July 31st, 2006

The Temptation Awards:

Dependng on who ya ask it was either good, bad or indifferent. I was comped 2 tix but I just couldn’t make it in time so I sent my ace undercover reporter.

Here’s how it ranked:

The food was the best of any show period, comparable but better than the days back when AVN had their awards at Ballys, AVN could learn a thing or two here specially considering the low ticket price.

The price for the Temptation Awards: 125.00, AVN 250.00

The award categories were heavily borrowed from AVN, it was suggested that may not be such a great idea. Personally I’m with JimmyD…a best anal award is…well kinda tacky.

Considering the issues they had with venues the show came off OK despite some technical glitches, I suspect next time around it will do a good deal better.

The buzz at the show was that the attendance was poor because AVN leaned on performers and companies NOT to attend. Word I get is that Paul Fishbein himself called certain people personally and asked them to not support it. In a way I can understand that, I mean AVN should have every right to protect it’s interests but at the same time they can’t very well claim objectivity about it can they…

Speaking of the 800 Lb Gorilla:

Anyone see the article on me there that suddenly disappeared? To set the record straight I am Producing and Directing the surgery documentary but I am not financing it. and while it is true that I am a mutli AVN Award winner I somehow missed my induction into the Hall of Fame….Maybe they are foreshadowing…

Mark Kernes Writes To Tell Me I am Wrong:

That the FSC NEVER implied that primary producers would be exempt from 2257 inspections. In a word BULLSHIT.

Even in the story on the gay content provider that got inspected Kernes noted that he was NOT an FSC member…as though that would have helped him…it wouldn’t if you are a primaryt producer the injunction by the FSC doesn’t apply to you, only to secondary producers…like AVN.

My Grandfather Passed Away Saturday Morning:

So updates may be a bit sparse…as if they aren’t lately already.

July 28th, 2006

Does Congress Really Want To Protect Our Children? Do You?

In doing the documentary on the plastic surgery of Summer Haze I have been confronted with some facts that both startle and disturb me. Since liposuction is one of the most common forms of plastic surgery I started looking at the cause.

Obviously the cause is being overweight, but why?

You are probably thinking South are you joking? You have to ask? the cause is poor nutrition and not enough exercise.

For the most part you are correct. But what is it that has brought about thisw poor nutrition and lack of excersize.

In my studying this I have discovered that childhood obesity in the United States now sits at near 15 %. That is obesity people…not overweight but grossly overweight enough so to cause drastic health problems.

Did you know that an obese child will lose 17 to 27 years off of his/her life? That doesn’t count smoking and other contributing factors…just the obesity.

Thirty years ago type 2 diabetes in children was virtually non existant, now it has increased to alarming rates and at a proportion that is directly associated with weight increases in children as a whole.

Other previously non existant problems are showing up as well, fatty liver disease for instance.

Yet in all the attention that is being tossed at protecting children from sex on TV and on the internet, virtually no one is giving this problem anything more than a little lip service.

For at least two generations now children have grown up thinking of fast food as a “treat”, they spend time with video games instead of outdoors playing, diet and exercise has given way to convenience and laziness, and as a result our children are becoming obese and dying.

I have news for you, and for our president and congress. People making adult movies by and for adults are not harming your children, we want you to monitor them and keep them away from our product we want your children to grow up happy, healthy and well adjusted. We aren’t doing them anywhere NEAR the harm that you are.

Stop gorging them with empty calories, get them outside to play and if our legislature wants to look for child abuse, they need look no further than the continuous procession of advertising of fast food that targets our children all day long.

Wake up people McDonalds and television are babysitting your kids.

Are you going to take responsibility or just ignore it and hope it will go away? Maybe you will change your mind when you attend your childs funeral…Hey it motivated John Walsh.

HR4472 The Adam Walsh Law Update:

From: Joe Obenberger
To: Clients and recent clients
Re: Special Client Advisory concerning HR 4472, Section 2257
Date: 7.27.07

As you probably know, President Bush signed House Resolution 4472 into law today, effecting substantial changes in the compliance requirments affecting “secondary producers” of explicit sexual material, eliminating doubt that the statute requires republishers and webmasters to maintain and make available for inspection the same records which the producing photographer/videographer must maintain. The House resolution also establishes a federal felony in refusal to permit an inspection and it eliminates a provision defining identity documents, thereby removing a potential conflict with the DOJ implementing regulations. The Act also creates Section 2257A to govern record-keeping with respect to depictions of simulated sex, which will become effective at a later time, after the promulgation of regulations to flesh out its requirements.

I have posted some tools for our clients on xxxlaw.net, including the revised text of Section 2257, a Redlined document graphically illustrating the changes under HR 4472, and a copy of the full House Resolution as enacted.

This law takes effect immediately upon passage. Undoubtedly, its most serious consequences are for the “secondary producers”. While the consequences on cotent that is now online is likely to be slugged out in the courts, much drama, expense, and risk can be eliminated by removing nonexempt content for which you possess no records. For many years, I have advised each of my clients to acquire rights in materials only when the records come along with the content and that remains my advice. Even with respect to exempt content displaying partial nudity in a sexual context, it remains my advice to use only that content that comes with the mandatory records and information - to provide proof of age in any dispute.

Inasmuch as the Department of Justice, for the first time since Section 2257 became law in the early nineties, conducted inspections this week in Los Angeles under that Section, it is clear that the adult internet has been brought into a new and different era concerning Section 2257. We have kept our eyes on the proposed legislation since the first bill affecting it was introduced in December, 2005, and while we are glad to report that some of the most onerous provisions were eliminated along the way before pasasage - including one calling for forfeiture of assetts for violation of this hypertechnical statute - the remaining provisions are serious enough to warrant your immediate attention to resolving compliance issues. We will be delighted to assist you upon request.

