Stop the Pinon Canyon Expansion



Join Wetpaint.com!



Join the Glorious Republic of Bob on Wetpaint.com!


(Carter and I are working on a logo.)


   

My Blogroll is back!
The newest within the last 24 hours are first:

Please Visit
Carter's New blog!
Which he's been updating more.



logansackett
February 6th 1960  (Age 49)
Male
Colorado Springs

Visit my photo galleries,
especially my granddaughter!

In case you are interested, these are some of my favorite entries or entries that tell a lot about me:

Intro Pt. 1

Intro Pt. 2

Big Herbie, Little Herbie

Evil Boy Scouts

Job Hunting

Pronghorn Antelope

1984

How and When to Ban Books

100 Things

How We Got Roo

Dead Drunk

Resolutions

Reiterator '06

Carter gets BLOWN UP!
Books I love:

1) The King James Bible – God
2) Have Spacesuit, Will Travel – Robert Heinlein
3) The Moon is a Harsh Mistress – Robert Heinlein
4) Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy(all 5 books in the trilogy) – Douglas Adams
5) Ride the Dark Trail – Louis L’Amour
6) Fahrenheit 451 – Ray Bradbury
7) North to the Rails – Louis L’Amour
*) A book I hated but think everyone in the world ought to read is 1984 – George Orwell.


Thank you President Bush for preserving life!

http://www.feministsforlife.org/

Please visit:
Herb's Humor

Herb's Friends

Also:
Check out the attacks that the Boy Scouts of America receive because of what they believe and teach!

Scarbrough's Garden. These are the kind folks that are going to help me grow a Savannah Melody Daylily!
Scarbroughs Garden


My award from Daveman.
looks just like me except the desk is clean.

My second award from Daveman looks just like five asterisks:
*****


If you want to be updated on this weblog Enter your email here:

New hits since Oct 19, 2006


<< October 2004 >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
 01 02
03 04 05 06 07 08 09
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31
rss feed

Some Blogdrive Blogs:


Herb Thiel

Sunday, October 17, 2004
Sunday Funnies

Okay, so a ‘blog is supposed to be where you can vent your spleen and rant and rave and carry on, right?  So let me tell you something that makes me mad every Sunday!  Something so frustrating and aggravating words nearly fail me.  WHY, oh why, do newspapers think it is okay to hide the comics section?  Back in the good old days (that, by the way, is the phrase, not, "Back in the day.") when i was a boy the funnies were on the outside of the paper.  You could see what was going on in Peanuts or Dick Tracy (depending on what paper it was) right on top.

One of our papers divides the comics into 2 sections, then completely wraps one of the sections in an ad.  If you don’t know that they do this, you discover that you have thrown away half of the comics section!  The other part has one of those fold-out, tear-off ads that tears the paper in half instead and the punch line to "Dilbert" has to be fished out of the trash.  Today the first section came wrapped in a full-page ad, then had another ad under that, plus the tear-away ad!

And whatever happened to "The Funny Papers," anyway?  When did adult humor become appropriate for the comics?  There are times that even the strips that you would think are for children come out with the most risqué and sometimes downright nasty jokes!  And who wants to know the political ideology of a cartoonist?  Put the op-ed funnies on the op-ed page!  I don’t care if they are left, right, middle or what, get them off the comics page.  Particularly the ones that are blatantly and openly political like "Doonesbury," "Boondocks," "Mallard Fillmore," et al.  Maybe newspapers could start a separate op-ed comics page, but get all of the politics out of there.  This would make room for funny strips like "Tumbleweeds" and "One big happy" and of course allow us to track Mary Worth and Little Orphan Annie much more closely also.

What papers should do, which will never happen because there is money involved, is not only go back to the days of putting the comics on top, but make the comics normal sized.  Make them (and the weekly ones too) the size that they are when the comics come off the drawing board.  This would mean a much larger comics section, but they could also generate more revenue from their ads.  They could triple charge the rate for advertising in the funnies and make the funnies section as big as the front page for all i care.  I can hear and read about death and sorrow and murder and taxes any old time, but i can only see the Sunday funnies once a week.

I have a hard question for all of you, my gentle readers.  But, what is your all-time favorite Comic Strip?  Why?  Leave me some comments and i’ll try to reply to as many as i can.  Is it possible that there is someone who DOESN’T read the funnies every chance they get?  Could there possibly be someone out there who doesn’t even care???  If that’s you I would like to know if you are mainly a "Math" person or "English" person and are you right-handed or left-handed?  Thank you all.

