Sunday, December 31, 2017

Movie Review: Possums


This is a forgotten movie from 1998 that is not without it's charm. It's called Possums and stars singer Mac Davis (Baby Don't Get Hooked On Me, It's Hard To Be Humble) as the announcer of a high school football team that has a long streak of losing games and not even scoring a touchdown.

He had left town some time ago, but he returns to run the business starched by his father. He has a love for sports and his beloved Nowata Possums football team, and that comes across in his announcing of a team that is the worst in the league.

The mayor decides to circulate a petition to discontinue the football program at the high school. He claims it's because the team is so bad that it would be better for the morale of the people of the town. Ultimately, the team is dropped.

Well, as fall comes a year later, the former announcer is sad. After a conversation with the student who works for him at his hardware store, he decides to pay for air time to announce fictitious games for the defunct Possums team. He's ridiculed for doing it, but that doesn't stop him. He tells the station owner to consider this like a play on the radio.

In this weekly play, the Possums are competitive and start winning games. As it happens, the town starts listening and getting excited about the team. Former players are gathering at the football field and practicing as the games are played on the radio. The Possums make the playoffs and win the State Championship.

This is where things get interesting. The real State Champions take exception to the idea that the Possums are getting more attention than they are. They challenge them to a game. I don't want to give away all the secrets, and this movie has a few interesting moments as the plot progresses.

Possums is formulaic, I suppose, but it has heart. I really like the charm of the small town too. It's not the best sports movie, but it's pretty good. It's been on Movie Plex TV lately, which is where I saw it for the first time last year. If you get a chance, check it out.

The NFL Once Had It's Version Of A Bronze Metal Game


It was called The Playoff Bowl, but some players and coaches referred to it as The Loser's Bowl. From 1960 to 1969, the NFL had their own version of a "Bronze Metal Game" in which the two losers of the conference championship games played to determine who was #3.

Back in those days, there were only three playoff games, the two conference games and the NFL Championship Game, and the league was facing competition from the upstart AFL. Former commissioner Bert Bell had passed away at an Eagles-Steelers game in 1959, and this game was named in his honor. It was used to raise over $1 million for the retired player's fund in its ten year run.

Technically, the league doesn't acknowledge this game as anything more than an exhibition played after the NFL Championship game. The league still held a Pro Bowl a week after this game. This game was effected by the AFL in 1966 on two fronts.

The game was always played in The Orange Bowl in Miami, and the AFL added the Miami Dolphins in 1966. That was also the first year of the NFL-AFL World Championship game, later named The Super Bowl. When the leagues merged, it was considered a possibility to keep this game, but the game was ultimately dropped.

The Playoff Bowl had three multiple winners as the Detroit Lions won the first three games, the Baltimore Colts won twice and the Los Angeles Rams won twice, including the final game. The Dallas Cowboys and St. Louis Cardinals each won once, and the Cleveland Browns lost all three of their appearances.

The Green Bay packers made two appearances, and legendary coach Vince Lombardi had great disdain for this game. They won their first appearance and lost a year later. The loss spurred the Packers to three straight NFL Championships, which included wins in the first two NFL-AFL Championship Games.

Saturday, December 23, 2017

The Key To Getting Dennis DeYoung Back In Styx


I see The Real Music Observer, David Spuria, making some interesting commentaries about various bands that I have enjoyed for years. So, I'll credit him with inspiring me to do this. One of my four classic rock go to bands is Styx. I refer to the classic lineup that included Dennis DeYoung, Tommy Shaw and James Young along with twin brothers John and Chuck Panozzo.

Rather than talk about the why things are the way they are right now, I'm going to talk about the possibility of fixing things and giving fans of the classic Styx lineup the tour they'd like to see. I see two ways to get DeYoung back in the band. Right now, it seems impossible. Styx just did a rather impressive album called The Mission this year, and DeYoung is about ready to record his own solo album after what has been a successful tour with his own band.

Of course, when they kicked Dennis out of the band, they needed somebody who would enable them to continue to do what they do. They needed somebody who could play keyboards and sing the only Styx songs that Shaw and Young seem to be able to tolerate from Dennis's catalog. They found their man in Canadian Popstar, Lawrence Gowan.

The quickest way to facilitate the possibility of a DeYoung return is for Gowan to leave. Being in Styx was the opportunity of a lifetime for him. Let's face it, nobody in America really had a clue who this guy was. He was somewhat popular in Canada. He doesn't have a bad voice, although it's not really right for the songs that Dennis sang that he continues to perform in Styx. He is definitely a showman, and he's a good keyboardist. The problem is, why would he leave the job of a lifetime? Tommy and James have to be happy with him because he fills the role they need. He has to be happy because he's still doing what he loves 20 years later.

The only way for Lawrence Gowan to step aside would be either because he knows the fans want to see Dennis with the band one more time, or he willingly takes a leave of absence from the band. It would be likely that Dennis wouldn't be a long-term member of the band, but a year's worth of dates would be enough. Lawrence could return at the end of that time period.

Some people have said Tommy Shaw is the one holding up a DeYoung return. I don't really believe that to be the case. Tommy has proven that he didn't need the band to keep his career going. True, he was interested in reuniting with the band in the late 1980s, but Dennis was about ready to release his third solo album and had commitments to honor. Tommy ended up taking the gig with the Damn Yankees and recording one of his biggest hits, High Enough. In short, Tommy was doing just fine.

Why would this make any difference? Because, if there's a bitterness that is held against Dennis, it's that he held the band up when others wanted to make money. If Tommy was out there making money as a solo artist in the 1980's and early 1990's, the same cannot be said for either Panozzo brother or Young. I'm not aware of any recording attempts ever being made by John or Chuck Panozzo. Young recorded albums, but nothing popped.

Basically, Dennis and Tommy were able to do their own thing and make money. Both had hits without the band. Then, Dennis came back when the time was right. Unfortunately, Tommy had other commitments, and the band went on without him. They had one of their biggest hits, Show Me The Way, and then things stalled out while they were working on a follow-up album. Dennis has been blamed for this. If I recall correctly, Glen Burtnik very directly blamed Dennis for costing him money, although the two have made peace since then.

James Young is one heck of a guitar player. Some have called him the balls of the band. If things got a little too soft, James was the one who kicked things into high gear. At one time in The Wooden Nickel era, James was pretty much a lead singer in this band. The Man Of Miracles album can be regarded as the height of that for James. After that, he still had one rocker on every album that followed.

Some of his finest moments include the often played Miss America, Half Penny Two Penny and Snowblind, both off of Paradise Theater, and the Great White Hope. An album of all of James's best rockers with the band would be an interesting record. However, he's more known for co-writing some of their best hits and his guitar work than for anything he ever sang with the band.

It was James who notably said that Dennis would be brought back to the band when they were playing ice hockey on the River Styx. That pretty much said that James was the one keeping the door locked and pushing his weight against it. Only James and Chuck remain with the band from the lineup that got the first record deal, and Chuck only plays a song or two on the occasional gig. Chuck's main concern was always that the band be playing so that he could play when he felt up to it.

It's hard for me to believe that if James suddenly came to the guys and said that he wanted to bring Dennis back into the band that this wouldn't happen. Some might say Tommy would be a little bit miffed, but Tommy's position in this band is solid. And he's had 18 years to lead Styx in the direction they are in. He and James have pretty much attempted to redefine what this band's legacy is.

Why would James even want to bring back Dennis? This is a good question. I don't see this current lineup wanting to hang up their guitars anytime soon. They're enjoying being out on the road. However, to the notion that Dennis DeYoung didn't want to tour or Rock, I think what he's done since being kicked out of the band has put an end to that silly discussion. Why would James want to shake things up and bring Dennis back? It brings everything full circle.

At this point, it wouldn't be about the next big Styx hit. Dennis has a track record of putting this band back up on the charts, but times have changed in the music industry. Another big hit for the band at this point in their career seems unlikely. But the Styx hits through the years have generally spoken of optimism and hope for the future. Maybe the reason the fanbase is so divided is because the music of this band has spoken to the hearts of all of them.

