A chronicle of vile and pernicious truths.
About This Blog
The right to keep and bear arms, occasional attempts at satire, frequent recourse to sarcasm, and anything else I can think of. Oh yeah, and pipe smoking. Sometimes H.P. Lovecraft. And obscure Monty Python references when applicable.

Email:


More about me.
Support This Blog!

Any and all proceeds go to this humble blogger's ammo & gun fund. (Because everybody else has one).
Blogonomicon CafePress shop

My Amazon.com Wish List
Filthy Lucre
I've been published!
Hell's Hangmen
What really happened to the Anasazi people? Was Jack the Ripper someone's second choice? What was the famous Ranger tracking in Gypsy's Gulch? These and other questions are answered in Hell's Hangmen: Horror in the Old West as twenty-two of today's most talented writers bring you fantastical tales with a Western Flavor. Thrill to those eerie days of yesteryear...

You can order it by clicking here.


Most recent update: 5 August 2007.
Most Recently Abhorréd
This Month
January 2007
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31
Year Archive
Local Weather
View Article  Pipesmoker of the Week #49: Salvador Dalí

Salvador Felip Jacint Dalí Domènech (1904-1989)
Every morning upon awakening, I experience a supreme pleasure: that of being Salvador Dalí, and I ask myself, wonderstruck, what prodigious thing will he do today, this Salvador Dalí.
The artist famous for his strikingly beautiful yet surreal works.  This self portrait was made in 1921, when he was only 17.
View Article  Pipesmoker of the Week #48: Irving Wallace

Irving Wallace (1916-1990)

"To be one's self, and unafraid whether right or wrong, is more admirable than the easy cowardice of surrender to conformity."

Prolific author Irving Wallace wrote novels and non-fiction, as well as writing some TV shows (he even wrote for Have Gun, Will Travel).  Several of his books were made into movies.

He was born in Chicago and grew up in Kenosha, WI.

I read once that he liked to celebrate finishing a book by buying himself a new pipe.

Biblography of Irving Wallace.
Filmography of Irving Wallace.
View Article  Pipesmoker of the Week #47: Douglas MacArthur

Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964)

I occurred to me that I hadn't featured one of the most famous pipe smokers of all time.  Wikipedia has another color photo of him posing with his trademark corncob.

He's so famous that I don't see how I could say anything about him.

I will note that he also liked cigars, and from what I have read, he probably preferred cigars to pipes.  MacArthur always had a keen talent for showmanship, and I think his choice of this pipe was just another aspect of the image he tried to create.  I also read that his favorite pipe tobacco was "whatever was for sale at the PX," or something like that.

That huge corncob is definitely more picturesque than a cigar, in my opinion.  Such corncob pipes are still made and are called MacArthurs, after the man who made them famous.
View Article  Pipesmoker of the Week #46: Gordon Parks

Gordon Roger Alexander Buchannan Parks (1912-2006)
"I had a mother who would not allow me to complain about not accomplishing something because I was black. Her attitude was, 'If a white boy can do it, then you can do it, too—and do it better, or don’t come home.'"
Gordon Parks was born the youngest of 15 children in the segregated town of Fort Scott, Kansas.  When his mother died, he went to live with a sister but he did not get along well with his sister's husband, so he left, working odd jobs to get by--only the kinds of odd jobs that were allowed to someone of his skin color in the 1920s and '30s.

In 1938, he bought his first camera after seeing some pictures of migrant workers in a magazine.  He was urged on his early path to professional photography by the film developers who developed his first roll of film, as well as by Marva Louis, the wife of boxer Joe Louis.  He began a business as a portrait photographer for society's upper crust in Chicago.

A full treatment of Parks' career in freelance photography is beyond the scope of this post, but he worked for Vogue and became famous for his photo-essays in Life.

During the 1960s he began writing, turning out the autobiographical novel The Learning Tree, and several volumes of poetry and memoirs.  In 1969 he became Hollywood's first major black director when he directed a movie version of his The Learning Tree.

In 1971 Parks directed Shaft, and in 1972 the sequel, Shaft's Big Score.

He directed Shaft! you say.  What else can be said after that?  Well, there's more.

He was a self-taught pianist.  He could perform classical as well as jazz, and wrote a Concerto for Piano and Orchestra and a symphony called Tree Symphony.  In 1981 he published the fiction novel Shannon about Irish immigrants.  He was also a visual artist who created abstract oil paintings based on his photos, and he was a co-founder of Essence magazine.

Gordon Parks himself said that freedom was the theme of all his works.
Welcome to...
Congratulations
For leaving comment #1,001!
Login
User name:
Password:
Remember me 
Search
Search all blogs
Write Your Representative

Write your representative about H.B. 1022!
Some sample letters are here.

Click here to sign the petition against H.R. 1022.
In Search of the Second Amendment

The TRUE story of the American right to arms is told by some of the greatest names in American constitutional law -- professors at Yale, UCLA, Fordham, George Washington University, George Mason University, and other institutions, as well as by lifelong scholars of the Second Amendment, such as Steve Halbrook, Dave Kopel, and Don Kates.

Free Wayne Webring


Free Wayne Webring

Home/Join | List | Next | Previous | Random

alt-webring.com

The Anti-PC League
Anti-PC League

Screw the U.N.

The Alliance of Free Blogs

"As you value your health and your reason, keep away from this blog."
--Glenn Reynolds

Miscellaneous


Blogroll Me!
Subscribe with Bloglines

PageRank Checking Icon
B-List Blogger
Get Firefox!



Blogonomicon

Grab this Headline Animator








I'm a Proud Citizen in
Technorati Cosmos

How about you?
Link Buttons