First one by Robert Gibson Jones
Next, Jack Gaughan
Art is uncredited
This one is also uncredited
#SFWApro. All rights to images remain with current holders.
First one by Robert Gibson Jones
Next, Jack Gaughan
Art is uncredited
This one is also uncredited
#SFWApro. All rights to images remain with current holders.
Springfield Ohio has a large Haitian-American immigrant population, overwhelmingly legal immigrants. Recently after a non-Haitian woman killed and ate a cat, the right-wing noise machine began shrieking that Springfield faced a plague of cat-killing Haitian illegal immigrants. Sen. J.D. Vance then claimed his office had received constant calls about the supposed crisis. When people pointed out the police say it ain’t happening (why would Springfield residents call their senator instead of the cops?), Vance told people to keep repeating the lie, and besides, Haitians have caused lots of problems for Springfield including supposedly murdering a kid.
(J.D. Vance, in case you’re curious, identifies Southern slaveholders as preferable to Woke Yankees).
Then Trump mentioned it in the debate and suddenly the mythical cat-eating Haitians were proven fact to countless right-wing pundits and politicians. Right-wing agitator Chris Rufo is offering $5,000 for proof, though as LGM says at the link, his standards for conclusive proof will doubtless be … flexible. Newsmax host Chris Plante likewise lies that the claim is 100 percent true. Former Democratic presidential candidate Marianne Williamson is outraged Democrats are ignoring Springfield’s eyewitness testimony — which doesn’t exist. She also lies that eating pets is part of voudou religious practice. Donald Trump Jr. goes with a classic: Haitians are mentally inferior to whites.
Rep. Mike Collins of Georgia just had a school shot up in his district. He’d much sooner talk about threats to cats. Right-wing xenophobe and Trump toady Laura Loomer is not only amplifying Trump’s lies, she’s claiming the Haitians are cannibals. Even MTG is calling her out, though that’s probably more Loomer’s currently more on the inside with Trump than Greene is.
As Public Notice says, this insistence Yes It’s True sounds bizarre to anyone outside the right-wing echo chamber. The WaPo makes the same point. That doesn’t mean it’s harmless. Bomb threats. More bomb threats. And the “murdered” kid’s father reminds us his boy was killed in a road accident involving a Haitian driver and the father is sick of him being used as propaganda. The Haitians are sick of it as are the Haitians outside Springfield.
The people who claim to believe this are angry too, angry anyone dares debunk them: “after reporters spoke with Springfield law enforcement, the mayor’s office, pet shelters and the local SPCA, confirming that no pets are missing and no one is eating cats in Springfield, none of the people supposedly believing this lie were relieved. They were, instead, angrily disappointed at responsible journalists and fact-checkers who were ruining their game by debunking their racist fantasy.”
Vance, a Catholic, is violating one of the cardinal Christian tenets: do not bear false witness against your neighbor. His defense (and Trump’s to at times) is that it gets attention for his other complaints about immigration. Which is like me saying that claiming Vance is a member of the American Nazi Party is a legitimate way of drawing attention to his fascist views.
As for the debate itself, Trump was a mess. It’s the first time in a long time he’s faced a seriously adversarial situation and couldn’t just whine his way out. Kamala Harris spoke passionately, including about abortion rights. So of course he’s lying that he won. And that the moderators should be criminally charged, which Fox News supports.
Fox’s Greg Gutfeld insists the moderators were totally unfair to Trump. Matt Taibbi argues that just because “conventional wisdom” says things like “Haitians aren’t eating pets” and “schools don’t perform gender surgeries on kids” doesn’t mean Trump’s wrong (spoiler: he is). Religious zealot Lance Wallnau’s saying Harris used witchcraft. Right-wing troll Brendan Dilley screams that Harris is a bitch. Congressional Republicans are ducking the subject.
Oh, and after Taylor Swift came out for Harris, Elon Musk and right-winger Dave Rubin both started making creepy threats.
