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October 6, 2001

THE FOLKS AT Mezco Toys have brought out a line of
terrific Popeye action figures — two different ones of Popeye the Sailor Man, one each of his friends and foes — Bluto, Olive Oyl and
Wimpy. All are well designed as per the best of the Fleischer cartoons. These are all in the (approx.) 6" size and seem to be most
available at Toys R' Us and Tower Video. There's also a larger, 12" Popeye figure that is only obtainable from Amazon.com, where it goes for
twenty bucks plus a special $5.00 shipping surcharge. If you click here, you will not only be transported to the page where you can
order but POVonline (that's us) will get a tiny cut of the money you spend while you're there.
And, speaking of the Spinach-Eater: My pal Jerry Beck has announced, over on his splendid Cartoon Research website, that Cartoon Network will soon commence a Sunday evening series that will run vintage
Popeye shorts, uncut and with their original titles. That's the good news. The bad is that it's on at one o'clock in the morning but,
hey, that's why God invented the TiVo. Set yours for the wee hours of Sunday, October 29 (Monday morning, actually) and every week
thereafter. If you don't have a TiVo, they sell them at Amazon.com and the 30-hour model is currently down to a new low price, plus we get our
little cut if you go there by clicking
here. End of commercials.
And let's note: Slowly but surely, Cartoon Network is sneaking more and more uncut cartoons onto their schedule. The Bob
Clampett Show, The Tex Avery Show, The Chuck Jones Show, Late Night Black and White and Toon Heads all run unexpurgated films and, since
they seem to be garnering no complaints and no sponsor defections, this trend will likely continue. The latter two shows, by the way, have been
running some superb, rarely-seen goodies.

HERE THEY COME: More articles I recently found interesting. I do not agree with with every word of them but yadda,
yadda, yadda...
The first link above is to the weekly column of one of my favorite current political commentators, Gene Lyons. Mr. Lyons is an
award-winning journalist who resides in Arkansas and, throughout the Clinton administration, he was generally out in front with predictions and
commentaries, including some of the first reports of Ken Starr's goons trampling on the Civil Rights of anyone in the state they thought might be
squeezed into giving damaging testimony about the President and First Lady. That no one ever caved to the pressures and said what Starr's
office wanted them to say is amazing. I'm not sure that, if they'd done some of that stuff to me, I wouldn't have cratered and confessed to
carrying Bill Clinton's Communist love child or whatever they wanted to hear.
But, getting back to Gene Lyons: His columns have not received the attention they deserve because they run exclusively in the
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, a relatively small paper. Still, a lot of us have been
flocking to their website on Wednesdays to read him...though we no longer do this. On October 1, the Democrat-Gazette began charging
five bucks a month for on-line access...an experiment that will almost certainly flop. When you can read The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times and hundreds of other papers for free, why would you pay for a smaller
paper with so little unique content?
Actually, I was almost willing to part with the fiver just to read Lyons but, before it came to that, strangers began to e-mail me his
first column of October, and Bartcop (a left-wing, sometimes-wacko site) posted it, as linked above. In fact, I have now been e-mailed his
column five times, all by folks I don't know but who saw me mention on this site that I enjoyed his work. A whole Gene Lyons Bootleg network
has spontaneously erupted and it seems to me that, as a result of his paper making it harder to see his writings, it's now a lot easier. Given
the topic of his first column that was affected this way, it's especially ironic.

THE LOS ANGELES TIMES is reporting (here's the link) that the Canadian government is likely to drop tax-shelter financing laws that
have made it financially attractive for American studios to shoot TV shows and movies up there. This would be a boon to Hollywood and could
have a major impact on the animation business. An awful lot of cartoon work that would otherwise have been done in this country — voice
work, especially — has gone North. With so many studios in L.A. closing down or laying off, this would be a great time to not have it be
advantageous to cross the border.

DAVE MACKEY operates a terrific website filled with info about great cartoons, over at www.davemackey.com. One thing he currently has up is a guide to the year-by-year color schemes that were used
on those concentric circles that opened and closed all the great Warner Brothers cartoons. I never realized it but they were color-coded and
Dave explains how. He also just e-mailed me with his solution to the mystery (put forth here) about how, in
the MGM cartoon, House of Tomorrow, the narrator briefly changes from Frank Graham to Don Messick and back again...
Don Messick's narration was during the pressure-cooker gag. he narration makes mention of a specific year: 2050. Joe
Adamson's book , Tex Avery: King of Cartoons, notes that the cartoon described the House of Tomorrow - "Tomorrow" in the original cartoon
being noted as 1975. This was the only scene in the whole picture with a hard date reference.
I have a feeling that MGM's sound engineer, Lovell Norman, had the dialogue replaced when the cartoon was packaged as part of CBS's
The Tom And Jerry Show in the mid-1960's, thinking that the cartoon's date reference would soon be outdated. Norman may have had access
to enough original sound elements to be able to do a nice, neat patch job, albeit without Frank Graham. Another less likely possibility was
that the line was changed when the cartoon went into local TV syndication in 1977.
That all sounds possible to me but, at least in the print on the Cartoon Network, the editing was not a nice, neat patch job. It
was a pretty sloppy edit, out of style with the other ins-and-outs, which were done via fades. (The animation in the Messick-narrated segment
also seemed a little out-of-style, as if it had been animated by others, but that may just be my imagination.)
But you're probably right that it was done when the show went on CBS (1965, I believe). And wasn't that the same time that they
re-animated and revoiced the episodes that featured the black, stereotyped maid to give her June Foray's Irish accent?

MY BUDDY Dana Gabbard informs me that he saw in a bulletin for the Motion Picture Academy that their recent screening of All
That Jazz used a print prepared for a forthcoming DVD release. No date is yet known.
IF YOU GET The Biography Channel on your cable system (or have a satellite dish) check out their programming for later this
month. They're running lots of episodes of Biography about show biz personalities. I just marked about nine for my TiVo to record.
Listings for the channel can be found here.
I would especially recommend the two-hour Biography Close-Up that reruns on A&E (as opposed to The Biography Channel)
October 8 and 9 in the wee small hours of the morning, and later this month in a more humane timeslot. It's all about the making of Sesame
Street and if you have the slightest interest in children's TV programming — or Jim Henson and the Muppets — it's a must-see,
must-keep.
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