When you're reading – even silently – the muscles of your mouth, tongue and larynx activate. This process is called 'subvocalisation'. We're essentially still sounding out the words in our heads to decode them, even when we're not speaking them out loud.
June 7, 1941 -
The Merrie Melodies short, Hiawatha's Rabbit Hunt, directed by Friz Freleng, starring Bugs Bunny, debuted on this date.
Due to pressure from Warner Bros., this cartoon was one of 11 pulled from rotation by the Cartoon Network for its 2001 "June Bugs" marathon, which was to show the complete chronology of Bugs Bunny cartoons. This is in addition to the "Censored 11" that have been withheld from distribution since 1968. The reason given was its purportedly offensive depiction of Native Americans.
June 7, 1946 -
The final installment in the Sherlock Holmes series, Dressed to Kill, directed by Roy William Neill and starring Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce and Patricia Morrison, opened on this date.
Irene Adler, mentioned by Dr. Watson, was a fictional character in the Sherlock Holmes stories written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. A former opera singer and actress, she was featured in the short story A Scandal in Bohemia to which Watson referred. But she was never incorporated into any of the plots of the films in the series.
June 7, 1952 -
The Looney Tunes short, The Hasty Hare, directed by Chuck Jones, starring Bugs Bunny and Marvin the Martian, debuted on this date.
The science professor's note of resignation reads: SHALOMAR OBSERVATORY I resign! When I begin to see things like this, it's time to take up turkey farming. I. Frisby DIRECTOR.
June 7, 1958 -
The Everly Brothers song All I Have to Do Is Dream topped the charts on this date.
Chet Atkins played tremolo-style guitar chords on the song, providing an interesting musical backing to the Everly Brothers' unique vocal harmonies.
June 7, 1969 -
Tommy James and the Shondells released Crystal Blue Persuasion on this date.
The lyrics, "It's a new vibration," are about James becoming Christian, but many listeners had their own interpretation. He explained: "Of course, everybody thinks if they don't understand what you're talking about it must be about drugs. But it wasn't. We were going through a real interesting time back then, and a very wonderful time. Everybody in the band, by the way, became Christian. And we're very proud of it. And 'Crystal Blue Persuasion' was sort of our way of saying that in a kind of pop record way."
June 7, 1969 -
The Johnny Cash Show, a summer replacement for ABC's Hollywood Palace variety program, premiered on this date, with performances by Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell.
Dylan, who met Cash at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival, was making his first public performance since the Woody Guthrie benefit in January 1968. He performed I Threw It All Away and Living the Blues. Cash and Dylan also played Girl From the North Country, which they’d recently recorded for Dylan’s country-flavored LP Nashville Skyline. The show also featured Cash singing Folsom Prison Blues, and Dylan’s It Ain’t Me Babe as a duet with wife June Carter Cash. Joni Mitchell sang her hit Both Sides Now.
Talk about cosmic convergence -
it's Dean Martin's,
Tom Jones'
and Prince's birthday today.
Think of the number of children conceived listening to their music.
June 7, 1974 –
The Kinks were hosts on The Midnight Special on this date.
Bunkies this was music on TV before MTV.
June 7, 1975 –
Sony releases Betamax videocassette recorder, the first home video format, in Japan, on this date. The recorder goes on sale to the public for $995.00.
Almost a year to the day later, JVC will introduce a competing format called the Video Home System (VHS). VHS will ultimately surpass the Betamax format in terms of popularity, partly due to its longer recording length and partly due to maneuvering on the part of Sony to corner the home video market.
June 7, 1975 -
Elton John's ninth studio album Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboys, went to No. 1 on the US album chart, on this date. It's the first album ever to enter the US chart at No. 1. (where it stayed for seven weeks).
Captain Fantastic' is a concept album that gives an autobiographical glimpse at the struggles John (Captain Fantastic) and Taupin (the Brown Dirt Cowboy) had in the early years of their musical careers in London.
June 7, 1985 -
The movie Perfect, starring John Travolta and Jamie Lee Curtis, premiered in the US, on this date.
Even though the film was a major box-office failure and temporarily derailed John Travolta's A-list career, he claims he doesn't regret doing it, mostly due to his friendships with the cast and the chance to work again with James Bridges. .
June 7, 1991 -
Spike Lee's controversial film (at the time), Jungle Fever, starring Wesley Snipes, Annabella Sciorra, Spike Lee, Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee, Samuel L. Jackson, Queen Latifah, John Turturro, and Anthony Quinn went into general release in the US on this date.
Samuel L. Jackson had just undergone treatment for drug addiction, and had only two weeks from his discharge from rehab to the start of filming. Jackson has gone on record as saying that Gator's ravaged look was not make-up, but actually the result of Jackson's own detoxification.
June 7, 1991 –
The Castle Rock film which revived the career of Jack Palance, City Slickers, directed by Ron Underwood and also starring Billy Crystal, Danial Stern and Bruno Kirby premiered on this date.
The story that Billy Crystal tells about his "best day" of going to a Yankee game with his father is a true story from his childhood. He notes at one point that, "I still have the program." Not only does he really still have it, but he got Mickey Mantle to autograph it twice: once at the game that day and once again some 20 years later on a talk show they were both guests on.
Another album from the discount bin at The ACME Record Shoppe
Today in History (sometimes it doesn't pay to get out of bed):
June 7, 1494 -
Spain and Portugal signed the Treaty of Tordesillas (which divides the New World between the two countries. Hence, the Brazilians speak Portuguese rather than Spanish). In the volatile, war-torn world in which we live, many historical documents have become required reading. Not this one. You will never be standing at a cocktail party where someone says, "It's all because of that damn Treaty of Tordesillas."