On Saturday afternoon eight days from today, on August 5, 2006, at the hour of 1:00 p.m., under the auspices of AVN Online, I will conduct a two-hour workshop on adult intenet legal issues - including obscenity and Section 2257 - at 1pm in Diplomat Ballroom 1 of the Westin Diplomat in Hollywood, Florida. It will be open to all Internext attendees with a Seminar pass. The following morning, at 10 a.m., I will participate in the legal seminar with the other usual suspects. Until this week, I never would have imagined that a standing-room-only audience would appear at ten in the morning on the last day of Internext for a legal seminar. It would not surprise me if precisely that took place, given the developments of this week. I encourage you to attend both events.

If it is your desire, feel free to pass this advisory along.

Kind regards,

Joe Obenberger


J. D. Obenberger and Associates
Attorneys and Counselors at Law
3700 Three First National Plaza
70 West Madison Street
Chicago, IL 60602

Telephone…….312.558.6420
Fax………….312.558.7773
Cellular Phone..312.405.6420
SKYPE Username..xxxlaw

http://www.xxxlaw.net

http://www.adultinternetlaw.com

July 26th, 2006

Why Burden of Proof Should Be on the Prosecution:

OK, so now porners have to prove they never committed a crime all in the name of keeping our shildren safe. Has anyone considered who will be next? Will beer sales or cigarette sales come next? must a store owner keep a record of every single alcohol or tobacco sale and prove that none were made to minors? And what about the privacy of performers, we have already had one major incidence of hundreds of performers information being placed on the net, including photos of passports and social security cards, everything a REAL criminal needs to steal an identity.

Bottom line is if the FSC wants respect they should be on the side of the entire industry, not just those who pay them, further they should do a better job, a first year law student could make the case that 2257 is way off base from a constitutional standpoint. This SUCKS…

 

July 26th, 2006

Shame Shame Shame on the FSC:

The Free Speech Coalition has led everyone to believe that if you are an FSC member you are exempted from 2257 prosecutions untill the lawsuit has been settled. Well Lo and Behold that is not entirely true. The exemption only applies if you are a “secondary producer”. In other words if you shoot your own content, you are NOT protected, this is a small detail the FSC left out when they were lobbying for members.

Is The FSC Chickenshit?:

Now here is what I don’t get. Why isn’t the FSC challenging 2257 on grounds that would protect all of us from Congress, who has passed this law with the sole intent of shifting the burden of proof mentioned above. 2257 allows the feds to prosecute and convict a pornographer whose ONLY crime is not being able to prove he didn’t commit a crime, and for those of you who attended public schools this is ass backwards from our long standing legal premise that the burden of proof is on the prosecution. Why isn’t the FSC challenging the law at this level?

July 26th, 2006

Ya I’m Travelling Again But I Have Some Things I Want To Discuss:

Not the least of which is this whole 2257 thing. While I am four square against shooting anyone under the age of 18 (and even some over 18) It really bothers me that we can now be a criminal simply by not being able to prove we ARE NOT a criminal. It bothers me that the federal government has allowed the burden of proof to be shifted from the prosecution to the defense.

July 14th, 2006

Ya Gotta Love Peelers:

I’m in Dayton, hangin with Tim and Fifi, been here since Tuesday. Now Since tuesday here are just a few of the happenings at Flamingo Show Club on North Dixie in Dayton OH.

The new bartender was told that on every Wednesday she was to water the ferns out in front of the door. So she fills up a big jug with water and goes out and dutifully waters the ferns, as you may have guessed, they are artificial ferns, but she watered both pots making sure the distribution was appropriate and even checking to make sure she did it right. though she was perplexed as to why we were all pratically crying.

Stripper Quote #1:

Its 2:45 AM and this little stripper is sitting in the office waiting on her ride, the club closed 45 minutes before and Tim can’t leave until all the peelers are gone. Tim asks her where is your ride? She says her brother is coming to get her. tim says have you called him? she says no, we communicate via esp. I about lost it and said well esp that motherfucker to get his ass over here and pick you up!

Stripper Quote #2:

Tim gets a phone call in his office, it’s imperative that the caller speak to Bambi (name changed to protect the guilty) the caller insists its a bona fide real emergency. Tim has the DJ page the girl to the office. She gets on the phone and answers the emergency question….What was the emergency? The caller was frantic because she couldnt find the bag of weed.

Stripper Quote #3:

Another emergency call, this time it’s a guy and it turns out he needs money to pay the hotel rent…they are living in a hotel…When Tim asks the dancer what the boyfriend does…the answer…Oh he is between jobs right now….Good Lord…

I Stand Corrected…I Am Allowed to be Wrong Once A Year:

so now Im out for the year…Daniel Metcalf Writes:

Dear Mike,

I know you’re close to the creators of PIRATES, so I thought I’d share this with you. While I applaud them for getting mainstream distribution for an R-rated cut of their very fine film, it’s being described in certain areas of the press as being the first adult movie to win such a release, and the simple truth is that it’s not.
In 1983 Anthony Spinelli created the lavish 40s style film noir melodrama IT’S CALLED MURDER, BABY, starring John Leslie and mainstream Hollywood legend Cameron Mitchell. The film was released theatrically to mainstream theaters as IT’S CALLED MURDER, BABY in its R-rated incarnation (where it did quite well, given its budget) while the XXX cut, called DIXIE RAY, HOLLYWOOD STAR, played in adult cinemas in the same markets simultaneously.
Years ago, Mr. Mitchell granted me two phone interviews prior to his untimely passing in 1994, as the groundwork for a career-spanning biography still seeking publication. In it, he speaks fondly of working with everyone from Paul Newman, Shirley Jones, and Sidney Pontier, to yes, Anthony Spinelli, John Leslie, and, especially Kelly Nichols (whom he genuinely liked and worked with on a total of three films, the best known being THE TOOLBOX MURDERS in 1980).
IT’S CALLED MURDER BABY was the first XXX American release to receive substantial mainstream distribution in R-rated form, but more importantly, its blend of high-art and exploitation makes it a key film in interpreting the 230 film-strong career of one of America’s most underrated character actors.
IT’S CALLED MURDER, BABY Details From IMDB:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0085446/

Ya know…sad thing is I KNEW that and had forgotten it. Dixie Ray was widely considered to be the only porn movie ever made that actually stands on its own with no sex scenes. It was very well shot (on film) and actually had good acting, plot and all

 

July 5th, 2006

I Am Angry

by Susan FassanellaThe Honorable Ron Paul’s piece on why Americans are angry really stirred me to respond. Mr. Paul’s piece speaks about many issues facing Americans today.

