“Video Killed the Radio Star”

This was the first video that MTV played, when it debuted on August 1, 1981, “Video Killed the Radio Star” by The Buggles.  Ah, 1981.  I began my senior year in high school and had just got my first car.  My thick collar-length hair was bleached auburn from a summer spent outdoors, and I was still a virgin.  What memories!

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August 1 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Author Robert James Waller (The Bridges of Madison County, Slow Waltz in Cedar Bend) is 73.

Actor Giancarlo Giannini (A Walk in the Clouds, Once Upon a Crime, Goodnight Michael Angelo, Swept Away…by an Unusual Destiny in the Blue Sea of August) is 70.

Actor – comedian Taylor Negron (Hope & Gloria, Angels In The Outfield, Young Doctors In Love, Easy Money, Punchline, The Last Boy Scout) is 55.

Singer Joe Elliott (Def Leppard) is 53.

Actress Jennifer Gareis (Private Parts, Miss Congeniality, Venus on the Halfshell, Gangland) is 42.

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On August 1…

1291 – A pact was made to form the Swiss Confederation.  The anniversary of this founding has been celebrated as National Day in Switzerland since 1891.

1770 – Explorer William Clark was born in Caroline County, VA.

1779 – Attorney – poet Francis Scott Key (The Star-Spangled Banner) was born in Carroll County, MD.

1819 – Author Herman Melville (Moby Dick, Redburn, Typee, Omoo, White-Jacket) was born in New York City.

1876 – Colorado became the 38th state of the United States.

1940 – John Fitzgerald Kennedy, then age 23, published his first book, Why England Slept.

1953 – The Alcoa (Aluminum Corporation of America) Building in Pittsburgh, PA, the first aluminum-faced building constructed in America, was completed.

1981 – The MTV (Music Television) Network made its debut.

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Quote of the Day

“You follow me around the world.  You see me hugging Muslims around the world, because the ones I hug are our friends.”

U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-TX, saying he does not make unfounded accusations against certain people because they are Muslim.

An evangelical Christian admitting he hugs Muslims?  Does his pastor know about this?

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Pictures of the Day

Men’s gymnastics is one of my favorite sports, especially since I aspired to be a championship gymnast in my youth.  It’s almost pure upper body strength, mixed in with a touch of ballet-like grace.  Unfortunately, my parents didn’t think that was a real sport.  My father, in particular, wanted me to play baseball and basketball – two sports I hated then and don’t like now.  Men’s gymnastics, however, has come a long way from being an obscure college sport.  We can thank Kurt Thomas for that.  His “Thomas flair” literally catapulted men’s gymnastics into the eye of the American public in the 1970’s.  The 2012 U.S. Men’s Olympic Gymnastics Team ranked fifth in the team competition the other day, but Danell Leyva won the Bronze in the individual all-around competition.  Here are just a handful of pictures of this year’s team in action.

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In Memoriam – Gore Vidal, 1925 – 2012

Novelist, playwright, politician and commentator Gore Vidal died July 31 in Los Angeles.  He was 86.  Along with such contemporaries as Norman Mailer and Truman Capote, Vidal was considered both a literary genius and a celebrity.  His works included hundreds of essays, novels such as Lincoln and Myra Breckenridge and scores of plays.

In his attacks on the establishment, Vidal appeared as brutal as he was exacting.  He bemoaned what he said would be the eventual demise of democracy and America’s political power, as well as the destruction of the environment.  His sometimes overwhelming contempt for everyone and everything around him alienated him from the same literary world in which he thrived.  Besides an honorary National Book Award, he won few major writing prizes and initially declined membership in the American Academy of Arts and Letters, joking that he already belonged to the Diners Club.

Born in West Point, NY, Vidal’s grandfather, Thomas Pryor Gore, was a U.S. senator from Oklahoma.  His father, Gene Vidal, served briefly in President Franklin Roosevelt’s administration and was an early expert on aviation.  Amelia Earhart was a family friend and reported lover of Gene Vidal.

