tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post499674528102357721..comments2023-11-03T06:02:02.128-07:00Comments on By Ken Levine: Weekend PostBy Ken Levinehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17305293821975250420noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-11073685169189238192020-07-13T20:26:11.484-07:002020-07-13T20:26:11.484-07:00Rex Allen...what a great VO artist!Rex Allen...what a great VO artist!JoeyHhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12710864245535772665noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-24218576519474449292020-07-12T17:19:30.220-07:002020-07-12T17:19:30.220-07:00I enjoyed the book. Its currently free with Kindle...I enjoyed the book. Its currently free with Kindle Unlimited. And you can probably get a free trial of Kindle unlimited if you don't have it. So therefor, you can get Ken's book for free.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00736208050908255786noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-89956336392996995612020-07-12T15:10:10.415-07:002020-07-12T15:10:10.415-07:00"Country Bear Jamboree" first opened at ..."Country Bear Jamboree" first opened at Walt Disney World in Florida and the second one was created in Disneyland, which is now the Pooh ride. The Pooh ride also first appeared in Florida, then at Disneyland. <br /><br />"Carousel of Progress" opened at the 1964-65 New York World's Fair General Electric Progressland exhibit then moved to Disneyland. It was replaced in 1974 by America Sings, so the elements were sent to Florida where the song was changed and the narrator went from Rex Allen to Andrew Duggan. It was revised years later with Jean Shepard as the narrator and a rare Disney performance by Janet Waldo in the cast. There was at least one more revision since then, but it still stands today.<br /><br />The "E" Ticket phrase became mainstream after astronaut Sally Ride described riding the space shuttle in those terms.Greg Ehrbarhttp://www.gregovision.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-65391279052761115052020-07-12T12:17:47.264-07:002020-07-12T12:17:47.264-07:00To paraphrase Tom Lehrer, when my grandmother was ...To paraphrase Tom Lehrer, when my grandmother was my age, she had been dead for two years. Yikes.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14421745682110194190noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-19043371047325873512020-07-12T11:03:36.474-07:002020-07-12T11:03:36.474-07:00You talk about your grandma in her "mid 60s&q...You talk about your grandma in her "mid 60s", It seems old, but I'm soon turning 63, ouch!Mike Barerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14447874605833321732noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-58044489305099490382020-07-12T05:14:57.847-07:002020-07-12T05:14:57.847-07:00I also love your story about the time you were lis...I also love your story about the time you were listening to a news presenter on the radio say “Help KXFM find the hooded rapist” and your grandmother said “Such a contest!”<br /><br />https://kenlevine.blogspot.com/2015/07/radio-contests-i-love.htmlTroy McClurenoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-78714993528233851742020-07-11T20:35:22.034-07:002020-07-11T20:35:22.034-07:00It's funny to hear people reminisce about the ...It's funny to hear people reminisce about the Carousel of Progress. That was before my time and *I* was sorry when they took out its replacement at Disneyland, America Sings, which I kind of grew up with. But when I took the family to Disney World in Florida a few years back, we discovered that both Carousel of Progress and Country Bear Jamboree still live on there!Randy @ WCG Comicshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08105266129029859540noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-52629122038121513852020-07-11T13:28:34.229-07:002020-07-11T13:28:34.229-07:00Disney obsessive checks in:
-- The Carousel of Pro...Disney obsessive checks in:<br />-- The Carousel of Progress became America Sings; not sure anything is in that building at the moment. Country Bear Jamboree got its own building, but was replaced by a Winnie the Pooh ride.<br />-- "Third Man on the Mountain" is on DVD from Disney Movie Club. <br /><br />My favorite Disneyland memories are things that were a Big Deal in the day but, arguably for the better, no longer. <br /><br />The Main Street Cinema was a round room without seats showing silent films -- comedy shorts and single reels from features -- on six screens. The idea was that people would wander through like a museum exhibit, but I'd watch each of them all the way through. You have to remember those pre-video days when there were precious few chances for a kid to see silent films. A rerun of "When Comedy Was King", a rare showing on Educational Television, and just maybe 8mm prints at the public library. Now I've got shelfloads on DVD, but then it was huge. Main Street Cinema is still there, its screens showing early pre-color Mickey Mouses. One cartoon that was released in color is shown in B&W to blend with the others.