Archive | history RSS feed for this section

The Phone Book Again? Really?

24 Jan

January 24, 2010

Last week’s snow storm dumped 48 inches of phone book right in the lobby of my apartment building. That’s right, in the middle of the snowstorm, when even the mail carriers took the day off to polish their shotguns, the phone books got through.

And nobody cared.

Why should they? For most of the history of the phone book it has been totally useless. When Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone, he was the only name in the phone book. Back then, the book was a mere 19 pages, 18 ½ of them ads for lawyers and sexual dysfunction pills. As soon as a second phone was sold, he promptly had his number unlisted.

As phones spread to rural areas, so did the phone book. (Phone books follow the phones like hookers follow sailors. And herpes. But I digress.) Farmers, though, had no use for the phone book as every single call had to go through an operator who would dial the number for you, then listen in on your call.

FARMER JOE: Hello, Sam?
SAM: Joe? Is that you?
FARMER JOE: Yep. Has you seen my boy Lucas?
SAM: Not since last week’s plowing. Anything wrong?
FARMER JOE: Tarnation, he’s been messing around with that Josie Smith girl. Claims he got her with child.
OPERATOR: Oh no he di’n’t! Shut yo’ mouth!

In the 1970’s phone books in New York City were the size of the Federal Deficit and required Charles Atlas to carry around on his back. They were no fewer than 3,000 pages long and were good for standing on to reach high shelves or to smash bugs with. You couldn’t actually look up any phone numbers because the paper was so thin the pages shredded as soon as you tried to turn them. On the plus side it was easy to line hamster cages, but on the minus side made the book fairly useless. To make matters worse, we got two phone books- a white one for residential listings and a yellow one for ads, er, I mean commercial listings.

Today’s phone book is a lot thinner, mainly because whoever is smart enough to own a phone is also smart enough to know how to unlist it. Who actually has his home number in the phone book? Who wants to be contacted? Are they so lonely that they are begging people to find them? In the classic film Rat Pfink A Boo Boo (I am totally not making that one up, Google it.) the heroine CB Beaumont is terrorized by three thugs named Link, Hammer, and Benjie simply because they picked her number at random out of a phone book. (Unfortunately for them, she is also the girlfriend of Batman rip-off, Rat Pfink. I’m telling you, look this up.) I am not going to take any chances on being terrorized by thugs, mainly because I am not dating a superhero.

BTW- Rat Pfink A Boo Boo also stars “Romeo Barrymore” and Kogar the Swinging Ape. Seriously, stop reading this and check out that film.

Anyway, on this particular day that I started writing about and then totally ignored, the phone books arrived, all four of them.

Four? Yes, four. Four different phone books, all really the same.

The first one is The Yellowbook, which I think is the new name of the old Yellow Pages. “Yellow Pages” apparently could not be trademarked. (Copywrited? Whatever.) More on this later. It is about 650 pages for all the businesses in Brooklyn and comes with a big magnet glued to the front for a law company fronted by a washed up actor. Which law company? Take your pick. They are all fronted by washed up actors.

The next is the Superyellowpages, all one word, by Verizon (their motto- We Don’t Care Too Much.) See what I mean about not being able to trademark Yellow Pages? This book has its title all in one convenient word. It just trips off your tongue, say it with me, slowly, SSUuuperrrrRRYELLlllloooowpaaaaaagessssssss. Ahh! Anyway, I’m not so sure what’s so super about it because A- it has the same ads as the Yellowbook, and B- is an inch shorter, making it that much less effective for smashing bugs.

The third book was even smaller, a slim 450 pages. Also by Verizon, it was the local book for my specific neighborhood. This one combines the residential and commercial listings into one useless book. Why is it useless? Because I, like most people in the city, drive, and like to frequent businesses more than five blocks away. Also, being so thin, you can never reach the top shelf by standing on it no matter how good you are at tippy toes.

Lastly and most uselessly, is the Verizon White Pages. Although it is easily the thickest of the bunch, over a thousand pages, there is nobody in it. You have a cell phone- are you in it? No. I have a cell phone- am I in it? No. People with cell phones, which are almost everyone, don’t get into the phone book. And Verizon should know this; they are one of the largest cell phone providers, despite being inept and full of a-holes. (Yes, I carry a grudge.)

And why pick up the phone book anyway? If I want a number, and the phone is in my hand, I call 411 and the operator (HA! HA! There are no more operators, they are all computers!) connects me. Or I can find a number online. Or better yet I find the website online, or just use Twitter which doesn’t require a phone at all.

This is why, one week after they were dumped in my lobby, 99% of them were dumped outside with the trash.

Who is the best 1970’s television role model? FINAL ROUND!

19 Jan

January 18, 2010

Who is the best 1970’s television role model?

Round Three was a hard fought brawl between two icons of justice, Barnaby Jones and Abe Vigoda. Despite heavy Geritol use and accusations of Viagra-juicing, the clear winner was Fish, setting up our

FINAL ROUND
THREE-WAY
WINNER-TAKE-ALL
BRAWL-FOR-IT -ALL:
Esther Rolle        Vs.     “The Man”        Vs. The Fish                               
“panties”                 “Which way to the Wonka-crapper?”    First GQ cover

Before declaring a winner, let’s take a final look at our contestants.

I’m not sure what is going on in this picture, but JJ sure looks uncomfortable. Any minute I expect Chris Hansen to walk out of Thelma’s bedroom and offer some lemonade.

Here we see Jack “The Man” Albertson in a scene from the 1977 made-for TV movie, “Not Without my Psoriasis,” which exposed the then-little known danger of moles and skin lesions.

For decades, Abe Vigoda has been plagued by rumors of his death. These rumors began in 1978, when he actually died, and later came back as a mummy.

Here we see him attending his own funeral:

Before we reveal the winner, what does the Best 1970’s TV Role Model win? This fabulous trophy!

No, not those fabulous trophies, this fabulous trophy:

Before we reveal the winner, let’s take a look at two men who almost made the finals.

 QUINCY, M.E.

Quincy was ruled ineligible when it was discovered that he used performance enhancing drugs and lied to Congress during the MLB steroid inquiry.

 FRED MERTZ

Despite having died in 1966, we wanted to include him for the memorable TVLand commercial that featured his pants.

 Yes, his pants.

AND THE WINNER IS:

 WHITMAN MAYO!

Whitman Mayo?

Yes, Whitman Mayo.
Whitman Mayo: Sanford and Son’s Grady.
Whitman Mayo:  Diff’rent Strokes mean Uncle Jethro, who tried to take Willis and Arnold away from Mr. Whitey, er, I mean Drummund.
Whitman Mayo: Star of

 Crash Corrigan Meets The Kelp Men


This serial is also notable as the first clothed appearance of porn star Monte Blue.

In this serial, Whitman Mayo spent 13 spine-tingling chapters evading this tin can robot:


Eventually, Whitman Mayo defeated the robots with a device that looked suspiciously like a cross between a fishing pole and a view master. In Chapter Eleven, Flaming Death, Mayo cemented his status as the Best TV Role Model of the 1970’s when he first uttered the immortal words that would become his catchphrase, “Great Googly Moogly!”

That locution, that seedy beard, that eerie resemblance to Wally “Famous” Amos, truly, the Best TV Role Model of the 1970’s!

One can only wonder what would happen if he were pitted against the Best TV Role Model of the 1980’s…..

NOT COMING SOON:

Who Has The Best TV Mustache?