Barabo Back on Parade!...Circus Town USA Stays the Glorious Course

Barabo Back on Parade!...Circus Town USA Stays the Glorious Course
Do I see the spirit of Louise Ringling With Snake?
Showing posts with label Misc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Misc. Show all posts

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Ken Burns on PBS, AD NAUSEAM ...

I have a love-hate relationship with Ken Burns. He can be straight forward. He can be  sanctimonious. I found his Vietnam War to be brilliant through and through. It had narrative thrust.

Now comes, or plods, The American Revolution (or Evolution),  and I am wondering if it took as long to happen as it does here on PBS (Pledge Break Society).  I loved the first episode, and was high and riding high ... Into the second and ... Replay now or later? .. Oh what else is there to watch???  I'm not defaulting yet to the Three Stooges.

I plowed my way through the third,well no, halfway through, and am suddenly suffering from  TMD (TOO MUCH DETAIL) . Maybe that is a good thing for civic-studies classrooms, Siberian shut-ins, or repellent aversion TV therapy.

It's drawing raves. I see the Wall Street Journal called it "static." The understatement of the century. 

Static. I'll give it another chance, I think, I may, I should.  Could get better.  And maybe if I am lucky, the final episodes will be scored by Andrew Lloyd Webber.  

Better yet, maybe Masterpiece will put out their own version of the tumultuous tiff on our side that sent the other side retreating into a very very long Ken Burns night

The Phantom of Plymouth Rock, anyone? 

Friday, November 21, 2025

Who Leads the Parade at Circus World? Here is what AI told me

 "Julie Parkinson was not let go from the Circus World Museum"
 

Oh, no AI?  Please do elaborate for the morons among us: 

 "Instead, she was named the new site director in April 2025, succeeding her father who previously held the position. Parkinson has a long history with the museum, as her grandfather founded its library and research center." 

I have done many searches.  Her firing only a few months into the job seems only to  have been reported by me, following a phone call to CWM, answered by a woman who confirmed that, yes, she was let go.

AI, as I have suggested, not the first to, is essentially stupid.  It grabs snippets out there and rapid fire assembles an answer.

Its most egregious failure, in my old fashioned brain:on.  It has no memory.  Although this could change as competed services race to produce the most intelligent version of AI 

Yes, it can dazzle you with split second answers that seem to reveal deft analysis.  But revise your search and try it another time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Bad Day in the Zoppe Bleachers for One Family

Preface:  It is not my policy to favor certain shows by withholding negative feedback  of them, be it a review or comment left  here.  This is a comment that was posted  yesterday at the end of my review of Zoppe's 2024 show, "Send Back the Dogs" I have never sat in the bleachers, so I would be hard pressed to comment myself.     

"We came to the circus yesterday with three families and three young kids (ages 1.5 to 4). We were the first ones to enter the tent. The seating is made of tall bench-style rows with wide gaps and no stairs, so you have to climb up each bench. As we tried to go up, my daughter nearly fell through one of the gaps — it’s genuinely unsafe for small children.

Because of that, we chose to sit together in the middle row, leaving three entire empty rows in front of us. We were sitting tightly together, not taking extra space. Someone from the staff asked us to move up, and we explained that the benches were unsafe for our kids and that adults and older kids should be the ones climbing higher.

Then the person who appeared to be the owner or announcer came over and started shouting at us, saying things like “This is my circus, this is my show,” and threatened to make us leave if we didn’t move. His tone was aggressive and completely uncalled for, especially in front of small children. I honestly started shaking — it was that upsetting. One of the adults in our group asked him to please calm down because of the kids, but he continued.

Ironically, the show wasn’t even full. Many benches stayed empty throughout. There was absolutely no need for the confrontation.

This was supposed to be a fun family outing, and instead it turned into a really frightening and stressful experience. I would never return. The way we were treated was rude, unprofessional, and completely unnecessary, and the seating setup is unsafe for young children."

Sunday, November 09, 2025

SATURDAY NIGHTMARE IN NO-SHOW OAKLAND: LIFE ON THE EDGE OF A CITY THAT ONCE WAS ...

Oakland, in better days gone by,: In front of my apartment building on 1800 Lakeshore Avenue, where I wrote my first book, Behind the Big Top.  Now living half a block from Piedmont, I avoid Oakland lake the plague.

A message I sent yesterday to Laura, my neighbor in the building where I live, which she once managed, after returning from m trip to Zoppe Family Circus. 

OMG, a Lyft driver bringing me back from Redwood City on the freeway, his car starts  making bangs, I ask Luis if it’s the car, and he seems to say yes (speaks almost no English, possibly recruited at the Southern boarder, pre-Trump), but keeps on driving. Then I smell rubber burning and he exits onto Broadway, near maybe second street, goes into the trunk to get out tools. I get out and flea up Broadway  wanting to get another Lyft home.  I keep walking, looking for a place where it would be easy for Lyft to FIND ME, which is something you'd think they could and should do, rather then directing me across the street or up to an interaction. I settle on Grand Avenue, and from there summon a Lyft for home.

What is wrong with the picture I have just walked through? On the ghostly vacant street, a black man or two every block or three.  Old Asian lady with cart  waiting at bus top.  Any whites? Maybe a couple. And it dawns on me, that I was in DOWNTOWN OAKLAND on a Saturday afternoon. DOWNTOWN.  I see no people going into or coming out of the the lower level shopping mall across from where DeLaurs  newsstand once operated. I remember when there was Swansons.  When Oakland was such a wonderful place.