It's unfortunate and a bit unfair that the fans have been forced to pick sides. While you have those fans who will go to a Styx show or one of the Dennis DeYoung shows and have a good time, there are many fans who will only go to one or the other because of their feelings about what happened to break things up. Dennis has reached out and is ready and willing, so the next move is up to Styx themselves. If that move is going to be made, it would be up to James to make it. And why would he do that? Because it's the right thing to do.

Getting back to Lawrence Gowan, you don't even have to kick him out of the band to make this happen. Dennis himself has a second keyboardist in his band. This enables him to step out front of the stage and be the showman that he is. Gowan has put 18 years into this band, and I don't think Dennis has animosity towards him. Gowan is just taking a role that somebody else would have taken had he passed on the opportunity.

Lawrence might want to take a leave of absence to let this happen, but he could easily handle keyboard duties and sing a song off of The Mission, one of his other contributions to the band or even Criminal Mind. All of the classic Dennis songs would be sung by Dennis, of course. The fans get to see the three core members and even Chuck on stage one last time, and everybody can walk away happy at the end of the tour. It seems simple enough from this point of view, but when you're in the middle of it, things are a little bit different.

The talk heats up every November when people discuss who the next band will be in the Hall Of Fame. The body of work that Styx had back in those days, the way tickets and records sold and the way songs from those days still touch people's hearts today shows that this is a band that is worthy. At some point, Styx is going to be inducted into the Hall Of Fame. When that moment comes, it could be that we finally get what we were looking for. Then again, if it doesn't happen then, it may never happen.

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Just What Is Perf Doing On That Quest?


Journey Quest is now in its third season with episodes being released weekly on YouTube. This is a series launched by Zombie Orpheus Entertainment about 6 years ago. It's a fantasy story that tells the tale of four adventurers on a quest to retrieve the Sword Of Fighting.

It's interesting to watch the four adventurers and where they are now in this story. You have the overzealous warrior, Glorion, who seems to enjoy killing a little to much. You have Carrow, who was killed by Orcs and then accidentally revived as an undead creature due to the inept magic of the yellow wizard Perf. You have Nara, the Elven ranger who believes the sword is her destiny. And then, you have the wizard Perf, short for Superfluous.

Perf does not act like he wants to be on this quest. He is a terrible wizard, who seems to only know two or three spells that aren't very useful. In the early going of the adventure, he was all too keen to try to run away. It's evident that he doesn't want to be there anymore. So why is he there?
I would love to see some back story on how this group was put together. We haven't seen it yet, but I believe it was Nara who assembled the group. Carrow was probably her first choice as the party priest and healer. It seems to me that she needed some muscle to kick butt when needed, and not much thought was put into choosing Glorion. He's not very smart, and he's not one for talking. He'd rather swing his blade at his enemies.

Speaking of the sword, Glorion also believes that the Sword Of Fighting is his destiny, and he's intent on taking it from Perf. If you watched the first season, you know that Perf accidentally grabbed the sword off of the wall in the dungeon. It was only a bit of dumb luck that he got that opportunity as he and Nara we're running from enemies and fell into the dungeon room by accident. Perf realized that the sword on the wall might be the sword they were looking for, and he grabbed it without even thinking.

Did he want that sword? Is that why he's on this Quest? That would be a no on both counts. He doesn't like the sword, and the intelligent talking sword doesn't like him either. In fact, the sword has tried to get him killed a few times, and Perf has repeatedly tried to throw the sword away and leave it on the ground. Unfortunately, he can't get rid of it that easily, and it seems to me he's going to have to come to terms with the fact that he is the sword bearer and take control of things.

You get a clue as to why he is on this quest in the very first episode of the first season. He wants to run away, and he looks over at Nara. He's torn, because it's obvious that he loves her. What probably happened was he saw Nara in a tavern or someplace trying to recruit party members, and he was smitten with her. Either that, or the order of wizards figured he was disposable and sent him along on the quest rather than give up one of the better members of their order. In either case, it was love at first sight for him.

In the current season, the most recent episode involved Perf and the Dwarven tavern owner in her bedroom. They were going to have intimate relations, but Perf at the last minute decided he couldn't go through with it. Why? Nara. He didn't want to cheat on her. Why did he put himself in the position with the Dwarven maiden to begin with? He'd been drinking, and she is a rare woman who has shown any interest in him.

I have no idea where things are going between Perf and Nara. It may be tied in with storyline of Perf being such a coward. He has to step up and gain confidence in himself. He has to claim ownership of the sword and accept the responsibility that a lot is riding on him and the party being successful in their mission. In doing that, he could ultimately win the heart of Nara as she sees him as a man rather than a coward. And ultimately, she is the reason he went on this quest to begin with.

If you want to get caught up on an entertaining web series, check out Journey Quest on YouTube or go to the Zombie Orpheus Entertainment web page @ www.zombieorpheus.com/

Sorry Democrats, But Non Voters Did Not Give Us Trump


I saw this meme on one of my social media pages again, and I hear this from time to time. This comes from a Democrat supporter who says not to blame the Donald Trump voters for Trump getting elected, but blame the people who did not vote. That's a rather arrogant stance to take. What this suggests is that everybody who did not vote would have voted for the Democrat candidate if they voted.

One of my big problems with these big elections as I've gotten older is the way none of the voters want to take responsibility for the change they would like to see in this world. You see it in your big state elections as well. They vote for somebody they think we'll do everything for them, and then they go back to sleep. When nothing changes, during the next election cycle, they get outraged. If you are greatly aligned with either party, then obviously it was the other party who caused every problem.

Let me put it to you this way. If you want to make a big change in your life or begin a project, do you delegate that to somebody else and let them do all the work? Yes, you might hire contractors to do things, but you are keeping an eye on what they are doing every step of the way. This doesn't happen in politics. Frequently, people vote for that candidate based on whatever they believe they say they are going to do that they agree with. Then they go about their life and don't pay attention unless the news puts a story in their face on the television screen.

I watch in amusement as people either blindly worship Donald Trump and everything he does or they are outraged against everything he does based on the frenzy the media whips and into. Don't blame the non-voters for this situation. They looked at the choices and said that neither was good enough. They looked at the third party option, if they went that far, and realized there was no chance of that ever happening. The non-voters recognize that the system as it is now is broken, and you can't fix it by voting. No matter what you do when you vote, it seems to make it worse.

I can break it down simply. The last election had nothing to do with Russia rigging anything. Both parties did attempt to rig the election in different ways. But if you want to boil it down to why the Democrat Party lost, it's because they forced a candidate on people that they did not want. People saw the system being rigged, whether they were buying into Donald Trump's rhetoric when he was saying it at the time or not. Rather than hold their nose and vote for the lesser of two evils, they realized that this way of thinking gets us nowhere either.

I like what Dennis DeYoung said in a podcast earlier this year. The majority of the people in this country aren't really for either party. They want a little from Column A and a little from Column B. When you hear any politician say "America wants this, " you know they are lying. America doesn't agree on anything totally. We will never fix this country as long as we go into an election cycle with an us against them attitude. And once again, you can't blame the non-voters for giving us president Trump. When you say that, you assume that every non-voter would have voted for the Democrat candidate, and you have no basis for a statement like that.

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Why Would You Want To Go To Mars?


There's a trailer for a movie on the subject of going to Mars. I wrote about this previously. It's the Mars One project that will send four ordinary people to the fourth planet from the sun. It asks the question, what would make you abandon Earth?

I'm a little disheartened by this 11 minute preview, because the attitude of the people for the most part is either, it's something to do or they have nothing better to do. I hope this is an editing tactic from the movie maker and not an indication of the mentality of those wanting to go.

Would I go to Mars? I totally would if I was fit enough to go in ten years when they blast off. I mean, it's a one way trip and maybe a suicide mission. I say maybe, because we don't know if it is. We land rovers up there safely, so people could be landed safely.

I'd have to have confidence that this ship is going to land safely and we will be leaving with the necessary tools to establish our little colony. Plus, I need to know the others with me are capable of doing their share of what needs to be done.

I think that given the risk, it's better to send up those who are unattached and have nobody who will really miss them if they are gone. So, I would have no problem going in that sense. If I had a loved one and knew there was a good chance I could die, I wouldn't do it.

For me, it's worth the risk. I get the sense that some of them would be happy if the ship did blow up. Not me. As sad as I get sometimes, I don't want to go out that way. The appeal of this trip is to set foot on another planet that nobody from here (that we know of) has been on before.