No one will ever blame the failures of the Middle East Peace Process or the brinkmanship in South Asia on the harsh conditions of the Treaty of Tordesillas. You'll never see your favorite pundit toss off the "Treaty of Tordesillas" in an ironic and off-handed way. You won't hear Noam Chomsky cite it as a cause or effect of American imperialism. It will never attract the directorial eye of Michael Moore or Oliver Stone.
You already know more about that treaty than most people alive today. You may now forget it ever existed. It has no relevance to your life.
June 7, 1502 -
Ugo Buoncompagni was born on this date. He became Pope Gregory XIII in 1572 and remained the Pope until 1585. He is best known for reforming the Julian calendar, which is why it's now Gregorian instead of Julian.
Had he reformed the calendar before becoming Pope, it would be the Ugian Calendar. That would have been a calendar worth having.
(For some reason that I can't quite figure out - I think I've mentioned Pope Gregory XIII in these pages more than any human being, except perhaps Mata Hari, whom I keep getting the date of her execution wrong.)
June 7, 1692 -
At 11:43 am, a catastrophic earthquake struck Port Royal, Jamaica, then known as "the richest and wickedest city in the world." Buildings are shaken apart and ships in harbor hurled onto busy streets.
In just three minutes, the temblor takes out 70% of the population, killing 1,600 and seriously injuring 3,000 others.
It was a beautiful weekend back in 1786, it's nice to know that the first day ice cream was sold in the US, on this date.
The Smithsonian Museum purports to have an inappropriate woodcutting of a very young Bernie Sanders making a rude gesture to either Martha Washington or Dolley Madison concerning how Alexander Hamilton cut ahead of him on line and how he'd fix those damn banks some day in the future.
June 7, 1892 -
Homer Plessy, a shoemaker of mixed race from Louisiana, was arrested for refusing to move from a designated "white" seat on a train, on this date.
His arrest and subsequent trial (Plessy v. Ferguson) led to the landmark "separate but equal" decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1896, which permitted segregation.
June 7, 1893 -
Co-incidentally or not, when traveling by train across South Africa, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi was asked to leave the first-class compartment - for which he had a ticket - because another passenger complained of having to ride with a colored person.
He refused to move and authorities were called to force him and his luggage to disembark in Maritzburg. This was Gandhi's first act of disobedience.
June 7, 1937 -
While filming Saratoga, Jean Harlow was hospitalized with uremic poisoning and kidney failure, a result of the scarlet fever she had suffered during childhood.
In the days before dialysis and kidney transplants, nothing could be done and Harlow died on this date. She was 26.
(Most of you probably have not idea who the hell Jean Harlow was?)
June 7, 1954 -
Despondent over court-ordered estrogen treatments to cure his homosexuality, Alan Turing committed suicide by consuming an apple laced with cyanide. (His inspiration - Snow White, his favorite movie.)
Turing is considered the founder of modern computing, a pioneer in the field of Artificial Intelligence, and a crucial member of the team that cracked Germany's Enigma cipher in World War II.
So, apparently an apple a day does keep the doctor away - permanently.
June 7, 1965 -
I suppose that if I could have quit, I would have, because in those days I never wanted to be an actress, the acting was something to do while I waited for a chance to study writing and directing. But I guess I was just meant to be an actress. Because, here I am..
The anything but dumb blonde, Judy Holliday (born Judith Tuvim, who reportedly had an IQ of over 170) died from the breast cancer that had plagued her for over five years, on this date. She was 43.
June 7, 1967 -
There's a hell of a distance between wise-cracking and wit. Wit has truth in it; wise-cracking is simply calisthenics with words.
Dorothy Rothschild Parker, writer, poet, critic and screen writer, outlived many of her drinking buddies from the Algonquin Round Table, died of a heart attack at the age of 73 on this date.
Her 'troubles' did not end with her death as her executrix, Lillian Hellman, bitterly but unsuccessfully contested the final bequest of her estate to the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. foundation and her ashes remained unclaimed in various places, including her attorney Paul O'Dwyer's filing cabinet, for approximately 17 years.
June 7, 1982 -
In an effort to defray its $500,000 annual upkeep costs, Priscilla Presley opened Graceland to the public only five years after Elvis died in an upstairs bathroom. The bathroom is kept off-limits to tourists.
Think of how much they could take in at the gate if you could sit on the King's final throne? (Hope all the kerfuffle over the estate will be resolved soon.)
And so it goes.
Dr. Caligari's Cabinet
Read the ramblings of Dr. Caligari. Hopefully you will find that Time does wound all heels. You no longer need to be sad that nowadays there is so little useless information.
Sunday, June 7, 2026
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Pop that cork!
The first Saturday in June is the day to break out that special bottle of sparkling wine you've been saving. Please note - while many people think that “bubbly” is merely a synonym for Champagne, the nickname really can refer to any sort of sparkling wine. Champagne is a specific sparkling wine from the Champagne region of France. This differentiation should help you keep those french sommeliers at bay. In the privacy of your own home, you may refer to any type of sparkling wine, as Champagne - it's no skin off my teeth.
National Bubble Day was invented by Freixenet Cava in 2016. This company has been making sparking wine since the 1860s, and the first bottle was released in 1914. This holiday was created to bring attention to sparking wine and how it can be enjoyed not just on this holiday but any day of the year. Other types of “bubbly” may include Prosecco (from Italy), Cava (from Spain), Moscato (from Italy) and many additional options.
Today is National Yo-Yo Day, falling on what is believed to have been Donald Duncan Sr.'s birthday (even the Duncan Company wasn't too sure if June 6 is the right date).
I'm sure you have one. Go into the desk drawer, dig around and pull your old yo-yo out - I'll give you a moment. (this year I found a butterfly model in the hall closet. How it got there - only God knows.)