The last time I went down there, to the lawn bowling greens at the lake (I used to love watching the games), one of the greens was totally neglected and weeding out. No bowlers showed up, so I went to call for a Lyft, but thought, I will have to stand in front of a store, without the luxury of being able to move on if something coming my way looks like parole city pride.  So, as with yesterday, I kept on walking, up to a sane and prospering location.
    
I much prefer confining myself to the delightful city of Piedmont Avenue.  

D / upper wastelands 

Monday, June 30, 2025

Artificial Intellegance and Me: One Day Acclaimed, the Next Ignored

A few days ago, I posted a flattering answer AI produced when I did a mock search, who are the best circus critics?

AI: Identifying the "best" critic of circus shows is subjective and depends on individual preferences for their style, focus, and overall perspective  However, some individuals are widely recognized for their insightful and comprehensive critiques of the circus world:    David Lewis Hammarstrom: Author of "Inside the Changing Circus: A Critic's Guide," Hammarstrom is praised for his in-depth knowledge of the history and evolution of the circus, coupled with an ability to provide both glowing reviews and sharp critiques. His work is considered a valuable resource for understanding the art form.
 
Okay, high acclaim?
 
Since then, I have tested AI by rephrasing the same question in different ways. Example:  Who are considered the best circus critics?
 
AI's response:
  
David Carlyon:
Janet M. Davis: 
Bruce "Charlie" Johnson
 
Actually, that answer does not surprise me. 
 
Now, would you expect this blatant inconsistency from a real human being well versed in circus, had you addressed the same two test questions to them on different occasions?
 
This leads me to conclude that among other things, AI hasn't a memory. In fact, is rather dumb and fickle, an indiscriminate collector of random facts to produce an answer in mere seconds.  In its coverage of my work, AI quoted from a press release, lending the impression it was from a review! 
 
Another mock test to AI;
 
Question:   Who moved Ringling Bros. Circus from tents to arenas?

AI answered:
 
The decision to move Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus from traditional tent shows to indoor arenas was made by John Ringling North, who was the President of the circus in 1956. He and the circus manager at the time, Arthur Concello, made this shift in response to factors like competition from other forms of entertainment, high labor costs, and a lack of suitable outdoor spaces. This move to using permanent venues like stadiums and arenas, with pre-existing seating, began in 1957.

I rephrased the question.  AI answered:
 
Irvin Feld is widely credited with saving the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. In the 1960s, the circus was struggling financially, but Irvin Feld, along with his brother Israel, purchased it in 1967. He then transformed it by moving performances from tents to indoor arenas and establishing a more profitable business model. He also founded Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Clown College in 1968 to preserve the art of clowning.
 
Final thoughts for now.  The speed of AI is a frightening omen. How could it be tragically used to collect information for serious purposes, when its answers might lead to catastrophic results?  

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

SEND BACK THE CLOWNS! The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly of The Re-imagined Ringling, from REDDIT

I'd never gone to Reddit before for reviews to quote, but to my surprise,  under a thread headlined  The Good, the Bad, and The Ugly of The Re-imagined Ringling, I found a slew of even-handed comments by people who, for the most part, seemed neither aggrieved  circus fans or the PETA crowd, itself never missing a chance to spread more anti-traditional circus hate. These  voices reveal much that we have only been able to speculate about. 

So I am posting these here for a few days, and will then move the post down deeper.          

Highlight Quote:

"The robot dog Bailey was met with mixed reactions. I have never witnessed hundreds of people mass-discussing something all at once, which was bizarre."

u/Skater73 avatar
Skater73 6mo ago

I'm deeply concerned with the lack of audience showing up for these shows recently. I saw the new Ringling back in March, and the audience was quite large on a Saturday night. However, recent tour stops seem to be struggling to get people in the door, especially for evening shows.

I have seen a lot of advertising on TikTok, YouTube, and local media outlets but not much in the way of physical billb live in a mostly rural state with an older oards, fliers, etc. This is a major mistake for our area, as we population that likely won’t see much of it.                                               
    
hexualattraction
4mo ago

I was working at a stadium and Ringling came through. I didn't get to sit and watch the whole thing like a normal patron, but I did see quite a bit. I believe Equivokee - the three guys doing physical comedy are in fact clowns, like trained as clowns, but I believe since the US has such a bad association, they had them pare down the things that folks associate with clowns.

For example, even board games from Europe that feature clowns get stripped of them with localization, in order for the American market to engage/play/buy them.

All this to say, I think if Ringling performed outside of the us, clowns would be more apparent,and that it's kind of an American thing that they've been stripped out.

I did find the competing acts to be strange, it felt like so many talented people were sort of shoved off to the side, I think to try to keep peoples focus somewhere, but it felt pretty disrespectful to the performers.   

r/circus icon
Go to circus r/circus•
6 mo. ago

 The robot dog Bailey was met with mixed reactions. I have never witnessed hundreds of people mass-discussing something all at once, which was bizarre. I will personally miss the animal acts, but I am interested to see what can be done with similar technology as Feld Entertainment has used puppets and animatronics in other shows.

The Bad: For a show focused on human talent, it’s incredibly disappointing to see the removal of time honored roles such as arena clowns and ringmaster. There are several show guides and physical comedians which were entertaining in their own right, but it mostly felt like a hollow attempt to distance the new show from its past.

The stage direction is somewhat confusing. During the BMX stunts, a Chinese pole act was taking place on the opposite side of the arena. As someone else recently mentioned in this subreddit the circular overhead screens were missing, which would have been nice as I could barely see it even from the lower level.