I have real questions about Mars. I believe there are ruins up there based on some of the things I've seen presented by people like Richard C. Hoagland and others. I would love to see for myself and make history as the first to walk on Mars.

I believe this could be an inspiration to the people of Earth that we can do great things. We should be striving to send a manned mission there with intent to return. The first to land there will have to prove that we can sustain ourselves there.

That means just living day to day, growing crops, maintaining the system and everything else that is important. It's not a joke. The people back home will be looking at the news reports of how we are doing. We need to be serous about this.

So, I would do it to make history and accomplish something to inspire others. I would do it to give my life more purpose. I would do it to "boldly go" off of this planet and explore another world. I want this mission to succeed, so I hope those who are chosen have that sort of attitude.

Link To The story: www.theverge.com/2014/3/6/5478774/what-would-make-you-abandon-earth-for-mars-forever

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Clark W. Griswold Is A Good Family Man


I'm a fan of Chevy Chase. I liked him since his days on Saturday Night Live. I love the way he delivers his lines in movies like Fletch and Caddyshack, sort of care free and aloof. One of my favorite characters in any movie really is Clark W. Griswold.

Clark is the kind of man who loves his wife and kids very much and wants to give them everything. I mean, he gets this picture in his mind about what they deserve and how good it will be, and he won't rest until he gives it to them. And, it has to be perfect.

He won't do it second best. He plots and plans it all. He puts it all into action, and it becomes one big disaster. He becomes too obsessed with it, and it blows up in his face. In Vacation, he wanted to take the family to Wally World. After all of the problems along the way, Wally World was closed. Of course, he flips out as only Clark can do.

In Christmas Vacation, he's gonna be holding the big family get together at his place. Of course, nothing goes right at all. The Christmas lights don't work, the tree catches on fire and his boss doesn't give out the Christmas bonus that year. He had a little help from cousin Eddie (Randy Quaid) in the end.

In Vegas Vacation, he nearly blows the whole thing. He's blinded by the glitz and glamor of Vegas and loses the family savings. He nearly loses sight of what is important, but he remembers it's his wife and kids that really matters. He remarries Ellen, his wife of 25 years.

Without his family, he would be lost, and he knows it. He's good at his job, but it's them that he does it for. His life isn't glamorous, but he knows what really matters. He just gets a little too obsessive sometimes in trying to give his family the good times they deserve.

Clark is a good man, and Chevy has done good work making so many movies you can take your family to and have some laughs. It's not that these movies don't get naughty, it's that they don't rely on that humor as the only way to be funny. I wonder how Clark would obsess over his daughter's wedding? Sounds like another movie idea to me.

I'm

Saturday, December 16, 2017

Why Not A Disco Hall Of Fame?


I was just thinking what some may consider a silly idea. With Chic having been considered for the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame and "The Queen Of Disco" Donna Summer having been inducted, maybe they need a Disco Hall Of Fame to honor that music. Who would be inducted?

I don't have the hate of Disco that others do. I like all kinds of music, and I still have a record collection filled with a lot of disco. I see it as happy music to dance to. It was all about having a good time at the discos and roller rinks.

So, who would I put in? The "big 3" are in on the first ballot. Donna Summer, The Bee Gees and The Village People. Each had their hits back in the day. Last Dance and Love To Love You by Summer, Staying Alive and Jive Talking by The Bee Gees and YMCA and Macho Man by The Village People.

The first three are no brainers. Chic gets in just on Le Freak alone. Sister Sledge is getting in too. We Are Family was a big hit and was the anthem for the 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates World Series championship team. Yes, the music was big back in the day.

Kool & The Gang and The Commodores. I think there was a time when I was confused and thought they were the same group. Both considered themselves funk and soul, but songs like Brick House (The Commodores) and Celebration (Kool & The Gang) got played on radio all the time.

Let's not forget I Will Survive by Gloria Gaynor. Her song is probably top ten or top five on the all time disco chart. Cheryl Lynn's Got To Be Real, I would have to consider. Maybe not first year, but eventually. Two other groups not to be forgotten are The O'Jays with Used To Be My Girl and Hot Chocolate with You Sexy Thing.

Let's end this with two other huge acts of the day. Michael Jackson for starters. The Off The Wall album got lots of play on disco and pop radio, and you can darn sure dance to it. Is he first year? Perhaps, but I don't want to put them all in on the first ballot.

Earth Wind & Fire was huge back in the day. I know they consider themselves more funk and soul, but songs like September and Boogie Wonderland were big hits. They also did a nice rendition of Got To Get You Into My Life.

I think this would be a good idea. Maybe we could keep rock bands in their Hall Of Fame and give disco artists a place of their own. Would anybody come? Sure they would. With all the music and disco culture exhibits, the actual building would be interesting to visit. I could see it becoming a tourist attraction.

Friday, December 15, 2017

The Little Girl And The Tadpoles


Kids can be so cruel sometimes, especially when they are in groups. If one of them starts picking on another student at school, the others will sometimes join in. These days, there seems to be more awareness and trying to deal with bullying. Back in those days, you were told to just deal with it. You might have heard them say, "Ignore them and they won't bother you, because they'll see they aren't getting to you."

This isn't always easy to do. Lord knows she tried, but sometimes everything around you converges on you. It's a combination of bad things that can become so overwhelming when you are being bullied. Her mother didn't provide all the things from the government check that were supposed to be provided. Drugs were more important.

As a result, she didn't have the best clothes or hygiene, and she was teased relentlessly for it. One day, one of the kids noticed her green teeth and decided "Froggy" would be a nice nickname to call her. The name stuck, and soon other kids were calling her by that name.

She hated it. Why couldn't they leave her alone? Why wouldn't they play with her? She could be fun if they gave her a chance. One day, she happened by the water where the frogs were croaking away. She moved in to investigate and noticed the tadpoles in the water.

There was a jar by the water, and she decided to capture some of them in the jar. She hoped she could raise these tadpoles into frogs and release them back into the water. She got them home and set up a tank. She nurtured the tadpoles and one by one they grew into little frogs.

She held one in the palm of her hand and admired its beauty. Most people might admire a cat or a dog, but she saw the beauty in these small creatures. It became a habit of hers to raise tadpoles into frogs and release them back to the water. It was a way for her to be a mommy of sorts to these frogs, a better mommy than she had.

And so it was the girl they called Froggy became a "mother" to the frogs. It gave her some piece of mind and made her feel good about herself. Years later, there's a new generation of frogs in that water, and that particular line of frogs was touched by a little girl's efforts to nurture the tadpoles into frogs. That thought always brings a smile to her face.

Thursday, December 14, 2017

Steve Walsh Releases Fourth Solo Album Black Butterfly


When Steve Walsh announced his retirement from Kansas a few years ago, it seemed like he had reached the end of his singing career. His voice wasn't what it used to be back in his glory days in the 1970's or even in the 1980's. After he released his third solo album Shadowman back in 2005, he decided he was retired from recording any music. Because of this, the other four members of Kansas recorded an album under the title Native Window.

That kind of saddened me to see Walsh go out the way he did. After listening to Glossolalia back in 2000, it was plain to me that this man had something to say in his music that didn't quite fit Kansas. Even his follow-up album Shadowman was pretty impressive. I can sort of understand why he didn't want to write or record with Kansas. It seems to me the things he has to say and the style of music he prefers doesn't quite fit the mold of Kansas.

So the question is, why would Steve stay with the band for so many years? You might say he did it for the paycheck. People will sit and judge these artists for doing that, but we should all be so lucky to make some sort of contribution to society that still pays off for us many years later. I think he still enjoyed the music, but at a certain point he had run out of gas.

With Black Butterfly, Walsh picks right up where he left off with Shadowman. He also helps introduce the world to a talented singer named Jerome Mazza. Jerome and Steve trade lead vocals on the song Born Of Fire, and Mazza handles lead vocals on three of the album's other ten tracks. David Spuria of The Real Music Observer series on YouTube has gone on record with his opinion that Jerome would have been a better replacement in Kansas for Walsh then current singer Ronnie Platt.