None of this makes a Harris victory a slam-dunk. A chunk of the electorate will never abandon Trump. And courts and red-state governments will do what they can to tip the scales, whether in North Carolina or Florida or elsewhere. If you’re doing anything to push back against fascism, keep doing it. A Trump win will be a nightmare.
Filed under Politics
As I’ve written before, I don’t expect a Y/A graphic novel featuring a comics character to worry about continuity but the character should still resemble the prototype. BARDA by Ngozi Ukazu does that very well and I really enjoyed it.
This takes us back to when Barda was a loyal soldier of Apokalips, trained by Granny Goodness for absolute ruthlessness and blind obedience. She’s surrounded by her team, the Female Furies, constantly battling Orion of New Genesis (she’s so excited by these clashes — is this what people call love?), and unnerved by that strange prisoner Scott Free, who seems determined to escape Granny’s X-Pit and then flee Apokalips itself.
The surprising thing is that Uzaku’s book works as a standalone while staying mostly true to Jack Kirby’s original continuity (the events would all take place in Mister Miracle #8). The changes are to make Barda more vulnerable and uncertain, and to give the Female Furies more personality. It’s an excellent job.
DOCTOR STRANGE: The Oath by Brian K. Vaughn and Marcos Martin has Dr. Strange show up at the clinic of the Night Nurse, a mystery woman who at the time this came out (early 2000s) worked to patch up superheroes, no questions asked. She learns Dr. Strange got seriously injured trying to find a cure for Wong’s brain tumor, a cure someone does not want found; who is it? Why? Strange is determined to get the miracle medicine back; Night Nurse shows herself equally determined to come along before her patient winds up reopening his sutures. As I thought the last time I read it, the Stephen/Night Nurse shipping comes across forced — I can see them having a date, not yet making out — but overall this was a good one.
#SFWApro. Cover by Ukazu, all rights remain with current holder.
I read Jessie Douglas Kerruish’s The Undying Monster after watching the film adaptation The Undying Monster, which Donald Glut rated as the best werewolf movie ever. I don’t agree but I did find it enjoyable.
For centuries, the Hammond family has been haunted by a monster that attacks them in the nearby woods at certain times. A new series of attacks brings a Scotland Yard CSI team to Hammond Hall. Can they explain the infamous Hammond Monster with science? Will it turn out to be supernatural after all?
The result is a good mix of mystery and horror but the women’s roles aren’t as strong as in the book, and the explanation doesn’t work at all — even if they could work in the book’s exposition, the curse couldn’t create the kind of fur-face shown on the poster. “No Hammond ever ventures into the frosty lane on a snowy night.”
TYG has a nostalgic fondness for THE CRAFT (1996), which came out during her college years, so we watched it recently. While it doesn’t move me as much, I did find it enjoyable. White-trash Goth Nancy (Fairuza Balk), scarred Bonnie (Neve Campbell) and black-and-discriminated-against Rochelle (Rachel True) are school outcasts and witches struggling unsuccessfully to work any magic. When new kid Sarah (Robin Tunney) shows she has powers, they offer to make her the fourth of their coven. She refuses until Chris (Skeet Ulrich) tries seducing her, then brags to the school that he succeeded. Sarah agrees to join in hopes of making Chris fall for her for real.
As a quartet, they have the powers to work miracles but this being a horror film things go wrong and the original trio, particularly Nancy, start crossing major lines. When Sarah tries to back out, they are not happy …
This is a remarkably woman-centered film — they have the agency, they make things happen, their feelings and conversations are the core of the story — which makes it odd how sympathetic the film is to Chris. The guy is a total jerk but Sarah doesn’t want him punished and insists he’s not that bad. What happens to him as the magic goes wrong is tragic but he deserves punishing as much as some of the others they lash out at. As the Mary Sue points out, that applies to some of their other victims too: Rochelle’s retaliation against a racist is nasty but so is her victim. Worth a look, all the same. “By the way, he wanted me to give you a message.”
