RIP Paul Allen

Paul wasn’t as famous as Bill Gates or Steve Ballmer being the number three guy at Microsoft but he will always remain essential to the history of personal computing. He was also pretty savvy too. Paul left Microsoft in 1982 (the day-to-day stuff) while holding on to all his stock despite Gates trying to buy him out in 1983 for a mere $5/share. This proved to be wise since Microsoft going public made him a billionaire overnight. He then went on to spend his fortune on numerous things he’s probably more famous for, namely the museum he founded with Captain Kirk’s chair on display.

Although I’m not a big fan of either Windows-driven products or the Xbox, Paul should be a key figure in the history books alongside Grace Hopper, Steve Jobs and Thomas Watson Jr. of IBM.

Posted in Apple, History, Science & Technology | Tagged , | Leave a comment

RIP Geoff Emerick

Another late obituary I wanted to post because Geoff was an instrumental man in the evolution of Pop/Rock music. He may be most famous for being the engineer at Abbey Road during the Beatles’ run of albums but to me Geoff contributed to so many more (and better) acts: Split Enz, Badfinger, Elvis Costello, Nellie McKay, Nick Hayward, Big Country, Ultravox and Wings.

I had the lucky opportunity to meet Geoff in Las Vegas after a Cheap Trick concert. The band explained how they wouldn’t perform Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band on stage unless Geoff ran the board. Ergo, their performance dates were based upon his availability and I think it also silenced critics who felt Cheap Trick was doing these shows exclusively for the money. Anyway, Geoff was a very generous man with his time, willing to speak to anyone who wanted to talk to him after the concert and get an autograph.

Thanks for all your technical skills and trained ears to give us such memorable music Geoff!

Posted in Music | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

The Predator: Streaming…at best

Everyone’s big-game-hunting alien(s) return in the latest installment of the Predator saga. What’s new this time? Not very much other than their race can be over ten-feet tall. Shane Black takes a shot at directing and in my opinion he came up short. He just made the same 1987 and 1990 movies, except the creature is trying to retrieve some stolen technology a US soldier managed to ship home. Plus, the government is aware of the aliens’ visits. Nothing terribly interesting beyond a by-the-numbers flick. The ending is also lame.

If you’re a fan, you’ll probably see it and be disappointed. Everybody else, don’t bother.

Alamo Extras: Trailers for It Came Without Warning, Robowar (an Italian ripoff of Predator) and Predator 2; scenes from a Japanese movie involving samurai v. cyborgs; footage of the CapCom video game AVP; Thomas Jane singing in an Indian movie; a little kid dressed up as a Predator at a convention; dancing Predators montage; Brad Neely’s “Preteen with a Predator Head” cartoon; Alamo’s collection of 100 Alien Movie Sightings (quite a collection, covering a century); lastly, everyone’s favorite fights with the Predator:

  • Gary Busey in Predator 2
  • Walter Goggins in Predators
  • Carl Weathers in Predator
  • Calvin Lockhart, aka “King Willie” in Predator 2
  • Arnold (of course) in Predator
Posted in In Theaters, Movies | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

End of a long week

This week was a huge let down in the intelligent, educated (ergo, Librul) parts of Texas. The twin specters of the entrenched Confederacy and lazy non-voters handed my adopted home another four yeas of tyranny under the Republicans. They don’t really govern here, they just sue Democrats, shit talk and push a regressive agenda embracing the “ideals” pre-Civil War America. The biggest heartbreak was Beto O’Rourke coming within a couple points of defeating the smug, pock-faced Turd Cruz for the senate seat. Beto shouldn’t give up, I think he ran a good campaign and he could unseat the other asshole who doesn’t represent real-people values, John Cornholio.

The bright spot is that Florida and Georgia will go down fighting. It’s pretty amazing how much the Republicans are acting like their Dixiecrat ancestors once SCOTUS defanged the Voting Rights Act. The other factor is the Democrats winning back the House despite the blatant gerrymandering numerous GOP operatives have set up as per the book Ratfucked. I personally think Pelosi will find a way to fumble again, losing the House to the GOP within four years. She, Diane Feinstein and Chuck Grassley are the poster children for why our government needs a mandatory retirement age. I have to “quit” working around 67, why are they allowed to cling to power well into their eighties? Other, real Western democracies have retirement caps and it seems to work. Case in point, they aren’t fleeing to live in America which continues to be the boogeyman on what not to do with healthcare, voting and immigration policy.

