What was good for GM was bad for America

People who have known me for a long time know that for many years I’ve said General Motors is doomed. I based that conclusion on having rented many nearly-new GM cars at airports during my past years of business travel. They were uniformly awful. The Chevy Lumina was a particularly loathsome vehicle. The times I got a Toyota Corolla or Camry, the difference was striking. Year after year the American cars didn’t get any better, and even if they did, the improvements were lost on me in comparison to the Japanese cars I rented.

I think quite a few men my age have always owned American cars solely because their WWII veteran fathers would have had a fit if any son of theirs bought a “Jap car.” But we’re in our 50’s now, and if that prohibition still applies to any of us, it certainly doesn’t apply to our kids.

My father’s ’65 Falcon was rusted out by the time I started driving it in 1972. His ’69 Galaxy was junk by 1977. In those days, you were pushing your luck keeping a car more than six years. Odometers only went to 99999 miles before lapping back to 00000.

The first warning shot that U.S. auto makers had, telling them that the Japanese were making planned obsolescence obsolete, was 30 years ago. Chrysler was in crisis, and Lee Iacocca had to beg to get a loan guarantee from the federal government. Who was President then? Oh, right. Democrat Jimmy Carter.

Lee Iacocca and Jimmy Carter

Michael Moore is as despised by the Right as Rush Limbaugh is by the Left, but 20 years ago, in Roger & Me, Moore tried to raise awareness that something was rotten at GM. It seems he wasn’t wrong, and the day of GM’s demise appears to be at hand. Part of me would like to say good riddance, because it was so inevitable for so long, but the fallout from GM’s failure could tip the scales in turning a clearly defined economic Recession into a less identifiable Depression.

Good Grief! More Roku

Back in November, I expressed an interest in the Peanuts Motion Comics, done in Flash animation (like South Park and Spongebob), and available on iTunes. I don’t have iTunes, but today, Roku added Amazon Video on Demand to its streaming digital player, and for $8.99 I bought all ten of the Peanuts Motion Comics. I’ve taken my first step — well, my second — into a larger world of streaming video, on TV, free of the computer.

[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/2009/MAR/MotionComics.flv 320 212]

BTW, I have my WiFi glitch with the Roku all fixed. It was a DHCP problem with the FiOS/Actiontec router. I tried adjusting the lease period, etc., but ultimately the solution was to use the WiFi access point of a spare router — a D-Link DI-624 — and it’s now working AOK.

Meet the Beaver, and Wally, and Eddie, and Lumpy too!

Recently, I said that I consider Leave it to Beaver to be one of the best, if not the best, TV series ever produced. By happy coincidence, this Wednesday, JERRY MATHERS, TONY DOW, KEN OSMOND, and FRANK BANK will appear together on Shokus Internet Radio.

“STU’S SHOW” AIRS LIVE ON
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4!

This week’s guests:

The Cast from “Leave it to Beaver” –
JERRY MATHERS (Beaver)
TONY DOW (Wally)
KEN OSMOND (Eddie)
FRANK BANK (Lumpy)

At posting time, all four cast members are scheduled to appear. We’ll finish covering Jerry’s career post “Beaver”, including a stint in the air force, working as a banker, and touring the country in a stage play with co-star Tony Dow before coming back and doing the sequel to the original series in the 1980s. Plus, all four will share their favorite episodes from both series, and we’ll invite the listeners to call in and share their favorites too!

THAT’S THIS COMING WEDNESDAY,
MARCH 4, 2009
LIVE FROM 4-6 P.M. PT
CALL IN WITH YOUR QUESTIONS AND COMMENTS
TOLL-FREE – (888) SHOKUS-5!
REBROADCASTS DAILY

Jerry Mathers and Tony Dow in the final scene of Leave It To Beaver, airdate June 20, 1963

R. Crumb’s Underground, Upstairs

Strangely, you have to go upstairs to see the R. Crumb’s Underground exhibit at the Mass College of Art in Boston.

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Robert Crumb original art isn’t often available for public scrutiny, and not everything at this show — which runs through next Saturday, March 7 — is original. There’s a good mix of material, very nicely presented, with almost none of Crumb’s overtly pornographic stuff — which is good, considering that today was Family Day at the gallery.

R. Crumb\'s UndergroundR. Crumb\'s Underground

In the photo at the right, facing left, is my old friend Morris, who showed me R. Crumb comics when we first met, 38 years ago. One of the niftier examples of Crumb’s work at the exhibit is a collection of thread spools he decorated with faces. That’s Morris looking into the case.

R. Crumb\'s UndergroundR. Crumb\'s Underground

This is the sort of drawing that I suppose most people who know of R. Crumb associate with him, but it’s actually representative of only his earlier work, and is fairly atypical of what he did starting in the 70’s.

R. Crumb\'s Underground

Here’s a relatively early appearance of Bill Griffith’s character Zippy the Pinhead on an R. Crumb cover from 1975.