The song that immediately jumped out to me upon my first listen was the haunting track Tanglewood Tree. Steve does some different things vocally on this song, which speaks to the topic of suicide. It's a haunting song, really heartbreaking. What do you say when somebody you love decides their life is too much to take anymore? I have to admit my life isn't really at a happy place, not that suicide immediately jumps out to me as an answer to my problems.

There is also the song Dear Kolinda. This is pretty much a love song, and it's one of my three favorite songs on the album after Tanglewood Tree. The song Nothing But Nothing also jumped out at me, and this is a song that he wrote for his children. The album ends with the song Billie Carbone Is Dead. This is Steve's commentary about how when something tragic happens, society seems to want to hear all the news stories about who did the crimes, but the victims seem to be forgotten. It's also named after a member of Kansas road crew, who died tragically.

Walsh teamed up with Tommy Denander, who wrote a majority of the songs with Walsh. Musically, this album rocks, but it doesn't really sound much like the music you would hear Steve record with Kansas. This is one of the reasons I like this album so much. While I admit his voice doesn't sound like it did in the glory days, Steve still brings passion to his vocals. For me, it's much easier listening to him sing newer songs than singing his older songs the way he sounds now.

Back when he recorded his second solo album Glossolalia, Kansas was also recording Somewhere To Elsewhere, the last album by the band to include all of the original members. I've always felt that Steve had more passion on his solo album, and to me it's the better of the two.

To Black Butterfly I can only say this is a good album, and it should rank high among the albums recorded by classic rock artists in 2017. I don't know if Steve plans to do any shows where he plays these songs, or if anybody can even see him perform live at all in 2018. However, I can only hope that he won't rule out a fifth solo album. If this is an example of what he still has to offer as a musician as he approaches 70 years old, I can only hope that he keeps on rocking.

Monday, December 11, 2017

JourneyQuest Season 3 Episodes Being Released On YouTube


I happen to be a big fan of fantasy and used to play Dungeons & Dragons when I was younger. I still enjoy gamer humor from things like the Knights Of The Dinner Table comic and The Gamers movies. The Gamers movies were done by the Dead Gentlemen, and they ended up joining forces with Zombie Orpheus Entertainmart.

This led to a rather enjoyable web series a few years ago called Journey Quest. Journey Quest is the series that introduced me to the concept of independent entertainment as I discovered enjoyable web series such as The Guild, Standard Action, Space Janitors, Voyage Trekkers and the fan created Star Trek Continues.

Journey Quest follows the progress of a party on a quest to find the all powerful Sword Of Fighting. We have an inept wizard name to Perf. There is the elven ranger with whom Perf is smitten named Nara. There is the priest named Carrow, whom Perf accidentally turned into a living undead creature after Carrow is shot with a few arrows by a party of orcs. And finally, there's the overzealous paladin named Glorion. Maybe you'd have to be a gamer in a Dungeons & Dragons session back in the 1980's to really understand the humor of Glorion. One of my favorite Glorion quotes from the first season is, "Killing equals honor." That's followed closely by, "l was too brave to spare the elderly."

We are introduced to several interesting characters along the way, including the cute, pixie like bard named Wren. Wren is sent to follow the party without being observed so that she may write an epic about their adventure. Of course, late in the second season, they send the famed bard Silver Tom to replace her. We also see the three surviving orcs who managed to not be killed by Glorion. Their leader is Rilk, who is smitten with Wren. I admit I am a fan of the Rilk-Wren story.

It is during the first season when, in a rather comical moment, Perf ends up getting the Sword Of Fighting. Of course, he is the last member of the party who should be wielding it. He doesn't want it, but now he can't get rid of it. To make matters worse, the sword is intelligent and doesn't like Perf. It makes for some funny moments, and it also makes Perf the target of Glorion, who believes the sword is rightfully his.

Glorion gets separated from the party, and when we see scenes of him, he's leaving a trail of destruction in his path. We don't get to see Glorion and the orcs until the fourth episode of our current season.With all of the characters having been seen, Season 3 is getting more interesting. We see Perf getting drunk at a tavern, and he ultimately doesn't resist the advances of the dwarven woman who owns the tavern. Unfortunately, Glorion is about to make his way to the tavern.Wren is there, and the orcs have also made their way there.

There's enough gaming references to make the gaming geek happy, but you don't necessarily have to be a gamer to get all of the humor of the show. It's funny in its own right. You care about the characters.I'm not sure where the show is going next. I am sure that I am enjoying their journey, and I hope their quest succeeds in the end.

Since the show began, Zombie Orpheus has grown to include several different web series. They use Patreon to get the crowdfunding that has helped them since Day 1.They are very interested In making content that their viewers enjoy, and as such, they keep an open line of communication with their fan base. In an era where it seems like Hollywood throws big bucks at various projects, Zombie Orpheus Is proving that you don't have to have a huge budget to be entertaining. All you need is creativity, good writers, good actors and a supportive fan base. With this model, the sky is the limit for them.

Check out their website at http://zombieorpheus.com/

Using A Smartphone To Write An Article


I just got myself a new smartphone to replace the one I broke a few months ago. The remarkable thing about these devices is that this little phone I hold in my hand has more ability than my very first desktop computer. And, technology continues to evolve.

Typing and editing can be tedious work. My current laptop has two busted keys, and that makes typing more of a chore for me. I'm actually doing a little bit of jogging in place while I dictate into my phone. This isn't something I could have done when I got my very first computer.

The scary part in all of this is where technology may be heading. A few years ago, I saw the reports about how they are creating AI programs that can actually write articles. Eventually, we'll be reading articles online that weren't even written by a human. In fact, there probably are such articles out there now.

I suppose one of my biggest concerns with all of this technology is that I don't believe it's making us smarter. It does make things a little bit easier for us, but the algorithms used in search engines and such are actually beginning to do our thinking for us.

I could get into more of this, but I've learned that these days it's better to do quick articles. It seems that people don't like reading long articles. I like writing longer articles, so this is an adjustment for me.  Go figure.

Thursday, December 7, 2017

Fan Created And Independent Video Content Grows In Popularity


The beautiful thing about technology is that it can enhance the possibilities of what creative people can do.  A great example of this can be seen with fan created internet video content.  If you have a creative mind, the basic tools required and even a simple budget, you can do quite a bit.  Of course, the more ambitious you are with your ideas, the more it may cost you.

Content creators have taken a couple of different routes.  One is to take existing Hollywood owned intellectual property and tells their own stories with it.  This has resulted in hours of entertaining videos from just a few minutes long to feature movie length.  The fan created content from IP they don't own has produced some very good results as well as some cringe worthy efforts.  It has also resulted in legal issues.

Content owners can be very protective of their property.  Back in the 1990's, when the internet was in its infancy, fans of the game Dungeons & Dragons started sharing their whole campaigns and posting them on their web pages.  You might think this would be considered a good thing for the IP owners, but they started shutting down these pages and cracking down on the fans.  It was not a smart public relations move, but they were within their rights to do what they did.

Some of the more popular fan created efforts have come using the Star Trek and Star Wars IP.  Creative minds have used other shows from multiple genres.  One of the more interesting efforts was a show called Adult Wednesday Adams.  Melissa Hunter did a spot on performance of how the Addams Family character might be as an adult.  Her show was very popular, and she was promptly shut down by the IP owners.  While not a popular decision, they were within their rights.  To be clear, she was not trying to get rich off of other people's IP.  She just used it as a vehicle to show what she could do as an actress.

Star Trek fans are passionate about their show, and there is a divide over what is happening with the franchise since the more recent movies.  Some say the J.J. Abrams vision is too far removed from what Gene Roddenberry created.  With the internet and technology being what it is, fans have been able to make better and better episodes of Star Trek based in various eras of the Trek universe.  The original Star Trek is one of the more popular choices.

One reason for that is because the original series wasn't known for having the greatest special effects or the biggest budget when it aired in the 1960's.  That is one of the show's charms.  The most recent and perhaps the best ever fan production is Star Trek Continues.  With money from his own pockets and fan donations, Vic Mignogna created a spot on replica set of The Enterprise.  The look and feel of what has been filmed is what you might have seen when the original show aired.  The writing is impressive.  Only the actors in the iconic roles have changed, but their performances are spot on.

