Two new Guitar Hero games this year, yes!

Good news everybody! The upcoming versions of my current favorite video game Guitar Hero finally has some tangible information!

First the Eighties version is going to happen which was puzzling. Was the third release going to be this or GH3? Then it sounded like Eighties was scrapped, plus a different developer was building it.

As we get closer to the planned release dates it turns out there will be TWO new GH games. First will be Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s which is a page from publisher Rockstar’s playbook by going back to a tacky decade of neon, pastels and Hair Metal. This site from Gamespy has some sweet movies demonstrating the look and music. The graphics are still the same for a PS2 and it’s an expansion only for that platform. Pretty funny to see Pandora and Axel in the fashions of the time. The song list isn’t in stone but here’s what has been confirmed. July is the expected release month.

Meanwhile another developer is doing GH3, remaking it from the ground up, mainly to accomodate its expansion to platforms outside of PS2. The song list for 3 is courtesy of IGN.com, seems Gamespy didn’t have any luck but they have Weezer this time. “My Name is Jonas” is a great tune to crank up the volume on. The look is even better as displayed on these clips. Sad thing is those being Xbox360 graphics. At least Judy Nails has an impressive makeover. Game play will be taken farther along too. I do not look forward to dealing with broken guitar strings, I’ve bit hit in the arm by one. November is the anticipated release date.

I need to dust off my controller and start practicing again to get my fingers conditioned for the really rapid solo on A Flock of Seagulls’ “I Ran” and the cooperative mode of Dio’s “Holy Diver.”

Posted in Arcade Games, Music | Leave a comment

The Venture Brothers: Season 2 satisfies until Season 3

Spoiler Alert: If you’ve never seen the first season of the show and you would like to, then don’t read this! If you have and you still want to be surprised, then don’t read this! Everyone else who doesn’t fit the previous two statements, read on.

Supposedly the second season of The Venture Brothers took a long time to appear because the Cartoon Network/Adult Swim was slow to decide on renewing and the show’s production cycles are the same as other “hand-drawn” programs like The Simpsons. It was very frustrating since the first ended on a cliffhanger:

  • What exactly did Dr. Venture say when the brothers were killed? Most people said, “I’ll get their clothes.” Yet it sounded like “clones.”
  • Why weren’t Brock and Dr. Venture distraught when they died?
  • Was this the end of the show? Many of the loose ends were wrapped up such as the source of Dr. Venture’s nightmares, the Monarch going to jail and the brothers’ death.

All of this and more are answered in the first episode with hilarious, gross and weird results. It also continues the other storyline of the Monarch versus the Phantom Limb for the affections of Dr. Girlfriend. With the brothers back from the dead in the second episode, the season then moves on with new adventures involving some crazy woman claiming to be their mother, Brock having to kill his mentor (a parody of Hunter Thompson) and Dr. Orpheus forming his own hero team since the Guild of Calamitous Intent has approved a nemesis for him. Past villains, rivals and allies return too: Professor Impossible (aka Stephen Colbert), Baron Underbheit, Colonel Manstrong, Girl Hitler, Molotov Cocktease and the original Dr. Venture’s cohorts. Everyone’s favorite henchmen, 21 and 24, receive more screen time as they’re instrumental to the Monarch-Dr. Girlfriend arc. New characters with different voice actors appear too: Jefferson Twilight (a Blade parody who only hunts blaculas), The Alchemist (Dana Snyder aka Master Shake), Orpheus’s mentor (H. Jon Benjamin), Dr. Killinger, Kim (Triana’s friend) and minor characters covered by Brendon Small. Places from season one are revisited too, namely the fate of Venture’s failed space station Gargantua-1 and Spider Skull Island. The Guild is fleshed out as well with the revelation of who its leader Sovereign really is…someone very famous, much to Brock’s consternation.

This season is definitely more killer than filler. For me, the only throwaway episode was an intentionally disjointed one that presents itself as part two of a three-part story. The remainder must be watched in order due to the ongoing events involving the Monarch and Dr. Girlfriend reuniting. True to its predecessor, this also ends on a cliffhanger but the writers didn’t leave any decent or vague hints as to what Dr. Girlfriend revealed to the Monarch.