Posted at 10/17/2004 9:24:15 am by logansackett
Comments? Anyone?  

Saturday, October 16, 2004
A Second Blog

I have a collection of jokes that i have saved, mostly from e-mails, but other sources as well, including Colorado Comments, GCFL, Humor Highway and others.  I was thinking of starting a separate blog (blogdrive.com lets you have more than one 'blog per account) for jokey sorts of things.  Many of the files I have contain several jokes and stories, so if I do 1 per day, I should have enough to last a while.

I will try to list the source i got things from, but some jokes have been around since God ribbed Adam and made Eve and either have multiple or unknown sources.  If you actually know the real original author and/or have some way to show i have not credited you i will either credit you or take it down.  But anyway, these will just be some of my personal favorites and i plan to start with some of the older ones first.

http://herbshumor.blogdrive.com/

No, Mary G., the "Artie Joke" ain't da same in a e-mail.

Posted at 10/16/2004 4:21:19 pm by logansackett
Comments? Anyone?  

I Kin Talk Good

Okay, this is where i am going to do it.  I’m feeling lazy and uninspired this evening so I am going to let the grammar and spell checker in Microsoft Word XP run the show.  For instance, where I use the pronoun "I" it tells me that I should not use the first person.  Hmmm, that’s going to be interesting...Oh, it doesn’t like contractions, either.  I think what I will do is type the whole thing up first, then go back and check the whole document and use the machine’s preferences everywhere.  But, what to write about?  Well, i could cop out and just type the first 175 words and then scan it and copy it below.  I think i will.  That way you can see the differences between my pitiful grasp of the English language and the superiority of the machine.  Oh, man!  Oh, man!  i just had to get a couple of those in there because i thought it was such a hoot last time i used it.  I know, it’s not particularly spontaneous, but, well, i guess i must feel a little lazy tonight.  I do my best work in the morning.  OOOHHH!  OOOOHHHH!!  Mr. Kotter!  OOOH!  How about this, also:

Eye Halve A Spelling Chequer

Eye halve a spelling chequer
It came with my pea sea
It plainly marques four my revue
Miss steaks eye kin knot sea.

Eye strike a key and type a word
And weight four it two say
Weather eye am wrong oar write
It shows me strait a weigh.

As soon as a mist ache is maid
It nose bee fore two long
And eye can put the error rite
Its rare lea ever wrong.

Eye have run this poem threw it
I am shore your pleased two no
Its letter perfect awl the weigh
My chequer tolled me sew.

Sauce Unknown

Okay, i know, I’m having too much fun.  Well, here we go, then.  Time to run it through the checker, and do you know what?  I STILL will have managed, by the time i end this sentence, to have broken 350!

The corrected text:

Okay, this is where Herb is going to do it.  Feeling lazy and uninspired this evening, this writer is going to let the grammar and spell checker in Microsoft Word XP run the show.  For instance, where the author uses the pronoun "I" it tells him that he should not use the first person.  Hmmm, that is going to be interesting...Oh, it does not like contractions, either.  This one think what I will do is type the whole thing up first, and then goes back and check the whole document and use the machine’s preferences everywhere.  However, about what should Herb write?  Well, Herb could cop out and just type the first 175 words and then scan it and copy it below.  He thinks he will.  That way you can see the differences between this writer's pitiful grasp of the English language and the superiority of the machine.  Oh, operate!  Oh, staff!  This writer just had to get a couple of those in there because he thought it was such a hoot last time he used it.  He knows, it is not particularly spontaneous, but well, he guess he must feel a little lazy tonight.  He does his best work in the morning.  OOOHHH! (It says this is a fragment and to revise but this author feels that an interjection is something he is unable to edit appropriately.)  OOOOHHHH! (It says this is a fragment and to revise but this author feels that an interjection is something he is unable to edit appropriately)  Mr. Katter!  How about this, also:

Eye Halve a Spelling Chaucer

Eye halve a spelling scheduler
It came with this writer's pea sea
It plainly marques four my revue
Miss steaks eye kin knot sea.

Eye strike a key and type a word
And weight four it two say
Weather eye is wrong oar write
It shows this author strait a weigh.

