Saturday, December 30, 2006

Disneyland Day 6


I went to Disneyland today. We got there at 8:30am and left at 6:30pm. We had quite a day. Here are all of the attractions we visited:

1) Monorail
2) Haunted Mansion Holiday
3) Jungle Cruise
4) Indiana Jones Adventure
5) Lunch at Cafe Orleans (one of 3 full-service restaurants still in Disneyland)
6) Enchanted Tiki Room
7) Mr. Toad's Wild Ride
8) Sailing Ship Columbia
9) King Arthur Carousel
10) Disneyland Gallery
11) Santa's Reindeer Roundup
12) The Bakery tour, hosted by Boudin Bakery (California Adventure)
13) The Muppet Vision 3D (California Adventure)
14) A few rounds of drinks at the Uva Bar (Downtown Disney)

I think I liked the Muppet Vision 3D show as one of the best attractions I had never visited before. It was a wonderful day! Although one of the BUSIEST days of the year at Disneyland, we orchestrated our visit in such a way that we didn't wait any more than 15 minutes for ANYTHING.

Friday, December 29, 2006

Famous People Dead

They say famous people die in 3's. Enough Said.

Disneyland Resort Line


Coming soon sometime in 2007: the new Mark VII trains including a revamp of the entire monorail system, name change (Disneyland Resort Line) and aesthetic changes to cast member uniforms and stations. The new trains will supposedly have a new seating arrangement and a sleek/retro design. The Tomorrowland Station has already been partially remodeled. Gone are the ramps (kind of like an escalator but flat) that take you up to the station and back down again. You'll notice that the Mark VII trains are, in concept, a modern update to the 1960's monorail system seen below (without the bubble-top). You'll also note that the submarines were originally grey to represent WWII submarines, later painted gold/yellow to emphasize exploration rather than war. (Note: when the submarines closed in 1998, they were diesel powered and when they re-open in 2007, they will be electric.)


The Disneyland Monorail has two stations: one in Tomorrowland, and another in Downtown Disney. The original Monorail was a round trip ride with no stops. In 1961, the track was expanded to connect to a station at the Disneyland Hotel, making it an actual transportation system, which was Walt's ultimate dream. The original Hotel station underwent extensive remodeling during construction of the Downtown Disney district, while still retaining much of its original footprint. It is now referred to as Downtown Disney Station, located next to the Rainforest Cafe.


In 2001, the Disneyland Monorail was re-routed to go through California Adventure and went straight through the Grand Californian Hotel, reminiscent of the Walt Disney World Monorail which still goes straight through the Contemporary Resort. When I was a kid I saw videos of the monorail going through the Walt Disney World hotel and thought that was so COOL. So when we got our own version in California, I was really happy. Although the California version remains outside, when it passes through two tunnels going through the Grand Californian it has the same look and feel (I rode the train through the Grand Californian yesterday and it was still so exciting).



Watch a video of the Disneyland Resort Monorail.


Watch a video of the Walt Disney World Monorail.

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Disneyland Day 5

Well, today was Disneyland Day 5. Today the park was mega-crowded. The monorail was just put back into service on 12/22 after being down for a couple of weeks while they were re-building the Tomorrowland Station over the new submarine ride, Finding Nemo. Temporarily, the monorail is not going round trip; it is shuttling back and forth from Downtown Disney to Tomorrowland on the same track while they work on the new submarine ride. The original submarine ride was shut down in 1998. It's hard to believe that Disneyland has been without submarines for almost 10 years. The new ride is scheduled to open this summer, 2007. From the Tomorrowland Monorail Station, you can see the new submarines on their tracks. The Imagineers are slowly adding new decorations which will eventually be underwater. The submarines still appear to be the same yellow. I only saw 4 submarines. The lagoon is drained. Interestingly, it looks like the majority of the ride is going to be underground inside the cave. They've expanded the cave so that you actually enter it after just a short half circle in the lagoon. I've indicated in red where the new entrance appears to be (top) and the short part of the track that is actually outside (bottom).