My complaints over the first season’s weak features are amplified on this set. There are deleted scenes which are usually enjoyable as most were cut for time; one or two had to be shortened since you can tell the actor is ad-libbing. However, the other offerings are a tour of Astrobase Go (painfully dull) and more meandering, not insightful, pointless commentaries on all 13 episodes instead of four. In defense of McCullough, Hammer and Urbaniak, I readily admit to being spoiled by Matt Groening’s shows. The Simpsons set the standard I judge commentaries’ worthiness by. I just don’t think it’s too much to ask that the people talking during the episode explain the obscure references, the story behind making it, what it was like working with Stephen Colbert or Brendon Small, so on. Banter and prattling isn’t a feature, it’s egotistical noise and crap which is why I was I unimpressed by DVDs when they first appeared. The guys behind this show are brilliant but I feel it would be smarter for them to skip doing commentaries or attend a special class on how to do it well (note to self, talk to VC about starting a commentary school). Otherwise, they’re wasting everyone’s time which could be focused on the upcoming third and fourth season.

Is this worth owning? I’m still debating the whole DVD ownership mentality lately. I just don’t really watch the same movie again that frequently nor am I big video buff, compared to music. I find myself just keeping particular series for their relative obscurity so I can loan them to friends who never heard of Mission Hill or lack cable. The real question should be, is this worth watching, borrowing or renting? My answers are yes (without the lame features), yes and yes. The Venture Brothers is still one of the Cartoon Network/Adult Swim’s best creations and proof of how animation can go beyond live shows for humor, action and absurdity.

Until season three, slated for the end of 2007 to early 2008, Go Team Venture!

Posted in DVDs | Leave a comment

Happy Fifth Birthday to Anna!

Hopefully her birthday will be a fun, eventful day. I’ll have to ask her dad (my brother Brian) if Dora is still cool with her. Kids are outgrowing toys so quickly. They rush right into makeup and video games too quickly, it breaks my heart. The Star Wars action figures children have today come with an amazing level of detail and Barbie has pretty impressive accessories, a VW Beetle for one. How could they want to give those things up before 12?

I received a recent e-mail from Brian too. He said her violin playing is coming along well for someone her age. My guess is it’s material to teach children the essentials: chords, technique and how to read music. If she can do the solo at the end of “Baba O’Riley,” then I’d probably buy her something equivalent to an iPod Nano.

This year I’m giving her the big treatment because she shares her birthday with numerous entertainers yet no historical figures and the events are mostly morbid or ghastly.

  • To start, today is the beginning of CNN in 1980. Everyone laughed at Ted Turner then, now there’s multiple versions and knockoffs from the BBC, Bloomberg and (ick) Fox.
  • Way back in 1958, WWII hero Charles DeGaulle is made the leader of France again since the country was on the verge of a military coup. It’s still debated how serious the coup actually was.
  • The “event” I’m sure we’ll be subjected to all weekend is the 40th anniversary of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band by the Beatles being released today. Regardless of my musical tastes and opinions, I have always admired the album for its technical merits: recorded in five months, done with only a four-track and it cost $75,000 (1967 USD) to record which is over $450,000 today—U2 couldn’t make anything that cheap or impressive to save their lives.

Birthday-wise, Anna shares the day with the hockey legend in waiting Paul Coffey (played for Edmonton in the Eighties with Gretzky, Messier & Fuhr), composer and conductor Nelson Riddle and singer-songwriter Brandi Carlile. She also has two favorite supporting actors in movie-TV geek realm: Powers Boothe (specializes in heavies and is the voice of Gorilla Grodd) and Rene Auberjonois (comic foil on Benson and Odo in Star Trek: DS9). Others of note are elderly fave Andy Griffith, Morgan Freeman (he’ll always be Easy Reader to me), Cleavon Little (Sheriff Bart in Blazing Saddles) and model Heidi Klum. The remaining two I hope won’t be omens of things to come with Anna: the overrated, overmarried Marilyn Monroe and overhyped Alanis Morrissette.

Maybe Brian will send me a picture of Anna so I can post it for my friends and readers. She resembles Brian very much. The cooler option would be a movie of her playing “Turkey in the Straw” on her tiny violin.

Posted in Birthday, News | Leave a comment

Spammer arrested according to NPR

Finally some justice is starting to happen with the War on Spam as this story shows. I think the best punishment for him would be a public flogging since I really can’t come up with something more appropriate now that Kurt Vonnegut died.

