Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Americana Lives --- Day 8/274

Walk: SPCA, Hood
Distance: 4 miles, Yoga

Besides Tom Hanks breaking down into tears when accepting the Cecil D. DeMille Award at the Golden Globes, this is by far the most heart-warming story Ciwt has encountered in the year 2020.
She reprints it in its entirety.  (Just look at that picture!  Aaww).

Don Russell (left) is stepping down as publisher and editor of the Mountain Messenger. Carl Butz (right) is taking over on Jan. 20, 2019.  Established in 8153, the paper covering Sierra and Plumas counties is the oldest weekly newspaper in California.

California's oldest weekly newspaper, which once featured the writing of Mark Twain, has been saved.
A California man is taking over the Downieville-based Mountain Messenger, covering school board meetings, federal land use and other issues in rural Sierra and Plumas counties northeast of Sacramento.
Carl Butz, 71, said he canceled plans for a multi-month trek across Europe and Asia to step into the role of editor-publisher, beginning Jan. 20.
"I've been a widower for three years and this is a new chapter in my life," said Butz, who lives in an off-the-grid cabin in Downieville. "What am I going to do? Go on another trip around the world? Instead, I'm doing something good for the community, and I feel good about it.
Established in 1853, the Mountain Messenger publishes every Thursday with a circulation of about 2,400. Mark Twain famously wrote a handful of stories for the publication under his real name, Sam Clemens, while hiding out from the law.
"He'd accepted a challenge to a duel in Virginia City, and the State of Nevada had just outlawed dueling and so the governor said, 'Look I can hold this warrant for 24 hours, but you got to get out of here,'" said Don Russell, 70, the current publisher who is retiring.
Russell said he has tracked down two of Twain's old stories in the archives and said, "They were very short, one column by three or four inches. They were not particularly entertaining."
After 30 years of doing everything from selling ads to reporting stories, Russell is ready to step down. He has spent the past year trying to find a new publisher and said in recent years covering expenses has been challenging. His salary last year was $3,000.
"We found a pigeon to carry it on!" Russell said. "I'm very happy about it. He is now on the porch talking to the L.A. Times. He and I had been talking about it for a long time. I had pretty well talked him out of it. This is a losing business. But he's an old-timer, and well-connected to the community, related to half the county. It's a very easy and casual hand-off. The paper is in good hands."
A retired independent software consultant, Butz plans to do some writing and editing and will be recruiting new writers. The region is popular for outdoor recreation and he hopes to increase coverage on mountain bike and snowmobile trails and campground availability.
The paper currently doesn't have an online presence and he may explore making a digital version available, but he has no plans to turn off the presses.
"I got all these papers from the 1800s. They're wonderful to be reading now," he said. "Nobody is going to be doing that 100 years from now with the digital stuff. I'm not a Luddite but I think there are some things we shouldn't lose. The printed word being one of them."





























































































































































































































































































































































































Monday, January 6, 2020

Not So Golden Fashion --- Day 8/273

Walk: Hood
Distance: Just a mile, Yoga

Well, Ciwt wasn't particularly accurate in her Golden Globes guess yesterday: 8 out of 18 and Ricky Gervais was totally unfunny.  But then many of the dresses weren't winners and several were awful.

The Not Good 



                         



The Totally Awful




Sunday, January 5, 2020

Golden Guesses --- Day 8/272

Walk: Pickle, Hood
Distance: 4 miles, 1 hr. pickle, small yoga



Here we see Ciwt's projected winners of the Golden Globes tonight in categories where she has seen (most of) the movies and shows.

Best Supporting Actor in Series,  Made for TV Movie, etc. :  Henry Winkler (should be Skarsgard)
Best Supporting Actress in Series, Made for TV movie: ?, only saw Emily Watkins who was Great
Best Actor in a Television Series/Comedy:  Bill Hader (Barry)
Best Actress in a Television Series/ Comedy: Phoebe Waller-Bridge (Fleabag)
Best Actor in TV Series Drama:  ?
Best Actress in TV Series Drama: Olivia Colman (The Crown plus Ciwt just likes her)
Now Ciwt will begin skipping categories; there are so many!
Best Series Made for TV:  Chernobyl
Best Motion Picture, Foreign Language: Parasite
Best Screenplay/Motion Picture: Bong Joon Ho, Han Jin Wan (Parasite)
Best Director: Martin Scorsese (The Irishman)
Best Supporting Actor: Brad Pitt (Once Upon a Time in Hollywood)
Best Supporting Actress: Didn't see enough, but heard Kathy Bates was outstanding
Best Actor in Movie Comedy: Leonardo di Caprico but it will probably to to Daniel Craig
Best Actress in Movie Comedy:  Awkwafina (The Farewell)
Best Actor in Movie Drama:  Antonio Banderas (Pain and Glory)
Best Actress in Movie Drama: Renee Zellweger (Judy)
Best Motion Picture Comedy: Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood
Best Motion Picture Drama: The Irishman

PS - Hope Ricky Gervais is Fabulous..

