Boys will be boys will be girls with no warning
1. My poem "Matlacihuatl's Gift," originally published in Dreams and Nightmares #63 and a Rhysling winner in 2003, will be reprinted in Aqueduct Press' The Moment of Change, edited by Rose Lemberg. I am very pleased about this.
2. Requiescat John Howard Davies, with possibly the most heartrending obituary photo I've ever seen. I hadn't realized he was the same child actor as The Rocking Horse Winner (1949), but what I really hadn't realized was the magnitude of the debt owed him by anyone who loves British comedy: his productions at the BBC including but not limited to Monty Python's Flying Circus (1969–74), Fawlty Towers (1975/79), and "the first two series of The Goodies (1970–72), a role that obliged him to balance the cost of elaborate visual effects against the size of the laugh they were likely to yield. In 1972 an episode emerged from the typewriter of Graeme Garden and Bill Oddie that asked for a giant kitten to demolish the Post Office Tower before being sedated by the principals, dressed as mice, riding a three-wheeled cycle borne aloft by hot air balloons. Davies said yes. Kitten Kong won the Silver Rose of Montreux." Please, sir. We want some more.
3. I keep forgetting to post this link: the newly discovered Roman port in Wales.
I have other stuff to post about, but I also have these errands I have to run. The sky looks as though it is seriously contemplating rain.
2. Requiescat John Howard Davies, with possibly the most heartrending obituary photo I've ever seen. I hadn't realized he was the same child actor as The Rocking Horse Winner (1949), but what I really hadn't realized was the magnitude of the debt owed him by anyone who loves British comedy: his productions at the BBC including but not limited to Monty Python's Flying Circus (1969–74), Fawlty Towers (1975/79), and "the first two series of The Goodies (1970–72), a role that obliged him to balance the cost of elaborate visual effects against the size of the laugh they were likely to yield. In 1972 an episode emerged from the typewriter of Graeme Garden and Bill Oddie that asked for a giant kitten to demolish the Post Office Tower before being sedated by the principals, dressed as mice, riding a three-wheeled cycle borne aloft by hot air balloons. Davies said yes. Kitten Kong won the Silver Rose of Montreux." Please, sir. We want some more.
3. I keep forgetting to post this link: the newly discovered Roman port in Wales.
I have other stuff to post about, but I also have these errands I have to run. The sky looks as though it is seriously contemplating rain.

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Requiescat.
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What is Riding the Bull?
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She played the woman, and he played her husband, the rodeo clown. The funny thing was that she had lost a startling amount of weight since the play was written and had to wear a fat-suit to play the main character, because it's part of the role.