Posted in Factoids | Leave a comment

Congratulations Steve!

My friend Steve Bryant, the comic book artist, illustrator and creator of Athena Voltaire has been nominated for a Russ Manning award! That’s a great name for an award since he was as cool as Will Eisner. Other than doing the first Star Wars newspaper strip and Magnus, Robot Fighter, I’m sure he did other important things to promote comic books.

More details here.

Good luck to Steve, his future in comics is looking up.

Posted in News | Leave a comment

Fox’s Cops will not be covering Austin

If there were only a better way to show my sarcasm through HTML other than italics because I’m sooooooo disappointed. There’s nothing funnier than watching White Trash under pressure. I Couldn’t find anything documented about it on the Internet but I don’t think KUT would lie if it were mentioned during their news breaks.

Posted in Austintatious | Leave a comment

Hot Fuzz, in the Must See group as soon as it’s on DVD

The team behind Shaun of the Dead returns to do a send-up of American Action-Buddy-Cop movies with their trademark British Twist: the slower pace of life in the English countryside, their slang, their mindset, etc. It translates just fine so nobody needs a tutorial on the UK or a crash course through BBC America to understand it.

Simon Pegg stars as Constable Nicholas Angel, the ultimate British police officer according to his service record: his efficiency, his eye for detail, his good demeanor with the public, his arrest record and his skills. Angel is the ultimate patrol officer, not an American Super-Cop like Martin Riggs, John McClane, ‘Dirty’ Harry Callahan or Marion ‘Cobra’ Cobretti. For years he has been stationed with the Metro London division until he is injured in the line of duty. As a reward for all his service, he is promoted to Sergeant with the condition of being re-assigned to the sleepy village of Sanford (doesn’t exist, I checked). He can’t stay in London or reject the promotion according to the Chief Inspector, who bluntly explains that he’s being sent to the country because he makes the rest of them look bad. Tail tucked between his legs, Angel leaves for Sanford to make the best of it. Too bad the only ally he has is the incompetent, overweight and action-flick addicted Constable Butterman—the Inspector’s son too equivalent to being the local police chief in the US).

If you’ve seen the commercials and trailers, you know what follows. Sanford is a village with no violent crime yet people die in rather grisly accidents that rouse Angel’s suspicion. The movie is genuinely funny and it works for me through its subtleness as well as the overt parodies. There’s also a surprise twist in the conspiracy to address what did seem to be a predictable plot. The ending does run a bit long and is a tad hokey but it doesn’t ruin the overall experience. Timothy Dalton is really humorous as the grocery store operator who speaks in murderous double entendres. One quick warning; if anyone who wants to see it is squeamish over blood and gore, then don’t see this movie because some of the “accidents” were rather graphic. Not vomit-inducing Slasher-flick graphic by today’s standards, more at the Grindhouse level. There’s also frequent rapid-fire sequences to demonstrate how efficient Angel is with his paperwork. My guess is it represents how his mind works and how he experiences the world because he believes “there’s always something going on, so pay attention.”

Another great job by the Shaun crew. Not sure what they may do next. Hot Fuzz isn’t raking in too much right now despite it probably costing less compared to American pictures. It’ll probably be a bigger hit on DVD as its predecessor and when it does arrive at Blockbuster, Hollywood, etc.; put it on your short list.

Posted in In Theaters, Movies | Leave a comment

Happy 54th Birthday to Danny Elfman

Most people know him as the guy who did the theme song to The Simpsons and the score to about every other comic book-cartoon movie made in the last 20 years. He’ll always be the lead singer of Oingo Boingo to me; one of the coolest bands from the LA area to grace the Eighties. It’s a shame Danny was never as famous with his band. I guess people thought the bulk of the material was too weird: songs about insects, hypocritical music critics and a lot of undead monsters. Thankfully, he is only related to the annoying Jenna Elfman by marriage, she’s his niece.

My brother was a huge Oingo Boingo/Danny Elfman fan. I’ll have to ask him in his own words why he lost interest. I know it was sometime after he graduated from college because he didn’t seem very enthused when I finally saw them in 1994. My immediate guess would be the rather weak albums after 1988.

When he was their biggest fan in Central Illinois, his favorite gift from me was this huge promo poster for Dead Man’s Party that I scored at a record swap in Milwaukee. This band was about the only thing we had in common with our cousin Jason too. The rest of Jason’s tastes in music, or anything else on the planet (he’s one of the black sheep of the Maggi clan) were best avoided.

