In Memoriam
It really does seem that more celebrities died in 2016, doesn’t it? But I’m not sure if that’s actually true. We probably saw the same number of celebrities pass away, it’s just that we’re all getting older, and a lot of our big cultural icons — David Bowie, Muhammad Ali, Prince, Nancy Reagan, Garry Shandling, George Michael, John Glenn, Florence Henderson, Alan Thicke, almost the entire cast of The Patty Duke Show — passed away in the same year, sometimes so close together it seemed like an onslaught.
Of all of the year-end tributes and memorials, CBS Sunday Morning always has the best:
(By the way, if you’re wondering why Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher aren’t in there, they got their own separate tribute.)
Of course, celebrity deaths don’t stop just because someone makes a compilation video. Since this aired, we lost M*A*S*H actor William Christopher, actresses Barbara Tarbuck and Sandra Giles, Walt Disney animator Tyrus Wong, red plastic Solo Cup inventor Robert Hulseman, and Jeffrey Hayden, husband of Eva Marie Saint and director of dozens and dozens of classic TV shows.
Don’t Use These Words in 2017
Every year, Lake Superior State University in Michigan unveils its list of words and phrases from the previous year that need to be banished. Last year’s list included breaking the internet, but that phrase is still being used every single day, so some people just aren’t listening.
This year’s list includes listicle, dadbod, guesstimate, echo chamber, on fleek, and bigly. That last one is interesting because it’s not even a word, it’s a misheard phrase. President-elect Donald Trump often says “big league,” but it comes out sounding like “bigly.” But maybe we should banish big league too, unless we’re talking about baseball.
The list also includes “831” which I have never heard or seen anyone use. Apparently, it’s an encrypted way to say “I love you”: Eight letters, three words, one meaning.
Things We Remember That Younger People Won’t Understand
Over on Twitter, Eric Alper posted a query that got a lot of attention:
https://twitter.com/ThatEricAlper/status/813972907252649984
The first thing that comes to my mind are all phone-related: busy signals, only having one phone in your house (and it was attached by a cord!), answering machines, having to carry change for the phone booth, etc. You can click on the tweet’s date above to see what other people suggested, and a lot of them are technology-oriented. Younger people will never know the frustration of waiting for someone to get off the phone so we could get online, back when downloading something took 37 hours.
Or how about how there used to be great songs on AM radio (if they can understand what “radio” is beyond SiriusXM)? Having to type a letter on a typewriter (or writing it by hand) and having to put it in an envelope and take it to a mailbox, and the other person wouldn’t get it for days? More freedom at airports? Having a stranger come to your home to take off the back of your TV to repair it (and before remotes, having to walk over to your TV and turn a knob to change the channel)? Having to call someone you knew or go to a library to find out a fact? Carbon paper? Having to wait months and months to see the repeat of a TV show you missed (and how TV channels actually ended their broadcast day late at night)? Or how as teens we had to somehow catch a glimpse of Playboy because the web wasn’t invented yet and all that stuff wasn’t available with only a few clicks.
Not that I ever did that or anything.
What other joys and frustrations from your formative years will today’s young people never experience? Let us know your ideas in the comments below.
Singin’ in the Rain
Two big events are happening to celebrate the life of Debbie Reynolds. Turner Classic Movies and Fathom are teaming up to show Singin’ in the Rain in selected theaters on January 15 and 18, something that was already scheduled for the movie’s 65th anniversary. Then on January 27, TCM will run a 24-hour marathon of her movies, including Singin’ in the Rain, The Unsinkable Molly Brown, The Tender Trap, The Mating Game, and How the West Was Won.
Considering she was only 19 and had very little dancing experience, she really does an amazing job in Singin’ in the Rain, holding her own with Gene Kelly and Donald O’Connor. She once said that “Singin in the Rain and childbirth were the two hardest things I ever had to do in my life.”