I am a 51-year-old woman. I have been married to the same man since 1976. I am the secretary/office manager for a small legal firm in the D.C. suburbs. My husband manages a wine and spirits store. I have two sons, aged 26 and 22. After realizing it wasn’t possible to support themselves and the government at the same time, both returned to the nuclear nest. Along with most people in my economic situation, I believe I am living what is supposed to be the American dream. I know why I am an angry American. I am frightened because America isn’t the same country it was when I was my children’s age. Allow me to share with you some of the reasons why I am an angry American.

I am angry because my government has been taken over by liars, thieves, thugs, deviants, and micromanagers. The propaganda it produces rivals that of the most fascist dictatorship.

I am angry that my government perceives my intelligence to be that of a jar of pickles incapable of making the smallest decision.

I am angry that my government takes it upon itself to shove its clucking nose into my pantry, medicine chest, bedroom, family room, doctor’s office, workplace, and everywhere else it thinks I need guidance to keep me safe from myself.

I am angry that the will of the American people is ignored on every issue imaginable. If voting really mattered, it would have been outlawed long ago.

I am angry that I am called a conspiracy theorist because I dare to think on my own and question authority and its lies.

I am angry that the more I read about 9-11 the more it looks like an inside job that was allowed to happen, enabling the Patriot Act to be conveniently enacted into law with the ensuing “war on terrah” following closely on its heels.

I am angry that the evil puppets in power think laws are created for the peon masses and it is their right to ignore the ones that get in the way of their agenda.

I am angry that the media has sold its soul to the evil forces running the world.

I am angry that my “leaders” have taken to calling my country the “homeland.” It reeks of socialism.

I am angry that my government has invaded yet another sovereign nation and caused untold death and destruction based on a flimsy lie. I am expected to believe that weapons of mass destruction threatened my freedom and then I am told several years and billions of squandered dollars later that a massive intelligence network got the wrong information. A select group of businesses profit enormously from war. When Bush announced his intention to save Iraq from itself and that its oil would pay for the overthrow of Hussein, I laughed so hard I nearly choked. I remember the instability in the Middle East during the 1970s and the gas “shortages” that followed. I knew which direction gas prices would go. How stupid does Mr. Bush and his cronies think I am?

I am angry that the world stands silently by while my government bombs foreign lands with weapons containing depleted uranium and the news magazines wonder on their front covers why lung cancer has increased six-fold in the last year.

I am angry that Americans accept as gospel the propaganda that is routinely cranked out of the Washington lie machine. The lies become more transparent and brazen with each passing year, yet the only thing that seems to matter in living rooms across America is who will be the next American Idol.

I am angry that I am punished with high energy and gas prices and the resulting inflation because tree-hugging terrorists masquerading as environmentalists have handcuffed my country’s ability to produce its own energy. It would be easy to tell the Middle East what to do with their oil if restrictions on exploration and production were lifted in our own backyard.

I am angry that I am constantly admonished by minimalists for being a greedy consumer because I live where I choose, drive the vehicle of my choice, eat meat, and use tin foil to cover my leftovers.

I am angry that my life doesn’t belong to me anymore.

I am angry that I am required to obtain permission, fill out mandated paperwork in quadruplicate, and obtain the correct license or permit for just about everything imaginable. The tentacles of government are strangling my freedom, choice, and privacy at an alarming rate. The wrath of the machine is a constant threat should I dare do anything without leaving a neon paper trail and of course ignorance of the law is never an excuse.

I am angry that property rights are a thing of the past thanks to court-approved eminent domain theft.

I am angry that the Constitution is routinely declared irrelevant making it easier for a fascist police state and new world order to take over.

I am angry that legislation is in the works that will require me to carry “papers” to “prove” who I am. Another coming law I will ignore.

I am angry that my right to own and carry a firearm is drastically regulated and restricted.

I am angry every time I see a young person detained on the side of the road while cops paw through their possessions looking for anything that could enable them to be arrested and dragged through the criminal justice system. This has become so commonplace it is now the accepted norm.

I am angry that roadblocks are set up under the guise of keeping roads free of drunk drivers. What has happened to my right to travel freely? Why am I presumed guilty without probable cause? I am afraid to have a few drinks when I go out to dinner for fear I will be pulled over and end up in court-ordered drug rehabilitation.

I am angry when I read stories of Americans terrorized in airports and treated like common criminals by government minions after they have paid for the right to travel within a private system, yet pilots are blocked from carrying firearms.

I am angry that America has become a nation of busybodies. We are constantly bombarded with messages to be on the lookout for terrorists around every corner, report “suspicious activity,” and rat on our neighbor whenever the opportunity presents itself. Is this not how the Nazis gained control of Germany and then most of Europe?

I am angry that the government requires me to sign a form every time I purchase a prescription. Whose business is it that I choose to take a thyroid medication, an antibiotic, a painkiller, an appetite suppressant, or any other substance? Am I dying of cancer? Am I facing debilitating chronic pain? Do I simply want to get HIGH? Heaven forbid someone out there might get their hands on something that might make them FEEL GOOD! No substance should be illegal or unobtainable. If a person wishes to self-medicate, that is their right. The government should not be in the business of criminalizing personal choices of any kind as long as those choices don’t infringe on another’s rights.

