Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Tuesday TV Touchbase: Jeopardy!

 


Let's  touchbase on Jeopardy! this week.

The show has had an incredible run by a multi day champion named Jamie Ding.

As of last night the New Jersey resident rang up this 17th win with earnings totalling  $494,012, which 8th on the regular-season money list all-time and 19th overall.

This puts Jamie on Jeopardy's top 10 list of contestants with the most wins.  

Jamie first appeared on Jeopardy! on March 13, 2026.  Some of the games since that time have been close.

For one game, Jamie set the lowest one-game winning score of season 42 in regular-season play with $3,933.

But in this same streak, he also had a game that set a season 42 records for the highest amount won in a single game,  $56,400.

Mostly, Jamie has been a buzz saw against his hapless competitors, frequently ending the game going into Final Jeopardy completely out of reach. A lot of times, the only real suspense is to see who comes in second. 

Jamie Ding certainly has nature and nurture working in his favor. His father is a professor of neurosurgery at the Wayne State University School of Medicine and his mother recently retired as a math teacher.  



Jamie Ding's favorite color is orange and he always wear a shirt or sweater this is all or at least part orange.

Andrea and I are also following Celebrity Jeopardy All Stars with returning season champions Ike Barinholtz, Lisa Ann Walter, and W. Kamau Bell along with 18 other past celebrity contestants who have actually won some games.  

So far the play has been pretty solid with these celebrity players who actually know stuff and act like they know what they're doing. So far, this run of episodes as avoided Emily Hampshire levels of embarrassment.

Recently, Ken Jennings hosted a special game called Jeopardy You Tube Edition featuring Monรฉt X Change, Rebecca Black & Brennan Lee Mulligan as contestants.

For all you AD&D people out there, there is only 1 round, not 2 with a Final Jeopardy round at the end. It clocks in at just a few secs under 20 minutes. 

You can watch the game here! 

Here's the post game discussion.


And for any of you have perhaps forgotten what "Baby Shark" sounds like....


Wait!  What did one of you other there say? Really?!?

No, man! Fuck YOU!

Just for that...


 OK, so that is that for this week's Touchbase.

Next week it's 2nd season wrap ups for St. Denis Medical, High Potential and (at long last) Fallout!

Until next time, remember to be good to one another and try to keep it down in there, would ya? I'm trying to watch TV over here.   


Monday, April 6, 2026

Now Let's Get This Strait or Welcome to the S.E.P.


In The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, writer Douglas Adams posits ways to make things invisible.

Most involved complicated machinations involving mirrors and light distortions to make something invisible to the eye.


But what about making something invisible to the mind?

It starts with taking the thing you want to make invisible and doing something weird to it, such as painting a mountain bright pink.

Then you slap an "S.E.P." around it.  An "S.E.P." is a low grade telepathic field that makes something "somebody else's problem." Out of mind, out of sight, if you will.

I apply the term "S.E.P." to my job for things that come into our department that are not things our department actually does. And I'm proud to say the term is catching on.

In a team meeting,  a co-worker was discussing some requests we received that we simply do not and cannot do.  She remarked, "Like David says, that's an S.E.P."  

Now declaring something an S.E.P. is not to be taken lightly. We have to be absolutely sure it's something we are not set up to do, not trained to do, not supposed to do. And even then, we have a responsibility to communicate it to the correct parties who are set up, trained and supposed to do the thing. 

I consider calling something an S.E.P. as a near sacred trust. We can't declare a thing as an S.E.P. simply because we don't want to do it.  

Like clearing the Strait of Hormuz.

We're, what, 5 weeks into our war with Iran.  We've been bombing the shit out of Iran and they have responded by jamming up the Strait of Hormuz, thus blocking 20% of the world's petroleum products. 

Everbody predicted that any military action taken against Iran would cause Iran to block the Strait of Hormuz. 

