Friday, May 24, 2013

Phone photo 2493

Make sure your hot food cools off a bit before using plastic silverware

Postcard - Seattle, Washington

"Seattle, Washington. Bisected by Interstate 5 (foreground), Seattle is the Gateway to Alaska and the Orient. The new modern skyscrapers characterize the growth in 'The Queen City.' The famous Smith Tower is on the extreme left and the black building in the center is the Seattle First Bank Building."

1970s.

Phone photo 2492


Favorite Movie Quotes: A Tale of Two Cities

"Must it end in nothing?"

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Phone photo 2491

That haze is the smoke billowing out of the microwave as I used the home fire alarm as my cooking timer. The Weber Cooks guy is a gourmet compared to me, I'm afraid. My kitchen smelled like a cremated chicken strip for about a week.

Postcard - Seattle, Washington

"Seattle, Washington, looking north towards the downtown business district with Interstate 5 in the foreground."

In 1980, which was about the time I acquired this card, I worked right about dead center in this photo at Seattle Public Library. What a great city.

Phone photo 2490

The Fabs

Morty Comix # 2572






I was going to place Morty Comix # 2572 in a bus stop on Capitol Blvd. in Tumwater, Washington, but I saw this little "YHWH is the devil! Only CHRIST is God!" sign in there. Whatever. I sure didn't want to share space with it. So, I left this issue of Morty Comix in another bus stop, on the (considering the circumstances) ironically named Israel Rd.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Phone photo 2489

The Fabs

Postcard - Seattle, Washington

"King County Domed Stadium. Seattle's multi-purpose stadium, the Kingdome, has a maximum seating capacity of 80,000. The Stadium houses major sporting and entertainment events, and conventions. In the background are Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains."

2nd half of the 1970s. The Kingdome was blowed up real good in 2000. YeeHaw!

Phone photo 2488

The shopping trip at the grocery store where only blue items were purchased.

Morty Comix # 2571





Morty Comix # 2571 was left wedged between a chair and side table at a lobby in a state government building, Tumwater, Washington.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Phone photo 2487

Washington State cutting board

Does Gilbert Shelton Have a Legal Case Here?


As I mentioned a few months ago, I hope Gilbert Shelton is getting some kind of commission from the catnip company Ducky World for the blatant use of his Fat Freddy's Cat character. And maybe he is, but I sure don't see Shelton's name anywhere on this container.

If Shelton is getting screwed over here, I can empathize.

Any attorneys who want to play David to Goliath (pro bono, of course, we cartooning librarians are not living in poverty, but we can see it from here) are welcome to contact me about Disney's use of my Floating Baby Head character. I think I have a good case. My character appeared in a nationally distributed comic book long before it later turned up in Phineas and Ferb.

Corporate America had no problem going after the underground cartoonists for copyright violations, but seems perfectly at ease lifting the creative efforts of underground/Newave artists for their own profit.

Phone photo 2486

Power Team

Keep [LOOK AT ME! LOOK At ME!] Weird











The "Keep [Blank] Weird" trend supposedly started in Austin, but has spread like eczema across the cultural epidermis. So sad.

Maybe it was original the first time it was used, but now it is hardly unique or creative.

To me the whole idea of weirdness is that the subject in question is out of touch with common reality and somewhat unaware of their own weirdness. Rotary Club meetings are weird. Most of the small towns in southwest Washington State are weird. The Tea Party is weird. Cats are weird. People who wear bicycle helmets indoors are weird. Silverware is weird.

Actually most of life is weird. But among the things that are not weird are cities, or entire states, that jump up and down and shout "Look at us! We're weird!" That's not weird, that's just marketing, which is pretty mundane. Since my motto is "Drabness is Goodness," I can hardly complain about this "Keep ... Weird" ad campaign, so I'll embrace the paradox as part of normal pop culture.

Phone photo 2485

Oregon Trail
1844
Marked by the
Daughters and Sons of
the American Revolution
in the State of Washington
1916

I have probably passed by this marker thousands of times in my life, but this month was the first time I ever really noticed it! It sits nears the Falls Terrace Restaurant, and in 1916 it would've been right in the center of action in downtown Tumwater, Washington.

See that concrete wall in the background? Interstate 5 is on the other side. When it plowed through this area in the 1950s the freeway destroyed the heart of the first American settlement in the Puget Sound region. The town has been more or less of a crazy quilt ever since.


Postcard - Seattle, Washington

"An aerial view of Seattle from the south shows the King County Domed Stadium in the foreground, the Downtown Business District, and the Space Needle in the background. To the left is a small part of Seattle's busy waterfront."


Sound familiar? It should. The text is exactly the same as the previous postcard I posted. This one appears to be just slightly later than the other postcard.

Phone photo 2484

This discarded portable dental floss joins a growing gallery of these repulsive things I have discovered and documented for this blog. This one was found just outside McCleary, Washington. Click on the tag "portable dental floss" below to see the others.

Morty Comix # 2570





Morty Comix # 2570 was placed among the interior supporting 2x4s of a newspaper vending machine shed in Panorama City, a retirement community in Lacey, Washington.

Phone photo 2483

Tumwater, Washington

Favorite Movie Quotes: Stakeout

"Alright, take this down. I think we got something to check out. He apparently has a buddy with the initials 'B.C.' right here in Seattle ..."

This is never fully explained in this 1987 movie, but it should be obvious the man they were looking for was a guy who lived in that city at that time named "Bruce Chrislip"!

Phone photo 2482

McCleary, Washington

Postcard - Seattle, Washington

"An aerial view of Seattle from the south shows the King County Domed Stadium in the foreground, the Downtown Business District, and the Space Needle in the background. To the left is a small part of Seattle's busy waterfront."

1970s

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Phone photo 2481

Hettie and the Boys

Postcard - Seattle, Washington

"Seattle, Washington. This panoramic view, looking towards the northwest, shows the King County Domed Stadium, with a maximum capacity of 80,000, and the Downtown Business District. In the background is Seattle's waterfront and the Olympic Mountain Range."

From the mid-1970s. When that black skyscraper on the left was erected, locals called it "The box the Space Needle Arrived In."