Thursday, April 9, 2026

Cheaper than therapy

Today is National Gin and Tonic Day



Once again I will remind you gentle readers that I am not a spokesperson for Bombay Sapphire (yet), I find it is a waste to use it, given it's delicate botanicals in a G and T; but hey, what do I know.
International Gin and Tonic Day, for those who need to know, is celebrated on October 19th.



Either way, celebrate responsibly


April 9, 1949 -
The Merrie Melodies short Rebel Rabbit directed by Robert McKimson and starring Bugs Bunny was released on this date.



Bugs sawing Florida off the United States has become a popular Internet meme,
often used as a reaction.


April 9, 1950 -
Bob Hope made his network TV debut on this date, hosting the Star-Spangled Review extravaganza, on NBC. Among the guest stars were Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Dinah Shore, Beatrice Lillie and Carl Reiner.



Hope holds two entries in The Guinness Book of World Records. One is for having the distinction of being the entertainer with "the longest running contract with a single network - spanning sixty-one years". The second is for being the "most honored entertainer", with over 1500 awards.


April 9, 1964 -
Edward Dmytryk's version of Harold Robbin's The Carpetbaggers, starring George Peppard, Alan Ladd, and Carroll Baker premiered in the US on this date.



Once considered so racy it was advertised as being "for adults only", this film was re-released in 1972, and resubmitted to the MPAA for a rating. Indicating how much standards had changed in nearly a decade, it was given a PG (the PG-13 rating having not been created yet).


April 9, 1974 -
It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown!, the 12th prime-time animated Peanuts TV special debuted on CBS on this date.



When the Peanuts characters arrive at the mall at Easter time, the mall is decorated for the December holiday season with banners that proclaim: Only 246 shopping days until Christmas.


April 9, 1975 -
The very surreal comedy film concerning the Arthurian legend, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, written and performed by Monty Python, and directed by Terry Gilliam and Terry Jones, opened in London, on this date.



During one of the first screenings of this movie in front of a live audience, co-writer and co-director Terry Jones noticed that when music was played during the jokes, there was a marked reduction of laughter from the audience. He went back and edited the music out whenever a punchline was delivered. At subsequent screenings, he noticed a dramatic increase in the audiences' positive reactions to the jokes. From that point on, whenever he directed, he remembered to stop the music for the funny parts.


April 9, 1976 -
Alan J. Pakula's version of Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward's novel, All the President's Men, starring Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford, went into general release in the US on this date.



Hal Holbrook was the first and only choice to play the informant Deep Throat. During the casting process, Bob Woodward, while looking at various actors' head shots and resumes, but not revealing Deep Throat's true identity, insisted to director Alan J. Pakula that Holbrook was the best choice to play Deep Throat. Holbrook bears a strong resemblance to Mark Felt. In 2005, 91-year old Mark Felt, former the Deputy Director of the FBI during the Nixon administration, acknowledged publicly for the first time that he was Deep Throat.


April 9, 1976 -
The final film directed by Alfred Hitchcock, Family Plot, starring Karen Black, Bruce Dern, Barbara Harris and William Devane premiered in the US on this date.



Bruce Dern had previously worked with Alfred Hitchcock on episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents, as well as having had a small role in Marnie. Dern once said of working with Alfred Hitchcock on this movie: "He noticed everything, a shadow on a performer's face, a few seconds too long on a take. Just when we thought he had no idea what was going on, he'd snap us all to attention with the most incredible awareness of some small but disastrous detail that nobody would have noticed until it got on-screen, and then he'd be bored again."


April 9, 1977
ABBA had their only no. #1 US hit on the Billboard Charts - Dancing Queen, on this date.



ABBA recorded this about a year before it was released. It was written and recorded around the same time as Fernando, which was chosen as the single. They knew Dancing Queen would also be a hit, so they held it until the album was released before issuing it as a single.


April 9, 1990 -
The very short lived series Capital News, starring Lloyd Bridges, William Russ, Helen Slater, and Wendell Pierce, aired on ABC TV, on this date.



The series consisted of one TV movie (also considered as the pilot) and twelve regular episodes, of which only three were shown on its initial run in the US.


