The hits in 1903; they’re #1s

Kitty Hawk

Mina Hickman
Mina Hickman

There were lots of hits in 1903. The first modern World Series in Major League Baseball took place. The Boston Americans of the American League (AL) played the National League (NL) champion Pittsburgh in a best-of-nine series. Boston won five games to three, including the last four.

Orville and Wilbur Wright were the “aviation pioneers who achieved the first powered, sustained, and controlled airplane flight. It took place at Kitty Hawk, NC, on December 17.

Note that a few of these came from the Discography of American Historical Recordings, which I wrote about here. The sound is not always great, but what do you want for 120-year-old recordings?

In The Good Old Summer Time – Haydn Quartet. Six weeks at #1 (Victor)

Doom Where the Wurzburger Flows -Arthur Collins and Byron Harlan (Edison). Five weeks at #1. A comedy record.                                                           

Come Down, Ma Evening Star – Mina Hickman (Columbia). Five weeks at #1

Hurray For Baffin’s Bay –  Arthur Collins and Byron Harlan (Columbia). Five weeks at #1 

Any Rags? – Arthur Collins (Victor). Five weeks at #1. A comedy record.

All #1 for four weeks each

In The Good Old Summer Time – Sousa’s Band, featuring Harry MacDonough and S.H. Dudley (Victor)

Come Down, Ma Ev’ning Star – Henry Burr (Columbia) 

In The Sweet Bye and Bye – Harry MacDonough and John Bieling (Victor) 

Hiawatha – Harry MacDonough (Edison) 

Uncle Josh On An Automobile – Cal Stewart. A comedy record. (Columbia) 

Good-Bye, Eliza Jane – Arthur Collins (Edison)

Trends

In the day, sheet music sales were the leading source of revenue in the music business. Thus you’ll see many of the same songs covered by various artists.

These all got to #2. In The Good Old Summer Time as performed by Harry MacDonough;  J. Aldrich Libby with In The Sweet Bye and Bye;  Bob Roberts’ Hurray from Baffin’s Bay.

But the sensation of 1903 seemed to be Hiawatha. Dan Quinn and Columbia Orchestra each got to #3. The comedy Parody of Hiawatha by Collins and Harlan and the instrumental Hiawatha Two-Step by Sousa’s Band also landed at #3.

Born in January 1953

two different Halls of Fame

desi arnaz jr TV Guide coverI will have a new feature this year and only this year. I’ll note people who are turning 70. Hey, don’t I do that all the time? Yes, for these, I don’t have enough to write a whole post, but I want to note them. Here are three folks born in January 1953.

Desi Arnaz Jr. (Jan. 19) has long confused me. For one thing, he is actually Desiderio Alberto Arnaz IV. His father was born Desiderio Alberto Arnaz y de Acha III.

He appears on the first cover of TV Guide. He was the first child of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. But he didn’t play the kid that Lucy and Ricky Ricardo, played by Lucy and Desi on I Love Lucy, had. Little Ricky was performed by Richard Keith, Michael and Joseph A. Mayer, and the uncredited babies Richard Lee and Ronald Lee Simmons, and James John Ganzer.    

Desi played a kid on six episodes of Lucy’s next show, The Lucy Show. Then on her subsequent show, Here’s Lucy, he played Craig Carter, the teenage son of Lucy Carter (Ball), in 63 of the 144 episodes. His sister Lucie Arnaz, playing Lucy Carter’s daughter  Kim was in 117 episodes. 

He was in a band called Dino, Desi, and Billy with Dean Martin, Jr.and their friend William Hinsche. They had two Top 40 hits in 1965; I’m A Fool and The Loving Kind. I have no recollection of these songs.

He was in a few other acting gigs. But he and his sister Lucie are probably best known for keeping the flame of their parents’ lives and careers. 

Reliever

Bruce Sutter (Jan. 8) was a fine baseball player. His  Hall of Fame article notes: “Sutter quickly mastered the [split-fingered fastball]… What appeared to be an ordinary fastball suddenly dove through the strike zone as it reached the plate.”

Unfortunately, he died in October 2022 at the age of 69 from cancer. The story in MLB.com notes: ” Sutter, the first pitcher inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame without having started a game, compiled 300 saves and a dazzling 2.83 ERA over 12 seasons with the Cubs, Cardinals, and Braves. He won the National League 1979 Cy Young Award while saving 37 games for the Cubs, racked up 36 regular-season saves for the World Series champion Cardinals in ’82, tied the then-MLB record for saves in a season (45) in 1984, and closed out his 300th save on Sept. 9, 1988, for the Braves.”