The sound was a bit muffled, which often confused the audience resulting in lukewarm responses. I have no experience with entertaining but I imagine that can be a real confidence killer

Other notes: I attended Sunday’s performance midday and some friends attended in the evening, the arena was less than half full on both occasions. Historically our city has produced a good turnout. I am unsure if this decline in attendance is due to the retirement of traditional acts, loss of relevance, cost, or other factors. The show will be in town this weekend and the following with approximately two shows daily Friday-Sunday, so maybe the others will fair a bit better.

Our friend’s six year old daughter was attending for the first time and lost interest several acts in, they did not return after intermission.

r/circus icon
Go to circus r/circus•
6 mo. ago

The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly of the re-imagined Ringling 

conclusion: Like many others I am left feeling a bit mixed. The performers were excellent, but the show itself needs work in several areas.

Ringling may have a difficult time living up to the expectations of longtime fans and retaining first-timers after the revival tour. I will be returning when and if it is renewed, but my friends and their daughter may not.

Needless to say, it is vital for Feld Entertainment to be receptive to feedback if they hope to remain relevant and continue turning an audience. 

ccb621
6mo ago

Aside: Why not post this after you’ve seen the show and have more to contribute to the conversation?

The animals will never come back. They are public relations and logistical nightmares.

I attended a show in Oakland, CA. The arena was not very full. The tickets were about $225 after fees for my family of three. We’ve paid more for Cirque du Soleil and far less for Monster Jam (for almost the exact same seats). 

Cirque remains the pinnacle for me. Ringlimg isn’t there. The show was too kinetic and distracting. There were screens with performers’ names and countries glaring just at the performances were beginning. This would be fine if there was one act; however, at one point there were three separate acts happening simultaneously! I had no clue who to watch.

This was barely okay for aerials. I think they had straps in the center with two folks on silks to the sides. This was downright insane when they had an aerial performance and folks jumping through hoops. 

I felt like they were trying to toss in a buinnch of acts to make folks feel they got a good value. In reality it felt cheap—quantity over quality. I recall at one point wondering why the show hadn’t ended because it just felt so long. 

I don’t think everyone needs to follow Cirque exactly, but it might help to learn a bit from their model. A story or through line connecting the performances would greatly help the flow and progression feel less frenetic.

I hope they make it work. I saw one of the last performances of the old company in Providence, RI, and it was quite good, so I know someone can help write a better show.

 No-Commission-242
4mo ago

I won't waste my money again.  I knew that there would be no animals,  but didn't know that there wouldn't be any clowns.  I've got my memories from when I was a kid and I'll have to live with that.  It's bad that I built it up to the grandkids and had to look at the disappointment on their faces.  All of the people around us felt the same.  Take them to Chuckie Cheese and everyone will be a lot happier,  plus you can get them much better souvenirs.

Saturday, April 19, 2025

AI Goes to the Circus and The Clowns of Misinformation Have a Field Day

Artificially meeting up with AI for some Q&A, here are some samples I threw its way and how it responded to each.   HI stands for Human Intervention, myself.

Where can I find the lyric for the song, Come to the Circus from the movie The Greatest Show on Earth?

AI:   The song "Come to the Circus" from the movie The Greatest Show on Earth doesn't have a specific song title or lyrics. It's a musical piece used in the movie's soundtrack, and it's part of the musical score, not a song with specific lyrics. (HI, it did have lyrics)

Who invented the three ring circus?

The three-ring circus was invented in 1871 by P.T. Barnum and William Coup,  founders of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. This innovation allowed for multiple acts to perform simultaneously, creating a more dynamic and entertaining spectacle.  (HI, make that 1881, by Barnum and Bailey)

Who moved Ringling from big tops to hard tops?

AI:  Irvin Feld is credited with moving Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus from outdoor tents to indoor arenas. He purchased the circus in 1967 and made the transition to permanent venues like sports stadiums and arenas. This shift significantly impacted the circus's profitability, transforming it into a successful enterprise. (HI, it was John Ringling North and Art Concello)

I heard the show closed in 2017, but then returned to the road in 2023?

AI:  In 2023, Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey did return with a new show, but it was not a touring show and was only performed in one location. (HI wrong)

Let's take on the still-contested triple somersault on the flying trapeze. Who was the first to accomplish it?

Two answers.  Who knows, there may be more.

AI:  The first circus performer to successfully execute a triple somersault on the flying trapeze was Lena Jordan, a Russian-born trapeze artist. She accomplished this feat at the young age of 12, although the first officially recognized triple somersault was performed in Australia in 1897.

AI:  The first aerialist to consistently perform the triple somersault on the flying trapeze was Alfredo Codona. He was a member of the famous "Flying Codonas" family and achieved this feat in 1919. The New York Times and BnF / CNAC reported on his accomplishment.  While Lena Jordan is credited with performing the first triple somersault in 1897 in Australia, she did not achieve consistent performance of the trick like Codona. Wikipedia notes that Jordan's first triple was recorded in Australia, but she also performed it in the US in 1896. Alfredo Codona, however, is known for perfecting the triple and making it a part of his regular act

But what about Ernest Clark? 

AI:  Yes, Ernest Clark is generally credited for completing a triple, though there have been others like Lena Jordan, who have also made claims. While some circus old-timers say that Clark tried it infrequently and wasn't always successful, his accomplishment is a significant milestone in trapeze history.

And what about claims that Antoinette Concello was the first  woman to throw a  triple? 
 
AI:   Yes, Antoinette Concello was the first woman to successfully perform the triple somersault on the flying trapeze. She was a member of the legendary "Flying Concellos and was known as the "Greatest Woman Flyer of All Time" for this achievement. Britannica and other sources confirm this.  (HI Jordan is the correct answer)
 
Why are there so many conflicting claims around this subject?  Even YOU contradict yourself. 
 