Either Li'l Donnie didn't know that was something Iran could do or he was so starstruck by his own war propaganda that he didn't conceive of Iran being able to do such a thing after we bombed the shit out of them.  

So Iran blocks the Strait of Hormuz and now my goddam gas is $4 a fucking gallon.๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜ 

Which is just the beginning of the pain. ๐Ÿ˜ข

Higher prices at the pump means it costs more to transport shit so stuff at stores gets more expensive.

Natural gas is used to make fertilizer and farmers already fucked over by Trump's tariffs are now paying more for fertilizer.

So Trump hit up NATO and even China to help unclog the Strait of Hormuz.

The response was a deafening indifference.

Donald Trump has spent years denigrating and insulting member nations of NATO as well as China and he did not bother to consult them before he launched his war against Iran. 

So who would be surprised that these countries would be less than eager to clean up a mess they didn't make? 

Well, Trump seemed perplexed by their response but then, he's stupid.  

Last week, der Fรผhrer posted this proclamation on his mildew rotted Truth Social.


Trump is trying to make the Strait of Hormuz an S.E.P.   

Well you dumb fuck but we can still SEE the Strait is jammed up and NO, it is NOT somebody else's problem.

YOU started the war with Iran that caused Iran to retaliate (as everyone but you knew they would) to close off the Strait of Hormuz.

YOU! BROKE! IT!  And you can't make someone else buy it.

Well, I suppose we're buying it in the form of fucking four ๐Ÿ˜  goddam dollars ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜ a fucking gallon, you goddam ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜  motherfucker! ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜ ๐Ÿ˜ 

Am I angry about that? Why, yes, yes I am. 

So after trying to make the Strait of Hormuz an S.E.P. by schlepping it off on to Europe, Trump pulled out his box of crayons and scrawled out this message:  

"Remember when I gave Iran ten days to MAKE A DEAL or OPEN UP THE HORMUZ STRAIT. Time is running out - 48 hours before all Hell will reign down on them."

Did he mean to say "reign" instead of "rain"? 

So bombing the shit out of Iran made Iran close the Strait of Hormuz.

So even more bombing more of the shit out of Iran will make Iran OPEN the Strait of Hormuz?

The beatings will continue until moral improves. 

Then on Easter Sunday, der Fรผhrer doubled down on his threats.

Aren't you glad we didn't elect a WOMAN as President who would be all crazy, hysterical and emotional? 

It's good that we have a MAN who is cool, calm and professional.  

Why, yes, I am being fuckin' sarcastic, you crazy bastards! 

Where was I? Oh yeah...

This whole damn war with Iran has been one continual cycle of contradictions and uncertainty. 

One minute Li'l Donnie is chastising Europe that it's THEIR problem to get the Strait of Hormuz open.

The next, Dumpster Trumpster* is making even BIGGER threats of action by OUR military to force open the Strait. 

*"Dumpster Trumpster is a new nickname I'm taking out for a spin. I haven't quite made up my mind if it will be a regular parrt of my repetoire.  

I really wish I could consider Donald Trump an S.E.P.  But my wallet won't let me do that.  ๐Ÿ˜ข

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Moon Trekking - The Artemis II Mission

The Artemis II Mission to the moon continues.

Below is a photo taken of the Earth from the Orion space module.

We're actually looking at the night side of the planet with the sun on the far side. Hence the halo effect on the edge of the globe.

The Earth is visible as it is being lit by moonlight. 



This image provided by NASA shows a downlink image of Earth taken by NASA’s Artemis II astronaut commander Reid Wiseman inside the Orion capsule on Friday, April 3, 2026.




Below is a video from the Artemis crew as they discuss among other things some issues they are having with the space toilet.  

Which is what they get for installing the Howard Wolowitz Zero-Gravity Waste Disposal System. (Yes, that is a Big Bang Theory reference.)




Here is another video of our space people in their space ship doing space stuff in SPACE!  


As noted in the video, the capsule has the space of approximately 2 mini-vans.  