Wednesday, December 20, 2006

1,000 Visitors to the Steven Todd Bryant Report




Today my site hit 1,000 visitors.
Merry Christmas Everyone.

Steve

Steve After Oral Surgery

Here's a picture of me taken just after my oral surgery.

Monday, December 18, 2006

A Day at Knott's Berry Farm

I spent most of the day at Knott's Berry Farm just about 15 minutes east of my home. It is really a Christmas tradition for me: going to Knott's Annual Christmas Craft Faire. After spending $8 and walking around Ghost Town, I was somewhat disappointed with this year's faire. Maybe I have nostalgic memories about it but it just didn't seem as fun to me this year for some reason. I hate to say it, and even though I love the Knott's Fried Chicken (which I brought home for a late lunch), and I love the history behind this first theme park in Southern California, I'm afraid the craft faire wasn't worth the $8 admission. It was cool that the faire was in Ghost Town and it was a blast to walk around an wild west town with gunslingers, an old steam train, and wild west scenery. It's just that the craft faire had about half of the booths that it used to and I think I had more fun in the Knott's Marketplace which is free and you can park there for 3 hours for free. Next Christmas I'll have to revise my Christmas tradition to just include the Marketplace and the Chicken Dinner to Go. Having said all of that, was a fun and nostalgic day.

Time Magazine Person of the Year

This year Time magazine made each and every one of us the person of the year.

But look at 2006 through a different lens and you'll see another story, one that isn't about conflict or great men. It's a story about community and collaboration on a scale never seen before. It's about the cosmic compendium of knowledge Wikipedia and the million-channel people's network YouTube and the online metropolis MySpace. It's about the many wresting power from the few and helping one another for nothing and how that will not only change the world, but also change the way the world changes.

So put yourself in the picture and have a great 2007.

Steve

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Merry Christmas Everyone

President Bush's war policies have failed in almost every regard, the bipartisan Iraq Study Group concluded Wednesday, and it warned of dwindling chances to change course before crisis turns to chaos.

Nearly four years, $400 billion and more than 2,900 U.S. deaths into a deeply unpopular war, violence is bad and getting worse, there is no guarantee of success and the consequences of failure are great, the panel of five Republicans and five Democrats said in a bleak accounting of U.S. and Iraqi shortcomings. The implications, they warned, are dire for terrorism, war in the Middle East and higher oil prices around the world.

It said the United States should find ways to pull back most of its combat forces by early 2008 and focus U.S. troops on training and supporting Iraqi units. The U.S. also should begin a "diplomatic offensive" by the end of the month and engage adversaries Iran and Syria in an effort to quell sectarian violence and shore up the fragile Iraqi government, the report said.

The report's release followed by a day the sobering assessment by Robert Gates, confirmed Wednesday as Bush's new Pentagon chief, that the United States is not winning in Iraq.

"Despite a massive effort, stability in Iraq remains elusive and the situation is deteriorating," the independent report said. "The ability of the United States to shape outcomes is diminishing. Time is running out."

The group's recommendations do not endorse either the current White House strategy of staying put in Iraq or calls from Bush's political opponents for a quick pullout or a firm timetable for withdrawal.

"The report is an acknowledgment that there will be no military solution in Iraq. It will require a political solution arrived at through sustained Iraqi and region-wide diplomacy and engagement," said Sen. Chuck Hagel (news, bio, voting record), R-Neb.

Incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and other Democrats said the ball is in Bush's court.

"If the president is serious about the need for change in Iraq, he will find Democrats ready to work with him in a bipartisan fashion to find a way to end the war as quickly as possible," Pelosi said.

The Iraq panel's leaders said they tried to avoid politically charged language such as "victory" or "civil war," but the words they chose still were powerful. The report said the current strategy is not working and laid out examples of where it has come up short.

