May 29, 2008

THE PIZZA PARLOUR


I like to eat Pepperoni Pizza. I eat it with more vigor and more frequency than any other foodstuff in the cosmos. It is a raging passion of mine. I was schooled in the art of pizza enjoyment at a very young age. My classroom was a place— a hut actually, designated solely for pizza eating. It was called the Pizza Hut.

Here I receive instruction from my dad in 1974.

My extensive lessons taught me that the pizza eating environment is a key factor (yet often overlooked) in a fruitful dining experience. In its heyday, our Pizza Hut adhered to the same decorating trends that were prevalent throughout the nation's pizzerias. These surroundings made pizza consumption feel like a primal ritual. The eateries were cave-like; low lit dens, often arranged around a central fireplace, where families could gather and feed on their pizza wheel peacefully and free from the threat of predators. Engirdling walls of brick and wood paneling further provided a sense of security and comfort. This kind of atmosphere has grown scarce in these days of the chilly, florescent carry-out lobby where those forced to dine-in are silently pitied by the eternal line of customers.

Occasionally I encounter a pizza joint that faintly echoes my golden years of pie-eating. I was recently introduced to such an establishment— Pizza Parlour of Fort Smith, Arkansas

The road sign exhibits two more architectural motifs that go hand-in-hand with proper pizza feasting: the black wrought iron brings to mind the power of a medieval armory while the arrow of light bulbs contributes an air of kinetic excitement. These elements, along with a portly, mustached pizza chef and a zesty, hand-lettered logo combine to make a hefty promise to the potential patron. But could this restaurant possibly live up to it? Let us continue...

Before you cry "ex-Pizza Hut!" I'm told by several reliable sources that this place has always been a "Parlour" since its construction in 1980.

The primary corridor offers glimpses of the dining hall through blanks in the brickwork pattern. Transversely, the wall of textured plexiglass struggles to keep the legions of pre-assembled pizza boxes at bay.

Next we stroll past the universal sizing chart and the all-important pizza incubators.

The chef reappears to proclaim a solitary commandment.

There's that soothing wood paneling, and note the stack of red cups to the left. These are the archetypal fountain drink tumblers for the ideal pizza meal; perfect in size, texture, and color.

The booth is essential to a complete pizza experience. Pizza Parlour gets bonus points for the hunger-inducing red vinyl, and note that there are no unsightly rips. Nothing is as unappetizing as a booth gash spilling over with dirty flakes of foam cushion (and the coinciding saggy seat). Some places dare to aid this with a grotesque patchwork of tape which inevitably peels at the edges leaving gray, sticky residue on your pants. This is equally offensive. The only thing I would add to the setting above is a standard red and white checkered tablecloth and one of those candles in bulbous colored glass, wrapped in plastic netting.

Yes, there is a monstrous stonewall fire pit with a wraparound chainmail screen.

On the left you can see the entrance to the restrooms. The light fixtures on either side are by far the greatest facet of the interior design...

These two glass boxes sport a variant of the excellent logo and somehow rotate in perfect unison.

In a brilliant move, the sides alternate between the name and the hungry chef.

But of course, all of this is meaningless without good pizza. Well, the pizza at Pizza Parlour (and I can only speak on behalf of the Pepperoni because that's all I care about) was just right. Crisp crust and ample, tasty toppings. Simple as that. Somehow the cuisine even possessed a "classic" sensibility to it. I was reminded of the pizza of my childhood. And equally pleasant was our friendly and ever-present waitress.

Completely satisfied, I proceeded to the checkout counter. When the cashier announced my total I attempted to correct her.
"Oh, I had a drink with that too."
"It's included in the price of the buffet." she said with a smile. I feel the need to type that once more...
The drink, my Diet Coke with multiple refills, was included in the price of the all-I-could-eat buffet of tasty pepperoni pizza in the comfy vinyl booth. So did you catch that buffet price on the sign in the earlier photo? Five dollars, forty-six cents.

I'm still amazed.
I hope you're reading this Pizza Parlour; you are a wonder of the modern pizza world. My sole suggestion is that you should consider replacing those water stained ceiling tiles. Better yet, swap 'em all out for black ones, but such things are petty on a full belly of delicious, inexpensive pizza goodness.

Thanks Pizza Parlour for embracing the essence of American pizza.




(Here's a map to the place.)