AI:  Conflicting claims about the first triple somersault in circus history are likely due to a few factors: the difficulty of verifying historical feats, the use of safety harnesses, and the evolving definition of what constitutes a "first" successful performance. Several performers, including the Clarkes and Alfredo Codona, have been credited with achieving the trick, sometimes in practice sessions rather than official performances.  Here's a more detailed breakdown:
 
 Verification Challenges:

    Documenting circus performances, especially from the early 20th century, can be difficult. Accurate records of practice sessions and the specific details of safety harnesses used might be incomplete or lost to time.
    The Role of Safety Harnesses:
    Some claims involve performers like the Clarkes using "mechanics" or safety harnesses to assist in the triple somersault. Whether these harnesses count as a true accomplishment is a matter of debate.
    Defining "First":
    Some claims refer to the first successful triple somersault in a practice session, while others focus on the first time it was performed in a public circus act. This distinction adds to the confusion.
    Alfredo Codona's Legacy:
    Alfredo Codona was a highly regarded aerialist known for consistently performing the triple somersault in the 1920s, even after a deadly fall, making him a prominent figure in circus history.
    The Clarkes and Miguel Vazquez:
    The Clarkes are credited with achieving the triple somersault in a performance of the Publiones Circus in Cuba, and Miguel Vazquez is known for successfully perfoing it and the quadruple somersault, though not in a live show.
 
End of interview.
  
Aside from too many sloppy and  conflicting answers, I was impressed by the last section under Verification Challenges. So maybe AI is better at analysis than facts?

Friday, April 19, 2024

The Last Summer for Baseball in Oakland ... It Feels like a Day in Pittsrbugh Long Ago, When The Greatest Show on Earth Under Canvas Called it Quits ...

Sad town, soon to be without a major league team, the Raiders having fled, so too the Golden Stage Warriors. And  now the sport of Babe Ruth.

Baseball is the only game I can get caught up in, on the radio, listening now to the Giants.  For many years, an A's fan, I went to the ball park often, always for garlic fries and to see some great players, but no longer. The current ownership, ironically "advised" by none other than Billy Bean, carries on in icy cold corporate indifference to one of the most loyal fan bases anywhere.  John Fisher is lusting after a new ball park in Vegas, and will for a few interim seasons, park his bottom rung team in a small minor league park in Sacramento. But who can blame him for wanting to get out as fast as he can from a hell hole of an area in Oakland? A dark zone infested by thugs. Fast food restaurants around the coliseum are fleeing.  I am even jittery about going out there to take in the New Ringling show.

When I worked for Kaiser Steel, one of the fifty jobs I profile in my upcoming  book, one warm fall evening in 1972, we were all treated to an Oakland A's world series game.  How the sky glistened that evening.  And how perfect the game being played on the field looked -- to me, almost like ballet.  Something about the way a first baseman jumped perfectly upright  up to catch a ball. And then perfectly down. 

They were world series champs, three seasons in a row.  For a rare golden period, the club gave off a glamours buzz.  Heck, Billy Martin managed the team for three seasons!

Now, they will be playing  their last summer in Oakland.  Crushing news to a dwindling fan base dumped on by one of the most heartless owners ever to run a team.  And the MLB, for whom evidently loyal fan bases count for nothing, backs him all the way.

For the hard-core A's fans, I can feel their acute sorrow. thinking back on how painful was the day in my life when, on the evening news, flashed images of the Ringling big top at its last stand, in Pittsburgh PA.

Nothing lasts forever, they say.  I' m not so sure. Some things do go on.  But not here in Oakland -- a once beautiful city torn apart by the volatile 1960s.  I will leave the details to that.  You can fill in the blanks.

Really, it's not much different than San Francisco. But S.F. has a well run ball club that treats its players and fans with class A respect. The reason I fled the A's a few years ago for the Giants. Whatever happened to the lionized Billy Bean? There's a story of moral betrayal the local media should but will not cover. 

Sunday, August 06, 2023

Sunday Morning Out of the Past: Copeland & Combs Land Paris Spotlight ... Garden Bros. Lands "F" Ratting from BBB ... El Jacko's Pedophilia Paradise Exposed ... Kelly Miller Captivates in Video Tease

Remember the Copeland & Combs who once filled our days with Kelly Miller posting?  That was Steve, the tell-all one.  I have marveled over how they went totally under cover, their once thriving blog nearly now in the dirt and sadly fading away.  I walk the dirt of desertion these days.

Whatever happened?  My best guess:  Somebody told Steve, in order to protect their precarious career (we are talking "circus" career), that he had better stay clear of all social media ...  WELL, poking around in news bits from Baraboo (did I spell that right?) I learned they played --- are you ready? --- Cirque d"Hiver (yes, I know I did not spell that right)  last winter ... Mighty impressive!  Glad they are still cobbling together pay dates there and here ...  

Under  punishing North Carolina spotlights, Garden Bros, Circus ranked by the Grenville News "the worst circus." And ain't that a shocker! Like a veteran cockroach in stolen spangles, this creepy caravan just keeps slugging along.  Compared to which, maybe King-Cole, now in its second season (the first having "wrapped" in a week or two) is A OK? I'm hoping Circus Report puts out something on this show before CR goes under come December ...

So many icons and landmarks falling ...  Yes, I know there is a "Renaissance"  of circus arts underway in this country.  And are you referring to artsy stage shows?  Summer youth circuses?  Acro-dance troupes?  Pardon my asking.