Please celebrate responsibly - don't drink and go Around the World.
June 6, 1933 -
The first drive-in movie theater is opened on a ten acre site off Wilson Boulevard in Camden, New Jersey by garage owner Richard Hollingshead on this date. (The first film shown was Wives Beware.)
The theater features a 40 foot by 30 foot screen and a four hundred car capacity arranged in semi-circular rows. The original slogan of the Park-In Theater was “The whole family is welcome, regardless of how noisy the children are.”
June 5, 1942 -
The Looney Tunes short, Hobby Horse Laffs, directed by Norman McCabe, debuted on this date.
Porky appears on a wooden fence in the opening credits, a departure from his usual pose. He is not featured in the short, however.
June 6, 1942 -
The Merrie Melodies short, Hold the Lion, Please , directed by Chuck Jones, starring Bugs Bunny, debuted on this date.
This is one of a handful of Bugs Bunny shorts that do not feature the words Bugs, Bunny, Rabbit/Wabbit, or Hare in the title.
June 6, 1953 -
The WWII movie Stalag 17, directed by Billy Wilder, and starring William Holden, Don Taylor, Robert Strauss, Harvey Lembeck, Peter Graves, Neville Brand, Richard Erdman, Sig Ruman, and Otto Preminger, opened on this date.
Otto Preminger always claimed that, as a director, he would only shout at actors if they were late or if they did not know their lines. Employed solely as an actor in this film, he told Billy Wilder at the start of filming that if he ever forgot his lines, he would present Wilder with a jar of caviar. Wilder later told interviewers that he soon had dozens of such jars.
June 5, 1953 -
The Looney Tunes short, There Auto Be a Law, directed by Bob McKimson, starring Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, debuted on this date.
After the man siphons gas out of the car, he begins making car start up noises. This is Mel Blanc imitating Jack Benny's Maxwell car.
June 6, 1964 -
The Phil Spector wall-of-sound production of The Dixie Cups' song, Chapel Of Love, hits #1 in America, on this date, where it stays for three weeks.
Thanks in large part to The Beatles, there were plenty of "love" songs in 1964, but most of those were about some form of puppy love or about the feeling of falling in love. Chapel Of Love was different because it dealt with the wedding day, making it about the commitment that comes after the courtship. There's a promise at the end of the chorus: We'll never be lonely anymore.
June 5, 1964 -
The Looney Tunes short, War and Pieces, directed by Chuck Jones, starring Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, debuted on this date.
The was the last cartoon directed entirely by Chuck Jones before he was fired from Warner Bros. Pictures in July 1962 for writing UPI's Gay Purr-ee. He and his team later moved to MGM after Warner Bros. shut down their animation studio in 1963.
June 6, 1972 -
David Bowie released The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars on this date.
Thanks in large part to The Beatles, there were plenty of "love" songs in 1964, but most of those were about some form of puppy love or about the feeling of falling in love. Chapel Of Love was different because it dealt with the wedding day, making it about the commitment that comes after the courtship. There's a promise at the end of the chorus: We'll never be lonely anymore.
June 6, 1978 -
The TV newsmagazine (created by Roone Arledge,) 20/20, debuted on ABC TV on this date.
The program was designed similarly to CBS's 60 Minutes . The original hosts were Esquire magazine editor Harold Hayes, and Time art critic Robert Hughes.
June 6, 1983 -
Reading Rainbow, hosted by Levar Burton premiered on PBS on this date
While developing the show, the creators of Reading Rainbow met with Fred Rogers and Joan Ganz Cooney of Sesame Street and The Electric Company fame to find out how to make more engaging television programming.
June 6, 1992 -
The video for the Guns N' Roses' song November Rain premiered on MTV, on this date.
The 9-minute epic is the most expensive video ever made to this point, costing $1.5 million, but reaped rewards for the band, as it got a lot of play on MTV. It stars actress and model Stephanie Seymour, Axl Rose's girlfriend at the time. In the video, she and Axl get married with Slash serving as best man and the rest of the band in the front row. After the wedding, it starts raining and the next scene is Stephanie's funeral in the same church.
June 6, 1997 –
Farrah Fawcett made a bizarre appearance on the Late Show With David Letterman.
She went on long tirades and story-telling sprees that made little to no sense and was distracted by blinking lights in the studio. (It should be noted that Dave was unusually kind to her throughout the interview.)
June 6, 1998 –
The highly successful series, Sex and The City premiered on HBO on this date.
The medicine cabinet in Carrie's apartment was first spied by Sarah Jessica Parker at a flea market shortly before filming began. She and husband Matthew Broderick didn't buy it but reconsidered. When they went back, the cabinet was already sold to "some television show". When she showed up for filming, the medicine cabinet was there.
June 6, 1999 -
(Attention Class of 2026) Australian filmmaker Baz Luhrmann went to No.1 on the UK singles chart with Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen), on this date. As I move follow (read: age) this silly tune becomes more and more poignant to me.
Actor Lee Perry read the narrative. The backing is the choral version of 'Everybody's Free (To Feel Good)', a 1991 song by Rozalla, used in the film William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet. The lyrics are from an essay called "Advice, like youth, probably just wasted on the young" by columnist Mary Schmich. It first appeared in 1997 in the Chicago Sunday Tribune, although the article was originally wrongly credited as being a collegiate commencement speech delivered by author Kurt Vonnegut. (Just a brief aside - Since I graduated college 44 years ago, the song cut very close to the bone.)
June 6, 2001 -
The atmospheric mystery film, Mulholland Drive, directed by David Lynch and starring Naomi Watts, Laura Harring, Justin Theroux, Ann Miller, and Robert Forster, opened on this date.
