My Favorite Beatles Song

Do I have one single favorite Beatles song? Actually, yes, I think I do. Overall, I tend to favor John over Paul, but this one is my favorite.

[flv:/Video/2008/MAR/HelloGoodbye.flv 440 330]

And while I have the old Laser (pre-DVD) video disc player going, here’s a delightful short scene from Magical Mystery Tour. Seeing this, it’s obvious that John had a kid of his own.

[flv:/Video/2008/MAR/MagicalMysteryTour.flv 440 330]

Extra: That version of “Hello, Goodbye” is obviously not the original stereo mix from Thursday, November 2, 1967. Further, it’s slower. Or perhaps the mix for the record was sped up. I’ll put it here for comparison, taken from the original Capitol Records LP of Magical Mystery Tour that I first heard 40 years ago.

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/2008/MAR/HelloGoodbye.mp3]

In the UK, Magical Mystery Tour was a double EP, and it had only the songs on side 1 of the American LP.

Click to enlarge
Click to enlarge

i(ain’t got no)Power

Most bloggers use a blogging host, and they don’t go to the trouble to be their own Webmasters on a Web host, like I do. This Web site is hosted by a company in Phoenix called iPower, or iPowerweb. It’s a big hosting service, specializing in small businesses. Sometimes, like yesterday, there’s some unscheduled downtime, as we like to say in the high-tech biz when things go wrong. Everything was OK after a while, without me doing anything.

The last time I had something go wrong that absolutely had to be fixed and wasn’t going away on its own, I called iPower tech support, and after an hour I got somebody on the phone who was very nice and fixed the problem. But I know that my friend Bismo, who uses iPower for domain and e-mail forwarding isn’t happy, and there are many other customers with complaints. These problems have become widespread to the point where the Arizona Republic recently had an article about iPower’s woes. Here’s a bit of it.

Web host firm plagued by client criticism

Andrew Johnson
The Arizona Republic
Mar. 6, 2008 12:00 AM

Complaints about Web-site crashes, shoddy tech support and billing errors have spurred fast-growing IPower Inc. to revamp its approach to customer service.

In recent months, the Phoenix-based Web-hosting company has nearly doubled its number of customer-service representatives and adopted new software to manage customer feedback.

The changes have come as the company finds itself the focus of Internet blogs slamming its service and customers threatening to cancel their accounts.

I’ll eventually be confronting some major changes to this site, including an update to the management console. I’m not looking forward to this, because the potential exists for everything to fall to crud. Whatever problems come up, I hope iPower is ready and able to help me.

Potter-nomics

Here’s an exchange between D.F. Rogers and myself. We have this sort of dialog going on all the time. I’ve been busy lately, and it’s easier to post this than to write something from scratch! As we often do, Dennis and I make reference to the movie It’s A Wonderful Life. I’m posting this without permission from Dennis, and if he sues me I’ll have to shut down the blog!

***Dennis Rogers wrote***
Oh well, so much for the 200 billion pumped into the lending system. Helped for two days.

[Link to Boston Globe article]

I now have a better idea of why so many houses are being foreclosed or simply abandoned – people just walk away. NO MONEY DOWN — 100% Financing.

Okay, you buy a house — NO MONEY DOWN — after a few years the value of the house is much less than what you “paid”. You started with no equity and the little equity you did build up has been wiped out by the drop in prices. You are losing money every month you pay. The payments balloon up even higher. You walk away and rent a house for much less money than you were paying. You really did not lose money. You invested no money at all except closing costs.

Is this the fault of the person buying or the fault of banks doing quick 100% loans without checking? They then were selling the mortgage as soon as the closing to another bank who then sold it to another investor and probably to another. Banks made money along the way, it’s just whoever is left with the loan at the end who is stuck.

Of course, now they’ve gone the other way, tightened things up so much that it is almost impossible to buy anything — and so all those foreclosed houses can’t be sold! Downward Spiral! CRAZY! Only Mr. Potter is wise and rich enough to wait and then to buy when the market hits bottom!

***Doug Pratt wrote***
If George Bailey had joined Henry F. Potter they actually would have made an unstoppable team. With George’s ability to manage the building (construction) part of the operation and Henry taking care of the loans, they could have expanded their reach all the way to Elmira!

This is yet another aspect of the movie that’s there, but isn’t blasted in our faces. “I want to build things!” George tells his father. “But this business of trying to save a penny on an inch of pipe…”

How did those “prettiest little homes you ever did see” come to be? Because George was able to use the construction part of the business as an outlet. He never realized his BIG ambitions, but he was in the construction business, and he was good at it. His weakness was the same as his father’s — a lack of financial savvy and toughness. Potter was right. That’s what makes him such a great character. He wasn’t wrong!

This day-to-day wrenching in the stock market makes it so apparent that these guys are just flailing around, with no idea which end is up. Yesterday was such a GREAT DAY on Wall Street, and already this morning they’re sinking again. It’s ludicrous.

Carlyle Capital Corp., which is managed by Carlyle Group, warned late Wednesday it expects creditors will seize all the fund’s remaining assets after unsuccessful negotiations to prevent its liquidation.

Isn’t the Carlyle Group that scary ultra-elitist bunch that includes Bush Sr.? I thought they were the ones who were supposed to be immune to the market fluctuations suffered by lowly brokerage firms.

PET-ition Final

The final tally for the PET-ition is 1,129. Thank you to all British citizens and residents who signed.

This petition is now closed, as its deadline has passed.

We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to recommend a Damehood for Petula Clark – which is long overdue.

Submitted by Irene Seaton – Deadline to sign up by: 12 March 2008 – Signatures: 1,129

King Of The Rocketeer

Dave Stevens, born mere weeks before me, has died of leukemia. Dave was a comic book artist. A very good one. In fact, he was so good he was able to stop drawing comic books and instead concentrate on covers, pin-ups, and portfolios. Sadly, in his case, the good really did die young.


Stevens took an idealized vision of Bettie Page, the iconic 50’s “underwear model,” and paired her with a version of the character introduced in a 1949 Republic movie serial called King of the Rocketmen. With better art than story, and with installments sometimes years apart, Stevens had a cult hit on his hands, with a fan following that was big enough for it to be picked up by Disney and turned into a movie. Unfortunately, Disney was the wrong studio at the wrong time to make The Rocketeer, and the movie didn’t take off.

Slate of Hand, by Judy & Ted Buswick

As alluded to previously, way back in the past century I got talked into joining the high school drama club. I was in two or three plays, and I had a great time doing them. The Proscenium Circus, as it was called, was the brainchild of an English teacher at Acton-Boxborough Regional High School in Massachusetts. His name is Ted Buswick. His wife Judy had been my eighth grade English teacher. She cured me of spelling hump day “Wendesday,” and she was approving when she caught me reading Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey. It’s funny how memories like those stick.

Ted and Judy Buswick

Judy and Ted have written Slate of Hand, Stone for Fine Art & Folk Art; which is, as the author of the forward says, “so timely and fills such a gap, why has nothing of the sort been previously undertaken?” Having taken a lot of art history classes in college I really enjoy Slate of Hand. I’m particularly impressed by the work of Ivor Richards, and everything in the chapter called “Stacked Sculpture.”

Slate of Hand, by Judy & Ted Buswick

After teaching for fifteen years, Ted quit the profession in 1982 to pursue another career, but his influence as an exceptional teacher and drama coach lives on in myself, my sisters Jean and Marianne, and many, many others. There’s a short written interview with Ted at this link.