Not exactly the expansive carpeted wood paneled bridge of the Enterprise 1701-D but a bit more wiggle room than the old Apollo capsules.   

Still a bit tight for my claustrophobia.  

This has been a most interesting experience to follow as humankind ventures out 250,000 miles from planet Earth.

Can't wait for those close up shots as the Orion capsule goes' round the moon. 

Star Trekking - The Next Generation - Season 1 - "11001001"


And we're back with another edition of Star Trekking, my blog's regular outpost for all things Star Trek.   

After two weeks in the relative present with Starfleet Academy and other modern series made by Alex Kurtzman and Secret Hideout, I thought today I would turn to the past.

But not as you might expect to the original series. 

Instead I'm going to dedicate a series of these posts to Star Trek: The Next Generation

The approach I've decided to follow in this exploration is to turn to one single episode per season for this and the next 6 posts.

The episode I select each week is not necessarily and objectively the best of that season but one that I particularly liked. It is very much a selective subjective perspective.    


The first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation was a bit of a mixed bag, to put it politely.  

For a show made 20 years on from the original series, TNG still managed to look chintzy and cheap. 

Instead of wry commentary on the modern human condition, TNG stories frequently offered ham fisted parables on par with an after school special.

Even with an English Shakesperean AcTOR at the top of the call sheet, performances felt flat and perfunctory.  Dialogue was stilted recitations of scripts lacking in nuance or character.

It didn't help that Gene Roddenbery really doubled down on the ideal that by the 24th century, pesky little human foibles like hate, jealousy and some other 3rd thing would be behind us. Which might make for an ideal future but does not make for ideal television drama.

Paramount was prepared to go forward with a new Star Trek TV series.  But studio execs felt that doing it without Gene Roddenberry would be a deal breaker for the Star Trek fandom whose support Paramount desperately needed for any new Star Trek TV show.  This did a lot to feed Roddenberry's ego.

An ego that was causing turmoil backstage with a revolving group of writers flummoxed by Gene's restrictions and his continual interference in their scripts.  

There were some episodes that survived this critical crucible that hold up as strong installments from season 1.

"Where No One Has Gone Before" which was introduced the Traveller and a raison d'รชtre for the irritating Wesley Crusher.

And "The Big Goodbye" which gave us that frustrating trope of the holodeck glitches out and tries to kill you but the episode does it with humor and style.

But the episode I wanted to spotlight today was the 15th episode of the 1st season, airing on February 1, 1988.

"11001001" was written by Maurice Hurley & Robert Lewin and directed by Paul Lynch. 

The Enterprise's arrival at Starbase 74 looks epic and almost cinematic. That's because the Starbase was lifted from Star Trek III: The Search For Spock.  


The Enterprise is there for some minor repairs and a retrofit of the ship's computers led by an alien race known as Bynars. The Bynars are a race interconnected with each other and their homeworld's master computer, making them really super good at computer stuff. 

With the Enterprise docked at Starbase 74, that leaves some down time for the crew.  

What to do? What to do? 

Capt. Picard and Commander Riker have a conversation about that. 

PICARD: Well, I have a little work to finish up, then I'm going to my cabin. I'm going to put my feet up, I'm going to turn on my personal relaxation light and I'm going to lose myself in the pages of some old novel. What about you, Number One? You've earned a rest.

RIKER: I've never been very good at organizing my time off. Something'll turn up. It always does.

Up until this point, Riker felt too stiff, too strictly adherent to his sense of duty. The sly twinkle in Riker's eye when he says "something'll turn up. It always does" is good indicator of the warmer, more relaxed approach Jonathan Frakes would bring to the role when he grew his beard for season 2.  

With the crew not dealing with the alien thingy of the week, the crew finds other ways to occupy their time.

Riker catches up with Tasha Yar and Worf who are off to play some form of sportsball. 

TASHA: We've been challenged to a friendly game of Parrises Squares by some of the maintenance personnel. Want to join us on the starbase?