The military reported that 10 American troops were killed Wednesday, adding to the toll of U.S. forces who have died since the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in early 2003. The United States has about 140,000 troops in the country.

"We do not recommend a stay-the-course solution," said James A. Baker III, the former secretary of state and Bush family adviser who was co-chairman of the commission. "In our opinion, that approach is no longer viable."

Former Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind., the other chairman, said the commission agreed with Bush's goal of an Iraq able to govern, protect and sustain itself, but that the administration needed new approaches.

"No course of action in Iraq is guaranteed to stop a slide toward chaos," Hamilton said. "Yet, in our view, not all options have been exhausted."

The report has been widely seen as an opportunity for Bush to pivot from policies blamed in large part for Republican losses in elections last month. Bush praised the group's work, but gave no hint of his next move. He said he would give the findings a hard look and urged Congress to do the same.

"This report gives a very tough assessment of the situation in Iraq," Bush said after an early morning briefing from the group of former government officials and advisers. "It is a report that brings some really very interesting proposals, and we will take every proposal seriously and we will act in a timely fashion."

Bush met later with members of Congress from both parties and said he wanted to cooperate to "send a message to the American people that the struggle for freedom, the struggle for our security is not the purview of one party over the other."

The commission also briefed members of the Iraqi government by teleconference, and one official there agreed that Iraqis must take responsibility for their own security. "Absolute dependence on foreign troops is not possible," said Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh.

The Bush administration has tried to keep the commission at arm's length so as not to appear hostage to its recommendations. To make the point that Bush will make his own choices, the White House stresses that other administration reviews are under way and Bush will have a menu of options to consider.

Baker offered a word of caution on that point during an interview with Associated Press Television News on Wednesday.

"This is the only bipartisan report for sale," and thus the one most likely to gain crucial consensus, Baker said.

Among its 79 recommendations, the group said the United States should reduce political, military or economic support for Iraq if the government in Baghdad cannot make substantial progress. The report said Iraqi leaders have failed to deliver better security or political compromises that would reduce violence, and it implied that a four-month joint U.S.-Iraqi military campaign to reduce violence in Baghdad is hopeless.

"Because none of the operations conducted by U.S. and Iraqi military forces are fundamentally changing the conditions encouraging the sectarian violence, U.S. forces seem to be caught in a mission that has no foreseeable end," the report said.

That was a withering evaluation of a central tenet of the Bush military strategy in Iraq. In Baghdad and elsewhere, U.S. forces are supposed to help Iraqi units "clear, hold and build," shorthand for routing insurgents or other fighters from problem areas, securing those areas from further violence and setting a positive future course.

On the highly emotional issue of troop withdrawals, the commission warned against either a precipitous pullback or an open-ended commitment to a large deployment.

"Military priorities must change," the report said, toward a goal of training, equipping and advising Iraqi forces.

The report said Bush should put aside misgivings and engage Syria, Iran and the leaders of insurgent forces in negotiations on Iraq's future, to begin by year's end. It urged him to revive efforts at a broader Middle East peace.

The report laid out consequences from bad to worse, including the threat of wider war in the Middle East and reduced oil production that would hurt the global economy.

In a slap at the Pentagon, the commission said there is significant underreporting of the actual level of violence in Iraq. It also faulted the U.S. intelligence effort, saying the government "still does not understand very well either the insurgency in Iraq or the role of the militias."

The commission recommended the number of U.S. troops embedded to train Iraqis should increase dramatically, from 3,000 to 4,000 currently to 10,000 to 20,000. Commission member William Perry, defense secretary in the Clinton administration, said those could be drawn from combat brigades already in Iraq.

The report noted that Iraq costs run about $8 billion a month and that the bills will keep coming. "Caring for veterans and replacing lost equipment will run into the hundreds of billions of dollars," the commission said. "Estimates run as high as $2 trillion for the final cost of the U.S. involvement in Iraq."

