear old Temple Bar
We love so well,

Sing the Whiffenpoofs assembled
With their glasses raised on high,
And the magic of their singing casts its spell.

Yes, the magic of their singing
Of the songs we love so well:
"Shall I, Wasting" and "Mavourneen" and the rest.

We will serenade our Louis
While life and voice shall last
Then we'll pass and be forgotten with the rest.

We are poor little lambs
Who have lost our way.
Baa! Baa! Baa!
We are little black sheep
Who have gone astray.
Baa! Baa! Baa!

Gentlemen songsters off on a spree
Damned from here to eternity
God have mercy on such as we.
Baa! Baa! Baa!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Much more from Wiki:

The Whiffenpoof Song was published in sheet music form in 1909. It became a hit first for Rudy Vallee in 1927 and later in 1947 for Bing Crosby. It has also been recorded by Elvis Presley, Count Basie, Perry Como, the Statler Brothers and countless others. Mory's refers to Mory's Temple Bar and Louis to a former owner of Mory's. The chorus is derived from the poem "Gentlemen Rankers" by Rudyard Kipling, which was set to music by Guy H. Scull (Harvard '98) and adapted with lyrics by Meade Minnigrode (Yale '10).

The chorus was also used in the movie 12 O'Clock High with Gregory Peck. It can be heard being sung in the background after the unit receives its first unit commendation.

THE WHIFFENPOOFS

The Yale Whiffenpoofs are the oldest collegiate a cappella group in the United States, established in 1909.[1] Best known for "The Whiffenpoof Song," based on a tune written by Guy H. Scull (Harvard 1898) and adapted with lyrics by Meade Minnigerode (Yale 1910). the group comprises senior men who compete in the spring of their junior year for 14 spots.[3] The business manager and musical director of the group, known in Whiff tradition respectively as the "Popocatepetl" and "Pitchpipe"[4] are chosen by members of the previous year's group, although an alumni organization maintains close ties with the group.

The Whiffenpoofs have performed for generations at a number of venues, including Lincoln Center, the White House, the Salt Lake Tabernacle, McAfee Coliseum, Carnegie Hall and the Rose Bowl. The group has also appeared on television shows such as Jeopardy!, The Today Show, Saturday Night Live, 60 Minutes, Gilmore Girls and The West Wing.

Throughout the school year, the Whiffenpoofs traditionally perform Monday nights at Mory's, known more formally as "Mory's Temple Bar," circulating from room to room singing.

The Whiffs' best-known alumnus may be Cole Porter, who sang in the 1913 lineup of the Whiffenpoofs when he was a student at Yale. Today the group often performs Porter songs in tribute.

The Whiffenpoofs donate part of their proceeds each year to the Whiffenpoof Children's Literacy Initiative, which aims to create 15 literacy centers in 12 countries, including the US. They travel extensively during the school year and take a three-month world tour during the summer. At one time most members were full-time students, but today many members take all or part of the year off and are effectively full-time professional Whiffenpoofs.

The word "whiffenpoof" originated in the 1908 opera Little Nemo by Victor Herbert, based on the comic strip Little Nemo in Slumberland by Windsor McCay.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`
Centennial year for this Kipling poem, made to song, still sung every day by its keepers.
[youtube]RJVUTHLFdQ0[/youtube]

Trivia: Rudy and I have nearly identical faces, the eyes in particular;
"sloe eyes". And we both, we all, face the same directions:
to the future, begging for kind endings, all.
~~~!~
I hope I end up as a cozy sweater, and not just as humus or ashes.

r
 
Reid Welch said:
I hope I end up as a cozy sweater, and not just as humus or ashes.

r
I met a guy who brushed his husky/shepard cross and saved the hair to be spun into yarn for a sweater after the dog died.
It was an old dog and he had closets stuffed with dog hair.

I'm done with the meat where it falls. After that is not my concern.
 
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