RIKER: You've already got all the players you need.

TASHA: We can switch off.

RIKER: No, you know if you do that in Parrises Squares you lose the rhythm of the game.

TASHA: I can't talk you into coming with us?

RIKER: No. But win, all right? The pride of the Enterprise goes with you.

WORF: Rest assured, Commander, we will be victorious. At whatever the cost.

RIKER: Worf, it's just a game. A little friendly competition, You work up a sweat, you have a few laughs, and you make new friends.

WORF: If winning is not important, then, Commander, why keep score?

Yeah, that sounds like the Worf we'll come to know better over the course of the next few years.  That intensity, that feeling of pride and a desire for victory sound like (and I don't want to insult our favorite Klingon here) those human foibles that Roddenberry was wanting to avoid.

I'm gonna take this opportunity to pile on with a bunch of other Trekkers to complain about Tasha Yar.  But... damn! 

Nobody seem to know what to do with Tasha Yar. Maybe we can chalk it up to Denise Crosby not being that good of an actor? Or the mostly male writers in the 1980's were clueless how to write for a strong woman in charge of a starship's security who might also be... interesting? 

It would be a  shame if Tasha Yar died before things got better for her character.

SPOILER: Tasha Yar died before things got better.  

NO! Not in this episode. Parrises Squares is not that dangerous.

Riker keeps wandering the ship.

"Something'll turn up. It always does."

Riker runs into Dr. Beverly Crusher who is all twitterpated over meeting some brilliant cyberneticist on the Starbase to compare notes. 

Is "compare notes" a euphemism for sex?

Listen, this is Star Trek. What it really means is the Crusher is meeting some brilliant cyberneticist on the Starbase to compare notes. 

Riker also checks in with Geordi (a blind man) who is teaching Data (an android) how to paint. Riker thinks this is an exercise for the history books.

Riker goes to the bridge where Wesley Crusher is watching the Bynars who are acting squirelly.

Or the Bynars are just acting like Bynars? Who knows?

Who are we to judge how an alien culture behaves? 

(It's a TV show. And yes, they are being squirelly. More on that later.) 

Riker tells Wesley to keep an eye on 'em and he continues is journey through the ship. 

When he arrives at the holodeck where some Bynars have finished some upgrades.  And the computer linked aliens ask if he would like to take the new and improved holodeck for a spin.

"Something'll turn up. It always does."

Riker says sure and orders up a made to order holographic fantasy.

RIKER: Jazz.

COMPUTER: Era?

RIKER: Circa 1958.

COMPUTER: Location.

RIKER: Kansas City. No, wait. New Orleans. Bourbon Street Bar, New Orleans. Around two a.m.

COMPUTER: Programme complete. Enter when ready.

(A nightclub with a slightly raised stage, tables with candles for light)

RIKER: Very good. Very good indeed. Now I'll need someone to play with. A trio. Piano, bass and drums, and a 'bone for me.

(The musicians appear)

RIKER: Now an audience. Whoa. Too many. I was thinking of something a little more intimate.

(A single blonde in a red dress)

RIKER: Great job, boys. But, computer, blondes and jazz seldom go together. (a red-head) Now that is truly exceptional. But more sultry.

Now I am going to confess my real reason for coming to this episode for today's Star Trek post.

Director Paul Lynch takes his own sweet time moving up a long pair of legs (and they go ALL the way up!) and we finally get to the beautiful face of a sultry brunette sitting at the bar.


Say hello to Law & Order's Carolyn McCormick as Minuet who is just dripping with sexual allure.

Riker looks upon this and is well pleased.  

RIKER: Gentlemen, if this is what you call enhancement, you've got a gift for understatement. What's your name? Tell me you love jazz.

MINUET: My name is Minuet and I love all jazz except Dixieland.

RIKER: Why not Dixieland?

MINUET: You can't dance to it.

RIKER: My girl. What's a knockout like you doing in a computer-generated gin joint like this?

