400th Post on Nostalgia and Now

Nostalgia and Now started in April 2009 and the article today by David Gasten was the 400th article posted at the website.

85,039 visits have been made to Nostalgia and Now. 2,102 visits have been made so far this week.

The first full month in 2009 showed 526 visits during May of 2009. The alltime high for one month was October of 2010 when 14,039 visits were made. That happened because an article on the death of Barbara Billingsley who played June Cleaver drew many more readers than usual to the website.

Twelve posts have brought over 1,000 visitors to the website. The following list gives the total visits for each post:

Classic Television: Leave it to Beaver….15,282

Home Page……………………………………………15,115

Dust Bowl: 1930-1940 What Caused It…  4,386

Reality TV: The Little Couple……………..  3,446

Classic Cars………………………………………….2,483

Radio Flyer Wagons: Then and Now……2,075

1950′s Prices……………………………………….2,004

Four Months in Vietnam……………………1,786

From the Past: Burma Shave Signs…….1,717

Growing Up With  Model Trains…………1,629

Drive In Movies Still Operating…………1,593

History of Baby Ruth Candy Bars………1,009

One of the fastest rising posts has been Lizard Lick Towing which was posted earlier this week and is already No.9 among all articles for the last 30 days with  156 visits. Towing News has linked to the Lizard Lick article from their website.

The biggest surprise to me is the large number of visitors who read the Dust Bowl article. I wasn’t really expecting much interest since it ended about 70 years ago. None of us can comprehend how it affected those people and how it affected the states of Oklahoma and California.

None of this would be possible without the loyal readers who have came to the website from Facebook, Twitter and Digg.

I want to think each reader that has visited the site. I have written so many nostalgia posts, that I am running out of topics, and  welcome anyone that has a topic that is nostalgic related, to send any ideas for nostalgic posts to:

Niteowl049@msn.com


Favorite Southern Gospel Song: The Lighthouse

Kenny Hinson and the Hinsons sing The Lighthouse in a concert before his death.

There have been many great southern gospel songs written and sung in the history of southern gospel music but the song that is my personal favorite is The Lighthouse sung by the Hinsons.

This song is southern gospel music at its best and when the rest of the Hinsons join in with Kenny for the chorus it gets even better. Then the crowd joins in at the end to sing the chorus.

Review: Beverly Kenney Sings For Playboys

My friend David Gasten who writes great reviews is writing a post today that will be shared with Nostalgia and Now readers.

He is writing about the Beverly Kenney Sings For Playboys album. As David mentions in his review the album is available for downloading at Amazon.com for $7.99. It is an even better bargain when you consider there are no shipping charges for downloads.

The David Gaston review from Amazon.com:

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most perfect albums you’ll ever hear (review for the “Nostalgia and Now” blog), March 4, 2011
By 
David Gasten (Denver CO USA) – See all my reviews
This review is from: Beverly Kenney Sings For Playboys (MP3 Download)

“A word to Playboys: I would not recommend this album as Music to Make the Romantic Approach By. You’re apt to get more interested in Beverly than the girl you’re trying to impress.” –Steve Allen

1950′s lady jazz vocalist Beverly Kenney looked like she had it all going for her. She had performed with many of the jazz greats of her day, and was even part of the Dorsey Brothers Orchestra for a time. The musicians and artists in New York City’s Greenwich Village scene respected her musical talent, and jazz fans from the period perceived her to be an heir apparent to Billie Holiday. She had even appeared on national American television, rounding out a May 18, 1958 episode of The Steve Allen Show. But on the evening of April 13, 1960, this promising and lovable vocalist committed suicide by ingesting a lethal mixture of Seconal and alcohol. She was only 28 years old.

To this day, jazz enthusiasts still ask amongst themselves: why did she do it? It’s a question that we still don’t have a complete answer to. But what we do have is a body of recordings that provide a whole new way to hear the vocal jazz genre. And of Beverly’s six LP’s, the true masterpiece is “Beverly Kenney Sings for Playboys” (1958), an almost perfect album that everyone who loves Vintage music needs to own.