I am angry that my government meddles in the lives of people all over the world but looks the other way on the catastrophic issue of what to do about the millions of illegals who have crashed the gates of this nation. My country’s laws are ignored and mocked, yet I am told I must accept with open arms those who are here illegally. My taxes are used to educate their children in their native language. Hospitals are overrun with indigent people seeking medical care. Untaxed dollars earned in the underground economy are sent to the family back home while social services here are stretched to the limit. I read job want ads stating if you aren’t bilingual don’t bother to apply. What would happen to me if I placed an ad that said don’t bother to apply if your English isn’t understandable? Marches are conducted in my cities’ streets waving their countries’ flags as they shamelessly demand their “rights.” I am told they deserve the same opportunities that brought my forefathers here. I am scolded that it is un-American to ask why they are not sent home. I am told that the term “illegal alien” offends them and that they prefer to be called “undocumented workers” and that my economy would die without them. I will happily pay more for fruits and vegetables if it means enforcing sensible immigration laws. But immigration isn’t about the cost of lettuce. It is another facet of an agenda that is bent on changing the face of America. When America is no longer a wealthy country of white European descent, it will be a place worse than anything Orwell could have imagined.

I am angry that my country is the only nation on earth who declares that a baby born on its soil is automatically an American citizen.

I am angry that the thugs that run my country don’t have the guts to declare English my nation’s official language.

I am angry that I have to search a package for English and push a button on every telephone system and ATM machine to continue in English.

I am angry that Washington, D.C.’s Metro is now being pressured to replace every station sign with bilingual verbiage to the tune of millions of dollars. Are bilingual road signs going to be the next mandated law of the land? I am currently forced to pay for voting ballots printed in 15 different languages and my tax dollars pay for interpreter services for people who are summoned to court for breaking laws. If English is the international language of the world, why isn’t it good enough to be the official language of the United States?

I am angry when I am told I am a bigot when I thumb my nose at political correctness.

I am angry when I wonder whether an expressed belief or opinion could land me in litigation if someone doesn’t like what I said and wants to silence my voice.

I am angry that diversity and sensitivity training is being forced on people whose only crime is to dare to speak freely.

I am angry that the symbols, customs, and roots of my Judeo-Christian country are being systematically outlawed because my culture offends newcomers. When we freely choose to go somewhere, are we not accepting the customs and cultures of that place? I am weary of being made to feel guilty for being an American.

And finally, I am angry that after working my entire adult life, I don’t see retirement in my life’s picture. My husband and I earn over a hundred thousand dollars a year, but by the time we pay federal taxes, state taxes, social security taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, excise taxes, energy taxes, telecommunication taxes, savings taxes, fees, permits, etc., there isn’t much left. But please don’t think that I mind supporting every deadbeat and down-and-outer with his hand out for a piece of my pie that I worked so hard for. I love supporting the world. After all, it’s the American way, isn’t it?

http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig7/fassanella1.html

GhostPro Wants To Send you To The REAL Sin City…Thailand:

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Do you remember Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory? Well instead of purchasing a candy bar and searching for the golden ticket in the package, Ghost Pro is authoring ONE special disk with a winning message for this chance of a lifetime vacation in the Land of Smiles! That’s right, a simple purchase of Asian Suck Dolls v.1 DVD and you might be the lucky winner.

GRAND PRIZE: One winner will receive round-trip air transportation for one (1) from a major commercial airport in the continental U.S., Canada, Mexico, or Europe nearest the winner’s home to Bangkok, Thailand. After flying to Bangkok, the winner will spend 7 nights at The Nana Hotel.

HOW TO PLAY: 1) Purchase or Rent any Asian Suck Dolls Volume One (1) DVD at any adult retail outlet or online store. 2) Open package, place DVD in any compatible DVD player. 3) Winner will receive the following message: Congratulations, you’re the Grand Prize winner of a FREE trip to Thailand. Further instructions, including a redemption security code will be displayed on the winning disk.

As far as I know this sort of giveaway hasn’t been done before, so I am certain that this will be a success.
Thanks for your positive responses.

Tony
http://ghostpro.com

OK now just make sure the screener y’all send me has one a them winnin tickets in it….

July 5th, 2006

My Friend Hart Williams recollects An Important Day:

04 July 2006
Hart’s Blog: http://www.hartwilliams.com/blog/blogger.html

The Bison Tenniel — An Origin Story
Last night my wife Jayne and I engaged in our little ritual of watching the musical “1776″ and went to bed sometime around 2 AM, having renewed our vision of “America.” When I got up on July 4, today, I turned on CNN for space shuttle launch coverage, and, after the anchors congratulated themselves on their impressive picture of the launch pad, they launched into one of those junk news bits that 24-hour news demands.

Where were you in 1976 for the Bicentennial? they asked. And that reminded me of what I’d intended to write and celebrate today. It was a unique sort of American experience, strangely concerned WITH and not concerned at ALL about the 200th National Birthday Celebration.

In a profound way, my writing career began in earnest on the Fourth of July, 1976, the Bicentennial. But before I tell you where I was, I need to tell you how I got there.

In the winter of 1975, I had realized (even though my “body” had already known for a few years) what I was going to be when I grew up. I was going to be a writer. It seemed the only possible answer, and it was not so much an “AHA!” moment as an “Uh, DUH!” moment.

I had been writing specifically for publication since the fall of 1973. Letters in the TCU DAILY SKIFF, true. But concerning the issues of the day. Eerily to me, they are still very readable, and recognizably in my style.

But I hadn’t known it until late December of 1975, and, from that point, I tried to take the classes that would turn me into a writer. It seemed a logical choice. I was a junior in college, had switched from a physics major to a philosophy major, and, while I was minoring in English, to be a writer didn’t require any of that.