MINUET: Waiting for you.

RIKER: Waiting for me? You can't be serious.

MINUET: Oh yes, Will. I've never been more serious in my life.

"Something'll turn up. It always does."

BOING!!!

So Minuet cranks up the sultry to "11" and Riker is getting all wobbly and wondering if he can fuck this hologram.

FUN FACT about the holodeck: Whatever is created by the holodeck will vanish when the program ends.

Whatever is brought in to the holodeck will NOT vanish when the program ends.

Which is why ensigns on the lower decks dread holodeck clean up duty, especially after Riker uses it.

Let's continue...

RIKER: How far can this relationship go? I mean, how real are you?

MINUET: As real as you need me to be.

(They kiss for a long time, then the holodeck doors open and)

PICARD: Astounding.

RIKER: Captain!

Yes! It's Captain Cockblocker just as Riker was getting ready to get some with the hot babe made of photons and force fields.

Note to self: Remember to lock the holodeck!  

PICARD: Oh, I'm sorry, Number One. I didn't mean to interrupt.

RIKER: No, it's all right. Come on in.

PICARD: You picked a wonderful locale. This is something I might have chosen myself.

MINUET: Aren't you going to introduce me?

RIKER: Captain Picard, this is Minuet. Minuet, Captain Jean-Luc Picard.

MINUET: Enchantee. Comme c'est merveilleux de vous voir ici.

PICARD: Incroyable! Vous etes Parisienne?

MINUET: Au fond, c'est vrai, nous sommes tous Parisiens.

PICARD: Oui, au fond, nous sommes tous Parisiens. The spirit of that city can always enchant my soul.

First season weirdness: Because Jean-Luc Picard is a French name, there was a habit of having our English Shakespearean AcTOR get all Frenchy, spouting shit in French, proud of his French heritage, you know like Chekov on the original series would get all prissy that Russians ("Wussians") invented everything.  

So early scripts would shoe horn some French stuff into Picard's dialogue.  It was a habit lost in subsequent seasons.   

Meanwhile and elsewhere from this computer-generated gin joint, the anti-matter containment on the warp core is breaking down. Unable to locate Picard or Riker (the holodeck has isolated them from communications and bio-scans), Data orders the evacuation of the Enterprise and sets the ship to auto-pilot itself away from the Starbase before it goes ka-boom!

Once the ship is apparently empty and it has cleared the Starbase, the anti-matter containment restores itself and the ship flies away.

Various plot contrivances keep the Starbase commander from sending any ships to go after it.

By way, where is Picard? Or Riker? Or the Bynars? Or Perry the Platypus? (Whoops! Wrong show.) 

Meanwhile back in the computer-generated gin joint, Picard and Riker try to leave to check on the ship but Minuet is really urgently, desperately pleading with them to stay with her.

  • They need to dance!
  • They need to play darts! 
  • They need to do some other 3rd thing!

Which just makes Picard and Riker all the more determined to leave. And what they find is an abandoned ship under a red alert flying to the Bynars' homeworld.

Minuet provides the scoop.

  • The Bynars are dying.
  • Their homeworld computer was whammied by radiation from a nearby supernova.
  • The Bynars need the computers on the Enterprise to reboot their planet.
  • Minuet's job was to keep Riker and Picard out of their way.

The Bynars on the ship are nearly dead but Riker and Picard save the day by completing the program to reboot the Bynars and their planetary computer.  

Then Picard gets all cocky that he can fly the Enterprise back to Starbase 74.

(I need to remind you that Data earlier set the damn thing to fly itself so hey, Jean-Luc, maybe flying it is not the big deal you're making it out to be.) 

Without the Bynar's influence, Riker is not able to re-create Minuet on the holodeck.  

(Minuet will make a surprise appearance in the 4th season.) 

I'm not going to oversell "11001001" as a great episode. It has difficiencies common to the first season of TNG. But among the scattershot quality of those 1st season episodes, I find "11001001" to be an enjoyable re-watch and something of a harbinger of the better quality seasons to come out of TNG.