Director David Lynch initially resisted Studio Canal's offer to provide additional funds to complete the Mulholland Drive TV pilot as a feature film. Lynch's battles with ABC network executives had left him with a negative feeling about the project, and he felt he had run out of ideas for the storyline. When he finally agreed to revisit the film, he found that all the sets had been destroyed, much to his horror, and all of the costumes and props had been released by ABC (normally all sets, props and costumes for a possible TV series are carefully cataloged and stored for future use). Lynch claimed this setback actually proved a blessing in disguise, when it finally generated new ideas about how to proceed with filming, and he was able to come up with a satisfying conclusion to the story.
Don't forget to tune in to The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour today
Today in History:
June 6, 1755 -
A boy was born in Coventry, Connecticut on this date. He grew up, went to Yale, and became a teacher. He never distinguished himself in any way. He never wrote or said anything of note, never committed any famous or infamous deeds, never married or had children. He seemed destined to be swallowed whole by the omnivorous mouth of obscurity. He was therefore recruited by the United States Military as an intelligence agent, dispatched behind enemy lines in British-occupied Manhattan, and captured.
He was hanged by the British on September 22, 1776.
Moments before his execution, he expressed regret that he couldn't be hanged more than once. This remark catapulted him to posthumous fame (but only after his death), and Nathan Hale is revered to this day.
June 6, 1844 -
... You can get yourself clean. You can have a good meal. You can do whatever you feel ...
That 'fun' place to stay, The Young Men's Christian Association was founded in London, England by George Williams and a group of Evangelical Christians on this date. (If you find yourself dancing around while watching the video clip above, maybe you may have swam in the nude at the Y as a child, or maybe even as an adult.)
June 6, 1944 -
82 years ago today, the largest seaborne invasion in history began - the allied invasion of Normandy (Operation Overlord.) The date is also commonly known as D-Day. The military calls the date of every major operation D-Day, probably to confuse the enemy.
This would have been especially confusing in Normandy, which is in France, where Day begins with a J. German spies were probably waiting to hear something about J-Jour.
June 6, 1955 -
I'm very much an optimist. I don't think I could do my work if I didn't believe there was some kind of hope for humanity..
Sandra Bernhard, comedian/actress was also born on this day.
June 6, 1968 -
Senator Robert F. Kennedy died at Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles on this date.
The Democratic lawmaker had been campaigning for his party's Presidential nomination when he was shot three times by Sirhan Bishara Sirhan a day earlier.
Jun 6 1976 -
American expatriate J. Paul Getty, named the richest man in the world in 1957, died in London at age 83.
According to the oil baron, "If you can count your money, you don't have a billion dollars."
June 6, 1985 -
Authorities in Embu, Brazil exhume the grave of one Wolfgang Gerhard in order to determine its true identity. The remains are later proven to be those of Dr. Josef Mengele, Auschwitz's notorious Angel of Death.
Mengele is thought to have drowned while swimming in the ocean in February 1979.
June 6, 1989 -
During the Tehran funeral of the Ayatollah Khomeini, frenzied mourners accidentally tipped his corpse out of its coffin and onto the ground.
Three million horrified followers bore witness to the desecration.
Oops!
June 6, 1990 -
US district court judge Jose Gonzalez ruled that the rap album by 2 Live Crew violated Florida's obscenity law.
Gonzalez declared that the predominant subject matter of the record is "directed to the 'dirty' thoughts and the loins, not to the intellect and the mind."
I've scoured the internet, they were not offering 'Interpreting dirty thoughts and the loins' when I was a freshman at Columbia.
On a personal note - Happy Birthday Joseph.
And so it goes.
National Bubble Day was invented by Freixenet Cava in 2016. This company has been making sparking wine since the 1860s, and the first bottle was released in 1914. This holiday was created to bring attention to sparking wine and how it can be enjoyed not just on this holiday but any day of the year. Other types of “bubbly” may include Prosecco (from Italy), Cava (from Spain), Moscato (from Italy) and many additional options.
Today is National Yo-Yo Day, falling on what is believed to have been Donald Duncan Sr.'s birthday (even the Duncan Company wasn't too sure if June 6 is the right date).
I'm sure you have one. Go into the desk drawer, dig around and pull your old yo-yo out - I'll give you a moment. (this year I found a butterfly model in the hall closet. How it got there - only God knows.)
Please celebrate responsibly - don't drink and go Around the World.
June 6, 1933 -
The first drive-in movie theater is opened on a ten acre site off Wilson Boulevard in Camden, New Jersey by garage owner Richard Hollingshead on this date. (The first film shown was Wives Beware.)
The theater features a 40 foot by 30 foot screen and a four hundred car capacity arranged in semi-circular rows. The original slogan of the Park-In Theater was “The whole family is welcome, regardless of how noisy the children are.”
June 5, 1942 -
The Looney Tunes short, Hobby Horse Laffs, directed by Norman McCabe, debuted on this date.
Porky appears on a wooden fence in the opening credits, a departure from his usual pose. He is not featured in the short, however.
June 6, 1942 -
The Merrie Melodies short, Hold the Lion, Please , directed by Chuck Jones, starring Bugs Bunny, debuted on this date.
This is one of a handful of Bugs Bunny shorts that do not feature the words Bugs, Bunny, Rabbit/Wabbit, or Hare in the title.
June 6, 1953 -
The WWII movie Stalag 17, directed by Billy Wilder, and starring William Holden, Don Taylor, Robert Strauss, Harvey Lembeck, Peter Graves, Neville Brand, Richard Erdman, Sig Ruman, and Otto Preminger, opened on this date.
Otto Preminger always claimed that, as a director, he would only shout at actors if they were late or if they did not know their lines. Employed solely as an actor in this film, he told Billy Wilder at the start of filming that if he ever forgot his lines, he would present Wilder with a jar of caviar. Wilder later told interviewers that he soon had dozens of such jars.