With each new fan created effort, they seem to take it up a notch, and Prelude To Axanar finally drew the attention of CBS and Paramount, owners of the IP.  Axanar was a 20 minute piece made in documentary style that talks about the Four Years War between The Federation and The Klingons.  It was so well done that they raised over $600,000 to make a full length movie and more money to build a studio.  CBS and Paramount stepped in with their lawyers and shut it down, causing more outrage from long time Trek fans who felt that this effort was more in line with the Roddenberry vision.

They furthermore set restrictive guidelines on what a fan created film can and can't be that forced Mignogna to bring an earlier than planned end to Star Trek Continues.  Vic has been respectful of the IP owners and has always maintained that what he does is a love letter to the old show and an attempt to fill the gap between where the old series ended and the movies began.  When the 11th Trek Continues episode is released in November, he will have accomplished his goal.  Vic says he holds no ill feelings towards the IP holders, supports their decision and has been in touch with them while creating his show.  Vic has also been vocal in speaking out against those trying to make money off of other people's IP, which he maintains is something he's never done with his show.

The nice thing about fan created content is that you get things like Star Trek Continues or Born Of Hope, which is based in Middle Earth at the time of Aragorn's birth.  The Tolkien Estate has actually shut down a few fan efforts that have attempted to tell stories based in Middle Earth.  This is the risk you take when entering worlds created by others and attempting to tell a story.  With the tools the average person has at their disposal, they could step in and tell stories in worlds laid out by The Matrix, Pirates Of The Caribbean, Back To The Future or the iconic Godfather Series.

There is a thriving market for all new content created by independent film makers.  If you are a fan of time travel, for instance, there are some entertaining movies available on YouTube for free.  The fantasy genre is a popular one, and there are some good efforts.  There's shows like Standard Action, Space Janitors, Voyage Trekkers, The Guild, Journey Quest and The Gamers, for instance.  The company Zombie Orpheus produces the latter two shows and more.  They started out taking fan donations and putting that content out for free, and now they are subscription based.  The writing is good.  As the actors have worked with each other more and more, their performances have gotten better as well.

As the internet evolves, there is a market for this fan created or independently produced content.  People will pay money if it's something they find entertaining.  You don't even need somebody else's IP to create something good.  You just need a good imagination, writing skills and some money for the necessary equipment.  What might be interesting to see would be the owner of a popular IP officially sanctioning the fans to be creative.  Fans want to be more engaged in these worlds that have inspired their imaginations, and sometimes what they create can rival the official product.  More and more people are starting to believe that the entertainment world is in need of change and fresh ideas.  Perhaps they can benefit from what is happening in the independent entertainment industry.

Thursday, November 16, 2017

The Media Needs To Do Their Job With Corey Feldman


Do you remember a time when there were actual investigative Journalists?  Those days seem long past.  We now have partisan reporting and people reading off of teleprompters.  Corey Feldman is in the news, or at least the actor/singer should be.  He is now naming names of adult predators who he says molested him when he was a child.  The media is silent.  I've voiced my concerns about some of his actions as depicted in his own auto biography, but that's not the point here.  The point is there is a story to be investigated.

Corey has been hinting at things for years, but this current news started with his appearances on The Today Show with Matt Lauer and another interview with Megyn Kelly.  Lauer and Kelly profess to be real reporters for a supposedly reputable news source, NBC.  Yet neither of them did their homework before their interviews.  It's obvious that neither spent any time reading his auto biography or even researching what has been said.   Poor journalism.  It's almost as if they only reluctantly gave him a token interview.

Furthermore, Feldman dropped the Alphy Hoffman Soda Pop Club hint that day, and they did nothing with it.  Only the simplest of research would have revealed Hoffman is who Feldman was talking about.  Furthermore, Hoffman deleted a Twitter account that day, a move that should have raised more suspicion.  Once upon a time, real journalists would have had a camera near Hoffman as soon as possible, even if all they got was a, "No Comment."  They would have shown up at his home or place of business and made an attempt to get his response.

The fact that Hofman threw parties for under age movie stars in Hollywood without much parent supervision should at least raise the possibility that something could have happened with Corey and others as well.  A news special could easily be put together looking back on those days, interviewer people who were there and starting real discussion.  The fact that the main stream media is silent on this is disturbing.  They are too busy fueling the Russia and Trump political narrative to bother with this.  Pedophilia and the fact that it has happened and continues to happen in Hollywood and around the world is genuine news.  Others are coming out with their own stories of abuse.

While I have questions about Corey and I am an admitted fan of many of his movies, I have no doubt that he was molested as a child.  Therefore, I want to know what went on, how it was allowed to happen and who is guilty.  Two people who he says molested him are convicted pedophiles.  I'm unaware of any record for Hoffman, but he looks suspicious.  And another one who Corey mentions under an alias in his book was recently identified as having molested Corey Haim, according to Judy Haim.  There's enough evidence here to warrant a media investigation, even if California's legal system seems to not care about the victims.  So, why is the media so silent on this issue?

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

As Kansas Rocks On, Steve Walsh Makes New Album


This is not really an album review.  It's more of an observation.  However, fans of former Kansas singer Steve Walsh should get his new CD, Black Butterfly.  You won't be disappointed.

When Steve Walsh retired as lead singer of Kansas a few years ago, nobody could really say they were surprised. He said it himself. It was time. Other than his brief stint fronting his own band called Streets, Steve had been lead singer of Kansas from the start.

He left Streets shortly after recording Crimes In Mind because Phil Ehart and Richard Williams were all that was left of Kansas at that point. From then on, they only recorded four studio albums of all new songs, the last of which Steve had no part in writing. He simply added his vocals as he was in the middle of recording his second solo album, Glossolalia.

If you listen to the Kansas album of the time, Somewhere To Elsewhere, and Glossolalia, you can hear the difference. Steve brought much more passion to his solo work. That's not to say he phoned it in on his last Kansas album, but you could hear where his heart was.

To be fair, his solo work was decidedly different. He went to darker places. His voice had changed so much, but it worked for his solo material. Maybe this is because you are not able to compare it to a CD of him singing those songs 20 years earlier. These were brand new songs.

Creatively, it's obvious Steve still had something to say, but it didn't fit the Kansas mold. I've often wondered since I've learned a bit about the Kansas creative process how many songs Steve brought to them through the years that were rejected.

Williams has said in interviews that the band could be hard on their song writers at times, and that included songs brought to them by Kerry Livgren.  

It's not difficult to think that it would bother Walsh more than Livgren. Livgren simply left the band and recorded numerous albums while offering up new songs for Kansas to record or reject. During their prime years, Walsh quit the band and was talked out of it.

Steve's third solo CD was released five years later. Shadowman continued his exciting new direction. However, he decided that he was retired from recording after that. Part of this was due to his frustration with album sales and probably the industry itself.

The band wanted to record new material, but Steve refused to write or record. Maybe because of Livgren's health or because they didn't want to ask him, the other four members thought about it and created their own CD under the title Native Window.

When you make it as long as Kansas has, you are a fortunate band. Not every group has been lucky enough to create songs so popular that fans want to see them performed live 40 years later. Carry On Wayward Son and Dust In The Wind are in the elite category among some of the greatest songs ever recorded.

There has been very little down time for the band since it began almost 45 years ago, though their lineup has changed. They keep going, and they recorded an album of all new material two years ago called The Prelude Implicit. They just released the live CD called Leftoverture Live And Beyond.

Ronnie Platt jumped on board as lead singer not long after Steve left, and there was already talk of new music. It was the gig of a lifetime for a man who had played some of those Kansas hits live as a part of a regional cover band.

Ehart asked former Kansas lead singer John Elefante to come back, because he knew the band couldn't have just any singer. Elefante declined in a public statement on Facebook. Platt's voice is still there, where you could hear Walsh struggle to hit some notes.

Make no mistake, Walsh still brought a passion to those lyrics and you could hear it. There is a knock on Platt, fairly or unfairly, that he could bring a bit more passion to those songs than what he does.

However, the band sounds great musically, and Platt's vocals don't really take away from that. Kansas is sill getting great reviews, and word is that they are already planning another new album.

When you consider how Walsh walked away from Kansas, it was almost a sad note. Most fans probably thought he was done, but Steve surprised them with the release of his fourth studio album, Black Butterfly.

Musically, it continues the direction in which he left off with Shadowman, but he's taking chances musically and vocally. He also hands vocals off to Jerome Mazza on three songs and shares them on another track.