By ANNE GEARAN, AP Diplomatic Writer

Sunday, December 03, 2006

Disneyland Day Four

It was another great day at Disneyland. Today I went early and didn't have to wait anymore than 5 minutes for any ride. The park was strangely deserted. The first thing I did was ride Space Mountain. I hadn't been on it since they did the 50th anniversary upgrade. They've changed the walking path to the ride but the loading area is the same, just a little darker. It seems like Disney has been making their attractions darker lately, perhaps to reduce maintenance costs.

Then I took a ride on Splash Mountain. I love this ride and I know not to sit in the front few seats. I got mildly wet but the couple in front of me got SOAKED. I love the 50 foot drop at the end as well as the animated characters throughout the ride. This is one of my favorites at Disneyland.

I climbed Tarzan's Tree House which used to be Smith Family Robinson Tree House. What memories and a fun attraction.

My last Disneyland ride was another deadly trip inside the Haunted Mansion, decorated as the Nightmare before Christmas. I just cannot get enough of this ride; it's really a blast and I just love the Christmas version, even though it is a bit macabre.

With four visits under my belt, I'm only $3 away from paying off my annual pass. The daily rate for the two-park-pass is $78.00 plus $11.00 for parking. My annual pass is good any day of the year (most passes have a bunch of days that the pass is invalid) and free parking. Additionally, I get 10% off for all services inside the park. I'm having a blast with my new pass and I enjoy all of the walking I've been doing at the Disneyland Resort.

Finally, I went over to California Adventure just to walk around. I visited the Hollywood Backlot and the Tower of Terror gift shop. I rode the Tower of Terror about a year ago and, believe me, one ride is enough.

Celebrity Sighting: Matthew Fox

I totally forgot to mention that a few weekends ago I had a latte with Matthew Fox from Lost. Actually, he was sitting a table away from me at the Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf in Malibu.

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Disneyland Day Three

Well, Disneyland Day Three was by far the biggest day of all. First I went on Pirates of the Caribbean, saw the two turkeys that G.W.Bush pardoned in Santa's Reindeer Round-up, took a rare ride on the tall ship Columbia, then rode the Big Thunder Mountain Railroad.

Pirates of the Caribbean

I really enjoyed the changes they made to the ride to promote their Disney movie Dead Man's Chest. It was fun to see Captain Jack Sparrow and Davy Jones on the ride.

Columbia


I was really surprised to see the Columbia navigating the waters of the Rivers of America. I can't remember the last time I rode on her. It was really great to go below deck and see the captain's quarters, the galley, and crew's quarters. This was an unexpected bit of fun.


Big Thunder Mountain Railroad

This ride is fabulous. The coaster so smooth and one of the greatest mine train rides around. A great way to finish my three wonderful days at Disneyland. Watch this short funny video of the ride I found on You Tube.

Disneyland Day Two

Before seeing For Your Consideration, the new Christopher Guest film, I went to Disneyland for a few hours - day two. I bought an annual premium passport which is good 365 days at Disneyland. Considering I live about 18 minutes from Disneyland when traffic is good, it's a fun day trip or even for a few hours. I rode the train around the park and enjoyed the nostalgic trip through the Grand Canyon diorama featuring life-sized audio-animatronic dinosaurs and cavemen (originally built for the 1964 World's Fair in New York).

I spent most of my few hours in California Adventure. Not nearly as cool as Disneyland but a really nice walk and you feel like you are on an old boardwalk like Santa Cruz.

I capped off our day with a Turkey Dinner at Claimjumpers. Way more food than you can eat at one sitting so I have lots of leftovers just like all other Americans today.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Happy Thanksgiving at Disneyland

If you cannot be with your family on Thanksgiving, then what a great way to spend Thanksgiving in Southern California: Disneyland. Clear sky and 71 degrees, I was shocked at how crowded it was and how beautifully it was decorated for Christmas.




For the first time I was able to ride the Nightmare Before Christmas Haunted Mansion. My wait time with FASTPASS was 4 minutes. I was skeptical at first but really loved it, especially the snow scenes. Some of it was corny but I'm really glad I finally got to see it. I think they've been retrofitting the Haunted Mansion during the holiday season for several years now.

