Yer friendly neighborhood munchamambo is here to tell you, “I give up!”
Yrs trly has read this post about why we all need to have (write? draw? tell over the campfire?) something called a “brand story” three times and I’m still clueless about what the fuck it’s talking about.read article
NOTE FROM LB: I think he’s just trying to make us jealous…and succeeding with me!
by Herbie J Pilato
In a secret, magic garden with the lovely, legendary actress (and one of my teen crushes) Juliet Mills, star of TV’s classic “Nanny and the Professor” series as well as much, much more:
via https://podnews.net/update/podcasting-popular-countries
by munchman
If podcasts are so fucken popular, how come das munchinkin doesn’t know anybody (that’s right, not one single human or for that matter dog, cat, horse, or turtle) who’s ever listened to one?
munchy snark score
3 STARS OUT OF 5
Omitting the fourth and fifth stars because let’s face it here, there’s so little real interest in podcasting that anything moi or you or anybody else says about it is meaningless..read article
That’s Mr. Lieber on the left and looks like Disney/Marvel on the right?
Whoa! The big news yesterday – you know, Sunday, a day when they never show us any news, which explains why you never heard about it before as well as why yer friendly neighborhood muncher-in-chief isn’t reporting it til today…wait. Where wuz I?
Oh. Right. The big news is that – and this is a headline at dailycartoonist.com:
LARRY LIEBER, STAN LEE’S BROTHER, SUES MARVEL
And yessirree, what LL is suing about is “a bigger portion of the pie” Marvel and its master, Disney, are making from film characters like Thor, Iron Man, Ant-Man, Loki et al, all of which, it turns out first appeared in comic book stories credited as written by, yeppers, you guessed it, Larry L his oh-so-very self.read article
How Life Flashed Before My Eyes in Front of the TV
by Herbie J Pilato
For many, the 1950s is considered television’s “Golden Age.” But as far as I’m concerned, that era expanded in the 1960s and 1970s, during which time I was born and raised in my hometown of Rochester, New York.
As fate would have it, Rochester was one of the test market areas for TV Guide. Who knew, right? I certainly didn’t, not while I was reading and loving every page of the latest edition of that magazine, every week.
I very muchlooked forward to buying TV Guide every seven days. I would run, not walk, but RUN to the corner store every end-of-summer to purchase the special, expanded FALL PREVIEW issue.read article