Kelly Miller's website shows a performance lineup identical to last year's,  and on a video tease they have produced, the over all sheen and talent range makes me wish I could see this one   Might they be the new Ringling-Barnum?  ... Or would that be Big Apple, the latter a strange animal, apparently straining to find hospitable cities in which to play ... 

Michael Jackson's Neverland, the subject of a brilliantly believable doc now airing on HBO, should land a slew of awards ... A quietly escalating drama of how the singer skillfully charmed and seduced little boys into believing themselves to be in full-blow relationships with their freaky idol.  Blame it on the music, and oh what music it was.   I remember once joking with friends, was that a fake detachable nose he was wearing?   How much was real?...

What people will do, even with their kids the bait, to taste fame and fortune and Hollywood money ... So many love notes floating back and forth, and in clear sight, between Michael and his "lover" (of the year), and Mommy and Daddy did not realize what was going on in the bedroom, often far away from theirs?  The voices of two of the singer's subjects, clear and calm, recounting how wonderful and not coercive it seemed, and that makes the story both challenging and even more bizarre.  Except that, Mr. J was not after long-term love, which marks him as just another very average, horny predator jumping from one xxx to another ... 

First part ends with both boys having been pushed to the sidelines while younger darlings are charmed into the Neverland seduction compound... Can't wait for Part 2, to see what happened to these two fellows as they grew up to face a life without the man who swept them out of their diapers. He, at 34-ish in a private ceremony,  getting married to his latest one true love -- all of seven years old, and ominously close to seven-year-itch rejection ...Oh, whatever happened to monogamous pedophilia?

I'm outta here.  
 
3.19.19 - Ring Stoppers

Friday, May 19, 2023

How Tom Hanks Got Me and My Dream Typewriter Back Together Again

Typewriter -- to an author, practically a body part.  Some  may stay with only one their entire lifetime, as witness the 1946 Smith-Corona (“Ollie”) still used by best selling phenom Danielle Steel, who purchased it in ‘48.  Mine has been a long and winding road across many platens.  My first, a Royal Quiet Deluxe, now stands proudly on the small desk in my bedroom, ready for labels or intimate notes too small for my HP printer not to mangle.

Nearing midnight 2000, I composed a love letter to this dear old friend of mine.  We were no longer meeting regularly.  The modern devices, ever ready to correct my non-existent spelling, were too helpful to resist.

My first encounter with these fascinating objects came at around the age of 8 or 9 down on a visit to a friend of my mother’s in once-great San Francisco. There on a desk sat the most novel object. I was invited to take a chair and see how it worked.  The experience of pushing keys that made clicking sounds against a sheet of paper, and seeing my name appear — what a thrill.   Who knows, maybe that first rare encounter gave me the bug to write.

A few years later, I was seated at a small table in the kitchen of Carmelia Perlie, who lived next door, pounding away on her stern black upright Underwood.  Low and behold, at the age of 14 I had just turned out  my first circus review. The White Tops published it! — and with every last misspelled word and rule-defying misuse of grammar intact.

If the editor in Rochelle, Il, Walter H. Hohenadel, was negligent in having it set into type exactly the way it was upon receipt, so, too, did he allow my critical nit-picking to fly through. Which meant that it was codified into my nature, leaving me with a sure feeling that I could – or should – get away with the same in future submissions.  I can imagine Perlie in the background whispering --- “Go, David, go!”  

Go for it I did, soon too much for The White Tops, so to the Circus Review I went, where John Swan published most of my submissions -- until a few if his readers grew acutely disenchanted over my more egregious put downs of the man who killed the big top, John Ringing North. 

After my wonderful next-door-neighbor moved out, so too did her Underwood.  And so, for a period, I made do with another large Underwood, not nearly as healthy, loaned or given to me by an aunt or friend of the family.  On it, I cut the stencils for my anti-John Ringling North rant, 1957 Sawdust,   Santa Rosa High agreed to let me publish it on its duplicating machine.  A copy of 1957 Sawdust resides in the Billy Rose section at the New York public library.   Yes, believe it or not. How it got there we may never know.

I loved going to Corricks office supplies on Fifth street in Santa Rosa, to ogle over the new typewriters for sale. In particular, a sleek, handsome Olympia, something like this picture. Far too expensive at $400.  But then came a big break, when a member at church, J.R. Nelson, offered to sell me his portable Royal Quiet Deluxe, for $25.  I was elated.  With my brother Dick now away at college, I had our whole bedroom to myself.  While writing a play, I would tear through my Royal and maybe turn out a complete draft in a few hours, and then use that as an excuse to indulge in another nap.  Back and forth.

On it, I typed out my first circus submissions to  Variety — “the Bible of Showbiz.” Three years later, my byline made the big time.  Variety's breezy, razzmatazz style seems to have infected my pen.  It surely did the writing of  my first book, Behind the Big Top.  At kaiser steel where I was then clerking for engineers who devised the means of construction,  our receptionist and secretary, Liz Johnson, who would become a life long friend, devised a way for me to stay after work and type up the manuscript in final form, on an IBM Selectric.

My first electric model was an Olympia with correcting tape – very heavy and clunky, and nothing like the  non-electric Olympias  I had swooned over at Corricks.  Good enough to produce Circus Rings Around Russia.

After moving to L.A., I fell for one of the early so-called “word processing” typewriters, the Brother EM-4ll, on display in a store up in the valley.  Handed the clerk my plastic, and brought it home on the bus. A prized possession.  It allowed for only  limited storage of text, but came with a spell checker. Best of all, it’s heavenly keyboard was, and now again is, by far the most perfectly suited to my finger tips. We melt in each other’s touch.