Lastly, Danny has a special place in my memory from WMUR (Marquette’s “radio” station). The station received a press kit of Beetlejuice which was one of his early scores, his second for Tim Burton I think. There was a cassette tape of canned answers from Burton, Elfman and Geena Davis included, maybe Alec Baldwin too because he wasn’t as famous yet. So I transferred Danny’s three canned responses to a CART and wrote questions around them as a gag on the show I shared with Sheila. I set the first one up to sound like he didn’t answer the question, thus my follow-up mentioned that he didn’t reply adequately, and he was standing on my foot. I did it because the second sound bite began with him saying, “Oh sorry! (laughter)” and then something closer to a satisfactory answer. Pretty weak stuff as I look back. It went over well at the station then and this was over a decade before affordable and effective digital stuff became more available.

Happy 54th birthday to the red-headed composer, the singing voice of Jack Skellington and Bridget Fonda’s husband, much to Craig Kilbourn’s disappointment.

Posted in Music | 1 Comment

RIP Charles Nelson Reilly

Sad to hear that he died through NPR this morning but his passing on Friday wasn’t released until today.

Growing up, he was just a fixture on game shows and Lidsville. He and Richard Dawson were usually the smart money when it came to the big prizes at the end. When we moved to Houston and got our TV working (as soon as the movers brought it in), my brother and I saw him appearing on a sitcom called The Ghost & Mrs. Muir. Don’t know why that surprised me then, I guess I didn’t know the position of game show panelist being a sign of a “failed” career. Writers on The Simpsons always gave him credit for the gesture of “we’ll, we’re dead now” by tugging at your collar and making a dorky noise; the whole town of Springfield does it when the missile for the comet destroys the only bridge out of town. At least he did live on with a new generation of people through Spongebob Squarepants as the voice of Mermaid Man’s enemy, the Dirty Bubble, and Alec Baldwin’s imitation on SNL.

Posted in Diversions | Leave a comment

Server update succeeded but has side effects

I figured the update wouldn’t bother anybody this morning and early afternoon (CDT) because everyone will be enjoying Memorial Day.

Just bear with some minor revisions, one being an annoying “upgrade” to 10.4.9 Server and what it does to the Weblog section, namely taking away the ability of Titles to use HTML formatting codes. So I will be eliminating the strings to italicizing and break commands. That change has proven to be more irksome than 10.4.4’s removal of the indenting look with the calendar when you made an entry. It will get me more razzing from my friends who use advanced solutions such as Drupal or Moveable Type. But this still beats the limitations of blogspot.com.

Posted in News | Leave a comment

The joys of little victories in home ownership

The check didn’t clear and probably won’t until after Memorial Day but Wells Fargo’s web site stated it arrived and it counted. We now own sixteen percent of the house! Only four more percentage points (about five grand) remain before we can tell Wells Fargo to “kiss it!” on their so-called mortgage insurance and I can take over the property taxes myself.

Somara remembered to save a graphic file of the house’s floorplan. I then cropped it and broke it up into 100 sectors through Photoshop. Every time we gain another point, I can color in the sector and celebrate. Hopefully the Internet will remain relevant when I’m in my nineties. Heck, I hope to be still alive by then.

Posted in News | Leave a comment

John Wayne would be 100 today

Stumbled upon this factoid on my Simpsons/Futurama calendars. Funny, I had him pegged to be older by five to 10 years. Well, if he didn’t smoke, he might have made it.

John Wayne (really Marion Morrison) was the quintessential movie cowboy to me but Westerns were waning in Hollywood by the time I was born, thus so was his career. In the commentary for Blazing Saddles, Mel Brooks mentions how he offered the part of the Waco Kid to him while in pre-production. Wayne turned it down. He said it was funny but he couldn’t do it because it was dirty. Comedy was never his forte so I think it was for the best Mel went with Gene Wilder instead, which is a story for another day.

I will leave his politics aside because I want to keep this site positive, but I’ll just say he was in the same hypocritical camp as Reagan when it came to WWII, War Profiteering and the Red Scare. I know you should separate the actor from the person when it comes to his work yet it’s pretty difficult with The Duke. He intentionally fused his film persona with his public one and it’s probably why he became unpopular with the Boomers while he was alive.