R. Crumb\'s UndergroundR. Crumb\'s Underground

 
 

TV Alert! ‘Burn Notice’

Tonight at 10 ET, on the USA Network, watch “Burn Notice” and be on the lookout for Paul Howley and his family. Here are viewing tips from Paul:

As some of you may know, Paul and Mal Howley and their daughter, Cassy Wood, recently got paid to be “extras” in a TV show (Burn Notice) that was being filmed in Miami, Florida. Mal and I will most likely be just blurry background characters, but you should be able to spot Cassy because she walks very close to Jeffrey Donovan (the star of the show) several times.

There will be a few scenes that take place in a nice public park in Miami and Mal and I can (possibly) be seen as picnickers sitting on a blanket. (We are such good actors that you’ll be convinced that we are really having a picnic.) Mal is wearing a pink plaid skirt and a pink shirt and Paul is wearing blue jeans (what a surprise!) and an ugly yellow t-shirt that the wardrobe department made me wear. We turn up later in the episode in a marketplace scene and we’re wearing the same clothes.

In the final scene Jeffrey Donovan (Michael) is walking towards his girlfriend and his car and when that shot begins, Mal and I are directly behind him, walking away from him. Cassy can be seen in one “park scene” as she walks right by “Michael” while he’s using his cell phone. Cassy is wearing a lime-green shirt and a white skirt. In another park scene, Cassy is walking with a guy who has his arm around her. Cassy is wearing a red shirt and a white skirt. Later, in a beach scene, Cassy is sitting on a beach chair wearing a black dress with purple and white flowers on it. You’ll recognize Cassy because she’s a petite woman with long dark hair. (Cute as can be!)

“Burn Notice” is seen on USA Network on this coming Thursday (February 26th) at 10PM Eastern time. Please be advised that this TV show may not be suitable for young viewers.

Here is a brief synopsis of what the TV show of “Burn Notice” is about:

WHAT IS BURN NOTICE?

When spies get fired, they don’t get a letter from human resources.

They get BURNED…

This summer, USA Network presents the second season of Burn Notice, a sexy, action-packed original series starring Jeffrey Donovan as Michael Westen, a blacklisted spy. Dumped in his hometown of Miami without money or resources, Michael struggles to put his life back together and find out why he’s been burned. In the meantime, he uses his unique skills and training to help people in need … mostly people who can’t get help from the police.

Burn Notice also stars Gabrielle Anwar as Fiona, a beautiful ex-IRA operative who happens to be Westen’s ex-girlfriend. Bruce Campbell stars as Sam, Michael’s closest buddy in town, a washed up military intelligence contact who is keeping an eye on Michael for the Feds. Also starring is Emmy® Award-winner Sharon Gless as Madeline, Michael’s hypochondriac mother, who couldn’t be happier to have her boy back in town.

Joining the cast this season in a recurring role is Tricia Helfer (“Battlestar Gallactica”) as Carla, the woman who may be behind Michael’s burn notice.

Created and written by Matt Nix, Burn Notice combines the best of the action/thriller elements with surprising humor and an iconic new breed of spy.

Thanks, Paul! I will, of course, set the FiOS DVR to record the show.

BTW, Bruce Campbell is in the series. He’s an old pal of director Sam Raimi, and he’s been in all three of the Spider-Man movies. Campbell has also done some very funny commercials. The one I’m thinking of has him sitting at a piano, but this isn’t that one, but it’s still good.

Rokusjesdag

My little Roku streaming video-on-demand player is so nifty I could kiss it. Nobody else has, that I’ve seen, done a direct video capture off of a Roku, so I’ll do one here. I don’t want to present an idealized view, so I used WiFi rather than ethernet, and I made the recording during the peak evening period, when there always seems to be congestion and the buffering can slow down before the video starts playing. Netflix is very good, however, about picking up where you’ve left off. This is a glitch-free run-through. Everything is the result of a button click on the remote, although now I realize that I neglected to demonstrate a simple pause and continue.

[MEDIA=24]

The quality rating is for the end-to-end connection, with four dots being the best. There’s a separate WiFi signal strength rating. Scanning can be done in three speeds, or you can manually click between individual preview pictures.

Picking up on a theme from earlier this month with June Marlowe in “School’s Out”, that’s the late Sue Randall playing Beaver’s too-good-to-be-true teacher, Miss Landers. Kids have always had innocent and safe crushes on teachers, of course, but over the past 20 years something seems to have changed. The number of women teachers who have developed what is delicately described as inappropriate relationships with students is shocking. Priests abusing kids in private was covered up for decades, if not centuries, but a teacher running off with a student isn’t something that happens unnoticed, and fifty years ago it would have been even bigger news than it is today.

Vera Miles, who I consider to have been a second only to Grace Kelly in the looks department, is seen with Francis (Mayberry) Bavier, in the first installment of the anthology series “Alfred Hitchcock Presents”. In 1940, fifteen years before he appeared on TV, Hitchcock introduced the long-running radio series “Suspense”, as heard here, in an entry I made back in the fall of ’07.

Another follow-up to a previous post is a bit of remastered Star Trek that you can compare to a transfer from VHS I made, by clicking here.