Unable to make a living from fiction, at least when identified as “Gore Vidal,” he wrote a trio of mystery novels in the 1950’s under the pen name “Edgar Box” and also wrote fiction as “Katherine Everard” and “Cameron Kay.”  He wrote for the theater and television.  “The Best Man,” which premiered in 1960, was made into a movie starring Henry Fonda.  Paul Newman starred in “The Left-Handed Gun,” a film adaptation of Vidal’s “The Death of Billy the Kid.”  He the script for “Suddenly Last Summer” and added a subtle homoerotic context to “Ben-Hur.”  The author himself later appeared in a documentary about gays in Hollywood, “The Celluloid Closet.”  His acting credits included “Gattaca,” “With Honors” and the political satire, “Bob Roberts.”

In recent years, Vidal wrote the novel “The Smithsonian Institution” and the nonfiction best sellers “Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace” and “Dreaming War: Blood for Oil and the Cheney – Bush Junta.”  A second memoir, “Point to Point Navigation,” came out in 2006.

“Because there is no cosmic point to the life that each of us perceives on this distant bit of dust at galaxy’s edge,” he once wrote, “all the more reason for us to maintain in proper balance what we have here.  Because there is nothing else.  No thing.  This is it.  And quite enough, all in all.”

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Guns for Hackers

The Daily Caller web site is offering a free gun to anyone who can help them track down a hacker.

From the site:

First, if you’re the first person to find our hacker and turn his name over to us, we’ll give you a gun. We realize this may seem like a daunting task, but we believe it can be done.

You’ll have only 2 weeks to complete your mission, and we wish you good luck.

For all of you readers out there who aren’t Internet sleuths we have a second way to win: Write an essay telling us what you think we should do with the hacker when we find him. We’ll give a prize to the person with the funniest and most inventive ideas for how TheDC should repay this jerk. Enter your essay in the box on this form, and please note that the winning essay will be published on The Daily Caller at the end of the contest.

I sort of hope it’s an inside job.

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July 31 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Actor Don Murray (Bus Stop, Knots Landing, The Outcasts, Baby the Rain Must Fall, Peggy Sue Got Married, Advice and Consent) is 83.

Actress France Nuyen (Vannga; The Joy Luck Club, South Pacific, Diamond Head, St. Elsewhere) is 73.

Actress Susan Flannery (Days of Our Lives, The Bold and the Beautiful, Dallas, Anatomy of a Seduction) is 69.

Actress Geraldine Chaplin (Nashville, Rosalind, Chaplin, Dr. Zhivago, The Wedding) is 68.

Tennis champion Evonne Goolagong (Australian Open [1974, 1975, 1976, 1977]; Wimbledon [1971, 1980]; French Open [1971]; International Tennis Hall of Fame) is 61.

Actor Barry Van Dyke (Diagnosis Murder, The Van Dyke Show, Foxfire Light, It Happened at Lakewood Manor, Casino) is 61.

Alan Autry (actor: In the Heat of the Night, Proud Men, Blue De Ville, At Close Range; mayor of Fresno, CA, 2001 – 2009) is 60.

Actor Michael Biehn (The Rock, Breach of Trust, Blood of the Hunter, Tombstone, A Taste for Killing, Timebomb, Aliens, The Terminator, The Fan, Coach, The Runaways) is 56.

Drummer Bill Berry (R.E.M.) is 54.

Actor Wesley Snipes (Demolition Man, Rising Sun, Major League, Sugar Hill, White Men Can’t Jump, To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar, One Night Stand, U.S. Marshals) is 50.

Author J.K. Rowling (Harry Potter series) is 47.

Actor Dean Cain (Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman) is 46.

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On July 31…

1928 – MGM’s Leo the lion roared for the first time.  He introduced MGM’s first talking picture, White Shadows on the South Seas.  Leo’s dialogue was more extensive than the film’s, whose only spoken word was, “Hello.”

1964 – Ranger 7, an unmanned U.S. lunar probe, took the first close-up images of the moon.

1971 – Apollo 15 astronauts David R. Scott and James B. Irwin became the first men to ride in a LRV (lunar rover vehicle) on the moon.  They rode for about 5 miles on the lunar surface.  Their first stop at the rim of Elbow Crater was televised back to Earth to millions of viewers.

1975 – Former labor leader Jimmy Hoffa disappeared from a parking lot in a Detroit restaurant and has never been seen since.  His disappearance remains unsolved.

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Cartoon of the Day

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