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Showing posts with label lafler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lafler. Show all posts

Friday, February 5, 2010

Nostalgia Trip

Forgotten Items

Going through the vaults I came upon these never before printed images.

This is a ticket stub from a Worcester Dead concert in 1987.





I took this picture of a flag draped fan outside a Grateful Dead concert in Springfield on March 25, 1985.





A ticket stub from a 1984 New England Patriots game. 





Paul Walker leaving Nora's Variety Store in Pine Point in 1984. 





Me and Jay Libardi in 1983.

 



Springfield historian Greg Metzadakis at the WAIC studios in 2004.





The Twig Painter Richard Doyle celebrating the completion of his painting "Hot Winter" in 1988.





A Doyle prank publicity photo. 





Me in Doyle's gallery in 2003.





Here is decorated combat veteran Mark Ecker of East Longmeadow introducing the Jefferson Starship in Northampton in 2007. After surviving horrific injuries in Iraq, Ecker was tragically killed in a car crash last summer.





The San Francisco band It's a Beautiful Day performing at the same concert. It was indeed a beautiful day. 





This picture was taken at the dedication of a section of Forest Park in Springfield as The Devine Way in honor of my mother, the ecologist Joyce B. Devine. Here my Uncle John is reading his poem about my mother called "The Lodge at Porter Lake" which was also printed in the newspaper article about the dedication in the Springfield Republican.





Here is my father with two of his grandkids Emily and Brett taken on his last Christmas.





Another Kind of Trip

UMass cartooning legend Steve Lafler was recently asked by a relative if Steve could guide him to the land of the magic mushrooms:





My visiting father in law expressed interest in visiting Huautla de Jiminez, the remote mountain town in the northeast corner of Oaxaca famed for it's magic mushrooms. I've been living in Oaxaca for 2.5 years, and of course I'm well aware of Huautla and it's sacred mushroom rituals. I have been in no rush to get there and gobble down magic fungus, as I approach them with respect and a wee bit of caution these days. Past experience with them has generally been wonderful. I consider that the 'shrooms themselves have a sense of humor and important information for human beings.

To read about Steve's adventures click here:



Political Trip

Jack Villamaino of East Longmeadow has formally announced his candidacy for State Representative. Here he is on the right at his official kick-off this week with Northampton's Dr. Jay Fleitman. 





Holyoke State Rep. Michael Kane and WGBY's Jim Madigan.

 



Today's Music Video

Here's Evan Dando at Northampton's Iron Horse a few days ago.





A new one from Hamp's School for the Dead.





Tony Pierce photo.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Steve Lafler's Book

For Bohemians

UMass cartooning legend Steve Lafler received a lot of emails when the following image appeared in the fashion mags:





The model is wearing headgear that UMass alumnus of a certain age would recognise. Lafler explains:

People have emailed me since yesterday regarding the appearance of a funny hat in New York during fashion week on a male model. The hat, from designer Thom Browne, looks just like the foil hood that my character Gerald Forge wore in my college comic strip, Aluminum Foil.

Gerald appeared with his side kick Benb for four years in the Massachusetts Daily Collegain. The strip was so popular in it's hey day in the late Seventies that the foil hat became the default Halloween costume for the tripping masses at UMass (yup, the late 70s saw Halloween become a three day psychedelic bacchanal at the UMass, Amherst campus).

Was Thom Browne even alive then?! Who knows. But I got a huge kick out of seeing Gerald's doppleganger on the runway. The only thing missing was a GIANT DOOBIE OF STINKY BUD!


As Steve explains, he also has a new book out:





Part entrepreneurial primer and part swashbuckling memoir with lots of hilarious anecdotes, Self Employment For Bohemians is available for $12.00 plus shipping. The book offers a lot of nut & bolts advice for freelancers, wound up with tales of my adventures in cartooning, publishing and running a wholesale custom T Shirt shop. Just like the header on this blog says, if having a regular 9 to 5 job is your idea of a living death, this is the book for you!

To order your copy go here.



An Outrage!

From Google News:



NEW YORK — New York's iconic Empire State Building will light up red and yellow Wednesday in honor of the 60th anniversary of communist China.

The Chinese consul, Peng Keyu, and other officials will take part in the lighting ceremony which will bathe the skyscraper in the colors of the People's Republic until Thursday, Empire State Building representatives said in a statement.

The upper sections of the building are regularly illuminated to mark special occasions, ranging from all blue to mark "Old Blue Eyes" Frank Sinatra's death in 1998 to green for the annual Saint Patrick's Day.

Just last week the tower turned bright red.

However, that was not to mark some other communist achievement, but the 70th anniversary of the film "The Wizard of Oz" in which Dorothy wears ruby slippers rather than the silver of the original L. Frank Baum novel.


So those are moral equivalents? The Wizard of Oz and Chairman Mao?



Hamp Things

This truck parked in downtown Northampton this morning reminded me of the amazing Paolo, still twittering away in New York City.





Is this sign in front of First Church serious?





On the woodland way downtown this morning after the rain stopped.