hi all. i gotta run, but i thought if TODD was there i wanted to tell him he was in my dream last night (not a nightmare, kinda surprising). i'd go to his show but i've got theaTAH. thanks.
1:17pm
Cooh John:
scored a Ronnie Hawkins 45 this week at my local record store.
1:30pm
Greg from ZONE 5:
YES!!!
You're getting a call when I finally commit to assembling the FMU bowling team. (Gaylord has his own ball, so he's throwing lead-off.)
Will Eisner never worked for EC. Eisner was famous for his character, the Spirit, which appeared in Sunday newspaper comic sections in the 1940s and early 1950s.
The kid's boyfriend hipped me to a Brit black-comedy caper movie called "Snatch", which has "Doncha Just Know It" as its closing-title music. Lotsa fun and a great pic for the FP Faithful.
2:05pm
Listener Jumpy:
Rex. you might be confusing Will Eisner, of The Spirit, with Will Elder, of E.C. / Mad.
2:08pm
mic a:
No youse have me imagining a Singing Dogs Hallow'een record with an immaculately gory picture sleeve by Graham Ingels.
2:09pm
mic a:
Not "No." Should be "Now." Sorry.
2:25pm
pottybear:
Are you and Coco doing the WFMU twist? Listening in Maui
2:28pm
angela oster:
Help preserve the history of music in the Queen City! cincymusic.com/news/2017/01/s…
#SaveKingRecordsBuilding
#CivilRightsLandmark
While driving across country, our car tire blew out. We didn't have a spare. Luckily, it happened right in the middle of Akron, Ohio, the tire capital of the world, and we were able to get it replaced fast!
From 1927 until 1947, Berg and his partner Bert Allenberg represented an empire of great movie stars including Lucille Ball, Wallace Beery, Walter Brennan, Olivia DeHavilland, Melvyn Douglas, Walter Huston, Buster Keaton, Alan Ladd, Charles Laughton and Edward G. Robinson.
Berg, born in New York City Feb. 15, 1902, graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, and became a millionaire before he was 30.
By 1947, he was wealthy from his investments and chose to leave his agency and concentrate on archaeological expeditions.
In 1969, he arranged to leave his collection of artifacts and art, then valued at $1.5 million, to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, while retaining the collection until his death.
Berg married Joan Hartley after the death of his first wife, the former actress Leila Hyams, who he married in 1927.