THE SPECIAL LONDON BRIDGE SPECIAL (1972) struck me as very strange when I saw it aired and rewatching on YouTube doesn’t change my opinion much. Singer Tom Jones discovers his bus ride to the London Bridge has deposited him at the old bridge in Arizona (it was bought and transplanted there in the late 1960s). He meets and starts arguing with American Jennifer O’Neil, the Carpenters sing, Charlton Heston plays Michael Landon at tennis, Chief Dan George kidnaps bus ticket taker Hermione Gingold (not so fun as we get into unpleasant racail stereotypes) and Jones teaches Kirk Douglas to sing and dance.
Part of the fun watching this when it first aired was that I was three years emigrated to America and the opening has lots of London scenery. Another factor was that it’s a musical and I didn’t get the genre conventions. Watching now it’s silly fun, though O’Neil trying to sing is a mistake (she’s not bad but Karen Carpenter and Jones completely outclass her) and the ending — Jones winds up back in London without her — didn’t work either time. This feels like a show that should have a HEA. “Karen, we’re in Lake Havasu, not Dunkirk.”
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Another good week, by which I mean I look at what I worked on and say yes, I did accomplish something!
I wasn’t sure I would because Wednesday was a mess. After the debate the night before, I started doing the opposite of doomscrolling, reading analyses and taunting the “No, Trump won!” and “No, Haitians really are eating cats in Springfield!” people on X. Fortunately today I was back to normal.
I rewrote the first two chapters of Jekyll and Hyde, dealing with the novel and then with the silent films. The novel chapter still needs a lot of work. I know the points I want to make (obviously I’m not going to try to cover all the critical analysis of the book or provide the definitive study) but there’s a lot of them and it’s tricky arranging them. Plus some of them may work better in the introduction or in later chapters discussing the films. So I called a halt after getting it into a reasonably workable shape. I’ll revisit after a couple more chapters.
The silent film chapter, however, went smoothly. I think I got some good discussion of the 1920 John Barrymore version. I also stumbled across an article in the Journal of Stevenson Studies listing silent versions. It added a lot of detail to some I already had and included a couple I hadn’t heard of (mostly name only). The Internet can be amazing — this would have been impossible 20 years ago.
I’m 150 pages into my final rewrite of Southern Discomfort, roughly halfway. I’ve also started proofing the rewrite, going through chapter by chapter to see if my rewrite introduced any errors (yes. My protagonist is traveling through Georgia, not Georgie).
I did an article about a Carrboro bakery for The Local Reporter and two posts at Atomic Junk Shop. One was about a bunch of unrelated Marvel stories in 1969 that have the Fantastic Four, Daredevil, Captain Marvel and the Avengers battling unstoppable robots. The other dealt with some stories and art from ’69 such as the SHIELD story above (page by Frank Sprinker) and the Gene Colan image below.
I’d hoped to get more done but I’m not bothered I didn’t. It was a good week and I’m only human.
Oh, and to end on an up note, my replacement crown, correctly adjusted, is finally in my mouth! Feels good.
#SFWApro. All rights to images remain with current holders.
Filed under Nonfiction, Personal, Southern Discomfort, Writing
Our morning walk sometimes takes us through a nearby office park. A week or so back, we turned down one path and found it led nowhere.

Plushie prefers hiding under the table where there’s easy escape.

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Filed under Uncategorized
Several years back, one libertarian argued that women aren’t libertarians because they’re sheeple who follow whatever political trend is popular and libertarians are always fringe (I blogged about it but can’t find the link). Elon Musk recently linked with approval to a version of the same idea: women and low testosterone men can’t defend themselves so they’ll sheepishly agree to whatever the consensus in their group is. “High T alpha males” and the neurodivergent are the only ones able to look at information objectively.