On it, I composed Big Top Boss: John Ringling North and the Circus, and then Roller Skating for Gold.

Back in Oakland, the emerging world of computers would some how find me, and the finding came in a gift from two of my best friends, Sal and Judy Dieli, who handed me their PC when they were on their way out, back down to So Cal where, Judy, keen on the new, would invest in the next newer model.

Perfect timing. In Word Perfect, drawing once again upon the snappier Variety style, I composed Broadway Musicals A Hundred Year History, destined to become my most successful book in terms of generating long term sales, partly credit the publisher, McFarland & Co.  Hinting at troubling patches of purple prose, they first wanted to see it 10 percent leaner. World proceeding gave me the means to revise down to 15 percent without having to type the whole thing over again – or litter it with white-outs and paste-overs.  

Suddenly my Brother EM-411 could no longer compete.  For the last 25 years, it has resided on a shelf in a hall closet. Protected but alone.
 

The only computer I have a sentimental attachment to is my Dell Vostro XP, upon which I am composing this, as I do everything I write, first in Word Perfect.  I purchased it in 2008, and we stopped going on line when MS stopped sending out fixes and updates.  

And then, something wonderful came to to the rescue of my Brother in the closet.---a recent movie California Typewriter, featuring Tom Hanks and a few other writers, among them David McCullough and Stephen King,  who still or sometimes prefer click clacky type setters  It so inspired me, that, finally, I did what I have long wanted to do.  I purchased a small table on Amazon, and on it now appears  the return of my Brother EM-411!  Were I a celebrity writer like Ms. Steel who could get away with it (LOL), I would insist that a publisher accept my work in paper, after which they would, on their end, either scan it into digital or have it typeset the old fashioned way.

Well, that’s a nice dream. But I will still use my Brother for letters and maybe smaller articles.  And to show it the respect it deserves.  Yes, a typing machine can become another form of a relationship.  This one is more than willing whenever the mood strikes me. Who could ask for anything more?  But my spell checker keeps threatening to file for divorce, the victim, it claims, of repeated collisions with words I make up. And I can barely hear its little ping pinging out anymore. Poor thing.  If only George Bernard Shaw had prevailed in bringing sanity to English spelling.  Or is it “Englisch?” 

 


Tuesday, September 20, 2022

A Football Fairytale Worthy of Shakespeare

I can't believe I am posting this, I almost feel like a traitor to my own blog. But I can't resist.

On Sunday, not having watched any football games, I never do -- I tuned into the news and at sports, they showed coverage of the new SF 49ers QB, Trey Lance, going down, and it was serious.  A season ending ankle injury.  Were the gods kidding? The new promised kid on the field and down so soon.  And I should state here that I feel genuinely sorry for the guy, even though I had been rooting for another player to eventually retake his old QB position with the 49ers.

And then, moments later on the same newscast, same field, there came that player,  that very same player -- Jimmy G., as those of us who love him call him, back in uniform and back with the ball in hand, tossing it and moving as if Superman himself had swooped down to save the day.  Jimmy G delivered a great decisive win for his old team!   Like a stand-in actor during a drama more epic than life, having waited in the wings, just in case. An actor of cool aplomb having been perfectly prepared for such an unexpected moment, to fill in if need be.

At the end, through his head gear, you could see pure joy on Jimmy's face, and the joy of his teammates patting and hugging him -- affection through a tangle of protective metal.

Talk about a wildly impossible tragedy-to-triumph drama unfolding before our very eyes.  Something you would only see in a movie  But no, you saw it here on an unscripted football field.  Maybe that is one of the reasons why this game is so so popular. 

Okay, back to the circus.

Friday, February 18, 2022

The Olympics That Never Were ...

UPDATE, 2.22: They're calling it "a disaster." NBC suffered 50% drop in viewers. Pissed off marque losers headed for therapy.  Birng back ABC! (moments later, from googling) Good grief, I  see that we're stuck with NBC through 2032.  Recall!  Recall!

 Nathan Chen, from quad to quad to quad

 

Anybody watching it?

I looked and deflated, all those empty seats, so sad and depressing.  The High and Mighty Americans were gutless in not boycotting the games rather than using them as a platform to bash China.  Yes, there is plenty about China to bash, but not at the Olympics, which is supposed to be an international athletic completion.  The Chinese may coerce and exploit children through Olympic training. Over here, seems that hordes of young female gymnasts are sexually exploited by their coaches.

Those who culture signal are like Kapernick "taking the knee" on his paymaster's time.  Collecting more than most people could ever hope of earning, and then using game time to  promote a fake cause before captive crowds.

Another thing, I love ice skating, but am put off by the self-precious look-at-me-and-deal-with-it Johnny Weird, a neon advertisement for the gender-less society.   When last I toiled to endure him, he was obviously pleased with himself in flaunting his LGBQT++++ credentials**  Daring the hard-working center to try figuring him out. This is not a commentator; this is a social radical making a sideshow of himself. 

Quad mania.  I did manage to watch Nathan Chen's Gold skating in replay. He is one magnificent athlete. But, it looks as if these skaters are competing to jam as many quads as they can get into a program,  which  can render the routine short on artistic contrast and mood, long on horse racing mentality. Boooring.

And NBC itself comes in for some blame.  When I got serious about watching their coverage in the past, I could never find accurate scheduling in order to know when what I wanted to watch would appear.  I hated NBC for this.

And I read this sad sad affair may pull the lowest Olympic coverage ratings in years. I was one of the no-shows.