June 5, 1953 -
The Looney Tunes short, There Auto Be a Law, directed by Bob McKimson, starring Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, debuted on this date.
After the man siphons gas out of the car, he begins making car start up noises. This is Mel Blanc imitating Jack Benny's Maxwell car.
June 6, 1964 -
The Phil Spector wall-of-sound production of The Dixie Cups' song, Chapel Of Love, hits #1 in America, on this date, where it stays for three weeks.
Thanks in large part to The Beatles, there were plenty of "love" songs in 1964, but most of those were about some form of puppy love or about the feeling of falling in love. Chapel Of Love was different because it dealt with the wedding day, making it about the commitment that comes after the courtship. There's a promise at the end of the chorus: We'll never be lonely anymore.
June 5, 1964 -
The Looney Tunes short, War and Pieces, directed by Chuck Jones, starring Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner, debuted on this date.
The was the last cartoon directed entirely by Chuck Jones before he was fired from Warner Bros. Pictures in July 1962 for writing UPI's Gay Purr-ee. He and his team later moved to MGM after Warner Bros. shut down their animation studio in 1963.
June 6, 1972 -
David Bowie released The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars on this date.
Thanks in large part to The Beatles, there were plenty of "love" songs in 1964, but most of those were about some form of puppy love or about the feeling of falling in love. Chapel Of Love was different because it dealt with the wedding day, making it about the commitment that comes after the courtship. There's a promise at the end of the chorus: We'll never be lonely anymore.
June 6, 1978 -
The TV newsmagazine (created by Roone Arledge,) 20/20, debuted on ABC TV on this date.
The program was designed similarly to CBS's 60 Minutes . The original hosts were Esquire magazine editor Harold Hayes, and Time art critic Robert Hughes.
June 6, 1983 -
Reading Rainbow, hosted by Levar Burton premiered on PBS on this date
While developing the show, the creators of Reading Rainbow met with Fred Rogers and Joan Ganz Cooney of Sesame Street and The Electric Company fame to find out how to make more engaging television programming.
June 6, 1992 -
The video for the Guns N' Roses' song November Rain premiered on MTV, on this date.
The 9-minute epic is the most expensive video ever made to this point, costing $1.5 million, but reaped rewards for the band, as it got a lot of play on MTV. It stars actress and model Stephanie Seymour, Axl Rose's girlfriend at the time. In the video, she and Axl get married with Slash serving as best man and the rest of the band in the front row. After the wedding, it starts raining and the next scene is Stephanie's funeral in the same church.
June 6, 1997 –
Farrah Fawcett made a bizarre appearance on the Late Show With David Letterman.
She went on long tirades and story-telling sprees that made little to no sense and was distracted by blinking lights in the studio. (It should be noted that Dave was unusually kind to her throughout the interview.)
June 6, 1998 –
The highly successful series, Sex and The City premiered on HBO on this date.
The medicine cabinet in Carrie's apartment was first spied by Sarah Jessica Parker at a flea market shortly before filming began. She and husband Matthew Broderick didn't buy it but reconsidered. When they went back, the cabinet was already sold to "some television show". When she showed up for filming, the medicine cabinet was there.
June 6, 1999 -
(Attention Class of 2026) Australian filmmaker Baz Luhrmann went to No.1 on the UK singles chart with Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen), on this date. As I move follow (read: age) this silly tune becomes more and more poignant to me.
Actor Lee Perry read the narrative. The backing is the choral version of 'Everybody's Free (To Feel Good)', a 1991 song by Rozalla, used in the film William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet. The lyrics are from an essay called "Advice, like youth, probably just wasted on the young" by columnist Mary Schmich. It first appeared in 1997 in the Chicago Sunday Tribune, although the article was originally wrongly credited as being a collegiate commencement speech delivered by author Kurt Vonnegut. (Just a brief aside - Since I graduated college 44 years ago, the song cut very close to the bone.)
June 6, 2001 -
The atmospheric mystery film, Mulholland Drive, directed by David Lynch and starring Naomi Watts, Laura Harring, Justin Theroux, Ann Miller, and Robert Forster, opened on this date.
Director David Lynch initially resisted Studio Canal's offer to provide additional funds to complete the Mulholland Drive TV pilot as a feature film. Lynch's battles with ABC network executives had left him with a negative feeling about the project, and he felt he had run out of ideas for the storyline. When he finally agreed to revisit the film, he found that all the sets had been destroyed, much to his horror, and all of the costumes and props had been released by ABC (normally all sets, props and costumes for a possible TV series are carefully cataloged and stored for future use). Lynch claimed this setback actually proved a blessing in disguise, when it finally generated new ideas about how to proceed with filming, and he was able to come up with a satisfying conclusion to the story.
Don't forget to tune in to The ACME Eagle Hand Soap Radio Hour today
Today in History:
June 6, 1755 -
A boy was born in Coventry, Connecticut on this date. He grew up, went to Yale, and became a teacher. He never distinguished himself in any way. He never wrote or said anything of note, never committed any famous or infamous deeds, never married or had children. He seemed destined to be swallowed whole by the omnivorous mouth of obscurity. He was therefore recruited by the United States Military as an intelligence agent, dispatched behind enemy lines in British-occupied Manhattan, and captured.
He was hanged by the British on September 22, 1776.
Moments before his execution, he expressed regret that he couldn't be hanged more than once. This remark catapulted him to posthumous fame (but only after his death), and Nathan Hale is revered to this day.
June 6, 1844 -
... You can get yourself clean. You can have a good meal. You can do whatever you feel ...