Well, I’ve rested enough to get back to the job of writing.

Posted in News | Tagged , | Leave a comment

This month’s header, They Live turns 30

Given our current state of affairs, it’s only appropriate to celebrate John Carpenter’s social commentary masterpiece, released on this day. The header took a little work to get it to work and I found this anti-Trump one weeks ago. No luck getting to view the movie again, it’s not on any of the three major streaming sources, drat. However, I did see it in college on a friend’s VCR. As much as I enjoyed They Live, I feel the fight scene is mainly padding to get the story to play out around 90 minutes.

Now that I think about, the gif of Trump being one of them isn’t possible. I’m still reading Bob Woodward’s Fear and the asshole lacks the mental capacity to even be assistant manager at Taco Bell so the aliens would put him in power as a dupe…the same way the regressive Republicans do now to pass their Gilded Age agenda.

Posted in Movies, News, The Site | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

King of the Hill “returns” on Hulu!

After the show suddenly disappeared from Netflix without any warning, Mike Judge’s masterpiece about life in Central Texas returns! I will probably start from the beginning once I’ve finished Adventure Time.

Posted in TV | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Culture Club with Tom Bailey

Yeah, I know what you’re thinking. It’s…you went to see Boy George this Summer? Really? I went for two other reasons. The first was this show being a joint trip with my friend and co-worker Ayako who likes Culture Club. The second was to see the opening act, Tom Bailey who is known as the lead member of the Thompson Twins.

Much like most teenagers in the Eighties, Culture Club was seen as weird and at the same time, lame. Obviously Boy George’s appearance was off-putting then. Was he trying to be a drag queen? Was this for attention to rise above a crowded field of other bands? The list went on and cruel descriptions usually followed with many people. Heck, there was a pseudo Country/Comedy act that did a song mocking him called “Where’s the Dress?” Their music also sounded a tad more Adult Contemporary or a novelty to me. My opinion of them improved when they released “Church of the Poison Mind” which had a strong Soul/Gospel element I liked. As I got older, I’ve been alright with the bulk of their hits because I came to a similar conclusion my friend Steve Bryant once made about the Police, these two bands along with the English Beat made Reggae safe for White Americans.

The concert was excellent. It was the original line up with a large back-up band. Four back-up singers, an extra guitarist/keyboardist, a percussionist and a horn player. They opened with Bowie’s “Let’s Dance” and continued with their hits. I think there was some new stuff, they released a new album around late October. For the encore, they had invited a local guitarist to join them in a cover of Robert Palmer’s “Addicted to Love” before closing out with what is probably their most famous song, “Karma Chameleon.”

There’s no set list of Austin but what I found for the Dallas show, it looks pretty similar.

I was glad to see Boy George in good spirits. He looked healthier than he had been in the late Eighties through the Nineties. He kicked his drug habit and the First World has become more accepting of his appearance along with homosexuals, transgendered and whatever floats some people’s boat, unless it’s hurting somebody.

Tom Bailey was who I really came to see and he didn’t disappoint. His back-up band was all women about half his age which was amusing, nothing like having to teach “the kids” how to play your hits. They kicked off with “Love on Your Side,” an interesting choice given it was the first song I ever heard by the Thompson Twins on KLOL but not easily recognized by the crowd. Tom threw in a couple new songs from his just released solo album, his first new work in 25 years! I liked what I heard. Other surprises were a couple deep tracks from Into the Gap, “Sister of Mercy” and “You Take Me Up.” They also reworked “King for a Day” into a ballad, nice touch and he joked about how one of his songs ended up in a movie, “If You Were Here,” which my generation knows from Sixteen Candles‘ ending, for younger people it’s an episode of Bob’s Burgers. “Doctor, Doctor,” “Lies, Lies, Lies,” and “Lay Your Hands” were played and the set concluded with “Hold Me Now.”

