Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

The Daily F Bomb, Monday 1/20/14

Interrogatories

What is your favorite melty cheese? What do you prefer in your mac and cheese?

Did you ever have a favorite disc jockey? Who, and what station?

What is your favorite department in the department store?

The Twitter Emitter

On This Day

In 1801, John Marshall was appointed chief justice of the Supreme Court.

In 1841, China was persuaded to give Hong Kong to Great Britain. They gave it back in 1997 (with a period of Japanese occupation during WW2).

In 1885, though he wasn’t the original inventor, L.A. Thompson patented the roller coaster (the first of many patents for that technology he obtained). It’s been up or down ever since.

In 1920, the ACLU was founded.

In 1954, the first black-owned radio network, the National Negro Network, was founded.

In 1961, the 35th President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, was sworn in.

In 1981, the 40th President of the United States, Ronald Reagan, was sworn in. Coincidentally, Iran released a bunch of hostages as soon as this deed was done.

In 1986, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day was celebrated as a federal holiday for the first time.

In 2001, George W. Bush received his court appointment as the 43rd president of the United States.

In 2009, Barack Obama was sworn in as the first African-American president of the United States.

Born on This Day

1756 – Jean-Antoine Constantin, French painter (d. 1844)

1795 – Frans Vervloet, Flemish painter and lithographer (b. 1872)

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1798 – Anson Jones, 5th and last President of Texas (d. 1858)

1811 – Vincent Vidal, French painter (d. 1887)

1829 – John Roddam Spencer Stanhope, English painter (d. 1908)

John Roddam Spencer Stanhope photo CharonPsyche_SpencerStanhope.jpg

1834 – George D. Robinson, 34th Governor of Massachusetts (d. 1896)

1837 – David Josiah Brewer, U.S. Supreme Court Justice (d. 1910)

1838 – Willem Geets, Belgian history, genre, and portrait painter (d. this same day in 1918)

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1867 – Yvette Guilbert, French singer and actress (d. 1944)

1871 – Nicolas Alexandrovitch Tarkhoff, Russian painter (d. 1920)

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1878 – Finlay Currie, British actor (d. 1968)

1878 – Ruth St. Denis, American dancer (d. 1968)

1888 – Huddie Ledbetter, better known as Lead Belly, influential blues musician, singer, songwriter (d. 1949)

1896 – George Burns, American actor, comedian (d. 1996)

1896 – Isabel Withers, American actress (d. 1968)

1900 – Colin Clive, British actor (d. 1937)

1902 – Leon Ames, American actor (d. 1993)

1907 – Paula Wessely, Austrian actress (d. 2000)

1918 – Juan García Esquivel, Mexican bandleader (d. 2002)

1920 – Federico Fellini, Italian film director (d. 1993)

1920 – DeForest Kelley, American actor (d. 1999)

1926 – Patricia Neal, American actress (d. 2010)

1929 – Jimmy Cobb, American jazz drummer

1929 – Arte Johnson, American actor

1930 – Buzz Aldrin, American astronaut

1934 – Tom Baker, British actor and best of the early Doctor Who actors.

1943 – Rick Evans, American singer (Zager and Evans)

1945 – Eric Stewart, English musician and songwriter (10cc, Hotlegs and The Mindbenders)

1946 – David Lynch, American film director

1952 – Paul Stanley, American musician (Kiss and Wicked Lester)

1956 – Bill Maher, American author, comedian, and political analyst

1959 – Tami Hoag, American novelist

1959 – R.A. Salvatore, American author

1960 – Scott Thunes, American musician (Frank Zappa) and good friend, happy birthday, ya old reprobate!

1965 – Greg Kriesel, American bassist (The Offspring)

1969 – Nicky Wire, British musician (Manic Street Preachers)

Died on This Day

1779 – David Garrick, English actor (b. 1717)

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1814 – Jean-François-Pierre Peyron, French painter and draftsman (b. 1744)

1815 – Caroline-Friederike Friedrich, German still life painter (b. 1749)

1875 – Jean-François Millet, French painter (b. 1814)

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1900 – John Ruskin, English art critic and sometimes painter (b. 1819)

1917 – Alejandro Ferrant, Spanish painter (b. 1843)

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1924 – Ivor Crapp, Australian rules football umpire with a great name (b. 1872)

1937 – Richard Benno Adam, German painter (b. 1873)

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1965 – Alan Freed, American disk jockey (b. 1922)

1971 – Gilbert M. ‘Broncho Billy’ Anderson, American actor, director, writer, and producer (b. 1880)

1980 – William Roberts, British painter (b. 1895)

1984 – Johnny Weissmuller, American swimmer and actor (b. 1904)

1989 – Beatrice Lillie, actress (b. 1894)

1990 – Barbara Stanwyck, American actress (b. 1907)

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1993 – Audrey Hepburn, Anglo-Dutch actress (b. 1929)

1996 – Gerry Mulligan, American musician (b. 1927)

2003 – Al Hirschfeld, American caricaturist (b. 1903)

2003 – Nedra Volz, American actress (b. 1908)

2012 – Etta James, American singer (b. 1938)

Today is

National Cheese Lover’s Day

National Buttercrunch Day

National Coffee Break Day

Penguin Awareness Day

National Disc Jockey Day

Camcorder Day

National Day of Service

Martin Luther King Day


22 comments

  1. Floja Roja

    Brie, a good Gruyere, those are my fave melty cheeses, but my Mac and Cheese always requires very sharp cheddar. Except the one I make with all the bits a pieces of various cheeses left in the fridge.