<br /><br />Almost as huge: The Fantasyland theater, a sit-down, air-conditioned cinema with character murals on the walls, would run three toons or a featurette, like Winnie the Pooh. This was when theaters were mostly dropping cartoons, and the Disney stuff was stingily parceled out on Mickey Mouse Club (one toon per episode) or the occasional World of Color episode (edited to fit into framing stories). And my family was still B&W (lousy reception). So big-screen Technicolor vintage Disney, with air conditioning, was worth a half hour. Especially as there was never a line. That space is now the Pinocchio ride. Again, now have shelfloads but miss the thrill of seeing big-screen Disney in the heart of Disneyland.<br /><br />Visited last year for the first time in decades. The trick with the Matterhorn and Big Thunder Mountain is to brace yourself against horizontal movement; otherwise you rattle like a marble in a cocktail shaker. I'm a non-robust senior citizen, and that made both of them dandy rides. DBensonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01144515471557731622noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-85063103455713714262020-07-11T12:30:38.707-07:002020-07-11T12:30:38.707-07:00Closest I got to any Disney parks was Disney World...Closest I got to any Disney parks was Disney World. We were moving out of state, and since grandma lived nearby, we did a detour to see what all the fuss was about. They had started the process of building it. They had just carved dirt roads out of the wilderness and it was probably the last time the place wasn't packed with people. No Mikey Mouse yet but all the real mice [and rest of the animals] were packing their bags and fleeing the place. Been back in that area for business conventions laat couple of years and you couldn't pay me to live there now,too many people. You fart and can knock over 20 people and give the rest of the county Coronavirus.YEKIMIhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01921751875397071034noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-51897050365203821052020-07-11T12:20:18.626-07:002020-07-11T12:20:18.626-07:00I wonder how many people know which Disney film th...I wonder how many people know which Disney film the Matterhorn ride is associated with? It’s Third Man On The Mountain, which is one of Disney’s best live action films. It’s largely forgotten today unfortunately, and not even available on Disney+. You can rent it on Amazon or iTunes though. If you’ve never seen it you should check it out. iamr4manhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03886388328762709050noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-55116458219112785122020-07-11T10:04:30.685-07:002020-07-11T10:04:30.685-07:00Maybe he was trying to kill her for the insurance/...Maybe he was trying to kill her for the insurance/inheritance. No one would question a heart attack on The Matterhorn.<br /><br />It has literally been decades since I've been to Disneyland.<br /><br />The "House of the Future" is very similar to G.E.'s Carousel of Progress. That was one of my favorites. The venue eventually became The Country Bear Jamboree. I've never had any desire to see that.<br /><br />No one uses this expression any more, but back then it was very popular, "That's an E-ticket ride." For those of you too young to remember, when you entered the park they handed you a ticket book. Rides such as the Tea Cups were A-tickets. The better, more popular rides e.g. The Haunted Mansion or the Matterhorn were E-tickets. They always gave you more A-tickets than E-tickets. However, the good thing about them was that they didn't expire. You could bring them back and use them the next time you went to Disneyland. (In the old days you could afford to go more often than once every twenty years.)<br /><br />Hearing your grandmother say "Fuck" is great, but now I like it when women use the "C-word."<br /><br />M.B.<br /><br />P.S. That's you on the left? You haven't changed much. Although, I'm not sure if that's a compliment.Mike Bloodworthhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04755626259169126800noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-10344909088383015162020-07-11T08:00:09.401-07:002020-07-11T08:00:09.401-07:00Actually, Disneyland opened today. Apparently the ...Actually, Disneyland opened today. Apparently the company is just starving for money...Elfhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10374380298273456994noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19336675.post-65996202404439770462020-07-11T06:08:05.220-07:002020-07-11T06:08:05.220-07:00I remember when plastic was cool. Now older versio...I remember when plastic was cool. Now older versions like Bakelite are auctioned off as semiprecious minerals.Lemuelnoreply@blogger.com