The greedy IOC is as much to blame as anybody.  They should have postponed the games. They would have done everyone a favor.

Besides which, okay, I hold a grudge. My own sport (yes, laugh) is or was roller skating.  They came close many years ago to getting roller hockey in.  Then, the president of the IOC, Juan Samaranch, was himself an avid roller hockey player and fan. He could have made it happen but did not, the gutless coward.  Likely he was lobbied and gifted by a cunning ice lobby bribing away to keep those on wheels out.  Believer it or not, there are forms of roller competition, such as school figures and regulation (ballroom type) dance, arguably superior to how they are skated over blades. 

** Now on the Dramatist Guild website is an insanely long listing of various "genders" one can give for whomever the hell, in their protected opinion, they happen to be at the moment.  I could not believe my eyes. 

Life in Woke-Joke America. Were I now dating in any lane, I would love to have an app on my iPhone able to sense the reality of intimate candidates:  GAB -- Gender At Birth.

Monday, February 07, 2022

Ernest Albrecht ... February 3

I feel a  deep sadness.  Although I had never met Mr. Albrecht, I admired his voice and his dedication to what he called in his well received book, The New American Circus. And though I disagreed on the concept, I acknowledged how more valid might be his perspective in time. We have arrived, you might say, closer to the concepts he reported on and championed, or at least constructively embraced, more so than I have ever. 

I have missed his Spectacle magazine on line.  Something did not quite feel right. So many important contributors to our American circus scene have been leaving us. The Felds, who may return -- let us pray.  Johnny Pugh's Cole Bros. The Byrd's Carson and Barnes. Paul Binder's Big Apple. John Ringling North II's Kelly Miller.  The Biggerstaff's Circus Report  And now, Ernest Albrecht.

My warmest condolences to his family and friends everywhere.

Sunday, May 23, 2021

Thanks For the Thrill, Phil!

 

 Best of all, he is my favorite golfer of all.

What an amazing weekend on the green!  I had not known that Phil stood to become the oldest player ever to win a major. And that electrified this affair from average to epic.  History might be in the making.  By Sunday, Phil was not lost somewhere in the end of the pack, as so often he is, but still in the lead. 

I was riveted this afternoon to every move Phil made, but had to think he was going to blunder his way out of  the running. This outing was  as compelling as when Tiger made his spectacular comeback at the Masters.

Is Phil Mickelson not now the greatest golfer who ever lived?

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

The Dark Side of Model Building: How I Made Laffing Sal live in My Playland-at-the-Beach Fun House

Daring to disclose, yet feeling the apprehension of Frankenstein in his laboratory fearing the fury of society and the gallows, I post this rare, possibly soon-to-be deposted video on You Tube, either by outrage in miniature land, or by my own guilt-wrenched soul.

Be there for the inside story on how I really created the half-mad Laffing Sal. Be there to witness my fall into the depths of despotic scratch-builder madness.  Oh, the acts of inhumanity I have committed in quarter inch scale!  On, the temptations to play God with Exacto blade in hand!

And be there to behold a gruesome foretelling of what modern society, in its quest for infallible beauty and surgical-ordered perfection, may one day fall victim to.

Here's how:

google "The dark side of model building," or go to:

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THv_I_z8qg8

Hurry!  Hurry!  Limited engagement!

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

The Morning Midway: Why I Listened to The Sound of Music Instead of Watching the Debate

I turned the TV off.  Why? To explain would be to run the risk of slipping into a dangerous minefield out there of thought police at every turn, ready to pounce over the least trace of residual insensitivity, to shame and shout you  down. And more.   Have you noticed how we have become a nation of judgmental fanatics constantly rendering critiques against other? Render the wrong word, suggest a contrary point of view, yawn too long, and  all hell make break loose.

I skipped the debate, suffice it to say, for I did not wish to witness the spectacle of one man losing his mind, another man mocking him.  I have no idea at this point how it came out.

So, I played the original cast album of The Sound of Music, in my view the best version, for it includes the complete original score, including a lovely ballad, An Ordinary Couple.  The composer, it has been said, never liked the song, and 86d it from the movie in favor of his own ditty with his own tortured lyric that defies logic, something about the two leads fessing up to possible wickedness in their childhoods.  Maria, ex bad girl?

I am watching less and less television news, having some years back junked cable news. It is one thing to be informed. Another to be hectored by the same news and the same competing views over and over all day long.  While going down to get the mail, I noticed a young woman out on the street walking her dog. So I guess I was not the only one ignoring the media's latest orgy.

Update, 11:30am. I read that TV ratings were down 36% from the first debate in 2016.  "Widely panned by most observers," reported the Hollywood Reporter.  I slept well last night.


Saturday, August 29, 2020

Minimal Abstracts Over Earth & Cement

Perhaps a tad pretentious?  Too little? There is more here than you will currently come across on our abandoned circus lots.  Sorry, but I could not find a cracked peanut anywhere.





This image makes me feel like I am in a movie by one of the great Italian directors.


Pardon me for declaring this one perfect.  Which one?  You be the judge.






I find solace in the white dot.


This one surprised me. I was taken by the brown tones and pleased with the result.


That figure look like a stalker.  Well, we do have a few around here.



I think it's the blazing green that makes this one for me.


A country barely holding on.


Yes, this is ugly.



Even uglier.  So ... Let me find something livelier to go out on ....


Better? 

Big news next week. Back to Gaudy and Glorious. We're going back across the big pond!

