Thursday 28 March 2013

Cool Make My Photo To Cartoon images

20100120 - Team America Super Stunt Dirt Bike - GEDC1409 - bike, launcher
make my photo to cartoon
Image by Rev. Xanatos Satanicos Bombasticos (ClintJCL)
The Team America Super Stunt Dirt Bike, my favorite childhood birthday present. I got it when I turned 7 on Jan 13, 1981, and still play with it 29 years later! The winder/launcher/crank eventually broke apart, but duct tape has held it together over the decades.

The internet barely mentions this toy as existing, and there are barely any pictures. When I posted a low-quality YouTube video of it in action, I eventually received requests to do a photo shoot of the toy, to prove that it existed. So here they are, world! Enjoy!

By the way, the plastic geras in the winding unit make a decent fingernail file. And the Rugrats sticker was added in 2010, simply because I like to put stickers on things and had a sticker laying around.

Rugrats sticker, Team America Super Stunt Dirt Bike, crank, duct tape, launcher, masking tape, motorcycle.


upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.

January 20, 2010.


... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com



...View low-quality video of our cats Oranjello and Lemonjello "playing" with Team America Super Stunt Dirtbike at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQGaTGDmhoA


20100120 - Team America Super Stunt Dirt Bike - GEDC1406 - bike, launcher
make my photo to cartoon
Image by Rev. Xanatos Satanicos Bombasticos (ClintJCL)
The Team America Super Stunt Dirt Bike, my favorite childhood birthday present. I got it when I turned 7 on Jan 13, 1981, and still play with it 29 years later! The winder/launcher/crank eventually broke apart, but duct tape has held it together over the decades.

The internet barely mentions this toy as existing, and there are barely any pictures. When I posted a low-quality YouTube video of it in action, I eventually received requests to do a photo shoot of the toy, to prove that it existed. So here they are, world! Enjoy!

By the way, the plastic gears in the winding unit make a decent fingernail file. And the Rugrats sticker was added in 2010, simply because I like to put stickers on things and had a sticker laying around.

Rugrats sticker, Team America Super Stunt Dirt Bike, crank, duct tape, launcher, masking tape, motorcycle.


upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.

January 20, 2010.


... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com



...View low-quality video of our cats Oranjello and Lemonjello "playing" with Team America Super Stunt Dirtbike at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQGaTGDmhoA


Day 264/365 - Confessions of a Retro Boy, Pt. 2
make my photo to cartoon
Image by Kevin H.
I've already confessed my love of old movies (which really should've been the first retro boy confession) and old radio programs, so it should come as no great surprise when I confess that I also love old comic strips from the 1930s and 1940s. As with the radio programs, I don't care so much for the old comedy strips. It's mostly the old adventure and detective strips that draw my interest.

Terry and the Pirates and Jungle Jim are two of the best adventure strips and Dick Tracy is unequivocally the best detective strip of all time. Tracy is also my favorite comic strip, period. The contemporary version of the strip is pretty dreadful and not worth reading, but the classic Dick Tracy strips had it all -- action, mystery, romance, melodrama, suspense, high tech gadgetry, fiendish death traps, and larger than life characters. I got hooked on Tracy when I was in high school. At that time, the contemporary strip was still pretty damn good.

When I went away to college my parents would save the comics sections from the newspaper for me so I could catch up on my Dick Tracy reading when I came home. Then, after I joined the Navy, they would clip the strips from the paper and send me an envelope stuffed with them every month so I wouldn't have to go without my Tracy fix. Now I love collecting and reading reprinted editions of the vintage Terry and the Pirates, Jungle Jim, and especially Dick Tracy comic strips. As with most examples of popular culture from that time period, they have a tendency to be casually racist. It's astonishing how the mainstream America of that era had no qualms about employing slurs and stereotypes that make most modern audiences cringe.

I love the old comic strips despite their flaws, although being a white guy probably makes it a lot easier to overlook the racist elements they contain and just focus on the slam-bang stories. There's more than a little guilt associated with this guilty pleasure.

(June 29, 2009)

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