Nah, I just wanted to plug something about him because he lives on in my memory as the punchline of two great jokes and this string of dialog from a movie. Whoever can give me the first right answer in the comments wins a prize of my choosing (it’ll vary since the winners’ taste can), only stipulation is that I have to know you (disqualifying comment spammers should this article attract it) and Somara is ineligible. And if the article gets pushed out of the first 15 with no answer, it’s over and I keep the prize.

Miller: John Wayne was a fag.

All: The hell he was.

Miller: He was, too, you boys. I installed two-way mirrors in his pad in Brentwood, and he come to the door in a dress.

The rest of the dialog gets too foul-mouthed for even this site. Good luck figuring it out, it might not be as obscure as I thought.

Update May 30, 2007: I have a winner, finally. The contest is now over. Sorry if you couldn’t think of it. Click on the Comment section and the first entry was the answer.

Posted in Diversions | 1 Comment

NHL Playoffs, Final Round, the Stanley Cup

This year’s beard lasted much, much longer (52 days) because Philly wasn’t in the playoffs but I still got skunked on the smart money.

Last year, it was the first WHA-Only Stanley Cup, now it’s an Nineties-Expansion-Only Stanley Cup with Ottawa being the “senior” team. Oddly, it’s also the third Stanley Cup in a row with a Canadian franchise battling for the prize which probably stopped happening when the Edmonton Oilers dynasty ended (I was wrong, there’s the 1993 Montreal Canadiens who won it). As the cliche goes, welcome to Bettman’s New (Inferior) NHL or yet another Cup match involving two minor market teams.

The Red Wings losing to the Ducks was predicted by me correctly. As much as I respect them, their overall lineup is aging too quickly and if they don’t correct it with an infusion of new, developing talent, they’ll be on the skids as Philly is. It’s already beginning as Hasek is wavering about retirement…altogether now, again?

I didn’t predict the Sabres imploding and giving the Senators a three-game lead. There’s definitely going to be some serious reorganization happening in Buffalo as Drury heads West and Briere becomes a free agent. I think Teppo Numminen is retiring too. The Sabres will have some holes to fill this Summer if they want to return to the level of play they had this season.

My prediction? I say the Ottawa Senators in seven.

– Ottawa clawed through New Jersey and Buffalo despite the lack of the home-ice advantage.
– This team wants it more than the Ducks in my opinion.
– Although Emery is a big fat “if” in goal, he still has more experience than Gigeure when the heat’s on.
– The Sens have Heatley, Comrie and Alfredsson for scoring and Heatley is on a roll with the assists.
– Finally, as petty as it may sound. The majority of the big mouths at ESPN predicted Anaheim, namely Barry “Cap’n Mullet” Melrose.

As always, expect Picayune’s colors to shift over to the team I’m rooting for.

In closing news, it seems Rick Tocchet has pleaded guilty to the charges involving the gambling ring but worked out a deal to avoid jail time. As long as there’s no proof he bet on hockey at any level, it will be up to the NHL to see if he can coach again. I’d say why not. The league has had its share of alcoholics, wife beaters and drug addicts, his crime is pretty mild.

Posted in Hockey | Leave a comment

1977: Star Wars opens in only 32 theaters

Hard to believe it has been 30 years since Star Wars made its debut, shrouded in doubt by Twentieth Century Fox; they grudgingly gave Lucas the $8 million to make it ($27 million in today’s money, a bargain by current standards). Meanwhile Time magazine was nuts about it and that’s how I knew of its arrival—my parents had a subscription. Knowing when the movie would be playing in Champaign-Urbana, IL was another problem for an eight year old. I didn’t read the paper outside of the comics and I was unaware of the movie’s limited distribution. Then I heard an ad for Star Wars on WLS-AM complete with sound effects and my campaign to nag my parents to take me to it began. If it was playing in Chicago now, it wouldn’t take long for it to come downstate was my logic.

It finally arrived within a month or so. I can’t remember the exact date but I know school was out for the Summer (June) and it was playing at the biggest movie house in the area, the Virginia Theater. The crowd was so large that evening (we went on a Wednesday), the management opened the balcony, a rare event then. We also got to sit there and have one of the better views in my opinion.

