The most recent 20 comments posted to Electrolite by Jim Meadows:

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Posted on entry It's art, but only if the right people are doing it. ::: July 14, 2003, 06:49 PM:
Kip W traced the gag behind Barbier's installation to a 1975 National Lampoon piece. I'd go back even further, to a Mad Magazine piece from circa 1960, imagining what it would be like if all comics characters aged in real time, as they do in Gasoline Alley (and in For Better Or Worse today). I remember dentures falling out of Tarzan's mouth, and Dick Tracy's hearing aid impairing his use of the two-way wrist radio. Also, a grown-up Dennis the Menace announcing to delegates at the United Nations that he had put gum on all their seats. There must have been a super-hero there somewhere. I believe Wally Wood did the artwork.
Posted on entry Jon Carroll ::: June 03, 2003, 02:25 PM:
For some reason, this cat column reminds me of an audio-visual presentation I saw in Peoria, Illinois about the area's history. I do not remember if the production actually started with the cooling of the earth's crust, but I'm sure it worked in the age of the dinosaurs.
Posted on entry More on the late Harry Warner, Jr.: ::: April 01, 2003, 10:29 AM:
Thanks for linking to the Herald-Mail's obituary for Harry Warner Jr. Besides giving its readers at least an outline of Warner's life in fandom, it also gave me a glimpse of his life outside fandom. Since my window to fandom has been almost exclusively fanzines, I've become familiar with the paper personalities of a lot of fans, without really knowing about their actual lives, even what they look like. Warner's obituary gave me more information about him personally than Warner's fan writing ever did.
Posted on entry Roll over Parnassus: ::: March 06, 2003, 01:57 PM:
When I was a kid in church choir, I noticed that one of the cool things about the 1940 Episcopal Hymnal was that each hymn featured a numerical code which explained the length of its lines. Sometimes, the hymnal provided two melodies for one lyric, or one melody would show up in more than one place. But you could always use the code to mix'n'match melodies and lyrics. I don't know why more songbooks don't have this feature.

On a related note, did you ever notice that the "Flintstones" theme uses the same chord sequence as "I Got Rhythm"? It takes some creative work to actually switch the lyrics around, but jazz musicians can always have fun with the chord changes.
Posted on entry What doesn't work and what does ::: August 15, 2002, 12:29 PM:

I also was unable to link to the Schneier piece in the Atlantic Monthly.

In looking at the Atlantic's website, moreover, I saw that the Schneier article is in the September issue, but the "current issue" online was only June. Could this be part of the linking problem many of us had?

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