April 9, 2009 -
We got to meet Leslie Knope and her co-workers when Parks and Recreations premiered on NBC-TV on this date.



The original pilot received mixed responses from focus group screenings, leading to parts being rewritten and new scenes shot in order to make Leslie and Mark more likable. Originally, Mark was interested in Ann and asked Ron to green-light the park project purely so he could pursue her romantically. This was rewritten so Mark asks for Ron to help Leslie because he genuinely thought she deserved to succeed.


Another little known Monopoly card


Today in History:
April 9, 1241 -
In the Battle of Legnica, Silesia, Mongol armies defeated the Poles and Germans and the Mongols slaughtered the entire infantry. Mongols collected nine bags of ears* after the battle with Henry, Duke of Poland, on this date.
*In case you need to win a very bizarre bar bet, apparently you can fit 25,000 ears into nine bags.


April 9, 1492 -
Lorenzo de' Medici died, turning his face to the wall to avoid the verbal abuse from Savonarola, who commands Lorenzo to confess his sins, indecencies and pride and to give the Florentines back their liberty, on this date.



It's very annoying to have your confessor pester you while you lay dying.


April 9, 1830
-
It's the birthday of Eadweard Muybridge, born in Kingston-on-Thames, England. He emigrated to California in the 1850s, where he took up photography and quickly became one of the first internationally known photographers. Between 1867 and 1872, he took more than 2,000 photographs, many of them views of the Yosemite Valley.



It was Eadweard Muybridge who designed a new camera that could take a picture in one-thousandth of a second. To test his improvement, he set up twenty-four cameras along a racetrack, with trip wires to trigger the shutters. With those cameras, he managed to take a series of pictures of a horse galloping, proving for the first time that all four of a horse's hooves are sometimes off the ground at the same time - and winning his sponsor, soon-to-be governor of California Leland Stanford, a businessman and racehorse owner, a $25,000 bet. Muybridge's friendship with Stanford proved quite helpful.



In 1874, still living in the San Francisco Bay Area, Muybridge discovered that his wife had a lover, Major Harry Larkyns. On October 17, 1874, he sought out Larkyns, said, "Good evening, Major, my name is Muybridge, and here is the answer to the letter you sent my wife," and shot and killed him. One is left to wonder what the good Major wrote to warrant such a response.



Muybridge believed his wife's son had been fathered by Larkyns (although, as an adult, the young man bore a remarkable resemblance to Muybridge). He was put on trial for the killing but was acquitted on the grounds that it was "justifiable homicide." The inquiry interrupted the horse photography experiment, but not Stanford's support of Muybridge; Stanford paid for his criminal defense.


April 9, 1860 -
A short song was captured on by a phonautograph, a device created by a Parisian inventor, Edouard-Leon Scott deMartinville, on this date. The device etched representations of sound waves into paper covered in soot from a burning oil lamp. Lines were scratched into the soot by a needle moved by a diaphragm that responded to sound.



The recordings were never intended to be played. Technicians in 2008 were able convert the digital scan of the paper into an audio file. The recording consists of about ten seconds of a person singing Au Claire de Lune. The audio file is now recognized as the oldest audible recording of a human voice ever made.


April 9, 1865 -
General Robert E. Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia to Ulysses S. Grant, effectively ending the American Civil War, on this date. On April 5, Grant sent a message to his old college friend Lee that said, "General: The result of the last week must convince you of the hopelessness of further resistance on the part of the Army of Northern Virginia in this struggle. P.S. If you could help an old friend out, send more bourbon. I've finished all of the Union's supply of that fine sippin' whisky of yours, and I have a powerful thirst."



Lee wrote back to say, "Though not entirely of the opinion you express of the hopelessness of further resistance ... I reciprocate your desire to avoid useless effusion of blood and therefore, before considering your proposition, ask the terms you will offer on condition of its surrender. Also, expect a barrowful of the heavenly nectar with this dispatch. Please tip the delivery boy, you cheap so-and-so."



And so they met at the Appomattox Court House on April 9, Palm Sunday, just after noon. Afterward, Lee rode back to his camp, and crowds of Confederate soldiers along the road began to weep as he passed. Little did Grant know that less than a week later, he would have the sad honor of serving as a pallbearer at the funeral of his greatest champion, Abraham Lincoln.