After most of a semester with the “writing guru” of TCU, I was utterly disillusioned. Nothing that she knew was of any use to me. Indeed, I read her “experimental” novel in manuscript, and it was just utter garbage. But I was critically reading at a rate of 50-60 books a week — attempting to strip them of their writing secrets.

I know that sounds like braggadocio, but it’s true. I took the Evelyn Wood speedreading course with my then-wife, paid for by my father-in-law to boost his daughter’s college fortunes. At the end, everyone else was reading at about the same speed I was reading at the beginning. I just read fast.

So, I continued reading the way that I read, but it was very fast, and I was reading a lot of science fiction, along with Burroughs, Vonnegut, the Illuminatus Trilogy (which was just coming out as paperback originals), Tolkien, Ayn Rand’s elephant-choker, ATLAS SHRUGGED, Hunter S. Thompson, James Joyce and the rest. I was reading a lot of then-obscure Philip K. Dick (courtesy of Paul Williams’ essay in ROLLING STONE, to which I subscribed), Roger Zelazny, Harlan Ellison, Ursula K. LeGuin, Samuel R. Delany — whose DHALGREN I suffered through, each and every word — Robert Heinlein (though he was then, as now, politically incorrect), Joanna Russ, Cordwainer Smith, Kate Wilhelm, H.P. Lovecraft, Frank Herbert and Theodore Sturgeon.

Pay special heed to those last two names.

My writing professor did me one great favor, though: She loaned me her copy of the 1975 WRITERS MARKET, and, in reading it, I realized that the way that you became a writer was that you MADE yourself a writer. You either did it or you didn’t. It was purely a meritocracy: no degrees, no aid on Earth (or in Heaven) could make you a writer unless you yourself did it.

I took it as a sign that the cover that year was a pencil blasting off into space, as a cartoony rocket metaphor.

Any number of events formed a thought in my mind that in order to become a writer, I would have to go where the markets were. Fort Worth, Texas in general, and TCU’s English Department (and J-School) in particular, offered me no assistance in what I proposed to achieve. It was nailed down when I received my NEWSWEEK one fine spring day: the cover story was: “WHO NEEDS COLLEGE?”

There was a little problem with the student housing office that bears mention, but just barely so.

I had two choices: Los Angeles or New York City.

Since I thought I might like to do screenplays and multimedia work, and not just paperbacks (it’s a steady job/and I want to be a paperback writer/paperback writer — Lennon/McCartney), I chose Los Angeles.

In May, we packed up the household for a long, terrifying journey to LA. I withdrew from my second-semester Junior year classes, and we traveled up to Omaha, and thence across Nebraska, into Colorado, to 1-70, and across to I-15 and Los Angeles, staying with skeptical relatives along the way. (’Skeptical’ being an euphemism for ‘highly doubtful.’)

Green behind the gills we were, driving in the hottest part of the day through the California desert in a 1964 navy-blue Ford Econoline van, and it was touch and go with the temperature gauge for one terrifying day in the Mojave.

We drove all the way to the beach, and spent our first week at the Topanga Beach Motel, in a little bungalow. Across the Pacific Coast Highway was the ocean. We didn’t have a lot of money, so we walked on the beach a lot.

A month later, we’d managed to get into an apartment in North Hollywood; had starved for two weeks while the Bank of America had waited for a Cashier’s Check to clear (they took our money FIRST, told us about the hold only THEN). And we had a fight. She took the Ford Econoline van, sold it, used the money to buy a ticket and fly back to Massachusetts, to her parents’ home in Sudbury.

Then I was sitting an apartment with a month’s rent paid up, no job, four cats, a little money, and utterly terrified. But there was a bookstore within walking distance, and it had a lot of science fiction. I picked up some recently used magazines, including an ANALOG that reprinted Robert Heinlein’s famous speech to the naval cadets at Annapolis on his Five Rules. That got me started.

Heinlein’s Five Rules:

First: You must write.
Second: You must finish what you write.
Third: You must refrain from rewriting except to editorial order.
Fourth: You must place it on the market.
Fifth: You must keep it on the market until sold.
– From James Forrestal Memorial Lecture, April 5, 1973.
That was THE important essay at the important moment in my life. Indeed, in that magazine, there were listings for science fiction conventions, and I noted that one was to be held a couple weeks hence at the Los Angeles Airport, called “WESTERCON 29.”

It would be over the July 4 weekend, but I didn’t notice that. There would be MANY science fiction authors in attendance, including Harlan Ellison, Theodore Sturgeon and Frank Herbert. I had enough money, so I wrote a Bank of America yellow check and mailed in my registration fee.

By sheerest chance, I had enough money.

When the time came, I hitchhiked the thirty or so miles to LAX. Don’t ask me how I did it. At the time you could still hitchhike as a means of transport, but getting from North Hollywood to LAX took sheerest dumb luck. That weekend I had it in abundance.

And so, with no money to get back, and knowing (literally) no one in Los Angeles (except for my cranky Locksmith and Lawnmower Blade Sharpening landlord, whose office was right across the street from my apartment), I arrived at WESTERCON 29 in 1976 with a lean and hungry look.

There, I met three young Science Fiction writers who would play significant roles in my life over the next year, Richard DeLap, the editor of DeLap’s F&SF review, who would publish my first compensated writing in the winter of ‘76; Paul Bond, who would be my roommate and a friend until his untimely death in the early 80s. And Russell Bates, a Kiowa author who is in the Oklahoma Hall of Fame, and with whom I still occasionally correspond. Russell’s preferred coinage is not “Native American” or “Indian” but his own, “Novamundian,” which means, in Latin, a “New Worlder,” more or less.

DeLap passed away in the late 80s. His papers and book collection are housed at the Spencer Library at the University of Kansas, in Lawrence.

I have written of these three elsewhere.