The Thompson Twins were a band I truly wish I got to see in their prime but I lived in the physical boonies (North Dakota) and cultural boonies (Indiacrapolis) when they toured. Better late than never. Tom’s famous red hair is all silver/gray now too. I gotta’ admit, many rock/pop stars I loved from the past are aging pretty well. I hope I share their luck.

Posted in Concert, Music | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

RIP Norm Breyfogle

Norm passed away a couple months ago but he’s worth mentioning because his Batman comics were a big part of my life when I was a collector. His style was very loose with the cape flowing when Batman was jumping around. Not as ridiculously as Todd McFarlane’s (his could be ten-feet long). Norm also put his stamp on certain villains at the time: the Ventriloquist & Scarface and Clayface III. Sadly I never saw him do anything else for DC. I stopped getting comics shortly after I moved to Austin and didn’t get back into them until the Obama administration so I don’t know what became of him until his death was reported in the Onion.

Thanks for all the cool stories you did with writer Alan Grant. You guys were a good counterweight to Tim Burton’s lame movies at the time.

Posted in Comic Books | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Get ready for the deluge of the recent past!

Even before I contracted pneumonia, I was pretty behind on numerous stories, namely all these recent concerts I’ve been attending since Summer, plus a couple movies (which has slowed down my movie attendance as punishment) and what have you. But I don’t want to come off like that infamous New England newspaper from the American Colonial period; those of us who’ve majored in Communication should recall it, the publisher printed a set number of pages and the stories were in a queue. Ergo, it wasn’t unusual for the paper to cover an event from a month ago. So I’m going to mix it up by simultaneously writing about those things I need to get out while throwing in more immediate events in my (and Somara’s) life.

The next major article is to get over the fatigue Fall brings via the cold weather, rain and sun setting earlier.

Don’t be shy with comments for Chrissake. Remember there’s a prize at 600.

Posted in News, The Site | Tagged | Leave a comment

New shirt from WizWorld #3: MST3K with the ‘bots!

Just in time for the upcoming live MST3K performances at the Paramount this Sunday! I got my new shirt featuring everyone’s favorite wisecracking robots Crow and Tom Servo! I also can’t wait for the new episodes that will be released on Netflix this Thanksgiving. Jonah Ray (aka Heston) has done a great job as the new victim along with Felicia Day as the new Dr. Forrester. The exciting element is which six horrible movies (and there are hundreds) will they be ripping on.

Posted in Funny Ones, Shirts | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

My car gave me a good scare

My Prius has optional screens to show different kinds of data via the dashboard. Whenever  I’m on the last couple dashes of gas, I tend to set it to the view displaying how many miles the computer thinks I have remaining in the tank. I often refuel Vixen (my car’s nickname) when it’s around 10 miles or so.

Yesterday, I was under 20 and as I headed south on the MoPac feeder towards Parmer to work, the computer said I had 16 remaining and then POW! it plummeted to zero! Then the alarm started squawking. Obviously I was thinking, crap! crap! the last thing I need is to be that guy blocking all the traffic while calling Somara to get me some gas. Fortunately, the computer wasn’t correct or there was a reserve/forgiveness amount…or Vixen knows how to hang in there on fumes. I made it to the first gas station I spotted on Parmer to save the day.

Ugh. I hate a big scare in the morning. Vixen has only sounded the alarm one other time, when I was waiting forever at the drive-thru with our local Jack in the Box. But then the car had around five or fewer miles to go.

Still, it’s a cool car and it’s my favorite.

Posted in News | Tagged | Leave a comment

New York Achieved!

I made it to the second milestone today via in-door bike! Not too late given my previous bout of pneumonia and lethargic mornings. I also bumped up my caloric goal to 570 (aka the red ring on my Watch), minimal time to 31 minutes and minimal distance to 7.6 miles. As always, whichever one I achieve last is when I stop.

Next destination, Caracas!

Posted in Health, News | Tagged | Leave a comment

Austin remains under the boil warning

Last time I checked, we remain under the three-minute boil order as all the water from the recent rains work their way through the local lakes, rivers, etc. Above is a photo of the problem when it got close to starting. The LCRA (Lower Colorado River Authority) had to let some of the mucky water out via several dams to prevent flooding which in turn had it run into Austin’s drinking supply. You can see the chocolate-milk-like water beginning to mix into the blue, safe stuff.