Saturday, January 4, 2020

On My Mind --- Day 8/271

Walk: Main Library
Distance: 5 miles, small yoga stretch

photographer unknown, Auguste Rodin (1840-1917), The Thinker, Golden Gate Park, ca 1917

The Thinker in Golden Gate Park?! Ciwt was shocked at the California Pioneers Museum to see an early 1900's photograph of Auguste Rodin's monumental statue pondering (or brooding) in front of Golden Gate Park's Conservatory of Flowers.

The entire time she's lived in San Francisco  The Thinker has occupied its famously prominent place in the courtyard of the Legion of Honor. So Ciwt had forgotten to remember that there was a time lag between his arrival in San Francisco and the opening of the Museum (Big) Alma Spreckels built, filled with Rodins and other significant art works and donated to the City of San Francisco.

Big Alma (her beloved nickname) acquired her copy of The Thinker* from Rodin personally in 1915 in Paris after she was introduced to the artist by their mutual friend Loïe Fuller. Later that year and ahead of the Great War, the statue was shipped to San Francisco and included in the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.  (This seemed a near impossible feat to Ciwt until she learned the huge bronze is actually hollow up to the shoulders and made of two casting: one of the seated figure and the other of the rock he is crouched on).  

After the Exposition closed, The Thinker was moved to the Golden Gate Park location Ciwt saw in the photo at the top of the page.  And there it stayed until the Legion of Honor was opened in 1924.

Okay, now Ciwt has one less thing to scratch her head about.


* There are several copies of The Thinker exhibited throughout the world (Cleveland, Philadelphia, Buenos Aires,  Moscow, Tokyo among the sites).  The original was purchased and installed outside the Pantheon in 1906 as a gift to the city of Paris. It was moved to the gardens of the Rodin Museum in 1922.  

Many/Most Rodins are posthumous casts, some quite recent, commissioned by collectors.  Our/Alma Spreckels' Thinker is particularly valued by scholars because it was made by the artist himself, or under his supervision during his lifetime.  Thus it is assumed to represent Rodin's own vision of its finish and final appearance.  




  




Thursday, January 2, 2020

George Fiske, Photographer --- Day 8/270


Walk: Pickleball (yes)
Distance: 2 miles, 2 hours pickle, yoga stretches

     George Fiske, Yosemite, image 234, ca 1880
                                                     George Fiske, Yosemite, image 220, ca 1880


Yesterday on her walk through the Presidio's Society of California Pioneers Museum Ciwt was introduced to the photographs of George Fiske (1835-1918).  Originally from New Hampshire, Fiske came to California to seek his fortune and in short order became the first year round photographer in Yosemite.  He established his studio in the Valley in 1879 and sold his work to tourists from his small shop in front of it for thirty-nine years. 

Ciwt was very impressed with Fiske's eye and his evocative  images, so modern for his time and so cutting edge even today.  But don't take Ciwt's word for it when you could hear the world renowned Ansel Adams thoughts on Fiske's work:

After Fiske's death in 1918 his surviving negatives were discovered in the attic of The Yosemite Company's sawmill.  Then a young apprentice, Adams was hired to print them and advocated for their careful preservation.  Unfortunately to no avail and the sawmill with the remaining negatives was burned to the ground in a calamitous fire.  Years later, Adams wrote "Had that not happend, Fiske would today be seen as a top interpretive photographer.  I really can't get excited about Watkins or Muybridge.*  I do get excited by Fiske.  I think he had the better eye." 


* Carleton Watkins and Eadweard Muybridge.








Right There, Ciwt --- Day 8/269

Walk: Presidio Main Post
Distance: 5 miles, Yoga



So once again this year Ciwt emerged from her holiday rabbit hole to find there was a sparkling world out there.  And, as always, it was right under the seat of her pants.  Or just down the hill in her backyard,  El Presidio de San Francisco, ie The  Presidio.  An on-going treasure trove; more in later CIWTs on that.

That seat of one's pants thing never ceases to amaze Ciwt.  You think you have to travel to points unknown for answers.  Or she does.  But nearly always what you/she's looking for is in a walk, or a book read peacefully in her living room, or grooming her cats as they purr.  For others it might be trying a new recipe, building something in their workshop, even taking a nap.  The list is endless of course.  But the wonder is the number of times Ciwt forgets this - then is amazed to finally notice what is right there under the seat of her pants.







Favorite New Year Thought --- Day 8/268

Walk: No
Distance: Yoga