May 26, 2008

JEAN SHEPHERD- SHEPHERD'S PIE


You know his legendary storytelling from A Christmas Story, but have you ever wondered what Jean Shepherd (1921-1999) has to say about the rest of our annual American rituals? Shepherd was a longtime radio personality and a successful author who's fierce sense of humor, expert wordplay, and uncanny ability to evoke powerful "sense memories" made him a true master of retrospection. Or as he put it— the "pleasant tinglings of mingled regret and exhilaration that we all call nostalgia."

Here I'm offering a super-sized album of eight recordings of Jean reading some of his own published "short" stories (perfect for summer listening!) complete with a nifty new "cover" design. Jean serves up laugh-out-loud wit as he guides you through all the places you'd be lucky to visit this summer— the county fair, Saturday matinĂ©es at the Orpheum, and the yearly family drive to the cabin by the lake. Shep also covers prom and a devastating fireworks display before concluding with two of his familiar Christmas pieces.

These stories are a joy. Shepherd is at his hysterical best and his intricately detailed childhood accounts are unabashedly personal, which is why I'm continually amazed at how closely I relate to his experiences which took place nearly half a century before I passed through Kiddom myself. So go ahead and download all seven and a half hours of bliss, and merrily drift into the Shepherd state of mind— "settled down comfortably into my soft, eiderdown bed of remembrances of things past. There are times when you just have to let it go."

UPDATE! Download from...
Zippy Share

99.3 MB, (32kbps)
9 tracks, 7.5 hours
(Contains some objectionable language)

Track List-
County Fair
Leopold Doppler and the Great Orpheum Gravy Boat Riot
Ollie Hopnoodle's Haven of Bliss
Ludlow Kissel and the Dago Bomb
Wanda Hickey Night of Golden Memories Part One
Wanda Hickey Night of Golden Memories Part Two
Murderous Maria
Little Orphan Annie
Red Ryder Nails The Cleveland Street Kid

My thanks goes to the Jean Shepherd Archives from which I culled these tracks (and which is unfortunately down at the time, hopefully just temporarily.) So if this collection leaves you wanting more then I recommend subscribing to The Brass Figlagee, an all Jean Shepherd podcast.

GOING BICOASTAL


While my S.S. Adams book is typically sold in magic shops, I think it's super neat that the few comic book retailers who are clued in on it seem to be among the coolest in the nation. My thanks to Mark Newgarden for pointing out that Brooklyn's new Desert Island comics is one of them...


and note the fully stocked S.S. Adams 24 peg rack. Now that's classy.

The view out their front window

It looks and sounds like a labor of comic love; a place I'd wish to find myself on a Saturday afternoon after payday. (They were also nice enough to make Secret Fun Spot a link of the week.)

And when you're on the left coast and in desperate need of sequential art, stroll into L.A.'s Secret Headquarters for an atmosphere more akin to Wayne Manor than the bat cave...



Stunning, no? Check out their blog for events and other secret stuff.

A hearty thank you to Desert Island and Secret Headquarters for seeing fit to peddle my wares. 'Tis an honor to be inside your walls. (Um, not in a Sheena Easton sort of way.)

May 11, 2008

SECRET FUN BLOG TURNS 2

Remember the year 2006? Gas was merely three dollars a gallon, James Blunt told us we were beautiful, YouTube existed independent of Google, and there was only one Pirates of the Caribbean sequel. The world was naive and innocent, the perfect time for a bright-eyed, retro-headed webmaster to proudly proclaim "I'm going to add a blog to my web site!"
Friend...that webmaster was me.

I'm not sure why I picked the most beautiful month of the year to delve into this neverending project, but two years ago today I published my first two posts. So in honor of this mediocre milestone I decided to sort through my 222 posts and apply a new "Best of Secret Fun Blog" label to the most popular entries as well as my personal favorites. Please allow me to outline some of my picks...

Ren & Stimpy Production Music
Easily my most popular post of all time, and rightfully so. I found a ton of authentic mid-century production music that was used on Ren and Stimpy mysteriously gathered and tucked away on the web. So I designed a cover for it and redistributed the whole collection. Incidentally, if you're one of the folks who went gaga for this, then you might want to visit again in a few weeks.





My Life in Frosting
In which I assembled photos of every birthday cake my mother made for me from ages 1 through 14. This post also tops the charts traffic-wise, it's received more international attention than any of my other pieces, and it's even fueled political unrest.