As soon as a mist aches, is house cleaner?
It nose bee fore two long
In addition, eye can put the error rite
It is rare lea ever wrong.

Eye has run this poem threw it
I am shore your pleased two no
Its letter-perfect awl the weigh
This author's torque tolled him sew.

Sauce Unknown

Okay, Herb knows, Herb is having too much fun.  Well, here we go, then.  Time to run it through the checker, and do you know what?  Herb STILL will have managed; by the time, Herb ends this sentence, to have broken 350!

Posted at 10/16/2004 5:39:11 am by logansackett
Comments? Anyone?  

Thursday, October 14, 2004
Coffee Worth A Thousand Words

Okay, so my friend and former co-worker, Alice, sends me an e-mail that says she has always heard it was supposed to be a minimum of a thousand words a day.  Well, I think that may be true, but the "Nifty Three-Fifty" was intended to just get you sort of jump-started and on your way.  I have been noticing that many of my entries are between seven hundred and a thousand anyway, so I will just sort of blather on as I have been doing and hope for the best.

In a book called "Don't Dig for Water Under the Outhouse and other Cowboy Commandments" by "Texas Bix Bender" which is part of a series of books of Western Wisdom and common sense which includes such classics as, "Don't Squat With Yer Spurs On," page 39 says, "Do not tolerate weak coffee." 

Read about it here.

Posted at 10/14/2004 4:53:29 pm by logansackett
Comments (5)  

Wednesday, October 13, 2004
The Rally

YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE-HAAAAAAAAAAAWWWWWWW!!!!!!!!!! (Word counted that as one word) Okay.  I am pumped!  What an incredible thing!  Read it here!

Posted at 10/13/2004 5:19:36 pm by logansackett
Comments (2)  

Monday, October 11, 2004
My Writing Goals

I have been told in sundry times and in diverse manners, that what i need to do is set some goals for myself as far as my writing is concerned.

The idea that, no matter what, I will write three hundred and fifty words every day is a great start but a little tougher than you might at first expect.  I think the author of the original article meant that you should add to your current project or projects, but writing about something new each day, or, more accurately, scrawling a thought a day, should get the creative juices flowing.  I already write long e-mails to friends on esoteric subjects.  I like the idea also because it reminds me that I want to make this my work, not just a pastime.

This brings me to the goals.  What do I really want from writing?  I think I want two things.  I want to make money as a writer and I want my writing to have artistic merit as well.  Here is my tentative plan:

1) Complete a short story of 1000 to 3500 words and submit it somewhere, either to a contest or to a magazine before the end of, ummm, er, ah, well, how about before the end of 2005?  I will try not to take rejection personally.
2) Submit at least five poems somewhere other than Poetry Dot Com for publication.
3) Work on plotting a novel.

While this will not make me a superstar overnight, we can hope that it will help me to become more organized and more committed to writing.  I think it may also influence other areas of my life, such as my business, which I need to kick-start as well.

So, the "Long And Winding Road" may lead, not to someone’s door, but to the door of success and opportunity.  I must keep this small, three-hundred-fifty word commitment and meet these goals, and I will be on my way.

The last question I have is something I have noticed when trying this.  Why is it so hard to come up with three-hundred-fifty words?

Posted at 10/11/2004 4:28:32 am by logansackett
 

Sunday, October 10, 2004
Steenking Dog II & Etc.

Well, the adventure is pretty much over now, thanks to Margaret's cleaning prowess.  The whole article is here

Posted at 10/10/2004 8:22:32 am by logansackett
Comments (2)  

Saturday, October 09, 2004
Woo-Hoo!!!

I AM JAZZED, JAZZED, JAZZED!  Read Why Here

Posted at 10/9/2004 7:52:46 pm by logansackett
Comments (2)  

Friday, October 08, 2004
What A Day!

Wednesday Night Bible Study, Pastor Johnson had taught about being excited and full of joy when you are out among people and letting the world see that you have joy.

What a day!  The steenking dog episode happened around 4 A.M.ish on Thursday and was just the beginning.  Read about it here

Posted at 10/8/2004 5:55:39 am by logansackett
Comments (4)  

Thursday, October 07, 2004
Steenking Dog

Posted at 10/7/2004 4:44:11 am by logansackett
Comments (3)  

Next Page