Imagine a calm evening when you are up late, wrapped in a cozy blanket, with a book, the glow of a reading lamp, a crackling fireplace, and the moon peeking through a window as your only companions. You are thinking about someone you love, who is away and cannot be with you, and you wish so much that they could be there at your side. “Beverly Kenney Sings for Playboys” is this situation’s unofficial soundtrack. The melancholy solitude, the disarming warmth, the romantic longing–they’re all here on this album. And the album gently spills it all forth as effortlessly and quietly as the night itself.

The instrumentation is sparse–Beverly Kenney on vocals, Ellis Larkins on piano and celeste, and Joe Benjamin on bass (there are no drums or percussion). But there may not be a better example in the world of “less is more”. Beverly Kenney’s voice is so uninhibited and human, and as delicate as a fine crystal figurine. She does not worry about singing notes perfectly, or at least not in the way that we are trained to think “perfect” to be. While other jazz artists obsess over perfection and technique, Beverly lets you fall in love with the vulnerable, fragile, and slightly sad little girl that she is, and makes you want to wrap your arms around her and keep her safe from the world. No amount of perfectly sung notes stand a chance next to something–someone–this soft, this gripping, this tender–this REAL.

Listening to Beverly Kenney Sings For Playboys for the first time may end up being the longest and shortest 35 minutes of your life, all at the same time. The album opens with a playful, light-hearted version of the Gershwin standard “Do It Again”. Then track two, “A Woman’s Intuition”, unleashes the stilling, arresting intimacy that dominates the album. The song grips you like a kiss or touch that comes at just the right time and in just the right way–or rather the memory of this kiss or touch from someone who has since left your life. The album continues to grip you in silence, leaving you bordering on tears from the gently aching romantic void that it opens up. Occasionally another light, playful track gives you a slight break before Beverly and her accompanists go in for the kill–a soft, gentle kill, but a kill nonetheless–all over again. As another famous standard (which she covers on this album) says, “It’s Magic.” Unbelievable, absolute magic.

After many years of being available solely as an expensive Japanese import, “Beverly Kenney Sings For Playboys” is finally available in the US as an inexpensive MP3 download from Verve Reissues. Beverly Kenney and “Beverly Kenney Sings For Playboys” have together changed this writer’s life to the point that he will never be able to hear lady jazz vocals in the same way again. He will wager that Beverly Kenney may end up becoming one of your favorites as well. So do as yet another track on the album suggests, and “Try A Little Tenderness” by downloading a copy of this record and letting it work its magic on you. You’ll never forget it.

13 iPads Stolen From Fla. Wal-Mart

One of the six thieves caught on surveillance camera as he enters into Wal-Mart before the six stole 13 iPads.

Wal-Mart store in Fort Myers, Florida will be re-examining their security measures, after 13 iPads were stolen. Six people were involved in the theft with one unlocking the case with the iPads and the others helping load them into shopping carts.

This was a well planned heist since they walked into the store individually to avoid suspicion and then waited while one of them unlocked the case.

The first question is how was this case unlocked without a key. The second question is how were they able to load the iPads into a shopping cart without being detected? Maybe because of the early hour there might not have even been a clerk in the department.

Makes me wonder if one of them diverted the attention of a clerk taking them to the other end of the electronics department away from the iPads (if a clerk was in the department).

The third question is how did the six people stuff the iPads into their clothing with them being 7.31 inches wide and 9.50 inches deep. How many people have pockets inside their clothing that are 7.31 inches wide? One of the six had to be carrying three iPads assuming they each took two each with one taking three iPads.

It would arouse suspicion if the six were all walking out of the store holding their coats closed to prevent the iPads from falling to the floor.

The main question is how did they get out the door with the iPads without the buzzer going off since they were unpaid items and where was the greeter? Did they disable something on the iPads to insure they could get out of the store without being detected?

