Wednesday, June 19, 2013

COMIC BOOK WALLPAPER: SUPERMAN


In honor of Superman's 75th anniversary, I've reassimilated some Superman comic covers into desktop wallpapers. Click on the image and save to your computer. You can see the original comic cover by clicking the issue name under the image. Last year I made a wallpaper based after Action #1 and you can find that by clicking here.






Wednesday, June 12, 2013

YUMMY! 1990S ADVERTISING FOOD GIFS

Don't panic! You didn't fall into a 1990s time warp on the World Wide Web! I thought it would be fun to put together a gallery of old-timey ad GIFs found on junk food and fast food official websites. Most are from the mid-90s and up to the year 2000. They're kind of fun to watch all in one place.

Of course I was hoping to find a Jif Peanut Butter GIF!

1996 Quisp

1996 McDonalds 

1996 Burger King

1996 Bullwinkle's Restaurant and Family Fun Center
1996 Oreo

1996 Kellogg's Cereal

1997 Wonka Candy

1997 Kentucky Fried Chicken

1997 Domino's Pizza

1998 Chips Ahoy

1998 Taco Bell

1999 Chee-tos


 2000 Screaming Yellow Zonkers

2000 Pizza Hut 

2000 M&M's Crispy


Tuesday, June 11, 2013

FOUND PHOTO: 1923 CALIFORNIA ROAD TRIP TO LAKE TAHOE

It's been a while since I've shared a snapshot from my found photo collection. With everyone planning vacations and road trips, I thought this one from 1923 might give some of you road trippers some inspiration.



The inscription on the back - "This was the day we crossed Calif. line Aug. 19. It constitutes one of the most educational & prettiest drives of all. We rose 11,500 ft in 25 min. When we got to the top of the Mt. we came to a beautiful mountain lake, called Lake Tahoe. It is about 1/2 mi. square & the water has the color of the emerald birth stone. This days drive took us thru Americas Greatest forrest, Pine-Cedar & Spruce. Beautiful & Dense? Mamma comments on it most every day. Geography is now an interesting subject to me."

Isn't that great? Between the photograph and the inscription, it really transports you back to when taking a road trip truly was an adventure. I'm sure this unidentified gent and "Momma" had to deal with some rough terrain and maybe a flat tire or two along the way.  

Saturday, June 01, 2013

JEDI WEEK IS OVER


Whew! Jedi Week is over. After 150+ blog posts this concludes the special 30th anniversary blog events related to the Star Wars saga that started in 2007. Thanks to everyone that stopped by the blog to reminisce about Return of the Jedi with me. I appreciated all of your comments and emails! A special thanks to Mike (Aparofan) MiddletonJohn Rozum and Erick from Wonderful Wonderblog for sharing the Jedi Week link with their blog readers. Also, thanks to everyone who shared Jedi Week on facebook and twitter.

I made the Jedi Week header from this newspaper ad for the 1985 rerelease of Return of the Jedi. 


Yub Nub! May the Force be with you!!

Now, I will leave you with Meco's Ewok Celebration! (Uploaded to YouTube by Andrea Ferrati.)


RANDOM MEMORIES OF RETURN OF THE JEDI

For the last post of Jedi Week, I just thought I would share some random memories and some stuff that I found packed away in boxes from my childhood. Thirteen is an odd age for anyone. It's right at the end of childhood with one foot back and one foot forward. This is the time that life gets a little awkward and confusing. For me, it was nice to have Return of the Jedi in the summer of 1983 for a great diversion from the onslaught of adolescence.


A photo of a thirteen year old me sporting the same T-shirt seen below. I had a pretty extensive Star Wars T-shirt wardrobe back then. 



"It's a trap!" It was always exciting to cut out the proof-of-purchase from the Star Wars figure cards and mail them in for a free figure. Receiving the odd looking Admiral Ackbar just added to the mystery of the last movie in the trilogy. Because of this figure I became an Ackbar fan. I even named my pet fire newt, Admiral Ackbar! 


By age thirteen I had given up playing with my action figures. I found a fun way to still interact with them and that was through photo taking. I tried to make my own scenes from the films with my 110 camera. I remember trekking into the woods to take Endor photos. The above is a snap from that photo session.


Thanks to this Marvel Super Special comic magazine I learned a spoiler. Actually it wasn't the mag's fault but a kid on the school bus. The Super Special was released before the movie and a kid on the bus had a copy. He blurted out that Leia was Luke's sister!