I also went on the Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh which is where Country Bear Jamboree used to be; simple ride and lots of fun!

Most notably closed was the Monorail which I usually love to ride. The monorail is closed from August 21 to December 14, 2006 to prepare for the opening of Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage in Summer 2007 which I can hardly wait to ride. Rumor has it that they are putting all new monorails in Disneyland in 2007. The new Mark VII trains are scheduled to be completed and installed in 2007 with a whole revamp of the system, including a name change (Disneyland Resort Line) and aesthetic changes to cast member uniforms and stations.

It was a great Thanksgiving! Happy Holidays Everyone!


Thursday, November 09, 2006

Ed Bradley, Dead at 65

I met Ed Bradley in the 90's. Rest in Peace. Steve

Ed Bradley, a pioneering black journalist who was a fixture in American living rooms on Sunday nights for more than a quarter century on “60 Minutes,” died today. He was 65. Mr. Bradley died at Mt. Sinai Medical Center of complications from chronic lymphocytic leukemia, said Dr. Valentin Fuster, his cardiologist and the director of the Cardiovascular Institute at Mt. Sinai. Mr. Bradley, who underwent a quintuple bypass operation on his heart in 2003, was diagnosed with leukemia "many years ago,” Dr. Fuster said, but it had not posed a threat to his life until recently, when he contracted an infection. His most recent segments on “60 Minutes” had been on Oct. 15 (on the rape case involving Duke University lacrosse players) and on Oct. 29 (an investigation of an oil refinery explosion in Texas). Even many close colleagues had not known that his health had been deteriorating precipitously for several weeks. On the day that last segment was broadcast, he was admitted to Mt. Sinai. He remained there until his death. “This has been a long battle which he fought silently and courageously,” said Charlayne Hunter-Gault of the “News Hour with Jim Lehrer,” who was one of several close friends at Mr. Bradley’s side when he died this morning. “He didn’t want people to know that this was a part of his struggle. He didn’t want people feeling sorry for him. And for a good part of his life, he managed it.”

What I'm Reading Now: Still Life With Crows

Well, travel season is over and I'm well into my Agent Pendergast Series. This will be the 4th book in the series that I'm reading.

  • Still Life With Crows -- Agent Pendergast travels to midwestern Kansas to the dying farm town of Medicine Creek to investigate a series of brutal and ritualistic killings. He teams up with teenage malcontent, Corrie Swanson to solve the case.

Saturday, November 04, 2006

The Great Pacific Northwest

Well I'm in the great Pacific Northwest. In addition to speaking in both Seattle and Portland this weekend I need to finalize the Keck School of Medicine of USC website project as well as celebrate my parent's 5oth anniversary and then get back to USC on Tuesday for the USC Presidential Retreat. Probably too much to fit in one weekend but, hey, it's the 21st century.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Steve on the Road

Well I'm ready for my my 5 city tour.

Houston
Dallas
Las Vegas
Portland
Seattle

I've got all of my travel things in a one quart bag and I'm ready to go. I'll be leaving on Thursday. I'll also visit Irvine, Rolling Hills Estates and Port Townsend. We'll be celebrating my parent's 50th wedding anniversary at my bro's place in PT. It should be a blast!