Musician

When Pat Benatar (Jan. 10) was nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2022, I voted for her on the fan ballot daily. This is even though I have NONE of her music. And I don’t really don’t know why. BTW, she got in

Here’s Heartbreaker, #23 pop in 1980, and Love Is A Battlefield, #5 in 1983.

A fabricated personal life story

George Santos

George Santos
George Santos

Kelly Sedinger has another interesting question.

It’s now coming out that a Republican who won a NY Congressional seat seems to have COMPLETELY fabricated his personal life story during his campaign. To what extent does this reflect VERY poorly on the state’s Democratic Party apparatus, which appears to have completely failed to do any opposition research at all?

It’s actually weirder than that. The Democrats DID spend $22,000 on opposition research in this race. Moreover, according to several sources, some of the fraud surrounding George Santos (NY-3) was known.

From City and State: “People associated with [Democratic opponent Robert] Zimmerman’s campaign and the Democratic Party [said] that they tried to get reporters to write about Santos, but that they were ignored. Zimmerman campaign consultant Jason Kaplan tweeted that “we’ve been screaming it from the rooftops since September.” He and others referenced a DCCC memo that offered details about Santos’ ties to Harbor City Capital, missing financial disclosures, and an allegedly fraudulent nonprofit Santos claimed to run that rescued animals as evidence that proof of the Republican’s purported malfeasance had been available but ignored by the media at large. “

But here’s the kicker: “Much of that so-called ‘opposition research’ had appeared in various news outlets prior to the election. No press release from the Zimmerman campaign, the state Democratic Party or the DCCC referenced the bulk of the [New York] Times reporting, which focused on the many alleged fabrications…” There’s a lot of finger-pointing but no good answer as to why.

Pooched it

The broader issue is that the New York State Democratic Party has continually messed up this election cycle. The Times Union notes: “An expert at the progressive-leaning Brennan Center called the Democrats’ political maps a ‘master-class in gerrymandering.'”

From Bloomberg Law: “The state’s redistricting process, marred by partisan politics, resulted in Democrat-drawn maps. The congressional and state Senate maps were then thrown out by the state’s highest court.” And rightly so, IMO.

“The final congressional and Senate lines were drawn by a court-appointed special master, who put competitive alternatives in the place of districts heavily weighted to favor Democrats.”

This meant a special August primary for the Congressional and state Assembly races after the regular June primary. There was a lot of jockeying for which district some of the candidates would run in.

Would Sean Patrick Maloney run in the 17th or 18th District? He ran in the 17th and lost. His colleague Mondaire Jones ran in the 10th but lost the primary. Two incumbents, Jerrold Nadler and Carolyn Maloney, ended up running in the primary in the 12th, with the former winning.

This process ultimately meant that NYS Democrats had a net loss of four seats in the Congressional delegation, even as the party made gains in other states.

The Republicans made crime the primary issue in these suburban districts. Governor Kathy Hochul could only get 52.43% of the vote as she was elected to a full term.

So yes, the state Democratic Party is a mess.

What to do

What will the party do to get its mojo back? One incumbent Democrat has thoughts about it. “After acknowledging the fallout from the Cuomo affair, the usual Democratic messaging issues, and the antipathy of the Democratic establishment towards the party’s leftwing, AOC arrived at the biggest problem, the lack of party organization. Referring to the debacle on {Election Day], here’s what she had to say:

“‘I don’t feel caught off guard. I don’t feel like my reality has been upended. Others may feel more surprised with this. I feel very clear-eyed about what the path should be ahead. We should rebuild the New York State Democratic Party, and if that is a structure that refuses to be reformed, we rebuild and replace.’”

Thinner or fatter?

bananas

thinner or fatter
from the Cambridge dictionary

One of those EOY questions:
Thinner or fatter?

Thinner. But you really need the bigger picture. In the first two months of 2022, I lost five pounds. I’ve lost five pounds a dozen times or more. I gained it back by mid-April and lost it again.

By mid-July, I was five pounds HEAVIER than I had been at the beginning of the year. So I decided to try Noom. (Here’s the old FTC notation: I haven’t been paid to plug Noom.)

Anyway, I was back to the year’s beginning weight by the end of July. Five pounds more off at the end of August. A quick five pounds in early September; was that COVID related?