But, and I did not know this until a few moments ago, I met Theodore Sturgeon at William Rotsler’s Birthday Party (a WESTERCON tradition at the time) on July 3. I had always thought it July 4, but I find that I am mistaken. July 4 makes a better story, but there you have it.

Because Bond and Bates were Science Fiction Writers of America members, I had access to the SFWA suite on the top floor of the Hyatt House hotel — which was where the actual writers hid out from the ofttimes hebephrenic fans. And, for the same reason, I was admitted to the Rotsler birthday party.

There, in the bedroom, seated cross-legged on the bed, and surrounded by an exclusively female audience that crammed the room to overflowing, was Theodore Sturgeon, pipe wafting Captain Black’s tobacco (then, a wondrous incense, and not, as now, a horrible attempt at second-hand murder).

We could not enter the room, and so Russell and I stood by the breakfast bar, eating string cheese (the first time I’d seen it), and watching as Jerry Pournelle attempted to remove the cork from a wine bottle with his pen-knife, succeeding to the extent that he managed to spill wine all over me.

But the bottle was yet uncorked and unpourable. Perhaps this explains what would come the following day. But Pournelle had already managed to put a cigarette burn in my polyester print “good” shirt the day before. Why this odd enmity, I shall never know. I requested the bottle, pushed the cork INTO the bottle, and the wine was dispensed. This didn’t please Pournelle, who continued in his boisterous manner.

Bill Rotsler was a great bear of a man, legendary as a fan artist (won a Hugo or two for fan art), a sometimes author (PATRON OF THE ARTS) and a man with connections to men’s magazines (He wrote for KNIGHT and ADAM, which would be significant to my career) and, oh, hell, here’s a bit of the obituary from LOCUS magazine, following Bill’s death in 1997: https://www.locusmag.com/1997/News/News11.html

“William Rotsler was born 3 July 1926 in Los Angeles, California. He worked on a ranch in Camarillo as a teenager, and served in the U.S. Army from 1944 to 1945, learning the profession of photographer. He discovered fandom in the mid-’40s and was part of the Los Angeles fan scene for over 50 years. He attended Los Angeles County Art Institute, 1947-50, and worked as a sculptor of mainly outdoor modern work from 1950 to 1959, then gave it up to become a photographer, filmmaker, producer, director of commercials, documentaries, etc. He worked mainly in the “erotic” industries, selling photos to Playboy, writing columns for Knight and other men’s magazines, writing, directing, or acting(!) — or some combination of these — in such movies as The Agony of Love (1966), Notorious Daughter of Fanny Hill (1966), Shannon’s Women (1969), and The Secret Sex Life of Romeo and Juliet (1970). He frequently used fan friends as extras in his movies. This part of his career mostly ended by the ’70s. During all this, his prodigious output of cartoons and drawings continued unabated. He was fan Guest of Honor at the World SF Convention in 1973.

“He also became a professional writer in the ’70s, first producing non-fiction book Contemporary Erotic Cinema (1973) and then his first and best novel, Patron of the Arts (1974). To the Land of the Electric Angels (1976) was also noteworthy. He collaborated with Gregory Benford on Shiva Descending (1980). Most of his books were movie and TV tie-ins or children’s fiction such as Tom Swift books with Sharman DiVono under the name of Victor Appleton, Jr. His most recent book was Science Fictionaries (1995), a collection of sayings and quotes from SF writers.”
Now, while I was taking this all in, Theodore Sturgeon emerged from the now-disbanded conclave (of which symposium’s subject I remain ignorant to this day), and, since I was standing in the path from the bedroom to the bar, he stopped, and greeted Russell Bates, whom he knew from Clarion:

“Hello, Russell,” he said, and Russell Bates introduced him to me. “This is …” he said. Sturgeon turned and his laser-beam eyes bored into mine:

“If you are going to be a writer, you have to get inside your characters. Don’t just write about yourself. See the world from inside their skin. The (Indians) have a saying: ‘You never truly know a man until you’ve walked a mile in his moccassins.’” And he walked on.

I would not have appreciated the magical nature of this interchange had not Russell Bates been watching closely:

“You didn’t say a thing about being a writer,” he said.

Sturgeon had, in some mysterious, oracular manner, divined my raison d’etre and given me what I needed. This would continue until his death in 1985, although neither of us had the slightest inkling of it at the time.

It remains the first magick in a long and magickal association that continues in a very real sense until this very day. There is not time, nor is this the place to delineate the rest.

Instead, we move forward in that significant weekend to July 4, in the SFWA suite. Evidently Pournelle had taken an instantaneous dislike to me. Why? I do not know. But it was not the first time — nor would it be the last — that a complete stranger has, on a purely instinctual level, instantaneously styled himself (or herself) my implacable nemesis. The anti-matter to my matter, as if it mattered.

Pournelle was at the SFWA bar, talking to Robert Silverberg. The previous night, I had heard any number of “insider” stories from Silverberg, sitting in a hotel room in the wee early hours of the Bicentennial, with a few of his fan friends, being a fly on the wall. He revealed, for instance, that the publisher his ACE doubles had a streak of anti-Semitism, and that he’d written under WASP-sounding names, like “Calvin M. Knox” at the publisher’s insistence. I asked “What does the ‘M’ stand for,” and Silverberg replied, “Moses.” He even autographed a copy of his Knox novel to me as “Calvin Moses Knox,” but, alas, the book has long since been stolen.

Pournelle was talking in an obvious stage whisper, and telling Silverberg about this sweetheart deal he had, speaking to a group of wealthy technophile businessmen, with a great dinner and a sweet honorarium. “You are just the kind of speaker they’re looking for,” he gushed. Then he did a strange thing.

He turned to me, as though I’d said something, and in a LOUDER stage whisper said: “Well, they might want to hear from you after you publish your FIRST NOVEL!” It was meant to be humiliating, and it struck me at particularly vicious at the time.