Evidence offered? None. Like so many undead sexist cliches, they’re going with “well it’s perfectly logical, isn’t it?” Which makes it a useful example of G.K. Chesterton’s line that “ten false theories will fit the universe.” For one thing wouldn’t the ones best able to defend themselves be mixed martial-arts fighters and street thugs, not bazillionaires like Elon Musk or Peter Thiel? For another, if Musk and other technocrats were that analytical and objective, he wouldn’t have turned X into a money pit. Musk wouldn’t traffic in gibberish conspiracy and antiSemitism theories or be arguing companies that don’t want to advertise on an increasingly far-right platform are violating his rights. I don’t think “self defense” in the context we’re talking about translates into “suing anyone who pisses me off.”
Plus the way in which every batshit lie flows through right-wing Twitter/X almost instantly doesn’t indicate much resistance to the consensus. Benny Johnson lies Haitian immigrants are eating pets and suddenly everyone on the right is parroting it.
And if they’re going to hold up Trump as an alpha male — lots of right-wingers do — well, we all know his thoughts are mush (no matter how much some media outlets “sanewash” them). Even given that what he says is a lie, the lies are getting stupider. Photos he doesn’t like are AI-generated. The conflict at Arlington was a lie. Ivanka found jobs for millions of people. And his repeated claims schools provide nonconsensual gender realignment surgery to students.
As for women being sheeple, the very concept of equality is a radical one that went against the consensus. There was nothing sheepish about the suffragettes, the second-wave feminists of the 1950s and 1960s or all the women (and some men) who’ve continued fighting the good fight. They’re way more edgy and clear-sighted than techbros struck by what Paul Krugman calls brain-rotting contrarianism.
I coined the phrase undead sexist cliches to reflect that no matter how often the cliches — men are smarter than women, men are naturally made to lead, men like sex and women don’t — get disproven, they rise again with a new rationale. The idea Musk passed on is just another version of women are stupid and they need men to boss them around.
Or consider J.D. Vance, who went from describing Trump as a threat to democracy to worshipping him as our white male messiah, which is why he’s vice president. Like so many Republicans he saw the party consensus was Trump for President and went with it. Though to be fair, when he says he despises women without children I don’t doubt he’s standing up for what he believes in. Especially despising women immigrants.
As I’ve said before, believing in patriarchy forces you to turn off your brain. It has to be partly turned off to believe crap like Musk was spouting.
Filed under Politics, Undead sexist cliches
My brother Craig, like me, is a fan of Hammer Horror so while he was here I put on DR. JEKYLL AND SISTER HYDE (1971). Despite director Roy Ward Baker coming up with the title as a joke—he was quite surprised Hammer then jumped on it—it’s a good film. I could not, however, kick back and enjoy it without my analytical, writing-a-book-on-this hat coming on.
In contrast to Stevenson and most of the adaptations I’ve seen (e.g., the Barrymore, Fredric March and Spencer Tracy versions) Ralph Bates’ Dr. Jekyll has no interest in splitting good from evil — he starts out wanting to cure all diseases. When a fellow doctor (Gerald Sims) points out it would take several years just to cure cholera and diphtheria, Bates decides to work on eternal life first, because that will be so much easier, right? And then he’ll have time to cure all diseases. It doesn’t occur to either doctor that curing diphtheria and cholera would save thousands of lives by themselves, get his name in the history books and inspire other researchers to follow in his wake.
He’s also unusually low-rent: where March’s Dr. Jekyll is filthy rich and most film Jekylls have servants, Jekyll here lives by himself in rented rooms. By Victorian standards, the lack of a household staff or at least a gentleman’s gentleman makes him slightly disreputable.
Another thing that occurred to me is how much Jekyll and Hyde films use hands. The Stevenson novel makes good use of them as shorthand — when Jekyll starts to lose control of the transformation, one of the first signs is waking up and seeing Hyde’s hands instead of his own. The Johny Barrymore film shows Hyde’s spidery hands—
— and the March film opens with Jekyll’s elegant hands playing piano. Sister Hyde frequently uses close-ups of Bates’ hands changing to Martine Beswick’s as signs of the transformation. A much easier one, I’m sure, than focusing on the face every time.