I don’t think this inconvenience will last much longer. We haven’t had any serious rain in a few days, giving the treatment plants time to catch up. However, this mess, which is the first I’ve encountered in my 24 years of residing here, is a good example to remind the “don’t raise my taxes” crowd what happens when you lower taxes, other than crappier schools.

Posted in Austintatious | Tagged | Leave a comment

Rest in Peace Brian Dyorich

Brian is the second person to the right.

While I was away recuperating, my long-time co-worker and friend Brian passed away during surgery. I received the sad news from our fellow co-worker Troy (he’s the guy on the left in the photo above) while I was headed to the gym. Troy filled me in and said he had been telling Apple people as he ran into them because he wasn’t sure how to get a hold of everybody who knew Brian.

Since the tragedy happened in early October, Brian’s siblings came down from Detroit (his hometown/area) to settle his affairs. Troy is still putting things together to have a memorial service at Apple; Brian had been an employee longer than me and he touched numerous lives in numerous ways, not all of them through his speciality of handling our phone lines and the traffic/routing. Below, are pictures are my contribution for when the service happens.

I mentioned earlier that Detroit was his hometown and obviously he was a huge Red Wings fan, even before they had their string of Stanley Cups starting in the Nineties. The Playmobil skater is a nice reminder and I put 19 on the back to represent his favorite player in our discussions, long-time captain Steve Yzerman. Sure, I could’ve gone with the long-hanging fruit of Gordie Howe (#9) but everybody loves Gordie, including non-Detroit fans. Yzerman was the hero/star player of Brian’s generation which is why he was the better choice.

As for our relationship, it was like many outside my department at Apple, a happy accident. Years ago, when AppleCare had fewer people and buildings, Brian sat near my team. While I was rediscovering hockey thanks to EA’s NHL 2001 on my PS2, I noticed Brian’s hockey paraphernalia around his cube. We struck up conversations and he slowly tutored me on key hockey history: the donut incident, Claude Lemieux’s famous dirty hit, why people throw octopuses on the rink in Detroit, funny encounters with early Dallas fans, etc. Brian and I even went to at least one game together to see the Griffins (Detroit proxy) v. Stars (Dallas proxy). Oh yeah, we also had a polite bet of six packs whenever Philly and Detroit squared off. His vast knowledge motivated me to buy a couple books to get more details. Today, I’m about better than average when it comes to hockey yet I will never been as knowledgable as Brian or my ex-roommate Paul.

Another factor involving Brian’s knowledge was his past. Growing up in Detroit, he took up hockey at a young age which led to playing for Penn State’s team. After college Brian then joined the Peterborough Petes, a very famous junior team in the Canadian OHL, as a forward. He had a couple scars and missing teeth to prove his time. However, a career as a professional player didn’t work out. He was traded to a team in the Quebec league, couldn’t learn French enough and was probably waives, which is the sports term for involuntarily retired.

Before anyone starts playing detective via Google, I’ll stop you right now. As part of the memorial planning, I did some looking and regretfully, Brian doesn’t appear on any rosters for any teams. There are a couple possibilities. He didn’t play long enough to be listed which is a strong possibility; with Penn State he could’ve been a walk-on or they were still a club team then. The other is he exaggerated, I’m not going to use the “L” word since he spoke with such conviction. Either way, it doesn’t matter. Brian was a good friend, a solid co-worker (he helped me a few times), a fantastic sports fan, an interesting storyteller and someone from other side of the political aisle who could be reasoned with, unlike many today. As for his hockey career…in honor of Brian, I will chalk it up as mostly true because he was my friend and it’s how I want to remember him.

Posted in Apple, History, News, Obituary | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Spent some time resting

After losing the first couple weeks to pneumonia and its recovery, I decided to take most of the month off, relax, do some more reading, more sleeping, more living…well, working. I will also use the time between now and next October to find additional Italians who helped change the world since I have mostly depleted the A list.

I’m not too worried about the backlog of stories/reviews/etc to post. I really look forward to them because I remember how hard it was to write about anything in the earlier years due to the scarcity of “news.” Life has a funny way of playing pranks on you.

So thanks for your support and patience! November is going to be prolific if all goes well.

Posted in Health, News, The Site | Tagged | Leave a comment