What? I could have killed him! First I didn't believe it and refused to look at the magazine. I even had my own copy at home but was never tempted to open it until after the movie. I really hoped he was telling lies, but to my chagrin he was right. I wasn't a fan of Luke and Leia being siblings. 


A Return of the Jedi birthday card given to me by my Uncle for my thirteenth birthday. Inside, it simply says, "Hope you have a royal time! Happy Birthday."


I attempted to start a Star Wars scrap book around this time. I only filled a handful of pages. I found this  article that I clipped inside. 


My grandma gave me a set of Return of the Jedi activity books. I guess I was too old because all of them are unused. I love that she added an inscription on the cover of the Word Puzzle Book. Back then when I thought I was big time "collector" this always bugged me. Of course now, these signed items are special and they have more value to me than other items in my collection.



I need to ask the First Lady of Neato Coolville to bake a batch of Monster Munchies. If anyone makes any, let met know!


I loved getting polybagged comics! I especially remember getting a bunch of Whitman comic three packs back in the 1970s. Someone gave these to me for my birthday or Christmas and since I had the individual issues, I kept it sealed in the bag!


I purchased this Official Collectors Edition and all the poster mags like the one below at my childhood grocery store, Carl's Market. I blogged about this supermarket earlier this year.


This poster magazine cover always made me laugh! I think Jabba is going to eat little Wicket the Ewok. Gobble gulp!


Memories are weird and for some reason unimportant memories sometime stick with me. My memory of this Rolling Stone magazine is that it caused me to have a dilemma. I saw it on the magazine stand at our local 7-11. The mag cost $2.50 and I only had three bucks, my weekly allowance, in my pocket. Hmm...I had a major decision to make because the 7-11 had a small arcade and I had been trying to master Donkey Kong Jr. The big dilemma was; do I buy the mag or buy a Big Gulp and play Donkey Kong Jr.? Not even a half naked Princess Leia nor a jam box toting Darth Vader could win over the arcade. I didn't pick up the Rolling Stone mag until about ten years after when I found it at a flea market. Just so you'll know, I did master Donkey Kong Jr. that summer!  


Rummaging through my boxes of childhood stuff, looking for things for Jedi Week, I ran across two Return of the Jedi candy heads by Topps. They both still had some candy inside! Check out John Rozum's post about these.

A Return fo the Jedi lid from a tin container.


A sticker sent out by the Star Wars Fan club. I didn't order it, but you could buy a patch of this image with the Revenge title.


A photocopy of a drawing that I did for the 1983 Star Wars Fan Club's Creativity Contest. They gave out some amazing prizes from signed posters to actual movie props. I didn't win, but it was fun entering the contest.


Funny fan club cartoon that I clipped from an envelope received from the club.


MY GRANDMA PAID $9.50 FOR A REVENGE OF THE JEDI POSTER

For Star Wars and movie poster collectors, the famous Revenge of the Jedi poster is one of the more sought after posters from the trilogy. Most know the story that George Lucas decided to ditch the Revenge for the word Return due to the fact that a Jedi would never seek revenge. The change came late in the marketing of the film and some promotional items with Revenge got out, including the Revenge of the Jedi poster. Supposedly the poster was selling for big money on the collector's market. To help offset the high price, Lucasfilm made the remainder of the posters available through the fan club.   

Here's the first announcement by fan club director Maureen Garrett in Bantha Tracks #17.

According to an article on TheForce.net, only 9000 of the posters were released. Lucky for me, one of those 9000 posters hung on my bedroom wall thanks to my grandma who ordered it for me.  


The poster was made available in issue #19 of Bantha Tracks for $9.50 postpaid. My grandma even dated my issue above the cutout order form, 2-22-83! I remember being really anxious for my poster to arrive. After what seemed like forever, a triangle shaped tube showed up on our doorstep. My poster had finally arrived! I spent that evening taking down all my football pennants from my bedroom wall so I'd have the perfect place for my Revenge poster.     

My bedroom wall circa 1984 with the Revenge poster.

That poster stayed up on my wall for the remainder of the 1980s. I eventually took it down and stored it away. In the early 2000s I finally gave in and sold it to a collector. My grandma got the biggest kick out of the substantial price I sold it for, especially when she only paid $9.50!