I’ll have more to say when I watch it purely for the book. “It is I who exist, Dr. Jekyll — not you!”
Earlier this year my brother performed in JEKYLL AND HYDE: The Musical (1997) and as it’s streaming online, I took a look (it’s the source of the title quote on this post). This was much more polished than the version I saw some years back, and (as I now realize) clearly based on the March/Tracy story: a romantic quadrangle with a Madonna (Jekyll’s fiancee) and a Whore (Hyde’s lover/victim), Sir Danvers Carew as Jekyll’s father-in-law (surprisingly he makes it to the end of the show unscathed — Carew isn’t that lucky in most adaptations I’ve seen).
In this version, Jekyll’s inspiration is his own father’s insanity — if he could separate good from evil in our minds, wouldn’t that enable his father to regain normality (an odd rationale as his father isn’t a psycho killer but comatose)? When he tells the hospital board he wants to use one of the patients in the madhouse as a guinea pig, they not unreasonably object; the bishop on the board raises the question not enough people do, after the split where does the evil go? Jekyll denounces them as hypocrites and ultimately decides to test the drug on himself.
I like the detail of Hyde sensing people by animalistic sniffing; I’m less thrilled with his odd, armored carapace, like he was about to turn supervillain. Hyde assaults a young dancer/sex worker who’d attracted Jekyll’s attention then discovers the bishop dropping in on the brothel for some action and settles Jekyll’s score with him. Ignoring the bishop’s hypocrisy, the papers trumpet him as a murdered saint; as the show’s set in 1888, Hyde’s killing spree is obviously meant to parallel Jack the Ripper. While the board members do turn out to be hypocrites there’s no way Jekyll could have known that when he spat the label at them. Jekyll of course struggles to regain control; we all know how that’s going to work out.
This shows the problem with writing about stage shows. Not only are the cast fixed but the show has been tweaked since the original hit the boards and there are other versions out there. In some of the early versions, for instance, one board member was Jekyll’s romantic rival and also the brothel keeper, emphasizing the hypocrisy theme. Splitting them in two gives us two unremarkable characters. For that reason I’ll be watching the David Hasselhoff streaming version which I believe is closer to the original Broadway musical, then comparing the two. “Comments on a lack of style should never be made by those who have none.”
CLIMAX: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1955) was an episode of an early TV anthology show starring Michael Rennie as the gruesome twosome. Unusually this opens near the end of the Stevenson novel, with Utterson leading Jekyll’s household staff to confront Mr. Hyde in Jekyll’s laboratory; after Hyde keels over dead (suicide by poison) Utterson finds Jekyll has left him the journal of the doctor’s experiments.
Here Jekyll’s interest in dividing good from evil is purely scientific: dissection will show us the nature of the soul just as if it were a living organism. There’s no fiancee for Jekyll but his Hyde (a less apelike version of the Fredric March’s evolutionary throwback) does take an interest in a singer at a local pub. When he discovers she has a fiancee he does not take it well.
This is not an A-list version but Gore Vidal’s script does a great job showing Jekyll (pronounced GEEkil as in the March film) slowly sliding into corruption. At first he figures there’s no harm letting Hyde play — in fact it’s rather fun. When things go bad, well you can’t blame him! It was Hyde, and all of us have a Hyde within! Yes, Dr. Lanyon says, but most of us keep him caged. “You talk of innocence but you reek of Hell.”
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As I mentioned, my brother visited us Labor Day weekend. He enjoys wandering around college campuses and looking at the architecture so we visited University of North Carolina Chapel Hill and then Duke. Here’s my bro in front of the Morehead Tower (yes, we’ve already made all the jokes).

The Wilson Library has an exhibit on the original Siamese twins (now known as conjoined twins) Chang and Eng, who came to live in this area.

We saw some general campus scenes—


And then there’s the library’s Fearrington Room.


By the time we left UNC, I could see what looked like a gathering storm. Craig, however, wanted to see Duke too.