Saturday, October 07, 2006

V for Vendetta Politico

I just finished V for Vendetta. What an intriguing and thought-provoking movie. From the makers of the Matrix, it is reminiscent of both the Bush and Hitler regimes. "The Wachowskis' [screenplay has] updated the evil empire to the U.S. under the Bush Administration, though there is not specific reference to Bush. However, the plot could have taken place in other countries, both West and East. The filmmakers intend the film to serve as an allegory, not unlike the latest chapter of George Lucas' "Star Wars," which also contains political overtones and timely issues. In the story, England is ruled by fascists that control the media and suppress free speech. Homosexuals are rounded up and shipped off to concentration camps. Citizens are executed for owning copies of or reading the Koran. Numerous people die out of biological attacks in the water supply. Indeed, tackling many scared cows, state-sanctioned torture, wiretapping, homosexuality, bio-terrorism, avian flu, Iraq war, pedophile priests, may turn "V for Vendetta" into one of the most subversive film to come out of mainstream Hollywood." {Source}

Monday, October 02, 2006

Goodfellas

I just viewed the film Goodfellas with Robert DeNiro and Joe Pesci. It's a Martin Scorsese film made in 1990. I was listening to the Adam Corolla show the other day and he had one of the cast on the show. He said that if you say you love movies and you've never seen Goodfellas than you're really missing out. So I rented it from Netflix. What a great film. Probably one of my top ten favorites. Lots of use of the f-word though. Joe Pesci won best supporting actor for his role. One of the most quoted lines from the movie is "Now go home and get your f-ing shine box." If you haven't seen it you should. It's an f-ing good movie.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

What I'm Reading: Cabinet of Curiosities

  • Cabinet of Curiosities -- Pendergast is drawn to the remains of a 19th century charnal house, unearthed at a construction site in New York and finds himself investigating a new series of copycat killings. He is joined by William Smithback Jr. and Dr. Nora Kelly.

Monday, September 11, 2006

My New Dream Car: Saturn Sky

I've seen a couple of Saturn Sky automobiles recently and I've fallen in love with this car. I'm afraid to buy it because I park at a "Park and Ride" in the shady part of Los Angeles -- so I'm afraid the top will be cut and the car will be stolen. Oh well -- I can dream; can't I? If I had my wish right now I'd live on the ocean in Malibu and be driving a Sky. Maybe someday -- soon I hope. ~Steve.

Sunday, September 10, 2006

Weekend in Santa Barbara

My Latest Favorite Drink When I Eat Out: Long Island Tea

1 part vodka
1 part tequila
1 part rum
1 part gin
1 part triple sec
1 1/2 parts sweet and sour mix
1 splash Coca-Cola®

I had lunch on the Santa Barbara Pier at Longboards on Saturday; it was a wonderful time. I ate on the patio. It was a beautiful day in Southern California. I had Long Island Tea. It was a wonderful weekend in Santa Barbara.

Monday, September 04, 2006

Seeing Dean Martin

I can't believe that I forgot to put on my blog that one of my most memorable celebrity sightings (next to seeing Milton Berle) was seeing Dean Martin on Sunset boulevard toward the end of his life. He was driving a Roll Royce and looked great. Farewell Dino.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Wildlife North of Malibu

Today on my drive up to Camarillo to meet my friend for breakfast, I saw a pod of dolphins just north of Malibu playing in the shallows near the beach. A flock of Brown Pelicans followed me up the coast - or maybe I followed them. The fog hadn't quite lifted so I couldn't see the Channel Islands as I normally would have. It was a great drive on a Sunday at the end of summer. My Yaris now has 6,756 miles on it. Still getting 40mpg. I'm impressed with it's sport suspension and it handles like a sports car up the balmy curves of the 22 miles of the Malibu coastline.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

What I'm Reading Now: Reliquary

  • Reliquary -- Pendergast returns to New York when a new string of murders surfaces resembling those of the Museum Beast case. He is again teamed with Margo Green, Dr. Frock, William Smithback Jr., and Vincent D'Agosta (all of whom were in the previous book) and introduces the character of Laura Hayward.

Sunday, August 06, 2006

Seafair 2006 Race Day

I wish I could be on the shores of Lake Washington in Stan Sayres pits to witness the 2006 hydroplane race. It's time for Seafair in Seattle. Since 1951, hyrdroplane enthusiasts have harkened the shores of Lake Washington.



