Sunday, March 29, 2020

WHEN A JOKE MAY SADLY BECOME REALITY.....

 
I love the comedy of Jack Benny.  He had a style all his own.  He was probably one of the first successful self deprecating comics in show business.  He was known for his slow takes, his age to remain 39, and his frugality (when in real life he was one of the charitable entertainers around) .  Probably his most famous comic routines concerns his frugality.  Historians say that there was laughter from the audience for at least five minutes after the punchline was uttered by Mr. Benny.
      However, the incompetence and vanity that has caused the worrisome environment we currently find ourselves in is finding people making very tough decisions about the future of society.  This is neither funny nor fair and I believe much of it could have be avoided.  However, we currently stand at a precipice that I never thought possible.  Do we have the faith, courage and responsibility to make the right choice?
      Anyway, here is the recorded routine:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-tVzdUczMT0

      May good health and laughter be with you.

Sunday, March 22, 2020

MY REVIEW: JAY MYSELF (2019)

I watched a documentary called "Jay Myself" about famous New York photographer Jay Maisel. He lived in the old Germania Bank Building from 1966 to 2014. He bought the building for around $150,000 and sold it for $55 million dollars. Not surprisingly, he is also an astute businessman and has sold has photographs to major businesses. He is not pretentious. He is not ironic. He has a child like sense of discovery even at the age of 88. He smokes cigars. He collects random things like old VHS cardboard boxes that have different colors and textures to them. When one of his students from 1979 came back to film him moving out of his bank building, he said "I'm glad to see that at our advanced ages, we haven't matured one bit."
Everything and everyone has value. The creation of something or someone is just as important as the decay. A person in a new suit is as fascinating as paint peeling off of an old steel sign. He has a very loving wife and a young daughter that calls him 'a father and a kooky uncle combined.'  She is currently a student at the Fordham University School of Law.
Jay and his wife moved to a different home in New York City; an old carriage house that has been converted into a home and work space. The song "Kodachrome" by Paul Simon plays at the end of the film. "You take pictures and you are taken by pictures." -Jay Maisel
I highly enjoyed the movie as it shows that artists can be normal people and not just artsy fartsy tortured souls. Hell, even Andy Warhol guested starred on an episode of "The Love Boat" not because of some ironic art project, but because he truly enjoyed the show.  My rating: A+