    I used to love this DJ at KSAN in San Francisco named Richard Gossett. I liked the music he played, and he was silly/goofy in a low key way (instead of the funny ha-ha, nudge-nudge way so many are today).

    There was a time that I didn’t hate department stores. I think the housewares section was my favorite, that was before I had lots of kitchen stuff. Now my favorite is the one I need to get something from, I guess.

  2.    Chris Christie reviewing plans to divert the Hudson away from Hoboken.

       – pourmecoffee (@pourmecoffee) January 19, 2014

    Poor Chris Christie! He will be hosting the Super Bowl in a couple of weeks and instead ascending the throne as the Anointed 2016 Candidate, he will be all lawyered up and yelling at reporters to “leave him alooooone!!”.

    There was a bit of controversy in one of yesterday’s games, recapped quite well by these Tweets:

    This!!

    Only mildly sports related, by the way. I will return to hover …

  3. Avilyn

    Have today off, yay.  Going to meet my favorite aunt for tea this afternoon.

    Q&A:

    What is your favorite melty cheese?   Yes.  Any but swiss, really.

    What do you prefer in your mac and cheese?  Orange powder, milk, and butter.   I know, I know, but it’s what I was raised with and I can’t stand the “real” baked mac & cheese.

    Did you ever have a favorite disc jockey? Who, and what station?  Hm.  Can’t really think of any.  Most of them annoy me when they talk so I either mute or change the channel (Yes Delilah, I’m looking at you [evening DJ on 106.7 in NY, can’t stand her]).  The morning guy on 101.1 in NY is OK.  When I was a kid I liked 92.5 in Philly, but I dunno if that was so much the DJs as the music.

    Oh, wait!  I know.  The DJs at 95.7 BEN FM in Philly.  They mostly play music I like and don’t talk much.  

    What is your favorite department in the department store?  Are we talking a department store with a book section?  If so, then there.  Otherwise, the music/movie section.  Maybe the kitchen appliances section.

  4. Gee

    What is your favorite melty cheese? What do you prefer in your mac and cheese?

    Did you ever have a favorite disc jockey? Who, and what station?

    What is your favorite department in the department store?

    Love all the melty cheeses, and the unmelty ones, too.  Seems to me that cheddar belongs with macaroni, though.  Probably because it’s what I’m used to.

    I grew up with Top 40 and went through several favorites in the days of AM, when you could hear distant stations at night.  One of my favorites, locally, was Kirby Scott on WCAO in Baltimore, because he had the Liverpool Hour every night at 7.  Then came “progressive rock” on FM radio.  Back then, “progressive” just meant anything that was non-Top 40.  It wasn’t anything as specific as what would now be called “prog.”  My favorite DJ on my favorite station was Cerphe Colwell on WHFS in Bethesda, MD.  After the great age of progressive radio, Cerphe survived on classic rock stations, and he’s now thriving again on internet radio at http://ecoplanetradio.com/.

    Long time ago, department stores had their own book and record departments, which is where I’d go mostly.  Nowadays, I hardly go to department stores at all, and then only for clothes.

  5. Yahoo News Matt Bai: Christie speaks, and looks for lessons

    “I will learn things from this,” Chris Christie told me last Friday, a little more than a week after he gave the News Conference to End All News Conferences, and a few days after the cable channels covered his annual address to the Legislature in Trenton as if it were Nixon waving from the helicopter. “I know I will. I don’t know exactly what it is yet that I’ll learn from it. But when I get the whole story and really try to understand what’s going on here, I know I’m going to learn things.”[…]

    “I think I’m a fairly good politician,” Christie told me, in defense of his rhetorical style. But the best at his craft learn, sooner or later, to rein in and recalibrate the things that work for them, especially if they entertain thoughts of the White House. “I think it is most likely that the next Republican nominee for president will be a governor,” Christie told me. I reminded him that in 2011 he had told me he didn’t feel ready to be president, and asked about now. “Yeah. I’m readier, if that’s a word,” Christie said.

  6. Gee

    1960 – Scott Thunes, American musician (Frank Zappa) and good friend, happy birthday, ya old reprobate!

    Damn, has it come to this??  Even the old reprobates are ten years younger than I am??

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