April 9, 1928
-
... Life is like a sewer: what you get out of it depends on what you put into it.



Tom Lehrer
, singer-songwriter, satirist, pianist, and mathematician,was born on this date. (Lehrer entered Harvard at age 15, having skipped several grades. Everyone applying for admission to Harvard was required to include an example of their written work. Lehrer submitted a long verse, in the style of W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan. The poem ended with the lines:

I will leave movie thrillers
And watch caterpillars
Get born and pupated and larva'ed,
And I'll work like a slave
And always behave
And maybe I'll get into Harvard
...




The poem in its entirety appeared in Scholastic Magazine in 1943. (It was Lehrer's first published work.)



Let's all throw open the windows of our homes and shout "Happy 98th birthday" then go read a smutty magazine in his honor.


April 9, 1939 -
In 1939, the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) refused permission for Marian Anderson, an African-American contralto singer, to perform in front of an integrated audience in Constitution Hall.



With the aid of President Franklin D. Roosevelt and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, Anderson performed a critically acclaimed open-air concert on this date, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. to a crowd of more than 75,000 people and a radio audience in the millions.


April 9, 1959 -
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) introduces America's first astronauts for Project Mercury to the press: Scott Carpenter, L. Gordon Cooper Jr., John H. Glenn Jr., Virgil 'Gus' Grissom, Walter Schirra Jr., Alan Shepard Jr. and Donald Slayton, on this date.



The seven men, all military test pilots, were carefully selected from a group of 32 candidates to take part in Project Mercury, America's first manned space program .


April 9, 1963 -
The first foreigner to receive honorary United States citizenship on this date, was Winston Churchill (whose mother had been American and may or may not have slept with the king of England, but I digress ...).



Only Sir Winston, Raoul Wallenberg, William Penn and Hannah Callowhill Penn, Mother Teresa, Casimir Pulaski, and the Marquis de LaFayette share this distinction. But it was the first time that Congress had actually resolved that honorary citizenship be bestowed, by the President of the United States, on a foreign national.


April 9, 1965 -
TIME magazine featured a cover with the entire Peanuts gang on this date.

After the Peanuts made the cover of TIME magazine, an advertising agent for the Coca-Cola company who had seen the Charles Schulz documentary produced by Lee Mendelson. The agent asked if Mendelson had thought about creating a Peanuts Christmas special. Mendelson fibbed that he had; the following day, he and Schulz came up with the story. A Charlie Brown Christmas is the longest-running cartoon special in history, airing every year since its debut in 1965.


April 9, 2021 -
When a man opens a car door for his wife, it's either a new car or a new wife. ...



As to all, death came to everyone's favorite itinerant Greek sailor Philip Mountbatten (nee Phílippos Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg) on this date.



And so it goes.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Happiness multiplies when shared

(If you're reading this in Japan and I'm sure I have many readers there) it may be the birthday of Siddhartha Gautama. ACME would like to wish you Namo Amituofo -
Otherwise, just calculate the first full moon day of the sixth month of the Buddhist lunar calendar, which would be the fourth month of the Chinese calendar, except in years in which there's an extra full moon, and then Buddha's birthday falls in the seventh month. Well, except where it starts a week earlier.

And in Tibet it's usually a month later.


April 8, 1939 -
The Merrie Melodies short Bars and Stripes Forever, directed by Ben Hardaway and Cal Dalton, debuted on this date.



The warden uses the same mannerisms as Hugh Herbert. His screen character was usually flustered and absent-minded. He would flutter his fingers together and talk to himself, repeating the same phrases: "Hoo-hoo-hoo, wonderful, wonderful, hoo hoo hoo!"


April 8, 1944 -
The Looney Tunes short , Tick Tock Tuckered, directed by Bob Clampett and starring Porky Pig and Daffy Duck, debuted on this date



The gag where Porky threw a book out the window only to have a sequel of that same book come in and hit Porky was previously used in Notes to You.


April 8, 1953 -
Columbia Pictures released the first 3-D feature by a major studio, Man in the Dark, directed by Lew Landers and starring Edmond O'Brien, Audrey Totter and Ted de Corsia, on this date.