Next week on Star Trekking: 

It's season 2 of Star Trek: The Next Generation and the show is still contending with back stage chaos and uneven quality on screen. 

But there are some gems from that season and I'll pick one for next week's post. It may surprise you. 



-------------------------------------------------

Later today we go from science fiction to science fact with a post about the Artemis II mission to the moon. 

We're gonna go Moon Trekking!  

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Movie Time: Glen Or Glenda

The husband of former Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem is a crossdresser.

It was reported on Tuesday Bryon Noem shared photos online of himself in women’s clothing, often with fake breasts while hanging out with fetish models.

"Fetish" leaves a lot to the imagination so let's narrow it down it a bit: the fetish in this case is  “bimbofication” .

So what the hell is that?  I'll let Britanny Wong at Huff Post tell the tale about that.  

Bimbofication is a practice, kink and/or fetish that involves role-playing and transforming oneself into a stereotypical portrayal of a “bimbo:” Cartoonish, often surgically enhanced boobs, heavy makeup, overdone lip injections, a girlie aesthetic (short skirts, tight shirts).

So Kristi Noem is reportedly devastated by the reveal that her husband is a crossdresser.

And on that note...

It's Movie Time! 


Today's movie post takes us back to 1953 and a "classic" from Ed Wood, the filmmaking genius who gave us Bride of the Monster and Plan 9 From Outer Space

This particularly cinematic excursion is called Glen or Glenda.

Ed Wood wrote and directed the film as well as starred in it (under the alias "Daniel Davis") as Glen.

Or when he's in a skirt, heels, angora sweater and blonde wig, as Glenda.

Unlike other movies by Wood, this one had someone else as the producer, George Weiss.  

Weiss wanted to make an exploitation movie based on the sex reassignment surgery of Christine Jorgensen, which made national headlines in the U.S. in 1952. 

Ed Wood took George's money with a promise he would do just that.

But Ed Wood gave him Glen or Glenda instead.  

The movie stars Delores Fuller who was Ed Wood's girlfriend at the time. She plays Glen's fiance Barbara who is unaware that her darling Glen spends part of his day as Glenda.  

Glen or Glenda also stars Bela Lugosi as...

As...

I'm not sure who the hell Bela Lugosi is supposed to be.

I'm not sure Ed Wood knew either.  

Bela Lugosi is a... scientist, I think?


Or he may be a trickster god or a demon spirit of some kind?


He appears at the beginning of the film and periodically at random points as he interjects himself to leer at the proceedings.


Or angrily demands to be shown to a better movie?


Here is some of Bela's purple prose from 
Glen or Glenda.

"People... all going somewhere! All with their own thoughts, their own ideas... All with their own personalities. One is wrong because he does right. One is right because he does wrong. Pull the string! Dance to that which one is created for!"

Yes! Pull the string and dance, you magnificent bastard! Dance!

"A new day is begun... A new life is begun!".

"No one can really tell the story. Mistakes are made. But there is no mistaking the thoughts in a man's mind. The story is begun".

Was this written by Donald Trump's speech writer?

"Beware. Beware. Beware of the big green dragon that sits on your doorstep. He eats little boys. Puppy dog tails. Big guns. Wicked women. Beware. Take care... Beware! Beware!"

Damn it! I didn't beware and now I'm watching Glen or Glenda.

And now a green dragon is gonna eat me?

What the holy fuck is Bela Lugosi saying? And why?

No answers are forthcoming. 

Bela's not the only one talking at us. We also get some narration of a more forthright nature from Dr. Alton who provides us some insight why Glen likes to dress like a woman and the impact it has on his life and on his relationship with women.

Dr. Alton is very emphatic that Glen is NOT a homosexual. Just because his underwear is made by Maidenform doesn't make him a pervert, don't you know? 

