Schulz In His Studio, 1963

Here are a couple more minutes of Charles Schulz from the never-aired 1963 TV special, “A Boy Named Charlie Brown.” It picks up from where I left off in a post from one year ago. The video is available from the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, CA. The studio shown in this video clip was destroyed in a 1966 fire.
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Note: the comic strip that Schulz draws is obviously only for show, and not an actual installment. It’s just a series of drawings, as if an introduction for a Sunday strip. Also, at that time Schulz was still locked into the 4-panel format, and would not have used two daily panels for a single drawing.

“The Book Is Horrible And Wrong” – Amy Schulz

Good grief! What a month this is turning out to be for Charles Schulz, between the new biography and the American Masters program.

Amy Schulz on The Early Show

Amy Schulz has appeared on the Early Show and said the family is outraged and feels betrayed by the David Michaelis biography of her father. The link will probably default to the photo, but be sure to click on the tab for video to watch the entire conversation with Amy.

Sparky, Joyce and Meredith

David MichaelisCharles and Joyce SchulzMeredith Schulz

Nat Gertler over at The AAUGH Blog points out there’s a full-featured (i.e., Flash) Web site for the new book, Schulz and Peanuts: A Biography. Be sure to watch the video, with author David Michaelis. I can see why Schulz’s lost love, Donna Wold, said “I saw pictures of his wife [Joyce] in the newspaper; she looked very pretty.”

I’m very interested in learning more about Joyce, whose daughter Meredith was adopted by Schulz. Watch the video I posted here nearly a year ago to see a few moments of Meredith, whose age was given as 14 in 1963. Schulz had his marriage license backdated to 1949 when he married Joyce in 1951.

ADDED NOTE: I’ve downloaded the promo video for the biography and have put it here.
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NOVA: Marathon Challenge

October 30, the evening after American Masters shows the Charles Schulz program, NOVA on PBS will present Marathon Challenge.

NOVA wanted to investigate these questions through the “Marathon Challenge,” and with the help of a dozen enthusiastic recruits, we set out to see if “ordinary people” could transform themselves into marathoners in just a matter of months. The results were extraordinary.

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The timing of this program is interesting, because a runner died in the Chicago Marathon this past Sunday; not from the 84° heat, but from a pre-existing heart condition. I have completed six Boston Marathons, under a wide variety of weather conditions, including a day when the temperature hovered around 90°F. And take it from me, it’s not something you want to try unless you’re totally in love with the idea of doing it and are prepared to do the work to get ready.

Does the idea of heading out the door to run 16 miles, even when it’s raining, because that’s what the training schedule says to do, appeal to you? No? Then forget marathon running.

The NOVA participants benefited from expert guidance throughout their 40-week training — hmm… the same number of weeks it takes to have a baby. The idea that anybody can run a marathon is simply wrong. Jon Krakauer is a favorite author of mine, and in his book Into Thin Air he is critical of people who want to believe that anybody can conquer climbing Mt. Everest with proper training and adequate equipment.

WALKING the Boston Marathon course is do-able, with proper preparation. A good friend of mine did exactly that recently. But if you aren’t already a runner, and you’re more than ten pounds overweight, and you’ve never jogged more than three miles, I strongly suggest that you not get it in your head that 26.2 miles is nothing more than 13.1 miles times two, because doubling the effort it takes to do 13.1 miles occurs at about 19 miles. And you still have another 7 miles to go.