Despite reaching theaters first, House of Wax, which will open the following day, will be heavily promoted by Warner Brothers as “the first feature produced by a major studio in 3-D.”


April 8, 1968 -
The TV special Petula airs on NBC on this date. Most people would not remember this special except at one point in the show, host Petula Clark grabs hold of Harry Belafonte's arm while they are singing a duet.





As bizarre as this may seem, the show marked the first time a man and a woman of different races had physical contact on American television.


April 8, 1970 -
The Universal Pictures nearly foprgotten sci-fi film, Colossus: The Forbin Project, directed by Joseph Sargent, starring Eric Braeden, Susan Clark, Gordon Pinsent, and William Schallert debuted on this date.



When the executives at Control Data Corporation found out that Universal was planning a major movie featuring a computer, they saw their chance for some public exposure, and they agreed to supply, free of charge, $4.8 million worth of computer equipment and the technicians to oversee its use. Each piece of equipment carried the CDC name in a prominent location. Since they were using real computers - not just big boxes with a lot of flashing lights - the sound stage underwent extensive modifications: seven gas heaters and five specially-constructed dehumidifiers kept any dampness away from the computers, a climate control system maintained the air around the computers at an even temperature, and the equipment was covered up at all times except when actually on camera. Brink's guards were always present on the set, even at night. The studio technicians were not allowed to smoke or drink coffee anywhere near the computers.


April 8, 1975 -
Aerosmith released their third album Toys In The Attic, on this date.



The album is their most commercially successful studio LP in the US, selling over eight million copies.


April 8, 1977 -
CBS Records released the debut studio eponymous named album by The Clash, on this date.



The group was signed by a CBS-affiliated record company for 100,000 British pounds, an unprecedented sum for a group who had little noteworthy performance history. Many of the punk establishment criticized the group for selling out, but the records were received well in the UK.


April 8, 1978 -
The TV comedy series, Another Day, starring David Groh and Joan Hackett aired on CBS TV on this date.



Apparently, audiences weren't into this show, as it was canceled after only four episodes.


April 8, 1979 -
The 204th and final episode of All in the Family, Too Good Edith, aired on this date.



The series would come back in the fall in the less successful offering, Archie's Place.


April 8, 1983 -
In front of a live audience of 20 tourists, David Copperfield makes the Statue of Liberty disappear. A large opaque screen appeared between two giant pillars. When the screen fell, the Statue of Liberty vanished. Then the screen went back up, and when it fell again, the statue was back.



The secret to the Lady Liberty illusion was nothing more than a rotating platform. Copperfield had seated his audience on a surface that turned via a hydraulics system. He then raised the curtain and kept the audience distracted with loud music and general showmanship, while the platform was slowly rotated a few degrees. Then, when the curtain was lowered, one of the pillars that had previously supported it now blocked the audience's view of the statue. In the area that the platform now faced, Copperfield and his team had set up a circle of lights identical to the ones that encircled the real Liberty.


April 8, 1990 -
It wasn't a very good day for Laura Palmer - The cult series Twin Peaks, the series about cherry pie and Damn fine cup o' coffee!, premiered on ABC-TV on this date.



The series was originally to be titled Northwest Passage. The character of Josie Packard (played by Joan Chen) was originally named Giovanna "Jo" Pasqualini Packard, and was intended to be played by Isabella Rossellini, who was dating David Lynch at the time.


April 8, 1991 -
English trip hop group Massive Attack released their debut studio album Blue Lines, on this date.



Massive Attack at the time was a three-man production team: Robert "3D" Del Naja, Grantley "Daddy G" Marshall and Andrew "Mushroom" Vowles. They used various vocalists on their song. It has been long rumored that the artist Banksy is Massive Attack singer Robert “3D” Del Naja.


April 8, 2000 -

In a Saturday Night Live skit where Blue Öyster Cult is recording (Don't Fear) The Reaper, Christopher Walken demands more cowbell from Will Ferrell, who complies.



A catch phrase is born


Another episode of ACME's Little Known Animal Facts


Today in History:
Once again, some days, it's NOT good to be the king -
April 8, 217 -
The very hygienically minded Caracalla (Marcus Aurelius Antoniius) Roman emperor (188 – 217) was murdered by one of his guards with a single sword stroke while defecating.