Then I stayed there in September and half of October before losing five pounds in two weeks. It’s been prolonged, but the point is that I haven’t regained the weight. So I’m 25 pounds less than at the beginning of the year and 30 pounds less than on July 16.

The great thing, and I mean this sincerely, is that almost no one noticed. Only one person other than my wife ever mentioned it, and they notice almost everything. When you are considered obese, you can achieve stealth weight loss without anyone paying attention.

The shirt’s baggy instead of tight, but it’s the same shirt. I did need to buy a new belt, though, because – TMI – my pants started slipping down. I’d keep my left hand holding them up, which quickly got old.

The system

Let me tell you what I like about Noom. It categories foods into Green (eat all you want), Yellow (have somewhat less of those), and orange (a limit to those). But it doesn’t say, “You can’t have that.” The problem with previous diets has been the feeling of deprivation. I can NEVER have ice cream? Or pizza? What’s the point of life?!

The app tells me calorie counts and categories. It contains many brand-name items, including Panera sandwiches and Trader Joe’s entrees. Trader Joe’s BBQ Chicken Teriyaki is green and delicious, while the non-BBQ version, which I’ve not had, is yellow.

Noom has daily readings tied to psychology. It’s not just food issues but broader topics such as when one feels fear. The website indicates, “What sets us apart is that we’re a highly structured program that provides the insight, education, and skill development to help you understand the ‘why’ behind your stress, so you know how to manage it now – and always.”

What I try to do at least five days a week is eat a heavily Green breakfast and/or lunch. Breakfast is often oatmeal, banana, blueberries, maybe strawberries, 1% milk (yellow), and brown sugar (orange, but I don’t care). Sometimes, lunch is fresh spinach, a five-ounce can of tuna, and light mayo (orange, but whatever.) I can eat out or go to events without thinking they’re all traps to scuttle my goal.

And my goal is another five pounds. Then another five pounds. I’ve long found saying I’m going to get to X weight is not productive for me.

My A1C is down too, and I wasn’t even trying that hard.

The random 2022 post

Carnegie Hall

ice tireThis is the random 2022 post. I think I stole the idea from near twin Gordon. Some folks, such as Kelly, will highlight particular posts. “If you have a blog or other online writing forum, share some of your favorite work from this year.” That sounds like an intriguing idea, but too much work when I can just punt

January 21: What ordinal number is your favorite band’s best album? “Conversely, there isn’t a major Motown artist whose first few albums I would peg as their best, except one.” This was lots of fun. Thanks, Greg.  

February 27: Documentary review: Ascension. “Perhaps more unsettling than the lynchings of over 4,000 African Americans by white mobs were the public, festive occasions these murders became.” I watched the Chinese documentary, then Paramount Plus rolled me to Lynching Postcards, a chilling documentary short.  

March 23:  The follow-up post: ice, COVID, more. “I’ve been trying to access the records of the court case involving my grandmother, Agatha Walker (later Green), and my biological grandfather Raymond Cone from October 1926.” The next sentences: “Alas, I got word that they can’t find the records. They may have been misfiled or destroyed.” Sigh, big time.  The photo above is from this post. 

April 28: Not running for office. “At some level, when I was much younger, I suppose I thought I would someday consider running for public office.” Nope.

May 17:  1972: “Have you ever been convicted of a crime?” “The link has a number of resources.” This was about my “criminal” past and “Ban The Box.”

June 7: Kottke.org – a “quality hyperlink product”. “Lydia Davis was one of the FFAPL Literary Legends in 2021.” A rabbit hole I fell into. 

The second half

July 26: The Lydster at Carnegie Hall. “We took a taxi to the venue and got there by 7:30.” This was probably the most fun I had with my daughter this year. 

August 6: 1972 #1 hits: Watergate break-in. “American Pie, Parts I and II – Don McLean, four weeks at #1.” A Saturday music post.

September 15: September rambling: perfect Yiddish word. “In Memorium Video from this year’s Emmys and going about a decade back.” A linkage post.

October 25: Plan B, when you’re tired. “We have since canceled three hotel reservations.” About the fact that nothing was going according to plan because of COVID, my wife’s leg infection, et al.  

November 18: Me in the autumn of 1979. “In many ways, I remember 1972 better than 1979.” Things in my 1979 diary are totally foreign to me.  Weird.

December 2: From politics to library science. “He blinded me with science!” My life choices.  

Not incidentally, I was weirded out about the passing of Armen Boyajian on December 5. He’s a guy I’ve known since high school who’d been commenting on my blog recently. I answered the question specifically for him, which he may not have seen.  

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