(It's the 1950's. It was really important to assert manly comformity and heterosexuality even while wearing a skirt and stockings.) 

Glen really likes being with a woman.

He just also happens to like being a woman.

(Hey, that's pretty clever turn of a phrase if I do say so myself.)

So Barbara is just giddily in love with her rugged mister he-man buddy-buddy heterosexual manly man Glen while Glen wonders if he should introduce Barbara to Glenda and if Glenda could borrow her lovely angora sweater 'cause Glenda has a skirt that would just pair with it divinely.  

A lot of this movie plays out like an old silent film as characters pantomine madly across the screen to dramatic music.  Thankfully, we have Dr. Alton's narration to bring us up to speed.

With occasional interjections from Bela Lugosi to... to...

Whatever the hell he's doing in this picture.

Anyway, to visualize the hell that Glen and/or Glenda go through in agonzing over what to tell Barbara, we get 15 minutes of.....

Some really weird shit. 



A fever dream pastiche of BDSM and orgies and some fucked up dude in a devil mask and....

Holy shit! Is Bela Lugosis masturbating to this shit? 


It so happens that Ed Wood's movie was coming in at less than an hour so producer George Weiss added approximately fifteen minutes worth of additional footage salvaged from some unproduced exploitation films.  

So if the sequence makes even less sense that the rest of this nonsense, well, there's a reason for that. It wasn't made for this movie. It's there to fill time. 

Eventually we get back to Glen/Glenda and Barbara learns the truth of her fiance's secret life.  

She's a bit weirded out by it but as a show of support for her man, she gives Glen the angora sweater off her back.


What a real pal! 

Eventually Glen, Barbara and Dr. Alton meet up where the good doctor figures out the source of Glen's obsession with feminine garb (his father was distant, only his mother truly loved him, blah blah blah) and figures out that frequent and rigorous legally sanctioned sexual intercourse with Barbara will wean Glen off the need to be Glenda. 

Or Barbara will need to learn to share more of her wardrobe with Glenda. 

Since George Weiss is paying the bills, Ed Wood adds a final sequence that delivers on the sex change promised in the movie poster, the tale of how Alan became Anne. 

Alan was a World War II vet who helped storm the shores of Normandy. Underneath his combat fatigues, Alan was wearing silk panties. Oh, he such a Nazi killing scamp, our Alan. 

This sequence comes complete with lots of war movie stock footage as stuff blows up real good.  

Unlike Glen who was just content to wear women's clothes as Glenda, Alan decides to go the whole enchilada and swap out his enchilada,  undergoing sex reassignment surgery to become what Dr, Altron calls "a lovely young woman" named Anne.

While Anne may now physically be a woman, she has to learn how to act like one. For example, sitting in a chair with your legs spread out is a no-no. 

Also no spitting, burping or farting is allowed.

Anne is now a proper lady.

And we're done! 

Whoa! What the hell was that?

While producer George Wiess wanted a film that would sensationalize the headline making sex change surgery of Christine Jorgensen in 1952, Ed Wood focused more on  transvestism because, hey, write what you know. Ed Wood was a cross dresser and wanted his film to be a plea for tolerance for transvestites.  

Ed would often appear in public in a matching pants and coat but instead of being a man's suit, it was a woman's pants suit. 

Glen or Glenda has long been considered the worst movie ever made and having sat through it myself recently (a colorized version can be found on Tubi), yeah, it really does earn that title with it's thread bare production, incoherent storytelling and discordant tonal shifts.  

And whatever the hell Bela Lugosi was doing. 

Lugosi was the biggest name in Ed Wood's repertoire of actors and frequently pressed him into service even if there was no real need for him. 

And Lugosi, racked by old age and drug addiction, would take any work he could get, even with a small time operator like Ed Wood.

Lugosi's role in Glen or Glenda makes absolutely no sense but there is no denying the absurdity of his scenes are completely captivating. Those scenes may be stupid but Lugosi is definitely game to do....whatever this is. 