Not a pleasant way to go . . but don’t feel too sorry for him. He shared the empire with brother Geta until he had Geta’s throat cut as he lay in their mother’s arms.


April 8, 1143 -
John II Comnenus Emperor of Byzantium (1118-43), died when he was accidentally infected by a poisoned arrow while out hunting.
I hate when that happens


April 8, 1364 -
John II the Good, King of France (1350-64), died at 44 after a night of heavy drinking in London.
You may ask what the King of France was doing, drinking in London - well, that's another story.


April 8, 1498 -
Charles VIII the Affable, King of France (1483-98), died in a freak tennis accident -



striking himself on the head while passing through a doorway, leaving the tennis court. A few hours later, he fell into a sudden coma and died.

Tennis - it's an extreme sport.


April 8, 1820 -
The famous marble sculpture, the Venus de Milo, was discovered on the island of Milos by Yorgos Kentrotas and a French naval officer, Jules Dumont d'Urville on this date.



The Marquis de Rivière presented it to Louis XVIII, who donated it to the Louvre the following year. The complete arms were never found.


April 8, 1832 -
Some 300 American troops of the 6th Infantry, lead by Brigadier General Henry Atkinson left Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis, to confront the Sauk Indians in what would become known as the Black Hawk War, on this date.



This is one of history's funny coincidences, in which Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis led troops on the same side - Lincoln as a captain of militia, Davis as a lieutenant of Regulars.

Impress the habitués of your local tavern.


April 8, 1904 -
Mayor George B. McClellan signed the resolution on this date, changing the name of Long Acre Square in Manhattan, New York, to Times Square.
New York Times publisher Adolph S. Ochs was preparing to move the newspaper's operations to a new skyscraper on 42nd Street at Longacre Square, hence Times Square.


April 8, 1950 -
Vaslav Fomich Nijinsky, one of the most gifted male dancers in history - celebrated for his virtuosity and for the depth and intensity of his characterizations, died on this date, in a psychiatric hospital in London.



No film exists of Nijinsky dancing. Sergei Diaghilev never allowed his ballet company, the Ballets Russes, to be filmed. He felt that the quality of film at the time could never capture the artistry of his dancers and that the reputation of the company would suffer if people saw it only in short jerky films.


April 8, 1973 -
...Drink to me, drink to my health, you know I can’t drink any more....



Pablo Ruiz Picasso, one of the most recognized figures in twentieth-century art, he is best known for co-founding the Cubist movement, the wide variety of styles embodied in his work and sleeping with almost anything that moved, died on this date.


April 8, 1974 -
The largest crowd in Atlanta Braves history (53,775) on this date, watched Hank Aaron break Babe Ruth's home run record on this date with a hit in the 4th inning off Los Angeles pitcher Al Downing. The ball landed in the Braves bullpen where reliever Tom House caught it.



While cannons were firing in celebration and Aaron rounded the bases, two college students appeared and ran alongside of him before security stepped in.


April 8, 1986 -
Clint Eastwood was elected on this date; with twice the voter turn out showing up, Clint got a whopping 72.5 % of the vote. He was the mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California for two years.



As mayor, Eastwood adopted a pro-business and tourism stance. He overturned, for instance, a local law banning the sale and consumption of ice cream on Carmel's streets.


April 8 1994 -
Kurt Cobain's body was found three days after committing suicide with a shotgun.



That was probably not a pretty sight (I won't even mention the smell - definitely not teen spirit.)


April 8, 1997 -
Singer-songwriter Laura Nyro died at age 49 of ovarian cancer, on this date.



Laura Nyro was discovered thanks to her father's persistence. Lou Nigro was a trumpeter and piano tuner and was working on a piano for A&R exec Artie Mogull when he just couldn't keep quiet about his daughter's songwriting talents. Exasperated, Mogull finally told Lou to bring Laura by sometime. "Next day, this little, short, unattractive girl comes up," Mogull recalled, "and the first three songs she plays are Wedding Bell Blues, Stoney End, and then When I Die. I almost fainted. I went crazy."



And so it goes.


Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Good health is not luck. It is a daily choice

Today is the 78th anniversary of the founding of WHO (World Health Organization), started in 1948 on this date. This years topic of World Health Day 2025 is "Healthy beginnings, hopeful futures", urging governments and the health community to ramp up efforts to end preventable maternal and newborn deaths, and to prioritize women’s longer-term health and well-being.



Despite what those in Washington D.C. tell you, everyone, everywhere has the right to access to quality health services.


April 7, 1933 -
Today is also National Beer Day. While it is not actual a national holiday, in March of 1933, President Roosevelt signed the Cullen–Harrison Act allowing the sale of beer once again with the proviso, the beer remain no more than 3.2% alcohol by weight, the first legal alcohol allowed since Prohibition began in 1919.



On this date, the act became law, and beer production began – thus marking the imminent end of Prohibition. April 7th does NOT signify the end of National Prohibition. National Prohibition ended on December 5, 1933. New Beer's Eve (which was celebrated last night) occurred during National Alcohol Awareness Month.



Celebrate either as you see fit.


April 7, 1915 -
Eleanora Fagan, considered by many to be the greatest jazz vocalist of all time, was born on this day. Though her career was relatively short and often erratic, she left behind a body of work as great as any vocalist before or since.







Eleanora's (or as she was professionally known, Billie Holiday) vocal style — strongly inspired by instrumentalists — pioneered a new way of manipulating wording and tempo, and also popularized a more personal and intimate approach to singing.


April 7, 1933 -
Arguably his most influential film, French filmmaker Jean Vigo's feature, Zero de Conduite (Zero for Conduct) was released on this date.



The film was banned by the French censor until after 1946. The film has been ranked as one of the "100 Movies That Shook the World".


April 7, 1945 -
Another Looney Tunes short Behind the Meat-Ball, directed by Frank Tashlin was released on this date.



The working title of this short was "Chow Hounds". A short with a similar title, "Chow Hound", would be released in 1951.


April 7, 1951 -
Another Looney Tunes short A Bone for a Bone, directed by Friz Freleng and featuring The Goofy Gophers was released on this date.



Although the dog in this cartoon is named George P. Dog (which is Barnyard Dawg's real name), they are not the same character.


April 7, 1970 -
John Schlesinger's Midnight Cowboy won the Oscar for Best Picture on this date. It remains the only X-rated film to win an Academy Award.



The film was rated "X" (no one under 17 admitted) upon its original release in 1969, but the unrestricted use of that rating by pornographic filmmakers caused the rating to quickly become associated with hardcore sex films. Because of the stigma that developed around the "X" rating in the ratings system's early years, many theaters refused to run X-rated films, and many newspapers would not run ads for them. The film was given a new R-rating (children under 17 must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian) rating in 1971, without having anything changed or removed. It remains the only X-rated film to win the Oscar for Best Picture, be shown on network television (although the "R" reclassification had taken place by then), or be screened by a sitting U.S. President, Richard Nixon.


April 7, 1973 -
The Universal Pictures western, High Plains Drifter, directed by Clint Eastwood, and starring Clint Eastwood, Verna Bloom, Mariana Hill, Mitchell Ryan, Jack Ging and Stefan Gierasch, was released on this date.



Shortly after this movie's release, Clint Eastwood wrote to John Wayne, suggesting that they make a western together. Wayne sent back an angry letter in reply, in which he denounced this movie for its violence and revisionist portrayal of the Old West. Eastwood did not bother to answer his criticisms, and consequently they did not work together.


April 7, 1976 -
The Paramount Pictures comedy The Bad News Bears, directed by Michael Ritchie and starring Walter Matthau, Tatum O'Neal, Vic Morrow, Joyce Van Patten, Ben Piazza, Jackie Earle Haley, and Alfred W. Lutter, went into general release in the US on this date.



Tatum O'Neal trained with a professional sports trainer for several weeks before filming began in August 1975, so she could get her pitch "pitch perfect," so to speak. Although some of the pitches in the movie were done by stunt doubles, O'Neal did the bulk of them on her own. (Rare for a movie like this.)


April 7, 1978 -
The Police release Roxanne in the UK on this date.