Hanna Barbera Meets Norman Rockwell
Many people may not realize that the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, not only celebrates the life and work of the Saturday Evening Post artist, it holds other events as well. From now until May, the museum is going to concentrate on the work of Hanna Barbera, makers of such classic cartoons as The Flintstones, Tom & Jerry, Yogi Bear, The Jetsons, and Scooby-Doo. There will be guest speakers, visitors will be able to take art classes, and there will even be breakfast served, so you can pretend you’re home eating cereal and watching Saturday-morning cartoons (another experience lost to today’s youth).
But if you’re thinking about wearing your pajamas, I’d call ahead first.
This Week in History
George Washington Unveils First American Flag (January 1, 1776)
The flag is usually called the “Grand Union” but some sources say it can also be called the “Great Union.”
Ellis Island Opens (January 1, 1892)
Over 12 million immigrants came to the U.S. through Ellis Island from 1892 until it closed November 12, 1954.
Alaska Becomes 49th State (January 3, 1959)
Did you know that Alaska has more coastline than all of the lower 48 states? It even has several beaches.
Soup Is Good Food
January is National Soup Month, and eating soup in January is the very definition of “comfort food,” isn’t it? In the current issue of The Saturday Evening Post, food columnist Curtis Stone gives us the recipes for some soups to warm both the body and the soul, including Weeknight Navy Bean and Ham and Creamy Celery Root Soup. You can also make Stone’s Homemade-Chicken-Soup-Makes-Me-Feel-Better Soup or his Winter Vegetable Minestrone.
The good thing about soup is that it can be rather healthy for you, to help you stick to those New Year’s resolutions you’ve made. It might even give you a dadbod. This is only a guesstimate, but I think many people might even say that soup is on fleek.
Next Week’s Holidays and Events
Houseplant Appreciation Day (January 10)
Just a week or so after you threw out one giant plant that was shedding needles on your carpet, you can learn how to take care of the smaller ones you have around your house.
Stephen Foster Memorial Day (January 13)
This day celebrates the life of the American songwriter, famous for songs like “Oh, Susanna,” “Old Folks at Home” (aka “Swanee River”), “Camptown Races,” and “My Old Kentucky Home.”
National Blame Someone Else Day (January 13)
Supposedly this day, “celebrated” on the first Friday the 13th of the year, was invented by Anne Moeller of Clio, Michigan, one morning in 1982, when her alarm clock didn’t go off. But I don’t know if that’s true or just a joke to blame her for it. If you don’t like the day, don’t blame her, blame someone else.
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Comments
Let’s hope this year will be less severe in terms of the celebrity death onslaught described above. Many were ‘unexpected’ therefore ‘shocking’ instead of being ‘expected’, like Zsa Zsa Gabor. The fact SHE passed away within the same month as Alan Thicke and Florence Henderson was enough to make your head spin on the extreme scale. Adding Debbie Reynolds and Carrie Fisher (still before year’s end) bordered on being completely mind boggling!
The situation also ought to teach LIFE and People NOT to come out with their respective softcover books on the year’s deceased until JANUARY after this, not late November or early December. 2016 certainly proved it was unforgiving up to and including the final week! Realistically? I’ll be expecting to see them out on the the newsstands at the same time in late November once again, of course.
On a happier note, I’d love to see the Hanna Barbera exhibit. My personal favorite is The Jetson’s, the Futuristic ’50s brought to life in the Soaring ’60s before the ‘future’ disintegrated by reality.
Maybe… I can call the Reagan Library and suggest they have the event there later this year, OR the Nixon Library. Am I trying to avoid airports and flying if I don’t have to? God yes! It used to be a different story. Even in the ’90s it was still okay.
Thanks for the heads up on Stephen Foster Memorial Day. I learned a lot of his songs in elementary school and we sang ’em on the bus back and forth to camp during those bygone summers. Then there was “99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall” (I never mentioned that one to my parents.) Of course you can add American folk songs to the LONG list of experiences lost to today’s youth, Bob!