The Phantasmagoria
I learned the true power and joys of blogging when a simple post caused one of my lifelong dreams to come true. When I learned that my favorite dark ride was being torn down I lamented its demise with a hearty retrospective in which I spoke of a failed attempt to personally paint its exterior. Gracious park employee Buddy Stefanoff offered to give me an exclusive walking tour of the ride's interior. This incredible day begat one of my most wonderful entries, Secrets of the Phantasmagoria, which was eventually followed up with Phantasmagoria: Revelations. Thanks again Robbie, Buddy and Kyle.

Teen Time
Now here's a post that truly deserves a second chance. It's one of my personal favorites and I laugh uncontrollably every time I reread it. Teen Time is a garage sale find that proved to be one of the most ludicrous board games ever conceived. It was mentioned on a couple of keen-eyed blogs, but I feel that it merits another wave of mockery.



I've noticed that road trips can make for good blogging. Here are a few fun ones...
  • My journey to Neptune, New Jersey for the S.S. Adams 100th anniversary banquet
  • My visit to the Charles Spencer Anderson design firm in Minneapolis
Then there's my Skeleton countdown and my 2007 Halloween Countdown which were both very well received.

When it comes to personal nostalgia, I'm particularly fond of these...
And about a dozen more faves can be found using the new Best of... label.

I am thankful to all of you who have read, commented, contributed, encouraged, shared, linked to, or spammed the Secret Fun sites. I've greatly enjoyed both entertaining and getting to know you, and I look forward to many more years of secret fun (seasoned with lengthy periods of complete inactivity).

May 08, 2008

A PRACTICAL PHOTOSHOP TUTORIAL

Step 1. Open PhotoShop
Step 2. Using the Gradient tool, create a radial gradient spanning from light blue (Red=0, Green=224, Blue=255) to black.



Step 3. In the Filters menu go to texture > craquelure. Apply this filter using the following settings... crack spacing 11, crack depth 3, crack brightness 9.




Believe it or not, this is all you need to know if you wish to design for the United States government...



May 07, 2008

FLiP: BIGGER, CLEARER, AND UNCUT

Speaking of the Johnson Smith Co. and the seven-foot monsters that J.J. Abrams spoke of (well, actually he was referring to the monster poster), I just uploaded Flip, the Rondo-winning short film that my friends and I put together, to a most excellent video sharing site called Vimeo. Here it's got a larger and less compressed picture than it did on Google Video. So if you haven't seen it and you feel like visiting a sunny Saturday morning in the late 1960s, when life revolved around comic books, monster movies and dime stores— now is the time to go for it...



Note: if it's playing choppy here then try watching directly on Vimeo.

May 06, 2008

J.J. ABRAMS MENTIONS "SECRET FUN SPOT" IN ROLLING STONE!


In the latest issue of Rolling Stone magazine (May 15, 2008) one of my most beloved cultural heroes, J.J. Abrams, does my site a tremendous honor...

(See the full piece here.)

It's difficult to express the joy this gives me without relying on high pitched yelps. 'Thrilled' is not the word... 'atingle' is only slightly more accurate. Grateful! Yes, that's it. Thank you J.J.

I wonder if there are a lot of folks currently rushing to the Secret Fun Spot thinking it's some new viral marketing campaign. If I were just a little more evil I'd swap out the regular site and upload fake production art for a Cloverfield sequel, or maybe some shots of "the new Star Trek crew" taken in my back yard... naked from the waist down.

Alas, I could never do such a thing because my feelings are completely mutual. Abrams is like an entertainment ambassador who serves as a representative for the childhood version of me. Spies... giant monsters... Star Trek! And then there's dear, sweet Lost; the only thing that can stir up the very feelings I had while watching Twilight Zone reruns before bedtime. At the same time, it manages to pluck the part of my brain that gets so excited by those classic lateral thinking puzzles. You know the ones; for example...
"A man and his wife raced through the streets. They stopped, and the husband got out of the car. When he came back, his wife was dead, and there was a stranger in the car." [Solution]
Those things have always given me such a creepy charge— just like Lost.

Could his upcoming show Fringe be anything but amazing? (A series that "mixes elements of "The X-Files" and Paddy Chayefsky's "Altered States" with what Abrams calls "a slight 'Twilight Zone' vibe." Sheesh!!) Did you know he directed an episode of The Office? Did I mention he's a huge S.S. Adams fan? I'm talking levels of fandom involving a fully stocked sales rack of pranks and magic tricks right in his office! (Not unlike the one I have.) Sorry for the love letter folks, but it's ridiculous the way his work represents just about everything I cherish.