BBC Radio 1 refuses to play it, which tanks the song, but when the band tours America a year later it catches on in that country, becoming their first hit.


April 7, 1979 -
With Richard Benjamin as the guest host, Rickie Lee Jones is the musical guest on Saturday Night Live, on this date. She performs her hits Chuck E.'s In Love and Coolsville.



The episode is notable not only for Rickie Lee Jones performance but it is the first appearance of Rodney Dangerfield on the show, in this episode.


April 7, 1979 -
The one and only Grammy winner for Best Disco song, I Will Survive by Gloria Gaynor topped the charts on this date.





The song beat out Don't Stop 'Til You Get Enough, Bad Girls, Boogie Wonderland and Da Ya Think I'm Sexy? for the 1979 Grammy for Best Disco Recording. It was the first and last time the Grammy was offered in this category, but not the last win for Gaynor, who won Best Roots Gospel Album 40 years later in 2019 for Testimony.


April 7, 1993 -
The 20th Century Fox film, The Sandlot, directed by David Mickey Evans, and starring Tom Guiry, Mike Vitar, Karen Allen, Denis Leary, and James Earl Jones, opened in the US and Canada on this date.



In order to establish the close bond between Smalls and Benny, the director had Tom Guiry and Mike Vitar meet and rehearse together weeks before the rest of the kids showed up to film. It worked so well that the other kids genuinely believed the two actors had been friends for a long time. To this day, Tom Guiry and Mike Vitar remained friends and kept in touch with each other since filming for this movie ended.


Today's moment of Zen.


Today in History:
April 7, 1805 -
Beethoven conducted the premiere of his Eroica Symphony No. 3 in E flat major on this date. Beethoven used the symphony to convey popular notions about heroism and revolution, which were prevalent throughout Europe at the time.



He was full of enthusiasm and respect for the French Revolution's ideals, and especially (at first) Napoleon Bonaparte. Beethoven, like a teenage groupie, scrawled Napoleon's name all over the dedication page of the symphony.



But then Napoleon went on a world tour and started conquering random European countries. When he became a truly evil bastard, finally declared himself Emperor of the French in 1804, Beethoven flew into a rage.
He ripped through the paper as he scratched out Napoleon's name with a knife.


April 7, 1927 -
An audience in New York saw an image of Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover in the first successful long-distance demonstration of television. Hoover’s image and voice were transmitted across telephone lines. Edna Mae Horner, an operator at the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company, assisted the transmission and became the first woman on television.

Unfortunately, this was not a demonstration of a time machine and Hoover didn't get a message about the upcoming Great Depression.


April 7, 1939 -
That little old Italian wine maker, Francis Ford Coppola, (who is also a magazine publisher and hotelier) was born on this date.





Like Martin Scorsese, Coppola was a sickly youth, a case of polio which allowed him time to indulge in puppet theater and home movies.


April 7, 1954 -
President Dwight D. Eisenhower coined one of the most famous Cold War phrases when he suggests the fall of French Indochina to the communists could create a "domino" effect in Southeast Asia on this date.



The so-called "domino theory" dominated U.S. thinking about Vietnam for the next decade.

Who know that the President was so afraid of the Pizza boy?


April 7, 1956 -
Capitol Tower, the headquarters of Capitol Records in Hollywood, California, was dedicated on this date.



The building, designed to resemble a stack of records, was the first circular office tower in the U.S. The blinking light atop the tower spells out the word "Hollywood" in Morse code, and has done so since the building's opening in 1956.


April 7, 1989 -
Soviet nuclear submarine K-278 Komsomolets sank in the Norwegian sea, with two nuclear reactors and two nuclear torpedoes aboard on this date.



41 crew members died, and the submarine remains one mile below the surface of the ocean, with its nuclear weapons intact.


April 7, 1990 -
A display of Robert Mapplethorpe photographs opened at the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati, the same day the center and its director, Dennis Barrie were indicted on obscenity charges on this date.



Both were later acquitted.


April 7, 1998 -
Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou was arrested by an undercover police officer after pleasuring himself in front of him in a public toilet.



If George only realized how many of his fans would have happily donned uniforms and stood provocatively before him in any restroom of his choice.



And so it goes.