If you do choose to see Glen or Glenda, do not do what I did, watching it while awake and sober. 

Heed the warning of Bela Lugosi!

"Beware. Beware. Beware of the big green dragon that sits on your doorstep. He eats little boys. Puppy dog tails. Big guns. Wicked women. Beware. Take care... Beware! Beware!"

Yes, dear reader, beware! BEWARE!!!


Friday, April 3, 2026

Your Friday Video Link: Tig Nataro


For this week's edition of Your Friday Video Link, we're gonna focus on comedian, actor and notable lesbian person Tig Nataro.  

In addition to her role as Jett Reno in Star Trek series Discovery and Starfleet Academy, Tig hosts a digital series called Under A Rock, an interview show where Tig interviews celebrities that Tig has no knowledge of.

For example, Tig sits down with Modern Family star Julie Bowen.  

And before the interview is over, maybe Tig will know that she is sitting down with Modern Family star Julie Bowen.  


"Would you like to feel my pacemaker?"

Yes. Yes, I would.

Next up, Tig needs to figure out her guest is Big Bang Theory Star Kaley Couco. 

And Tig and all the rest of us may learn how to pronounce "Couco".  


Not let's follow Tig Nataro into SPACE  with scenes from Star Trek: Discovery with Tig as Commander Jett Reno.  


More Tig Nataro as Jett Reno, this time from Starfleet Academy. Reno busts out some Oscar Wilde on her cadets.


And that is that for this week's edition of Your Friday Video Link.

Until next time, remember to be good to one another.  

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Random Thoughts

Littered about today's posts are some comic strip panels I posted to some posts back in spring 2019.

Last night, der Fรผhrer himself, Donald Trump, co-opted some prime time television to ostensibly address the nation about the war in Iran.

In full disclosure, I am writing this post the day before that speech so I may be wrong but given every single thing Li'l Donnie has ever done, I don't think I will be wrong about what he said last night.  

So Trump....

  • lied.
  • got angry 
  • contradicted himself.
  • lied some more.
  • denied reality.
  • blamed Joe Biden.
  • threatened allies.
  • claimed the war is won
  • promised to keep fighting the war.
  • persisted in lying.

I could go on but hell, we've lived through this moron's bullshit too long now. You know the drill.  

If Trump actually delivers an address that is calm, rational, unifying, sensible and reassuring, I will eat my hat.

  • OK, step one: buy hat.
  • Step two: eat hat. 

Problem: due to tariffs and war, I can't afford a hat.

Wait! Andrea has a hat.

  • OK, step one: steal Andrea's hat.
  • Step two: eat hat. 

Again, I fully expect my future diet will be hatless.

I have tomorrow off from work.

For Good Friday.

This is not some personal observance of a religious holiday.

It's a company holiday.

If I hear Donald Trump or one of his ilk rant and rave that Christianity is under attack, I must address that the Fortune 500 company I work for does not give us the day off for Ramadan or Yom Kippur.  

On the other hand, our firm will be shut down on the date that commerates the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.  

Hey, it's a day off and I'm certainly not complaining about that.

But I am pissed off at alleged Christians who try to present themselves as martyrs to a faith under siege who live in a country where businesses will close for Good Friday.


This weekend will be Easter Sunday.

I have Andrea's gift ready in the form of a small Easter basket of goodies.

Yes, she is an adult person and who expects gifts for Easter other than children looking for candy from the Easter Bunny.

Well, she does and she's already bought something for me and I had to retaliate.  

I can't let Easter be a shut out. I have to put up some kind of fight. 

That is that for this post.

We're back tomorrow for Your Friday Video Link.

Our Movie Time Post on Saturday is about a bizzare film from the 1950's that is surprisingly topical.

Until next time, remember to be good to one another.  

Tuesday TV Touchbase: Jeopardy!

  Let's  touchbase on Jeopardy! this week. The show has had an incredible run by a multi day champion named Jamie Ding. As of last nigh...