-
Gallery
Artist’s Quotation
As my artist’s statement explains, my work is utterly incomprehensible and is therefore full of deep significance. ~Calvin and Hobbes (Bill Watterson)
-
Book Recommendations
Sign-up For RSS Feed
Tags
Photo Contest Sunset Winds Creative Textures Film Art Theft. Hiram Larew Body Image The Lone Ranger Webb Sisters An Wine Backwards Trinity Art Conference Dale Chihuly Biscuit Environment Birthday Wendell Berry musician Sharon Chmielarz Children in a Field Reading Word Art Art and Christianity The Streets William Blake Shadow art Rita Dove Typolution Player Piano Text Art Peggy Noonan Snow The search Floyd Skloot NEA Evaporation John Leax Girl John Bisbee Katrina John Donne Walker Percy Angela Shaw Nature Monet Holbrook AZ Ben Zion James Deahl Pablo Neruda Dylan Covers Mary Louise Parker Ocean Waves Boy and Girl Flower Cowboy Junkies Color Georges Rouault Bird H. PALMER HALL Jennifer Maestre Kevin Young WineKIng Galleries J Tillman PBS Bamian caves White Winter Hymnal Larry Norman Tina Dico At The End Of Paths Not Taken New York Robert Frost Word Sunset Music Waiting Video Paperclay Dennis Sampson Paper Cutting Nancy Henry Glass art Movie Bianca Rossini Sigur Rós Mixed Media Psalm 34:8 Christian Rock Ted Kooser Michael Kenna New Video Philip Larkin basketry Arizona Sunsets Ottawa Short Film Netflix Robert Haas Trinity Arts Conference Pane e tulipani Facebook They Sit Together on the Porch Self Image Naomi Shihab Nye Afghanistan Black History Art Wordle Kathleen Adcock Lightroom 3 Vladimir Tatlin Oscars Roger Mitchell Wire Sculpture Ocean Perfecr Suite 6 Camera Toss Louise Gluck Flirtation Alicia Keys Dillon Gallery Poverty Photocrati Donald Hall Cristians In The Visual Arts Everyman Photo Contest One Simple Question Random Art The Fat Man Olivier Beaudoin Count To Ten Animated Poetry Kumi Yamashita B&W William Stafford Africa Bob Dylan Cisco Kid by Madeleine L'Engle Sky King Bread and Tulips Wendy Cope Dance Foreign Films I Shall Be Released Ethics in Photography Olga's Gallery Bryce Alan Flurie Ann Ginsburgh Hofkin Nathan Sawaya Poet Laureate Terry Evans Animals Pencil Art Alistair Heseltine The Air That I Breathe Acadamy Awards I See William Doreski Brooklyn Fleet Foxes Arthur and Yu Silent Music Makoto Fujimura Ox Cart Man The List Mark Strand Cara Barer weaving National Geographic Holocaust Math onOne Jon Pineda Macmillan Piano Katja Mater Boy Pixie Foudre Samuel Bak Water Hyacinth Animated Short Poetry Out Loud Cezanne Americana Alela Diane White As Diamonds Nick Brandt Japanese Artist Peter Callesen Find Work New Water Calvin College Jane Kenyon 1 Question London New Yourk City Science Beach And As If The Rain Train Station Scholastics books Hearts and Minds Jess Lopez-King The Shirt Art Conference WILLIAM AARNES John F. Kennedy memories Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens Biblical art Ed Knippers National Poetry Month Rilke Flickr Emily Dickinson Love MOMA Square Halo POW Mathew's House Project Harriet Tubman Robert Burns Old Time Radio Bonnie Ferrill Roman Lane Smith Silent World John Keats Marc Chagall Michael Nichols 50 People Jack Smart Vespers Black and White A SONNET FOR NAPALM Kelli Russell Agodon Mark Doty paper sculpture Family Denise Levertov Robert Hayden Fractals Interview Poetry Degas Film Posters If It Be Your Will Western Sunsets Legos Pause photography Sunsets Carl Sandburg Rhina P. Espaillat Theodore Roethke sculpture Makato Fujimura Earth Day Love In Black And White Otherwise Leonard Cohen Van Gogh In Camera Kindly Rachel Zucker Jewish Billy Collins Daniel Hoffman Scotland Seagull.To Win Green Living Alice N. Persons Angela Mellor Prisoner of words Susan Springer Nail Art Portrait Chip Cain Troy DeArmitt OTR The Shadow Hardly Art
Tag Archives: Jack Smart
Weight: 239 pounds. Fortune: Danger. Who is it?

On Monday, January 21, 1946, at 8:30pm ABC radio broadcast the following words for the first time.
There he goes, into that drugstore. He’s stepping on the scales. Weight: 239 pounds. Fortune: Danger. Who is it? THE FAT MAN!
It wasn’t until 1974 that I found a Fat Man record, with two 20 minute episodes, in a closeout bin at the Korvettes Department store and I first heard those words. Although Korvettes is from a bygone era the Fat Man lives on.
If you’re old enough like I am to remember Saturday morning shows like Sky King, and Cisco Kid, then you may already know these programs started out as radio programs. In fact most of the first shows on early TV were transplants from radio. TV has certainly moved on to other kinds of shows but if you want to hear those old radio shows then you need to know that broadcasting of these shows continues. They are no longer sent out on the airwaves but on the backs of electrons streamed to your computer through the internet. As an example Canyon Oaks Radio airs OTR programs 24 hours a day that not only include programs I have already mentioned but also music and variety programs originally aired on radio.
Want to hear Jack Benny or Red Skelton? Or how about The Green Hornet? They are available all for a simple search using Google. If you are interested in the history of certain characters then you may know of the connection The Green Hornet has to The Lone Ranger. But do you know why The Lone Ranger has a sidekick named Tonto? Besides the steady course of westerns, detectives and variety shows there were true stories, soaps, yes even soaps, and science fiction . Two of my favorites science fiction radio programs are Buck Rogers and X Minus One; they were the dreams of every young boy in their day; and pleasantly enough the stuff of my dreams now.
Here’s another quote that many over the age of 70 might remember: “Who knows…what evil…lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows.”
Well, I gotta go sit in front of the radio, computer, I think I hear the William Tell Overture playing . . . .
Posted in creative, Radio
Also tagged Cisco Kid, Old Time Radio, OTR, Sky King, The Fat Man, The Lone Ranger, The Shadow
Comments Off

Recent Comments