With the film’s thunderous opening theme and its initial starship-chase sequence, I was completely entranced. I was also rather confused and surprised when the audienced boo’d during Darth Vader’s first appearance. I already knew he was the villain from the Time article; how did everyone else know? The other strong memory I had was how tense it made me feel. Tense? Seriously. I was only eight so I had only been to Disney flicks and my movie IQ was low, therefore I thought Darth Vader had a good shot at stopping Luke Skywalker. Could have happened too if you look at the general nature of Seventies films: The Parallax View, Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid, The Omen, The Exorcist and The Wild Bunch.

From that Summer on and probably until I finished high school, I was obsessed with all things Star Wars along with the millions of others from my generation: toys, videogames, novels, comics, trading cards and games. I remember it was the first movie anyone saw more than once in a theater which was weird to me; why see it again if you already know what’s going to happen was my thinking. Then again, I was a tad jealous because the closest thing I could do to seeing the movie over and over was sorting out my trading cards according to their scenes (ultra-nerd move). Star Wars went on to become more than an obsession for kids, it took the country like mad (and probably Canada). It played in some places for over a year (impossible now). It was the crux of jokes on SNL, The Tonight Show, and even the “unhip” Bob Hope Christmas special in 1977. There were T-shirts, jewelry, action figures and glasses from Burger King. Past licensing with movies was rare and toys based upon any franchise were uncommon (Mego dominated with Star Trek, Planet of the Apes, Superheroes and Happy Days). Not so with Star Wars, everyone wanted his own Falcon or X-Wing Fighter and George Lucas with Kenner Toys made it possible.

I do miss the magic of that time now because it seems like every other movie is another attempt to recapture the licensing bonanza Star Wars became. All the toys and crap are made ahead of time regardless of how well the film may do. I should’ve taken it as a warning when The Phantom Menace was about to hit the screens eight years ago since Lucas went on to make three disappointing, tepid prequels. Doesn’t matter now since I’m sure another movie would’ve come along to do the same thing.

On the upside, this movie kicked off a dozen space operas my brother and I played with our toys and friends. It had a relatively positive effect on my life too. Now my nephews (especially Nick) and my friends’ kids (namely TJ and Jack) are getting into it, which is pretty cool. They’re too young to see the flaws in the prequels or the strengths of the character-driven elements of Empire. They just enjoy it and Uncle Maggi can answer all their questions since he still remembers all the “useless” information about secondary and tertiary characters.

Epilogue: Sorry about the dealy, I’ve been out sick lately. This story was written in several forms much earlier.

Posted in Diversions, History | Leave a comment

The Texas State History Museum is more than an IMAX spot

Yesterday we were going to spend the day at Lake Georgetown but the intermittent thunderstorm canceled it so instead we went to The Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum.

For those of my friends who don’t live in Texas, Bob Bullock was the last Democrat Lt. Governor back in the Nineties and probably deserves more of the credit for Bush’s “successful” first term as governor. The position is more powerful than in most states because the Lt. Governor has a bigger say in the legislature’s agenda, etc. Now with the little historical-political lesson out of the way, back to the visit.

The museum opened over six years ago but neither of us had really seen it. I live around Austin so I probably take it for granted like residents of St. Louis do with the Gateway Arch. Somara had been wanting to see it for some time and I decided Monday is a great day to take in a museum because everyone else is at work. I was only partially correct. There were hordes of middle-school-aged children running around for a massive field trip. Probably an end-of-the-year thing. We didn’t let them ruin our fun.

The museum is really colorful, informative and enticing through all its short movies, interactive displays and hands-on kiosks. Some sordid details about Texas history are glossed over, mainly in the Civil War period and the little coverage on Texas before the Spanish arrived. The layout is what really sells it. The three floors and pathways guide the visitors through a chronological tour starting from the Spanish expeditions to the first moon landing. Events and people from more contemporary times (the Seventies on) are shown and mentioned, just nothing massive on display as an AT-6 fighter or the original statue on top of the state capital.

Will children enjoy it? I think so. The army of tweeners running around when we were there wasn’t a good gauge because children in large groups have other things on their minds, especially when school is ending in a couple weeks. However, I will have to see how it proceeds with the nephews and nieces. As for the adults? I think even my friends who have a mild disdain for history will find it a half day well spent. The admission is certainly cheaper and easier to digest than a James Michener novel.

Posted in Austintatious | Leave a comment