Anyway, you can spot this issue by the tastefully classy, yet classically tasteful cover featuring The Hills gals on their way to an underwear parade. In compliance with the cultural standards, I had a subscription to Rolling Stone throughout my college career (and then some), so it's a blast to revisit the publication under these circumstances. However, reading it all these years later makes me feel so out of touch with the music scene. For instance, before I read this issue I knew so little regarding "the truth about The Hills" and even less about the $25,000-a-night escort service, but thankfully, now I'm hip again!

So now that you know there's a chance that J.J. could be reading, go ahead and fill up the comments section with your unsolicited movie concepts and nitpicky questions regarding any of his productions.

For further proof that Abrams is the master of secret fun watch J.J.'s chill-inducing presentation from the 2007 Technology, Entertainment, Design (TED) conference...





(Thanks for the heads up Todd and Mike!)

May 05, 2008

2008 S.S. ADAMS PRODUCTS


I find it oddly comforting to know that every Monday morning a crew of employees continues to file into the majestic S.S. Adams factory in Neptune, New Jersey where aspects of the workday routine have remained practically changeless for nearly a century. A typical day may involve cramming leopard-skinned "snakes" into fake cans of "mixed nuts," or fitting yellow sponge rabbits into magic set boxes, or maybe even sitting at a lathe hollowing out real U.S. coins for use as Squirting Quarter gags or Scotch and Soda magic tricks.

The Adams approach to new products is also comfortingly constant. While the modern day practice among their competitors is to take established pranking concepts and slap on a technological veneer— MP3 players that shock, cell phones that squirt, whoopee cushions with remote control— Adams chooses to focus on reviving time-tested novelty classics, as well as dreaming up a few choice items that have such dateless appeal they could have been top sellers fifty years ago. (i.e. Gross Soap...)

This year Adams unveiled an assortment of new old items, each guaranteed to stir up sizable mirthquakes. Let's have a look...

Amazing Scottie Dogs
You've played with them, you've been mystified by them, and you've made them do unsavory things; the magnetic doggies are back and their magnets are more powerful than ever before. The dogs themselves are actually genuine uncirculated stock from the fifties. How cool is that?

Chatter Teeth
These familiar wind-up choppers are based on the gag originally designed by Eddie Goldfarb and introduced to the world by legendary toymaker, Marvin Glass (by way the Fishlove Novelty Co.) Variations of these have been sold alongside Adams merchandise for decades, but this is the first time that Adams has gotten in on the lucrative world of novelty dental work.

Flying Butterfly
This item was the invention of S. S. himself. The mechanical butterfly was discontinued decades ago (originally sold inside greeting cards) but her time to fly has come again. These little beauties travel a surprising distance and the new models are more durable than their predecessors. S.S. would be proud.

Squirting Quarter

Until now you had to use the Squirting Nickel to soak your friends in the eyeballs. These days five cents isn't always enough to attract the sucker's gaze, but a shiny new quarter will certainly do the trick!

Considering how the Joy Buzzer helped America have a few laughs during the Great Depression, these little numbers may be just the thing to liven up our little recession! If you're a retailer you can get this stuff straight from Adams haunted factory; just give them a call. But if you are just a lowly consumer I recommend ordering online through World Famous Magic shop.

No, Adams didn't shell anything out for this little sales spiel. I'm just a fan. Well, there's also the fact that I still design for them. Oh, and of course that book I made for them.
Happy shopping!

May 04, 2008

DO NOT DISTURB SIGN

With vacation season approaching, now seems like a good time to share this nifty, vintage Do Not Disturb sign from some nifty, vintage Holiday Inn. Click on the image above for a high-res version. Print it, cut it out, tape the pieces together and place your new creation on your favorite doorknob. Soon you'll experience a deep, restful, disturbance-free slumber— the same way folks slept many decades ago. You'll sleep so hard your Z's will be backwards.
Once rested, face the "Maid" side out for a comic effect. You don't have a maid; and that's why it's funny. Or if you do have one, the sign may prove to be quite helpful. Either way, you won't find an easier "papercraft" project. Enjoy.

(Thanks Todd!)