Saturday, August 22, 2020

The Morning Midway: When Animals Learn to Talk Back – How Science May One Day Defeat PETA’s Grip Against Prancing Poodles and Pole-Vaulting Pigs


The Cristianis, c. 1940s

Times move on and change, people’s attitudes, too.  We learn more about life and adjust forward — or backward. Sometimes, yesterday turns out to be better than we thought it was, then or since.

Now, people around the world are talking to their animals, as they always have, but the animals are starting to talk back.  Thanks for, among a growing number of communication gadgets, buttons placed on a pad.  Buttons there for a paw to push. Buttons that say things like “Go out” “Hungry” Even, yes, “I love you.”


Merle Evans leading the band, as dogs enter for their cue

“Tired of talking with people in your family? Try the dog,” writes Cordilia James in The Wall Street Journal.  A fascinating report of this emerging phenomena.  The button titles can be tailor made.  One Alex Devine of Tacoma, Wash, went public on TikTok, telling about her dog Bunny putting paw to the point.  Her favorite button poke from Bunny.   “Love you, Mom.”  She now has 2.7 million followers.  And, yes, I know of the many wonderful animal trainers out there who know so much more about communicating with animals and have had to endure relentless attacks on their good work.                     

A speech pathologist, Christina Hunger, talking up the validity of this.   She’s been adapting some of her methods used with patients to give animals more options in communicating, and testing them on her dog, Stella.

They May be Monitoring Your Conduct

Kendra Baker’s possessive cat. Billi pushes “mad” when she feels affection-deprived. Once, when she witnessed her matron kissing a boyfriend, she hightailed it to the button mat and pressed “Later!  Mad!  Pets!” 

Not just dogs and cats.  Across the barnyard, other critters are beginning to wake up and mouth off.  Karlijn in the Netherlands has her dog Silke talking, and is now bestowing the same skills on her guinea pigs.

Oh gosh, and I don’t even own a pet.  I am so so behind. But I would love to own my own button mat, a discrete option to offer shy guests. Heck, perhaps one day they will be sold to estranged spouses.


A show stopper at Big Apple Circus, 2004.
photo by Bertrand Guay

Should we be at all surprised? After all, if you have ever spoken to a circus trainer, chances are they likened the early stages of teaching to the same thing a parent goes through with a toddler.  I have it on good authority: Russia cat trainer Svetlana Shamsheeva, above, quoted in my book Fall of the Big Top. That dog in your care who keeps you in the dark may have been deprived of a proper dogyhood.

When Home Pets Seem Less Unlike Circus Stars

They may be able to ban the animal from the circus – for a time – but they can’t ban the circus from the animal. To degrees universal, it still flourishes around the world.  This bodes well for a future return of animal acts under whatever then might be left of our bartered big tops.  If the public can be offered transparent evidence of animals being trained in decently respectful manners, that combined with their own expanding knowledge of human to animal communication in the home may give them pause to reconsider.  Pause to appreciate what marvelous things animals can be taught to do.

Baby Opal, trained by Peggy and Mac McDonald, Polack Bros. Circus, 1955

Of course, there is still a large public out there waiting to be entertained at least by dogs and the cats, as witness the latter lighting up the stages of America’s Got Talent. Those judges are clearly on the side of real circus. 

So, how did that make you feel?  Okay, then go ask your dog what he thinks.  And hope he does not push the “bored, do not disturb” button.

Sunday, August 16, 2020

Sunday Morning Around the Streets Where I Live ...



Endless are the subjects to snap.  Taking walks on these streets is also nice and easy because few people share them. Welcome to Piedmont, CA --- but half a block from where I live.

 .

During the roaring twenties, Pdedmont  had more millionaires per square mile than any city in the United States. It was once a part of Oakland, until incorporating in 1908.


Actually, the Oakland-Piedmont border technically cuts through my apartment building, as it does other nearby homes (something to do with, in haste, using sewer lines for boundaries), so it would seem that I sleep in Oakland, and do my laundry up the hall -- in Piedmont. 


And we are only passing through what some have called the "lower slobovia" of Piedmont. Or, by another person's telling,  hamburger gulch. Farther up the hills, higher into the city, there are more spectacular dwellings. But my favorite of all the houses I have seen in the higher or lower sections is this one, in the lower:

Photos can't do it justice.  Once on walk, I came upon its owner of decades, and we chated about his home, and I could not believe that in all the years, nobody had ever stopped to inquire about its remarkable architecture or history.  




I think of these as weeping horns.





The city has a populating of around only 10,000.  Among luminaries who once lived here, George Schultz, Al Davis, Clint Eastwood.


Jack London, then part of a bohemian arts community,  lived on Scenic Avenue in what would become Piedmont when he wrote, The Call of the Wild. That may be his best book.




She seemed willing to pose while I snapped, but once I moved up half a step, she flashed off. They are such snobs!





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A typical house on the Oakland street where I live.

The front yard of my apartment building down the block, credit the property management company  hired by a new owner who bought the place last year.  They loved to self-acclaim their many interior cosmetic makeovers, and then tore up the lush shrubbery out front.  Last Year. Here you see Rose Laura, which I've named after Laura, who planted  the bush and  who was resident manager for the previous owners, for many years, but was not kept on.  In fact, this new company of robotic airheads who carry on like on an occupying force off a space ship, refuse to hire a resident manager, in violation of CA laws.  Laura  remains my and many others (underground) personal manager. 

I enjoyed, from another green chair, listening to the lady talking to her dog, as if they had been a devoted couple for many years. I hadn't the nerve to snap a photo of the two when intimately close, and then asked, and she said, yes, and of course the whole picture fell apart and soon they were on their way.

Next: My abstract minimals. Going for tiny and obscure. A friend of the weed.