YEAR BOAT DRIVER OWNER
*1951 Slo-mo shun V Lou Fageol Stan Sayres
*1952 Slo-mo-shun IV Stan Dollar Stan Sayres
*1953 Slo-mo-shun IV Joe Taggart Stan Sayres
*1954 Slo-mo-shun V Lou Fageol Stan Sayres
*1955 Gale V J. Lee Schoenith Joe Schoenith
1956 Shanty I Russ Schleech Shanty Waggoner
*1957 Miss Thriftway Bill Muncey WIllard Rhodes
*1958 Hawaii Kai III Jack Regas Edgar Kaiser
*1959 Maverick Bill Stead Bill Waggoner
1960 Miss Thriftway Bill Muncey Willard Rhodes
1961 Miss Bardahl Ron Musson Ole Bardahl
*1962 Miss Century 21 Bill Muncey Willard Rhodes
1963 Tahoe Miss Chuck Thompson Bill Harrah
1964 Miss Bardahl Ron Musson Ole Bardahl
*1965 Miss Bardahl Ron Musson Ole Bardahl
1966 My Gypsy Jim Ranger Jim Ranger
*1967 Miss Bardahl Bill Schumacher Ole Bardahl
1968 Miss US Bill Muncey George Simon
1969 Miss Budweiser Bill Sterett Sr. Bernie Little
1970 Miss Budweiser Dean Chenoweth Bernie Little
1971 Pride of Pay N' Pak Bill Schumacher Dave Heerensperger
1972 Atlas Van Lines Bill Muncey J. Lee Schoenith
1973 Pay 'N Pak Mickey Remund Dave Heerensperger
*1974 Pay 'N Pak George Henley Dave Heerensperger
1975 Pay 'N Pak George Henley Dave Heerensperger
1976 Miss Budweiser Mickey Remund Bernie Little
1977 Atlas Van Lines Bill Muncey Bill Muncey
1978 Atlas Van Lines Bill Muncey Bill Muncey
1979 Atlas Van Lines Bill Muncey Bill Muncey
1980 Atlas Van Lines Bill Muncey Bill Muncey
*1981 Miss Budweiser Dean Chenoweth Bernie Little
1982 Atlas Van Lines Chip Hanauer Fran Muncey
1983 Miss Budweiser Jim Kropfeld Bernie Little
1984 Miss Budweiser Jim Kropfeld Bernie Little
*1985 Miller American Chip Hanauer Fran Muncey, Jim Lucero
1986 Miller American Chip Hanauer Fran Muncey
1987 Miss Budweiser Jim Kropfeld Bernie Little
1988 Miss Budweiser Tom D'Eath Bernie Little
1989 Miss Circus Circus Chip Hanauer William Bennett
1990 Miss Circus Circus Chip Hanauer William Bennett
1991 Miss Budweiser Scott Pierce Bernie Little
1992 The Tide George Woods, Jr. Bill Wurster
1993 Miss Budweiser Chip Hanauer Bernie Little
1994 Pico American Dream Dave Villwock Fred Leland
1995 Miss Budweiser Chip Hanauer Bernie Little
1996 Pico American Dream Dave Villwock Fred Leland
1997 Pico American Dream Mark Evans Fred Leland
1998 Miss Budweiser Dave Villwock Bernie Little
1999 Miss Budweiser Dave Villwock Bernie Little
2000 Miss Budweiser Dave Villwock Bernie Little
2001 Miss Elam Plus Nate Brown Ellstrom Family
2002 Miss Budweiser Dave Villwock Bernie Little
2003 Miss Budweiser Dave Villwock

Joe Little

2004 Miss Budweiser Dave Villwock

Joe Little

2005
Miss Llumar Window Film Jean Theoret Bill Wurster
2006
Miss Beacon Plumbing Jean Theoret Billy and Jane Schumacher

Friday, July 28, 2006

What I'm Reading: The Agent Pendergast Series

Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast appears in four stand-alone novels in addition to starring in his own trilogy. All of these books were jointly written by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child.