What's really nice is you can hear the passion in his voice. He's singing new songs that he believes in. It's great to hear him singing again. Hopefully, he continues as a solo artist, because Steve Walsh still has something to contribute to the musical world.

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Are People Expecting Too Much From Corey Feldman?


When somebody says there is pedophilia in Hollywood, anybody who is paying attention to the world at large knows this is true.  Pedophilia is a world wide problem.  Actor/musician Corey Feldman is getting people to talk about it, and that is a good thing.  Anybody who expects Corey to bring them down is naive.  At best, what he can do is start a chain reaction in which other child stars begin to speak up about their own experiences and identify the criminals.

Corey has claimed he knows six names, and he wrote about them in his book.  He used fake names.  In truth, he's probably aware of more, and it wouldn't be a surprise if there's more to his story than is written in his book.  I find it interesting the way he describes Corey Haim's experiences versus how he talks about his own.  I don't like being a critic at a time like this.  Let me just say, I believe it has happened to him.  I have a feeling his story is worse than he lets on here.  However, I don't think we're going to get more out of him than what he is hinting at now, and that's totally up to him.

The reality is, the two names he has dropped, Jon Grissom and Marty Weiss, are both already known as pedophiles.  They have gone through the court system, and frankly, they got off lightly.  At best, we now know, according to Feldman, that they did things to him too.  There's another name we are waiting to hear from him.  He calls him Ralph Kaufman, and he also names his father, Bob Kaufman.  Corey claims Bob was really Ralph's gay lover.  Bob was in casting and helped get him some of his early roles, and Ralph was the one who had the Soda Pop Club parties in Hollywood in the 1980's.

I don't know how far back Bob and Ralph go, but it's just possible Bob groomed Ralph when he was a minor and Ralph became a pedophile himself.  Sadly, this is known to happen.  Ralph, though in his 20's during the time of the parties, had a youthful appearance.  He would be a prime candidate in a pedophile ring to gain the trust of the kids and lure them to the late night parties.  Ralph is not known as a big Hollywood name, but if he's connected to a pedo ring, he is an important name.  At this point, we are waiting for Corey to reveal who Ralph really is, but others have used his clues to identify him as Alphy Hoffman.  Corey's retweets of certain posts would suggest those people are on the right track.

I don't think Corey is going any further than naming this person and possibly the identity of Tony Burnham.  For one thing, he's said he won't name anybody he doesn't have first hand knowledge of.  This means the name of the person who supposedly molested Corey Haim on the set of Lucas is not likely to be named, although Feldman mentions in his book that the incident happened.  This was before he and Haim started hanging out, and it's obvious that it had a big impact on Haim.  Feldman claims Haim started telling him about it early on, but years later, both of them started dealing with the pain of it all through their drug abuse.  Haim is said to have never won that battle.

Where it gets contentious is Carey's mother, Judy Haim.  She would prefer Feldman not include her son in any of his own crusade, and she is particularly troubled by his Ideiegogo campaign to raise $10,000,000 to make a movie based on his autobiography.  She believes, as others have said, that he should name names and do the right thing without a price tag.  She has said what he is doing is a scam.  Feldman insists he's raising money not just for the movie that will name the names of these abusers, but legal defense and security for the danger he is putting himself and his family in. 

Who is right?  Corey's first two names wouldn't seem to be a danger to him.  Based on hints, the biggest name he's holding on to that he would even dare name is the identity of Kaufman.  He has no proof of who the person was on the set of Lucas, although theories have ranged from a producer still in the business today to a co star who is still involved in successful projects.  This is another problem.  Because Corey is only dropping clues, internet sleuths are coming up with theories that name other big names, and they have no proof other than Corey's clues.  Is it fair to those people to allow this to continue without some real evidence?

Judy Haim was recently on the Canadian version of ET.  She made it clear that if Feldman is going to name names, she is all for it.  Tell the truth and protect innocent lives.  She also claims that what happened to her son was only a one time incident.  I have many theories on that.  I don't believe it was only a one time thing, but I can also believe that he may have only told Judy about the one time.  If that is true, however, it would suggest that she knows this abuser's name.  If so, why is she silent?  See what I mean about speculation?  What do we really know?

What is disturbing are passages in Corey Feldman's book and how he portrays Haim and additional encounters Haim had with older men.  Feldman describes them as if Haim is asking for them and insinuates that Haim is gay.  I'm not passing a judgement, because I don't think you are bad if you are gay.  Haim hadn't fully processed what happened to him.  However, it's described as if Haim was asking for these things to happen, which is also a defense some of these pedos use when they are finally caught.

This is from the end of Chapter 12 of Choreography regarding Haim's experience with Marty Weiss and how Feldman helped make it happen.  Haim is depicted as asking Feldman to set him up with somebody for a sexual encounter.


Feldman replies:  “Corey, we’re in Santa Cruz. I don’t know anyone here.”

“What about that girl your mom hangs out with? The Asian girl?”

“I guess you can call her…?”

“Can you call her for me?”

I set down the picture of my girlfriend, Katie, and sighed. “I really don’t know her that well.”

“Come on, man. I just need somebody to take care of me.”

And then suddenly I remembered a story, something Jason Presson had told me about Marty, a month or so before I left town. Jason had spent the night at Marty’s house; Marty was living, at the time, with his parents and his brothers and sister. At same point during the overnight, Marty had admitted to Jason that he was gay.

I’m not sure what made me think of that, or what made me say what I said next. It just sort of slipped out—it wasn’t something I thought about, it wasn’t something I meant to be in any way taken seriously. It was just a flip comment, a weak attempt at a joke.

“Marty’s gay,” I said. “Why don’t you ask him?”

Haim looked over at Marty, sitting sheepishly in a chair in the corner. “Is that true, man? Are you gay?”

Marty was clearly flustered by this; he sat up a little, wiped his palms on his pants. “Well, uh, I mean … I don’t know about gay. I don’t really like to talk about it. I mean, I like boys as much as I like girls, but I don’t know if you’d call that gay.…”

“Well, if you’re gay,” Corey said, not missing a beat, “then why don’t you take care of me?”

They walked single file into the adjoining room the room that had originally been intended for my mother. I heard sounds, banging, thumping. I felt my stomach flip-flop. I felt sick.


This sounds an awful lot like gay, consensual sex, doesn't it?  For one, we don't know if this happened.  Secondly, we don't know if it happened as Feldman described, if it did happen.  Third, if it did happen, Haim had clearly not processed what had happened to him on the set of Lucas, and once he did start dealing with it, it was a down hill spiral for him.  Judy Haim has threatened to sue Feldman over his continuing comments regarding her son.

I'll just put this out here for consideration without an opinion.  If you've seen the documentary An Open Secret, you will hear a story about one boy's encounters with Weiss.  He eventually recorded a conversation, which led to Weiss being convicted.  Feldman claimed he named names, which appears to be the case, to police officers investigating Michael Jackson in 1993.  Obviously, he was ready to talk then, but those particular officers didn't listen.  Why didn't he make a more serious effort to talk back then?  What might have happened to the boy interviewed in An Open Secret if Feldman had spoken up then when he was clearly ready to?

In Chapter 13, Feldman described how Haim was hitting on him again.  Feldman set him up again, this time with another older man.


I went to the fridge to get myself a soda. “That’s great, man. I don’t need to see your dick.”

“I’m just showing you because this is how frustrated I am right now. I just want to get laid. Is that really such a bad thing? Is that really such a big deal?”

Before I even realized what was happening, he started in with, “Hey, why don’t we just mess around, why don’t we just touch each other?” I was used to his persistence; I was not accustomed to being hit on myself. I said no, I scooted farther away from him on the couch, I repeated that it wasn’t “my thing” until finally, exasperated, I said, “Corey, are you gay?”

“I’m not gay, man. This is just what guys do. It’s totally normal. Why don’t we just do it?”

I yelled. We nearly came to blows. I smoked some weed of my father’s, tried to settle myself down.

“Okay,” he said after a long silence. “What about that one guy, Marty Weiss?”

I glared at Haim. “I’m not talking to him anymore.”

“Why not?”

