ceased
9 entries
Like City Lights, Receding
2010.02.14 at 23:35
20:30 < lwhalen> so, fill me in. I haven't read all 8 pages of the carebridge page. dude was just walking along, and "BAM", stroke/hemmorhage/tumor/whatever?
20:30 < helix> pretty much
20:30 < solios> then he Got Bad
20:30 < solios> and we hoped
20:30 < helix> we were on irc and suddenly he was like "omg I just had crushing pain in my head"
20:30 < solios> then he looked like he was Getting Better
20:30 < solios> and we all hoped
20:30 < solios> then he Wasn't
20:30 < helix> he went partially deaf, had weird temperature changes
20:30 < solios> and we all hoped
20:30 < Kam> He was getting better until Saturday I guess, and then he got much worse since
20:30 < helix> went to the hospital
20:30 < solios> then he Isn't
20:30 < helix> and then as solios says
20:30 < solios> and we all wept.
20:30 < solios> :(

Andrew M. Zebrowitz: July 27, 1979 - February 14th, 2010

Note : This entry was changed back to 'draft' the morning after the initial posting - which didn't keep it from listing in a few RSS readers. As this is how #215 discovered the reason for bda's sudden departure for Atlanta, I've decided to re-list the entry with comments disabled. Recipe for the Orange Zebrowitz to follow later this week, once #mirrorshades has come to a consensus on the ingredients.

Patrick McGoohan
2009.01.14 at 14:48 | comments (5)

March 19, 1928 – January 13, 2009.

dangerman.jpg

Image surfaced in a google search and allegedly came from goon-magazine.de.

Read the LA Times obituary, a BBC overview and the BBC obituary.

If you're one of those rare under-cultured sorts who has no idea who this man is, or are somehow unware of The Prisoner and its cultural impact, read McGoohan's wikipedia entry, and this interview. That should get you started. Buy the show while you're at it.

Here's an excerpt from the interview:

Troyer: What about the philosophy, the rationale of the Village? What did you tell them about that? Its raison-d'etre, not its mechanics...
McGoohan: (very deliberately) It was a place that is trying to destroy the individual by every means possible; trying to break his spirit, so that he accepts that he is No. 6 and will live there happily as No. 6 for ever after. And this is the one rebel that they can't break.
Troyer: To what end was that process of breaking down the individual will?
McGoohan: To what end?
Troyer: For the Village, what was the purpose, the goal?
McGoohan: I think it's going on every day all around us.

It's been forty years (a matter of weeks to the day) since society was so stylishly and thoughtfully challenged. That all comers have failed to be as engaging, as thought-provoking - or as accurate - says a lot for the state of modern media.

One of the largest and most long-lasting contributions my father made to the development of my worldview was to tape re-runs of The Prisoner during a run on CBS late-late night in the {late 80s|early 90s} and letting me watch them. Nothing I was exposed to in my formative years - with the possible exception of Robotech, but I'm trying to be serious here - has had such a broad-ranging impact on my creativity.


Number 2 : Do you still think you can escape, Number 6?
Number 6 : Oh, I will do better than that.
Number 2 : Oh?
Number 6 : I'm going to escape and come back.
Number 2 : Come back?
Number 6 : Escape, come back, wipe this place off the face of the Earth, obliterate it, and you with it.

=== Added ===

As my dad mentions in the comments, I blogged about The Prisoner previously (and more eloquently, which is proof that booze kills brain cells). Back then, they were muttering about a remake... now they're actually following through. As an Industry, as opposed to a focused, pissed off individual with connections.

As xeno quotes in the comments: Unlike me, many of you have accepted the situation of your imprisonment and will die here like rotten cabbages.

Majel Barrett-Roddenberry
2008.12.19 at 02:02 | comments (0)

23 February 1932 – 18 December 2008.

majel_barrett.jpg
Man must be in space - that is what we are destined for. There is nothing else that we can do.
-- Majel Barrett (Wikiquote, unsourced)
Since then it’s been decreed that the sun is highest at one o’clock.
2008.08.04 at 02:33 | comments (0)
707solzhenitsyn.gif

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn : 1918 - 2008.

One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich being more meaningful to me than The Prisoner, on two points - my high school social activism with regards to said (being politically Retired from the reading list), and the content itself - which brings new meaning to the word cold.

Not everything has a name. Some things lead us into a realm beyond words. (AS via thinkexist)

"The salvation of mankind lies only in making everything the concern of all.
(ibid)

Arthur C. Clarke
2008.03.19 at 02:24 | comments (0)
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1917-2008. Photo swiped from Setileague.org. One of many obituaries here.

40 years on and 2001 is still the finest visualization of space travel ever committed to film.

Clarke was one of the all-time greats, and he clearly had great taste in shirts.

Dr. J. Robert Cade
2007.11.28 at 16:03 | comments (0)
gatorade.jpg

Dr. J. Robert Cade, the man who brought the world Gatorade, died yesterday in Florida at 80.

The death was announced by the University of Florida, where Cade and other researchers created Gatorade in 1965 to help the school's football players replace carbohydrates and electrolytes lost through sweat while playing in swamplike heat.

Gatorade was born thanks to a question from former Gators coach Dwayne Douglas, Cade told The Associated Press in 2005.

Said Cade: He asked, 'Doctor, why don't football players wee-wee after a game?'

That question changed our lives, Cade said.

All persons, living and dead, are purely coincidental.
2007.04.12 at 02:39 | comments (1)

Kurt Vonnegut : 1922-2007.

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To be
the eyes
and ears
and conscience
of the Creator of the Universe,
you fool.
Kilgore Trout's unwritten reply to the question "What is the purpose of life? (src=wikiquote)
The most important thing I learned on Tralfamadore was that when a person dies he only appears to die. He is still very much alive in the past, so it is very silly for people to cry at his funeral. All moments, past, present and future, always have existed, always will exist.
-Slaughterhouse Five

(NYT via IRC- see here, or here if that doesn't work, image source here. Subject header from Timequake)

Mrs. Ritter - my instructor in The Gifted Program, grades 2-4 or thereabouts - made damned good and sure that the lot of us read Harrison Bergeron shortly after we'd demonstrated a grasp of the concepts of vowel and consonant. In late high school, Slaughterhouse Five, for a book report. In the final moments of artskool, Mother Night. Always, the right book at the right time.

Positive, negative, or otherwise.

So it goes.

The Upstage
2007.01.08 at 08:23 | comments (0)
upstage_neon.jpg

The Upstage
1983.?.? - 2006.12.30
Casualty-related Insurance Hike

Home to Ceremony (relocated to Pegasus effective 2007.01.10).

Home to 80s night (relocated to Prive).

Trivia : The logo for The Upstage was done by Mike Propst in 1998 (possibly 1997?). He never got paid for it. If memory serves he did it in exchange for a DJ night that immediatly burned down, fell over and sank into the swamp for whatever reasons.

Also Trivia : This is the second bar to shut down during the course of ATC production. Script and layout are now being done at Dee's Cafe.

Ben Bloom
2006.04.25 at 15:36 | comments (0)

ben_bloom.jpgBen Bloom
1980.03.01-2006.04.18
Heroin Overdose

Keyboardist for Rein[Forced],
Frontman of Agnes Wired For Sound.

Image swiped from this thread posted to the PGHGoth Livejournal community.

I hung out with Ben off and on over the past few years - he was a loud drunk, a great frontman, and a lot of fun to be around.