  • Relic (Pendergast's First Appearance) -- Pendergast investigates a series of strange murders and rumors of a murderous beast in the New York Museum of Natural History. Includes reporter Bill Smithback and Vincent D'Agosta. (I'm 80% done with this book)
  • Reliquary -- Pendergast returns to New York when a new string of murders surfaces resembling those of the Museum Beast case. He is again teamed with Margo Green, Dr. Frock, William Smithback Jr., and Vincent D'Agosta (all of whom were in the previous book) and introduces the character of Laura Hayward.
  • Cabinet of Curiosities -- Pendergast is drawn to the remains of a 19th century charnal house, unearthed at a construction site in New York and finds himself investigating a new series of copycat killings. He is joined by William Smithback Jr. and Dr. Nora Kelly. (I've read this before but love it so much I'm going to read it again in order).
  • Still Life With Crows -- Agent Pendergast travels to midwestern Kansas to the dying farm town of Medicine Creek to investigate a series of brutal and ritualistic killings. He teams up with teenage malcontent, Corrie Swanson to solve the case. (I'm about 30% through this one).


Brimstone (Book One) -- Agent Pendergast and Vincent D'Agosta team up once more to investigate brutal murders of a seemingly supernatural origin. Their investigation takes them from high society New York to old world Italy and into the dark heart of an age-old conspiracy. Vincent D'Agosta, Laura Hayward and Bill Smithback's nemesis, reporter Bryce Harriman (mentioned often in the previous books) make a reappearance. In this book the reader is introduced to Pendergast's brother Diogenes and D'Agosta catches his first glimpse of Diogenes.
  • Dance of Death (Book Two) -- Aloysius Pendergast faces off against Diogenes in an attempt to stop his diabolical brother before he can complete the perfect crime. All of Pendergast's old compatriots find themselves in danger and old friends band together in the race to prevent an almost certain disaster. The novel features an all-star cast for Preston-Child fans and includes cameos from all of the books even going so far as to include characters from the author's non-Pendergast novels.
  • Book of the Dead (Book Three) -- The final book of the Pendergast Trilogy. Expected to wrap up loose ends and provide an ending to the conflict between the Pendergast brothers. Centered, again, around events at the New York Museum of Natural History.
Co-author Douglas Preston has said that a new book featuring Pendergast is currently being written

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

Hell Warmed Over

Heat waves and power outages. It's been Hell here in Los Angeles. The heat in Los Angeles has finally dropped about 5 degrees (feels like 10). Thank God. I don't ever remember LA being so hot in all of the years I have lived here (since 1984). That's 22 years! They are saying that this is a heat wave unparalleled in 50 or 100 years. Hope it stays cool. My apartment is 79 degrees. It was 84 yesterday but feels a lot cooler due to reduction in humidity. Hell warmed over.

Sunday, July 23, 2006

Disneyland in the 1970's



Do you remember when Disneyland rides required a ticket? My brother Bob and I flew down to Disneyland from Seattle back in the 70's. Boy have things changed since then. A lunch at the Tahitian Terrace would cost you a steep $1.85. And a cup of coffee for 15 cents? How I wish I had invested in Starbucks back in those days. Space Mountain was brand new and LA was the smoggiest town in the US (ok, some things don't change). Bob and I ate at Casa de Fritos. E-ticket rides were 85 cents and with one you had a choice of the following rides: America Sings, the Monorail, the Submarine Voyage, It's a Small World, the Matterhorn Bobsleds, the Country Bear Jamboree, the Haunted Mansion, Pirates of the Caribbean, the Enchanted Tiki Room and the Jungle Cruise. For more about old Disneyland, visit Yesterland. I wish I could still get a Monte Cristo Sandwich served with fresh fruit compote for $1.50.

New Blog Feature

I've added a new blog feature. In the left hand column I've listed all of the celebrities I've seen in real life. I've also added links, mostly to IMDB. Since the list is getting so long I thought I'd make it a regular feature. Enjoy.