That 'fun' place to stay, The Young Men's Christian Association was founded in London, England by George Williams and a group of Evangelical Christians on this date. (If you find yourself dancing around while watching the video clip above, maybe you may have swam in the nude at the Y as a child, or maybe even as an adult.)
June 6, 1944 -
82 years ago today, the largest seaborne invasion in history began - the allied invasion of Normandy (Operation Overlord.) The date is also commonly known as D-Day. The military calls the date of every major operation D-Day, probably to confuse the enemy.
This would have been especially confusing in Normandy, which is in France, where Day begins with a J. German spies were probably waiting to hear something about J-Jour.
June 6, 1955 -
I'm very much an optimist. I don't think I could do my work if I didn't believe there was some kind of hope for humanity..
Sandra Bernhard, comedian/actress was also born on this day.
June 6, 1968 -
Senator Robert F. Kennedy died at Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles on this date.
The Democratic lawmaker had been campaigning for his party's Presidential nomination when he was shot three times by Sirhan Bishara Sirhan a day earlier.
Jun 6 1976 -
American expatriate J. Paul Getty, named the richest man in the world in 1957, died in London at age 83.
According to the oil baron, "If you can count your money, you don't have a billion dollars."
June 6, 1985 -
Authorities in Embu, Brazil exhume the grave of one Wolfgang Gerhard in order to determine its true identity. The remains are later proven to be those of Dr. Josef Mengele, Auschwitz's notorious Angel of Death.
Mengele is thought to have drowned while swimming in the ocean in February 1979.
June 6, 1989 -
During the Tehran funeral of the Ayatollah Khomeini, frenzied mourners accidentally tipped his corpse out of its coffin and onto the ground.
Three million horrified followers bore witness to the desecration.
Oops!
June 6, 1990 -
US district court judge Jose Gonzalez ruled that the rap album by 2 Live Crew violated Florida's obscenity law.
Gonzalez declared that the predominant subject matter of the record is "directed to the 'dirty' thoughts and the loins, not to the intellect and the mind."
I've scoured the internet, they were not offering 'Interpreting dirty thoughts and the loins' when I was a freshman at Columbia.
On a personal note - Happy Birthday Joseph.
And so it goes.
Friday, June 5, 2026
Sometimes, it doesn't pay to know certain things
Do you have anything else to do today? Perhaps you should do it.
Today is Dead Duck Day, an annual event celebrated at the Natural History Museum in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. It's the anniversary of the first known observation of homosexual necrophilia in the mallard duck.
Now that you know, you may go about your business
Today is National Donut Day. The holiday began as a fundraiser for the Salvation Army in 1938. It is celebrated annually on the first Friday of June, and honors all the female volunteers who served donuts to soldiers behind the front lines during World War I.
(And if you hurry maybe Ben will be working at your local drive thru.)
To celebrate Donut Day 2026, a few donut shops are offering a free donut deal. Celebrate at Krispy Kreme with a free donut of any variety, or at Dunkin' Donuts which is offering a free donut with the purchase of any beverage.
It's also National Moonshine Day. Moonshine traditionally is an illegally distilled spirit. Mostly made from a corn mash, moonshine is a distilled whiskey that is typically produced by an individual illegally without a permit. Also known as white lightning, mountain dew, homebrew, hillbilly pop, rotgut and too many more to list here.
The X’s on the moonshine jugs symbol represents the number of times a batch was run through the still. If marked XXX, the moonshine is pure alcohol.
June 5, 1939 -
The Wizard of Oz was test screened on this date.
(Bunkies, the video is a joke - the screening though, did occur on this date.)
June 5, 1956 -
Elvis Presley appeared on Milton Berle's TV show on this date. His undulating hip movements during the song Hound Dog cause quite a national controversy. (Once again kids - place one hand upon the screen and the other upon your 'afflicted' region. Feel the healing powers of St. Elvis emanate throughout your body.)
Elvis' pelvis and Uncle Miltie's 'special gift' - American virginity was never the same again.
June 5, 1954 -
The Looney Tunes short, Little Boy Boo, directed by Bob McKimson, starring Foghorn Leghorn, debuted on this date.
Widow hen not only breaks the fourth wall, she addresses Foghorn by his proper name, Mr. Leghorn.
June 5, 1961 -
Roy Orbison's record Running Scared reached the number one position on the charts, on this date.
This was the last song Roy Orbison ever sung live. His final performance was on December 4, 1988, just two days before his sudden passing, at a Cleveland-area venue. As was his usual habit, Orbison closed the show with Running Scared.
June 5, 1964 -
David Bowie's first ever release was Liza Jane/Louie Louie Go Home on this date, under the name of Davie Jones with The King-Bees.
Despite promoting the single on the television shows Juke Box Jury, Ready Steady Go! and The Beat Room, and receiving good radio coverage, the single sold poorly and the band was subsequently dropped from the label Vocalion Pop. He later changed his name to Bowie to avoid confusion with Monkee Davy Jones.
June 5, 1968 –
The mystery film, Jigsaw, directed by James Goldstone, and starring, Bradford Dillman, Harry Guardino, Michael J. Pollard, Susan Saint James, Hope Lange, and Diana Hyland, opened on this date. (This was a remake of the film Mirage, released in 1965.)
This was originally planned to be a television movie. However due to content NBC refused to run it so Universal gave it a theatrical release instead. NBC wound up broadcasting it in 1969.
June 5, 1983 -
U2 played an intimate yet energetic concert, in the rain, at the Red Rocks amphitheater in Colorado, on this date.
It is later released as a concert film called Under a Blood Red Sky.
June 5, 1998 -
Peter Weir's underrated film, The Truman Show (often credited with predicting the reality television phenomenon,) starring Jim Carrey, Laura Linney and Ed Harris, premiered on this date.