One more question is why wasn’t someone monitoring the security camera for the electronics department? If someone was watching them they wouldn’t have time to even unlock the case .

It is inconceivable that they could steal thirteen iPads valued at $8,027, stuff them in their clothing and stroll out the store undetected.

Wal-Mart has surveillance video of the thieves but need help in identifying them.

http://www.northfortmyersneighbor.com/page/content.detail/id/508630/Tips-wanted-on-WalMart-thieves.html?nav=5164

The Crime Stoppers has more photos posted at their website and the release states that the thieves entered the store at 5:55 AM on February 25 and left the store at 6:05 AM. The photos in the following release from Crime Stoppers are very clear and it should be a matter of time before the thieves are behind bars.

All they need is some names to go with the faces. It is surprising they haven’t been arrested but they could be out of the area by now, considering it is over a week later and there are no followup stories about them being arrested. They may have been traveling hundreds of miles to hit this store and may be in another part of the country by now.

http://www.swflcrimestoppers.org/Press%20Releases/2011%20Press/110303_Photos%20Released%20Of%20Thieving%20Troop%20Who%20Stole%20Thousands%20From.html

American Idol Judges: Improvement Over Last Season

The American Idol judges for Season 10, Steven Tyler, Jennifer Lopez and Randy Jackson are making us forget Simon Cowell.

The Season 10 American Idol judges panel of Steven Tyler, Jennifer Lopez and Randy Jackson are showing they are better than the panel of judges from Season 9.

I think most viewers thought we would miss Simon Cowell this season but the show has done well in the ratings despite the departure of Cowell. The contestants this year are fortunate to not have to deal with the snarky comments of Cowell.

Kara DioGuardi to me did a great job last season and still don’t understand why she was not allowed to come back for the new season even if it meant having a fourth judge.

Ellen Degeneres was by far the worst judge ever on American Idol and her departure was a foregone conclusion. She was more worried about trying to be funny than judging the contestants. You could almost feel the tension when she tried to make a comment about a contestant. She was clearly uncomfortable in the judge’s role.

To her credit she realized she was not a good fit for the show and left after her first and only season.

All three judges this season are quick to make their comments unlike Degeneres who seemed to be thinking of what to say next as she was talking.

Steven Tyler for the most part has been gracious to the contestants and seems to feel their pain when he makes his critique of their singing.

Jennifer Lopez has been an excellent judge and is quick with judgements of the singers with no dilly dallying around before saying what she wants to say. Her breakdown after telling Chris Medina he was not going home showed she really cares about the contestants.

Randy Jackson the only holdover from Season 9, and the only judge to last the whole series,has been the closest to being the Simon Cowell of the panel. However he  still stops short of being vitriolic as Cowell. He knows what constitutes good music because of his musical background.

One thing for sure is that these judges have picked some great singers for American Idol this season. Last season was not a good one with Crystal Bowersox and Lee DeWyze battling to be American Idol.

Bowersox was good but not in the same class as Kelly Clarkson and  the Season 9 winner DeWyze has recorded an album with good reviews but the sales are not going well.

Since Carrie Underwood won in Season 4, Taylor Hicks won in Season 5 and may be known as the biggest failure of any winner. Hicks started a streak of winners who have not done well  with album sales and are not getting much exposure.

Season 6 winner Jordin Sparks, Season 7 winner David Cook, Season 8 winner Kris Allen and Season 9 winner Lee DeWyze are not in the same class as Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood. Clarkson and Underwood stand above the other American Idol winners.

Chris Daughtry who finished 4th in Season 5 is by far the best non-winner having sold the third most albums behind Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood.

James Durbin could be the Chris Daughtry of the 2011 season but it is questionable if he can sing any song without him hitting high notes. He could be in trouble if they have a Frank Sinatra week or country western week but it will be our chance to see if he can sing well without an extra high note.

Back to the judges, they are poised to have a great season and hopefully they will help the viewers choose an American Idol who will join Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood  as one of the greatest selling Idols ever.