“Because he started a company with my mom, and my mom and I aren’t really talking, and I think what happened in Santa Cruz was really fucked up and I just don’t want to be responsible for that again.”

“Okay. Don’t you know anyone else?”

Actually, I did know someone. Every time I had seen Tony Burnham at one of Ralph’s parties, he would be on and on about Corey Haim, about how good-looking Haim was and how much he wanted to meet him. At that moment, I wasn’t thinking about the fact that Tony was an adult and Haim was a minor; I was thinking that I would do just about anything to get Haim to shut up, to stop him from hitting on me.

“Okay, who is this guy?” Haim asked.

“His name is Tony. He’s older, and he’s kinda fat. He’s really not at all attractive.”

“Have him come over.”

“Are you serious?”

Haim raised his eyebrows and gave me a frustrated nod.

“Look, I don’t feel comfortable with this,” I told him. “Why can’t you just go out and get yourself laid like everyone else?”

“Just call him up, man. Just please do me a favor and call him.”

Whatever happened between Tony and Haim that day, I cannot tell you—they went off to the laundry room in my father’s building. Next thing you know, Tony was always at Haim’s side, driving Haim around town, hanging out with Haim’s mother, passing himself off as a friendly big-brother type. Looking back, I think Tony must have thought of Haim as his boyfriend. I think he believed they were having a real relationship. I didn’t understand that what he was doing was wrong, or what it would eventually do to Corey Haim. I just thought that if Haim seemed to be okay with it, I should learn to be ok with it, too.


Feldman even rationalizes this.  He's not setting him up to facilitate pedophilia, he's doing it to get Haim out of his face.  It's hard to defend Feldman at this point, because this looks bad.  I have to remind myself that he was a victim of these predators too, and it probably goes back further than Feldman himself admits in his book.  Tony Burnham has been identified by internet sleuths, but I won't put the name here.  You can easily do a web search.  It's possible Feldman will name him, and he would be a reason Feldman would need lawyers.  Burnham still has a career, according to reports I've seen.

In Chapter 19, Feldman admitted that Burnham was a man he maintained a friendship with, and Haim was not happy about it.  In the TV show The Two Coreys, Haim speaks in code about a time in which he was raped.  It could be Burnham he was talking about.


I moved to Encino, and Tony became my roommate. Haim took this as a kind of betrayal. Looking back on it now, who can blame him?

Whether it was denial, or the fucked up way your brain works when you’ve been a victim yourself, I just didn’t think of Tony as a bad guy. I still thought, erroneously and ridiculously, that because Haim “wanted it,” the abuse had not been Tony’s fault. While Haim tolerated the arrangement and the two remained civil—Tony even scored a small role in one of our upcoming movies—it was clear to me that Haim could no longer stand him.


If these particular passages don't make you pause and think, you might need to read them again and absorb what Corey is saying.  I don't claim to know all of the ways in which a victim of this abuse will react and rationalize things.  Reading Corey's words, it sounds like he just thought Haim was gay and wanted this.  I do question, given the fact that he claims to be Haim's friend, why he would depict it the way he has in his book.  Should he have said anything at all?  Might he have been better served to describe things differently?

Corey claims he actually named their names in the book before the publisher stepped in and told him that he couldn't do it for legal reasons.  Who knows if there are other names and passages that were removed entirely for that very reason?  If we focus on what's here, did he have to tell Haim's story in the manner in which he did?  I'm not claiming to know the law, but it sounds like if Weiss or Burnham were ever brought to justice over this, they could indicate that Feldman set them up with Haim knowing that they would have sex. 

I don't know what the laws would be regarding Feldman here, or if he might be classified as a victim too.  He has claimed that Weiss molested him.  Certainly, his words serve as his excuse for why he did what he did, how he rationalized his actions.  It's important to know that Feldman says he never witnessed any of these things, but in some of it, there's every indication that he knew what was happening.  It's because of these passages that some people are blaming Feldman for some of what happened to Haim.  Of course, their theories go into darker and unproven areas.  We don't know, and we may never know.  We only have his words to go on at the moment.

I'm not putting this out here to make Feldman the bad guy.  He's been victimized too.  People are counting on him to be the hero who brings some of the truth out.  He may give us some names that we haven't already heard were sentenced for sexual crimes against minors, and that would be good to know.  He may get others to talk and bring about the change in Hollywood we'd like to see, and that would be even better news.  He may not give us anything significant in the end

Pedophilia is a bad thing for so many reasons.  The victim is left with scars that never heal.  They wonder if they deserved it.  The predator can do such a good job of getting inside the victim's mind, that they wonder if they asked for it.  When it's a boy being preyed upon by a man, they may wonder if they are gay.  Left alone and allowed to grow up as a normal child, gay may never have entered the picture.  It was forced upon them, and frequently, the predator will even rationalize that the victim asked for it.  Feldman's stories about Haim, if they are to be believed, paint a picture that Haim was asking for it, but it's not as simple as that.

I would caution people to not ridicule Feldman for how he is going about this, but also, don't make him the leader of some movement to expose Hollywood pedophilia.  Encourage him to name names and tell the truth, but understand that he was a victim too.  Though he's overcome some of those demons that claimed his friend's life, he still battles them too.  I hope he tells us at least the names he's hinted at telling us, and others come forward with their stories too.  Things like this should never happen to any child.

Sunday, November 5, 2017

Why They Had To Kill Bill Cooper


If you are a relatively new member of "truth" movement, you have probably heard of Alex Jones, but chances are you've never heard of Bill Cooper. However, it's patriots like him who paved the way for Jones and others to follow. Bill believed in what he was saying and lived that way. In the end, he died that way.

His Time In The UFO Community

One of the things critics say about Bill is that he was a UFO guy. In the 1980's, UFO's were the big topic. The conspiracies in America and the world were still discussed, but people like Cooper included the UFO enigma in his discussions. Going back to his time in the military, he had a desire to learn the truth. He had witnessed a craft coming out of the ocean during his time in the service that he never could explain.

Bill revealed that he had seen documents that claimed, among other things, an alien presence on the planet. He later commented that maybe these documents were revealed to him on purpose to lead him in that direction. People would send him files during the time when he was researching the UFO enigma, and he would do his research to uncover the truth. Many times, he uncovered hoaxes that way and let the people know his findings.

By the late 80's, he had his doubts about what was really at the heart of this matter. Cooper was being fed false information, and it finally came to a head when his own friend hoaxed a set of papers that ended up in his possession. This was at a time when he was receiving similar information from other sources. This led to an unpleasant parting of the ways between Cooper and this person, and Cooper's own realization that the UFO movement at the time was itself a hoax.

Moving To More Serious Matters In His Search For Answers

By the early 1990's, Bill had moved on to more important topics, but when pressed, he would always point out that the technology exists, but who's behind it is the question. He always encouraged people, whether on his radio show "The Hour Of The Time" or at speaking appearances to do their own research. "Listen to everything, " he would say, "Trust nobody until you can verify it through your own research."

Unlike some people in the movement, Bill did not relish the spotlight. He wanted to be with his family. Though he served in intelligence for the militia, he never wanted to be considered the leader. He was quoted on many occasions saying, "Do not make me your leader. I am not your leader, for I am a man and I will surely fail you."

What he always tried to do was encourage people to search for the truth and think for themselves. His book, "Behold A Pale Horse" is still one of the best books ever written in the truth movement and highlights the agenda to come if we can't stop it as well as predicting some things that have since happened.

Being Solutions Oriented

Cooper was solutions oriented. He did not preach hate of any group of people or religions. He did not preach violence, but he did preach preparedness. He showed people how to be prepared at some seminars and offered advice and tips on things like starting your own radio station or newspaper to counteract the effects of the mainstream media.

Bill created his own monthly newspaper and did a radio show from his home starting in the early 1990's. This included investing in satellite technology to allow other radio stations, big and small, to broadcast his show if they so chose. This show delved into many topics of what government was doing and dispelling the lies and rumors along the way. He strove for the truth. If he was wrong, he admitted it himself.

As he told his listeners, if you can't be honest with your listeners, they won't be listening for long. There were times when he had to correct a caller here or there, but it was never about being mean or showing himself as somehow superior. He wanted to educate people on how to do research, and he wanted his listeners to educate him too.