Oops. We were soaked to the skin but it was amusing. And the campus, what little we saw while seeking shelter, was pretty.



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Filed under Uncategorized
Last year, In These Times discussed liberals who suddenly swing to the far right. Journalist Matt Taibbi, pundit Glenn Greenwald, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (the article notes he did a lot of good environmental work earlier in his career), Naomi Wolf of The Beauty Myth are among the liberals who’ve swung to the right, embracing conspiracy theories or even Trump.
This is not a new thing. After 9/11, a number of liberals did the same. Cartoonist Dan Perkins AKA “Tom Tomorrow” described them as “yoostabees” who used to be Dems, then stopped.
(And since I’m borrowing one of his images, I’ll mention you can see his excellent cartoons on DailyKos or subscribe to his newsletter). I’m not sure if it was Perkins, Alex Pareene or another pundit who pointed out that while it was understandable they’d swung more conservative on things like national defense — the 9/11 attack was a shocker — they didn’t stop there, swinging to conservative on everything. One wit summed it up as “I used to be a liberal but since 9/11 I’m deeply offended by Chappaquiddick!”
And then as now, the trend was to declare it wasn’t you leaving liberalism, it’s that liberalism had left you. Gone too far left. Too radical. Too worried about identity politics. Or because liberalism imposes cancel culture on anyone who disagrees with their terrifying thought policing. Sometimes it’s the argument that Republicans and Democrats are interchangeable — neither will support the Palestinians, both support capitalism, ergo they’re both worthless. At least Trump shook up the system and changed things!
There are also those who “Inspired by transgressing one boundary, they made a movement out of transgressing others.” This is another idea that goes back a while, that if society considers it unacceptable to say the n-word or sneer about gays/transpeople/immigrants, then throwing the forbidden words around makes you an edgy rebel, not a ginormous jackhole. Not all transgressions and acts of rebelllion are equal.
The In These Times article brings up “horseshoe theory,” the idea that if go far enough right or far enough left, you end up in the same place. Except, they point out, that’s not the case here. We see liberals marching over and joining the right, even the very far right. Fascists and white supremacists do not move in the other direction. This may reflect, as journalist David Neiwert once observed, that the far right, for all it’s anti-government talk, gets much softer when Republicans are in power (shitbag Rush Limbaugh’s “government is the enemy” rhetoric vanished under Republican administrations); the far left is much more likely to reject the Democrats as insufficient.
And even within the right, the vortex is steadily to go further right. If you start out seeing yourself as opposed to a liberal hegemony that controls everything (it doesn’t, in case you were wondering), it’s a small step to challenging facts like “Nazis were evil.” and Tucker Carlson declaring that’s “too pat, too obvious” as if he were a TV detective skeptical they’ve busted the right crook. Likewise, a cartoon at the first link suggests that the general consensus the Third Reich (and Nazis in general) was monstrous is a sign we’ve been brainwashed, not that it’s a commonly accepted fact.
Plus some of the right-wing bullshit flowing through America is the work of Russia. Republicans are outraged anyone would suggest this.
Which is not to say a lot of it isn’t homegrown. Either way, it’s still bullshit when flat earther Candace Owens claims all world leaders are gays working for “the Synagogue of Satan.” Or crackpot Trumper Laura Loomer claims the FBI wanted the recent school shooting to happen to hurt Trump. Or the Very Very Old Felon (who thinks he’s still running against Biden) lies that schools are performing gender-transition surgeries on kids.
Or two preachers claiming Obama’s running the Biden White House. Like sliding into anti-semitism, paranoia about the black man who became president is lying at the bottom of the spiral never goes out of fashion. Similarly, rants about how the government is going to lock up Christians or shut down Christian broadcasting or force conservative preachers to officiate gay marriages never go away no matter how many times they’ve been proven lies.
Which is why I hate it that the NYT so often soft-pedals what’s going on, like lying that Trump’s plan for massive immigrant deportation is a plan to free up housing. We need facts, not bullshit on bullshit.
Filed under Politics