I was nobody from nowhere, who’d come up with the insane idea that I could move to Los Angeles cold, without any contacts or friends, and become a writer. I had lost my van, and, seemingly, my wife, and was completely broke in a place in which I had nothing to fall back on, and, I have to admit, it was the scariest time of my life.

But Bates said, “You didn’t say a thing to him. He’s just being a jerk.” And I fought back the rising tide of panic, and just maintained.

That was the Fourth of July. What came next was the best part of all, in a way.

Everyone was into the “hip” show, “Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman,” and the latest episode was tuned in on the hotel TV. I was not interested. Bates left to socialize with a group down in the coffee shop, and I could only move as far away from the hotel TV as the suite would permit.

Another fellow shared my aversion to the entertainment provided. He was dressed in a three-piece suit, like Santa Claus attending a board meeting, except that the suit was of a light color, and I think he was wearing a turtleneck. But he looked every bit the successful author.

And so he was.

It was Frank Herbert, the author of DUNE — a book that changed the face of science fiction, and was the first true “breakout” novel of a genre that had been previously relegated to the slot in bookstores somewhere between westerns, nurse novels, and soft porn paperbacks.

And, for an hour, Frank Herbert talked to me about writing. What he said was incredibly important, although I remember little of it. But it was the validation, the justification that whether or not I’d dropped out of college (a huge source of fear at the time), I could be a writer through my own industry. I didn’t need to know all that fancy ‘parts of speech’ and grammar stuff. I could do it. All I had to do was DO it.

He said one thing that has always remained with me, however. He explained that those days, mostly he traveled around giving lectures at universities. And they would ask him complex and abstruse questions about foreshadowing, or split infinitives, et al, and he said this: “I don’t know about that stuff. I’m a newspaperman.”

And then he said this, which I will never forget. “What do you do,” I asked.

“I smile, I nod, and I take their money,” Frank Herbert said.

Here, from Wikipedia:

Frank Herbert was born in 1920 in Tacoma, Washington. He knew from an early age that he wanted to be a writer. In 1939 he lied about his age in order to get his first newspaper job on the Glendale Star.

There was a temporary hiatus to his writing career as he served in the U.S. Navy as a photographer during World War II. He married Flora Parkinson in 1941, but divorced her in 1945 after fathering a daughter.

After the war he attended the University of Washington, where he met Beverly Ann Stuart at a creative writing class in 1946. They were the only students in the class who had sold any work for publication — Herbert had sold two pulp adventure stories to magazines, and Stuart had sold a story to Modern Romance magazine. They married in Seattle on June 20, 1946. Their first son, Brian Herbert, was born in 1947. Frank Herbert did not graduate from college, according to Brian, because he only wanted to study what interested him and so didn’t complete the required courses.

After college he returned to journalism and worked at the Seattle Star and the Oregon Statesman; he was also a writer and editor for the San Francisco Examiner’s California Living magazine for a decade. (for the rest of it, go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Herbert )
Ted Sturgeon had shown me the soul. Heinlein had shown me the way, and Frank Herbert had let me know that I was on the right path. That I wasn’t as crazy as everyone in my family, as the TCU faculty, and my TCU friends, and my wife and her parents seemed to think that I was.

And I remember thinking distinctly the thought: This is the American Bicentennial, and I’m sitting having a one-on-one conversation with Frank Herbert. And it is ironic that what he did was to quell my fear. From DUNE (The Bene Gesserit “Litany Against Fear”):

I must not fear.
Fear is the mind-killer.
Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.
I will face my fear.
I will permit it to pass over me and through me.
And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path.
Where the fear has gone there will be nothing.
Only I will remain.
A few months later, taking Bill Rotsler’s name in vain, I tricked my way into ADAM Magazine, and began a literary association that would continue for the next decade. Later, Rotsler was sure that he’d recommended me, but in fact, I lied. I said that he’d mentioned it at a science fiction convention, and Jared Rutter, the editor, assumed it to be true.

But that only got me in the door. I had to be able to write, and it turned out that I could, and I did. I worked with Rotsler for a long time after that. I was even in one of his soft porn movies, with Kitten Natividad on my arm. (I was clothed. She was not.)

And in 1978, at BooksWest, Ted introduced me to his new wife Jayne. A year later, I would become Ted’s editor at HUSTLER. He was our book reviewer, and I was responsible for assigning him books to review, and rewriting those reviews into HUSTLER style. He would often say, on the phone “Talk to Jayne.”

And Jayne and I would talk, because we were into the same things, and had much in common. Ted became a friend, and remained so until his death in 1985. At one point, when I was living on the edge, homeless in Boulder, Colorado, he told me that when I was in trouble, I could always, and SHOULD call him collect any hour of the day at his new home in Springfield, Oregon. He had relocated there from Los Angeles/San Diego, as his final ‘retirement’ location, after scouring the world for the right place to live.

In 1993, Jayne and I reconnected, after nearly a decade since Ted’s passing, and were married in August of that year.

And so, I find myself surrounded by him, in that magical relationship that continues to this day. I still find his pipecleaners marking pages in paperbacks. I have seen the privately printed copy of Philip K. Dick’s CONFESSIONS OF A CRAP ARTIST that Phil autographed to Ted. And his reading glasses turned out to be the cure for my presbyopia.

I have seen the typewriter on which he wrote “Amok Time” and “Shore Leave” for the original Star Trek, and it turns out to be the same Smith-Corona portable model that I began my writing career on — which I’d been given to go to college, even though I steadfastly refused to type out manuscript of any sort until I had decided in 1975 to become a writer.

The Bicentennial was a transformative weekend in my life, if not THE transformative weeked of my life. Except for Jerry Pournelle, Robert Silverberg and Russell Bates, everyone else in this story has passed away. I haven’t heard from my first wife since 1981, and that time seems almost as long ago as the July day in 1776 when the Declaration of Independence was signed, 230 years ago.