Researching To Uncover The Real Truth

Over the years, Cooper built up a huge library of books, recordings and videos. He did extensive research on the JFK assassination and uncovered footage that showed the driver turning and firing the fatal shot. This is controversial even in the "truth" movement. Bill had an understanding of the income tax system and did battle with the government on this issue. He practiced what he preached and did it within the confines of the law.

Unfortunately, this was a battle that saw him send his wife and children from the country for their own safely. As a man who believed in God and his country, he felt he had to take this stand. This was not an easy sacrifice to make, but he loved his family too much to see them hurt. Having survived multiple attempts on his own life, he knew it was the right thing to do.

Bill's shows and his research are still available on his web page. The Hour Of The Time was the fastest moving and most informative hour on the dial whenever it aired. One of his most insightful series was "Mystery Babylon" in which he documented the agenda of the elite of the world and where it comes from. If it was important to the movement and restoring the country, he covered it.

Cooper even took a young Alex Jones to task for being too sensationalist. The two had very differing styles as Bill tried to be more calm and scholarly in his approach, maybe more like a father teaching a son, while Alex tends to get excited about just about anything. Maybe the lesson here, though, goes back to what Bill said about not making him or anybody your leader, and trust but verify.

The Horrific Prediction

As the new millennium came, Bill could see the trouble that was coming. In June of 2001, he made his boldest prediction yet that an attack on the U.S. was imminent and even named the man who would supposedly be behind it. This was the earliest such prediction on the radio. On that fateful September day, he took to the airwaves for over ten hours as the events unfolded.

Cooper offered his take on the situation, while still being restrained. He knew that was not the time to make wild speculations, though he did offer the opinion that the event would be used to take freedoms away. He was right again. He continued to do his show until that fateful day on November 5th, Guy Fawkes Day. If you understand how they use symbology at times like this, it's not a surprise.

The Day He Was Killed

Cooper was lured out of his home and down the hill of his property to deal with supposedly rowdy teenagers. It turned out to be an ambush. He was shot in the back trying to run from his truck into his house.

His grave site lists November 6th as the date of death, because he was still alive for sometime, but allowed to bleed to death. They wanted him dead.

It is my opinion, of course, but I believe they felt they had to kill him to shut him up. Bill Clinton once referred to him as the "most dangerous talk show host in America" according to Rush Limbaugh.

They Care Not About Making Martyrs

You see, some people will say the powers that be won't kill them because it will make them a martyr, but that simply isn't true. They will kill you, frame you, send you to jail or do whatever it takes if you are a problem to them. They killed two Kennedy's, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X and on and on. People cried, but they got over it. The agenda moved on.

With Bill Cooper, it was easy. The internet was just taking shape and not everybody could hear what he had to say anyway. Within a few years, he was forgotten. Alex Jones and others had moved in. You certainly won't hear Jones give any respect to Cooper, because he's still stinging from the verbal beating Bill gave him. Personally, I think Bill wanted to see Alex be a better voice, because he had an opportunity to reach more people. His comments on Jones were more in disappointment than hatred.

Why Kill Him?

They wanted Bill out of the way, because too many things he was predicting were right, and he was preaching the correct way to bring about positive change. He only stood to gain more listeners on the heels of that fateful September day, and they couldn't have that. Most of the time, they get what they want.

He isn't a martyr. People don't even remember him, and that makes me sad. Most of the time, when people looking for the truth hear Bill Cooper's words, they realize he was a good and honest man who understood what we are truly up against.

Others are building "empires" in the truth movement, but he didn't want that. The truth was much more important than money. With his speaking style, he probably could have made quite a bit of money, toned down his act, kept his family with him and might still be alive today. But, that's not who Bill Cooper was.

He wanted a country that stuck closer to the principles of The Constitution and Bill Of Rights and was driven by the desire to make a better country for his children. Fame didn't matter to him, and that's one reason he's not remembered like he probably should be. That's also why they finally had to get rid of him.

Cooper didn't play by the rules of left vs right paradigm when it came to politics. He knew what was really at stake was much bigger than that, and he was never shy when it came to talking about that fact.

Friday, November 3, 2017

Corey Feldman's Clues Lead To Soda Pop Club


It's been an interesting week for Corey Feldman as he has started a campaign to make a movie naming the abusers of himself and his friend Corey Haim.  In all, Feldman says he knows of six.  His Indeagogo campaign to raise $10,000,000 has raised concerns from those who say this is all about money for him.  Money will be put towards legal council and security.  Anybody with half a brain knows that what he proposes, bringing down some of those responsible for pedophilia in Hollywood, is risky business.  This could ultimately cost him his life.

Some people have been analyzing the clues to determine who he is talking about.  One of his abusers, Marty Weiss, has already been convicted of similar crimes against other children.  One he just named on Dr. Oz, Cloyd Jon Grissom, has also been in trouble for similar crimes.  One abuser of Feldman appears to have been identified as Alphy Hoffman.  He has yet to come out and say it.  He's basically speaking in code.  His two big clues, The Soda Pop Club in Hollywood and the guy works for the L.A. Dodgers, led right to Hoffman.

Feldman has not come right out and said it, but he has tweeted other people who are saying it.  That's not something you do if there's no truth to it, or it would be a good way to get sued.  Hoffman has removed a Twitter page because people have been Tweeting him with accusations of his alleged crimes.  My opinion at this time is that it looks bad for Hoffman, and at this point he is the biggest name.  My fear is that the rest of the rats will scurry away while Hoffman takes the all blame, and the conspiracy researchers will have a field day with this one.

The biggest problem with what Corey is doing now is people are being named by researchers based purely on speculation.  I won't name those names here, but it simply is not good to hang that label on somebody if it doesn't belong there.  There is such a hatred of Hollywood that good people could get caught up in what the bad people did.  The bad people need to go down.  If Hoffman is indeed one of them, he needs to pay for it.

Hoffman is the biggest story in Feldman's movie if the six rumored names are true.  He's the biggest name in terms of the influence he had.  He had both Feldman and Haim hosting party's a his Soda Pop Club, and none of that is disputed.  He has pictures on his old MySpace page.  As Hoffman has removed his Twitter page, expect the MySpace page to be scrubbed any time.  There are fliers about some of those parties and pictures on his page.  Hoffman was there, no question about it.  And, there were many young stars of the 1980's at those parties.  Will they be joining Feldman as I know he hopes they will?

If you study the ways of the pedo groups.  There is the procurer of kids.  Hoffman's father has also been identified based on Feldman's clues, and he was involved in getting stars for various movies and TV shows.  This has led to speculation and finger pointing at other stars based on zero evidence.  Alphy got involved in the same line of work as his dad.  But really, the Soda Pop Club was the place to be.  This is where the predator's could pray on these kids, and this is a potentially huge story as well as a heart breaking story.  If these rumors are true, you could do a whole movie on that club.

To me, Hoffman feels like the potential sacrificial lamb of an even bigger story.  My fear is if he is officially identified as a pedophile and he does go down, the attempt will be made to end the story there.  It was all his fault.  I don't believe that, although a procurer of children is a sick bastard that needs to go down.  I believe there are people involved who go further up the ladder.  Other child stars know of them, whether they speak out or not.  Corey may know more than he intends to tell, and if Hoffman is the guy, he would certainly know.

If he is the one, taking a guy like Hoffman down is a good thing.  Feldman could make a compelling movie.  Nancy Grace, Dr. Phil and countless others would pick up the story.  People would clamor for every morsel of information they could get about this story, without digging deeper.  Hell, Matt Lauer and Megyn Kelly have enough clues to start an investigation on Hoffman right now, and they won't even go there.  They are gate keepers, not reporters.  If Hoffman goes down, they will do all they can to stop the trail with him, which they are probably doing right now.  They may not even want him to go down, but if he does, it can end with him.

The danger in that game is Hoffman may want to talk and name names.  If it gets that far, he will most likely meet an unfortunate end before he can really talk.  And, if that is the game, Feldman is not in danger.  He's part of a controlled release of information, wittingly or unwittingly.  He'll be seen as a hero, but unless others start talking, this story will die they way it has every other time it started to come out.  I'm happy to see any truth come out, but I'd prefer to see the whole ugly truth come out, even if it destroys a whole industry and forces it to start over.  To me, the biggest crime in the world is robbing children of their innocence.