According to a 2008 New York Times article, psychologists in Britain and the U.S. reported a number of people experiencing "Truman Syndrome" or "the Truman Show delusion," the belief that they are the unwitting star of their own reality TV show.
June 5, 2018 -
Ocean's 8, directed by Gary Ross and starring Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Anne Hathaway and Rihanna premiered on this date.
Both Rihanna and Cate Blanchett have actually served as Chairs for the annual Met Gala, the function played by Anne Hathaway's character in the movie.
Another unimportant moment in history
Today in History:
June 5, c470/469BC - (this is an approximate date. Literally, calendar makers, as well as most of the citizens of ancient Greece were engaged in their favorite past time- vigorous sodomy.)
Education is the kindling of a flame, not the filling of a vessel.
<
Socrates was born in Athens, on this date. He served as an infantryman during the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. A sophist (teacher of philosophy), he claimed not to know anything for certain (including the fact that hemlock was poison) and used the interrogatory method for teaching. He was a major critic of popular belief in Athens and was the protagonist of Plato’s dialogues. He left no written works.
June 5, 1878 -
José Doroteo Arango Arámbula (aka Pancho Villa), one of the most famous generals of the Mexican Revolution (or notorious bandit - history is very fickle that way) was born on this date.
Pancho Villa was also responsible for a raid on Columbus, New Mexico in 1916, which was the first attack on U.S. soil since 1812.
June 5, 1895 -
All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes
William Lawrence Boyd (aka Hopalong Cassidy,) American icon and actor was born on this date.
June 5, 1938 -
The first machine in history to produce intelligible speech-like sounds was exhibited by Homer Dudley, Richard Riesz, and Stanley Watkins. Called “Pedro, the Voder,” it is put on display to the public at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on this date.
In addition to human voices, it can imitate the sound of various farm animals.
June 5, 1967 -
The Six Day War erupted in the Middle East as Israel, convinced an Arab attack was imminent, raided Egyptian and Syrian military targets on this date.
I have enough problems with the Chinese government that I don't need any trouble with the entire Middle East by commenting on this fracas.
June 5, 1968 -
Seconds after Senator Robert F. Kennedy was shot by Sirhan Sirhan in a Los Angeles hotel, witnesses wrestle the assassin to the ground and grab his smoking .22-caliber revolver, on this date.
Sirhan later claims to have been acting unconsciously, the result of hypnotic brainwashing, possibly under the orders of a dog named Harvey in Long Island.
June 5, 1975 -
... Come on you stranger, you legend, you martyr, and shine!...
During the Wish You Were Here recording sessions on this date, Syd Barrett just happens to wander into Abbey Road studio while Pink Floyd were mixing Shine On You Crazy Diamond, a song written about Barrett. At first, none of Syd's former bandmates recognizes the fat, bald lunatic who was compulsively brushing his teeth.
When someone tried to break the ice by asking Syd how he had put on so much weight, he maniacally replied, "I've got a very large fridge in the kitchen, and I've been eating a lot of pork chops!" This would be the last time any of the Pink Floyd members saw him.
June 5, 1976 -
Located in the eastern part of Idaho, between Fremont and Madison counties, the Teton Dam, an earthen dam on the Teton River suffered a catastrophic failure while it was being filled for the first time, on this date.
The collapse of the dam resulted in the deaths of eleven people and 16,000 livestock. The dam cost about $100 million to build and the federal government paid over $300 million in claims related to its failure. Total damage estimates have ranged up to $2 billion. The dam has never been rebuilt.
June 5, 1981 –
The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that five people in Los Angeles, California, had a rare form of pneumonia seen only in patients with weakened immune systems,
in what turns out to be the first recognized cases of AIDS.
June 5, 1998 -
Reuters and ABC News both erroneously reported the death of Bob Hope, after Arizona congressman Bob Stump announced the comedian's demise on the floor of the U.S. Congress.
This was a tremendous surprise to Bob Hope himself, who was eating breakfast at the time.
Oops.
And so it goes.
Today is Dead Duck Day, an annual event celebrated at the Natural History Museum in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. It's the anniversary of the first known observation of homosexual necrophilia in the mallard duck.
Now that you know, you may go about your business
Today is National Donut Day. The holiday began as a fundraiser for the Salvation Army in 1938. It is celebrated annually on the first Friday of June, and honors all the female volunteers who served donuts to soldiers behind the front lines during World War I.
(And if you hurry maybe Ben will be working at your local drive thru.)
To celebrate Donut Day 2026, a few donut shops are offering a free donut deal. Celebrate at Krispy Kreme with a free donut of any variety, or at Dunkin' Donuts which is offering a free donut with the purchase of any beverage.
It's also National Moonshine Day. Moonshine traditionally is an illegally distilled spirit. Mostly made from a corn mash, moonshine is a distilled whiskey that is typically produced by an individual illegally without a permit. Also known as white lightning, mountain dew, homebrew, hillbilly pop, rotgut and too many more to list here.
The X’s on the moonshine jugs symbol represents the number of times a batch was run through the still. If marked XXX, the moonshine is pure alcohol.
June 5, 1939 -
The Wizard of Oz was test screened on this date.
(Bunkies, the video is a joke - the screening though, did occur on this date.)
June 5, 1956 -
Elvis Presley appeared on Milton Berle's TV show on this date. His undulating hip movements during the song Hound Dog cause quite a national controversy. (Once again kids - place one hand upon the screen and the other upon your 'afflicted' region. Feel the healing powers of St. Elvis emanate throughout your body.)
Elvis' pelvis and Uncle Miltie's 'special gift' - American virginity was never the same again.
June 5, 1954 -
The Looney Tunes short, Little Boy Boo, directed by Bob McKimson, starring Foghorn Leghorn, debuted on this date.
Widow hen not only breaks the fourth wall, she addresses Foghorn by his proper name, Mr. Leghorn.
June 5, 1961 -
Roy Orbison's record Running Scared reached the number one position on the charts, on this date.
This was the last song Roy Orbison ever sung live. His final performance was on December 4, 1988, just two days before his sudden passing, at a Cleveland-area venue. As was his usual habit, Orbison closed the show with Running Scared.
June 5, 1964 -
David Bowie's first ever release was Liza Jane/Louie Louie Go Home on this date, under the name of Davie Jones with The King-Bees.
Despite promoting the single on the television shows Juke Box Jury, Ready Steady Go! and The Beat Room, and receiving good radio coverage, the single sold poorly and the band was subsequently dropped from the label Vocalion Pop. He later changed his name to Bowie to avoid confusion with Monkee Davy Jones.
June 5, 1968 –
The mystery film, Jigsaw, directed by James Goldstone, and starring, Bradford Dillman, Harry Guardino, Michael J. Pollard, Susan Saint James, Hope Lange, and Diana Hyland, opened on this date. (This was a remake of the film Mirage, released in 1965.)
This was originally planned to be a television movie. However due to content NBC refused to run it so Universal gave it a theatrical release instead. NBC wound up broadcasting it in 1969.
June 5, 1983 -
U2 played an intimate yet energetic concert, in the rain, at the Red Rocks amphitheater in Colorado, on this date.
It is later released as a concert film called Under a Blood Red Sky.
June 5, 1998 -
Peter Weir's underrated film, The Truman Show (often credited with predicting the reality television phenomenon,) starring Jim Carrey, Laura Linney and Ed Harris, premiered on this date.
According to a 2008 New York Times article, psychologists in Britain and the U.S. reported a number of people experiencing "Truman Syndrome" or "the Truman Show delusion," the belief that they are the unwitting star of their own reality TV show.
June 5, 2018 -
Ocean's 8, directed by Gary Ross and starring Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Anne Hathaway and Rihanna premiered on this date.
Both Rihanna and Cate Blanchett have actually served as Chairs for the annual Met Gala, the function played by Anne Hathaway's character in the movie.
Another unimportant moment in history
Today in History:
June 5, c470/469BC - (this is an approximate date. Literally, calendar makers, as well as most of the citizens of ancient Greece were engaged in their favorite past time- vigorous sodomy.)
Education is the kindling of a flame, not the filling of a vessel.
<
Socrates was born in Athens, on this date. He served as an infantryman during the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. A sophist (teacher of philosophy), he claimed not to know anything for certain (including the fact that hemlock was poison) and used the interrogatory method for teaching. He was a major critic of popular belief in Athens and was the protagonist of Plato’s dialogues. He left no written works.
June 5, 1878 -
José Doroteo Arango Arámbula (aka Pancho Villa), one of the most famous generals of the Mexican Revolution (or notorious bandit - history is very fickle that way) was born on this date.
Pancho Villa was also responsible for a raid on Columbus, New Mexico in 1916, which was the first attack on U.S. soil since 1812.
June 5, 1895 -
All the Best Cowboys Have Chinese Eyes
William Lawrence Boyd (aka Hopalong Cassidy,) American icon and actor was born on this date.
June 5, 1938 -
The first machine in history to produce intelligible speech-like sounds was exhibited by Homer Dudley, Richard Riesz, and Stanley Watkins. Called “Pedro, the Voder,” it is put on display to the public at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on this date.
In addition to human voices, it can imitate the sound of various farm animals.
June 5, 1967 -
The Six Day War erupted in the Middle East as Israel, convinced an Arab attack was imminent, raided Egyptian and Syrian military targets on this date.
I have enough problems with the Chinese government that I don't need any trouble with the entire Middle East by commenting on this fracas.
June 5, 1968 -
Seconds after Senator Robert F. Kennedy was shot by Sirhan Sirhan in a Los Angeles hotel, witnesses wrestle the assassin to the ground and grab his smoking .22-caliber revolver, on this date.
Sirhan later claims to have been acting unconsciously, the result of hypnotic brainwashing, possibly under the orders of a dog named Harvey in Long Island.
June 5, 1975 -
... Come on you stranger, you legend, you martyr, and shine!...
During the Wish You Were Here recording sessions on this date, Syd Barrett just happens to wander into Abbey Road studio while Pink Floyd were mixing Shine On You Crazy Diamond, a song written about Barrett. At first, none of Syd's former bandmates recognizes the fat, bald lunatic who was compulsively brushing his teeth.
When someone tried to break the ice by asking Syd how he had put on so much weight, he maniacally replied, "I've got a very large fridge in the kitchen, and I've been eating a lot of pork chops!" This would be the last time any of the Pink Floyd members saw him.
June 5, 1976 -
Located in the eastern part of Idaho, between Fremont and Madison counties, the Teton Dam, an earthen dam on the Teton River suffered a catastrophic failure while it was being filled for the first time, on this date.
The collapse of the dam resulted in the deaths of eleven people and 16,000 livestock. The dam cost about $100 million to build and the federal government paid over $300 million in claims related to its failure. Total damage estimates have ranged up to $2 billion. The dam has never been rebuilt.
June 5, 1981 –
The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that five people in Los Angeles, California, had a rare form of pneumonia seen only in patients with weakened immune systems,
in what turns out to be the first recognized cases of AIDS.
June 5, 1998 -
Reuters and ABC News both erroneously reported the death of Bob Hope, after Arizona congressman Bob Stump announced the comedian's demise on the floor of the U.S. Congress.
This was a tremendous surprise to Bob Hope himself, who was eating breakfast at the time.
Oops.
And so it goes.
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