I live in Eugene, Oregon because of that weekend. I am married to the woman that I am married to because of that weekend. I am a writer in large part because of that weekend.

There’s one last grace note: Jayne met Ted for the first time at COMICON in San Diego two weeks after that Bicentennial in 1976.

And that’s what I remember of the Bicentennial. Or, as we styled it, we young SF writers at that convention, “The Bison Tenniel.”

Courage.
.

July 4th, 2006

Happy Birthday America, Get Well Soon.

Photo Credit Brian Gross

It’s No Longer Adella O’Neal

As of the date of this photo June 30 she is Adella ….Ummm Married, though to me she is still and always will be A-Dell. May she and mike live long and …well you know the rest…To her knowledge she is not yet knocked up, but word is they are at least parcticing.

 

Happy Birthday America, Get Well Soon.

Today is Indepedence Day, the day we celebrate the founding of this country and the independence that made us the greatest country the world has ever known.

But today finds all of us at war, a war that we had better win, because our very survival depends on it.

We are at war with people who have violently attacked every single one of the rights enumerated in the Bill Of Rights.

Free speech has been curtailed, relegated to “free speech zones”.

Individual property rights have fallen to eminent domain abuse.

Our guarantees of due process have been stripped away by simply adding the words RICO in an indictment.

We now have to prove ourselves innocent, shifting the burden from the prosecution to the defense, we can even be convicted of simply not being able to prove we didn’t commit a crime.

A simple accusation of treason seems enough to be able to suspend the freedom of the press.

We can’t have a private telephone conversation because the government no longer needs a courts permission to listen in, so every conversation is essentially public.

The things we store on our computer and send to each other do not belong to us, our government is free to intercept them and do with them as it pleases, including use them against us.

Companies who provide us with so called “public services” now make claims that THEY own our personal information.

We are routinely incarcerated for being no threat to anyone else whatsoever.

We cannot freely travel, we must carry identification at all times.

We are not safe in our homes, we can be invaded by gun carrying individuals with no warrant, pretty much anytime.

The list goes on and on and on.

Yes we are at war this independence day, at war with people who would slowly strip away every freedom that this country was founded on. People who see their sole purpose as nothing more than coming up with ways to make criminals out of as many of us as possible, and in doing so have made criminals out of all of us. All the while these very people who should be subject to the laws of this country more than any other people, hold themselves above the law, and have gotten so arrogant about it that they now actually proclaim that they are above the law.

And the sad part is, that we aren’t fighting back.

So many people have given their very lives, and the lives of their loved ones so that you and I could live in a free country and today we look on with disinterest as these freedoms are, one by one attacked an conquered.

And every single one of these freedoms that we have lost, we lost because we allowed the enemy to take this freedom away so that we could be “protected”

Be it from drugs, or terrorists, or communists or whatever dragon the enemy has conjured up to frighten us into blind submission we have turned our head and allowed the enemy of the people another victory.

The enemy has divided us and is steadily conquering us.

When this grand old lady finally dies what will be the epitaph on the tombstone?

Will it say she died a slow death as a result of the apathy of what once made her strong. That she rolled over and let the enemy have their way with her until there was nothing left to take and she simply died with a whimper?

Or will it say she died fighting tooth and nail against all who would seek to rob her of her strengths, the very freedoms that gave birth to her and that she never lost faith that her people valued freedom above all else and that they understood that freedom was a precious thing, a thing worth dying for because without it, they are dead.

This country and our freedoms are ours people, yours and mine and if we don’t protect them nobody will. We may disagree on religion or drugs or sex or rock and roll but I for one will die to protect your right to believe anything you wish, even if I don’t agree with you.

We have elections coming up, lets clean house, lets tell our government, our newspapers and each other that we want back what has been taken from us, we don’t need you to protect us, we can make our own enemies.

Who is responsible for taking more freedom away from Americans? Osamam Bin Laden or George W Bush Jr?

The Taliban or your senators and congressmen?

Public enemy number one is our government and it’s time we met THAT dragon, head on, and slayed it.

Please remember this when you go to the polls, write your enemies and tell them that you want back the freedom that has been taken from you, that they are not above the law and remind them that they answer to you and only you, not oil companies, not lobbyists and not the Wall Street Journal, but to YOU.

It is time we engage this enemy before it is too late

Lest we be celebrating Happy Dependence Day, I fear we may already be.

July 2nd, 2006

SimplyJimmyD is Simply Back:

JimmyD is back to updating, and I for one welcome him…the new site look pretty good too, wordpress template or not..

Steve Writes:

The one thing that is also happening is the econmy. High gas prices, home energy prices and food prices are killing the buyer or renter. Sales in the first quarter were down by 26% over last year. But, I think now the public has re-budgeted and re-tooled for the energy “Crunch” and is budgeting differently. Sales are up in the second quarter and the future looks better.
I think your 100% right on the death of gonzo producers, maybe when their buried and forgotten the other studios will get a little pro-active and produce better porn for “OUR” future!
Go Mikey, Steve, Video Heat

Excellent point, even my paysites have experienced a slight downward turn since the price of gas has skyrocketed, I see a lot more rebills declined now than before largely because credit limits have been hit and that is probably directly related to people using credit cards to purchase gasoline and hitting credit limits.

I have one gas card with a 600 dollar limit..in one single fill up I maxed it out.

How you ask? The boat holds 200 Gallons..this time last year it cost about 300.00 to fill it up. Consider similar situations for truckers, common carriers and everything else that moves the products you and I purchase from one place to another and you can see how this pushes up the cost of everything.

I Got A Mention In the Fort Saskatchewan Record Newspaper Friday:

Why would a provencial Newspaper in Canada have me in the entertainment section? Well it seems like my buddies Wank Punter , who did the South Pole Boogie song and video are taking off in the frozen north and I got listed as an inspiration! Thanks Guys YOU ROCK!

To read the article Go Here: