Simanaitis Says

On cars, old, new and future; science & technology; vintage airplanes, computer flight simulation of them; Sherlockiana; our English language; travel; and other stuff

CELEBRATING MORT SAHL

LONG BEFORE BILL Maher and John Oliver, even before Lenny Bruce and George Carlin, there was Mort Sahl. And there still is! A recent Tweet from Sahl: “Executive Privilege is … Continue reading

June 7, 2017 · Leave a comment

THE TSAREVICH AND THE BALLERINA, PART 2

THE RUSSIAN bioflick Matilda, detailing Tsarevich Nicholas’s affair with ballerina Matilda Kshesinskaya, isn’t scheduled for release until October 2017. However, it has already generated lots of buzz in its homeland. … Continue reading

June 6, 2017 · Leave a comment

THE TSAREVICH AND THE BALLERINA, PART 1

SOMETIMES I encounter fascinating things even before they occur. Precognition? Or just stumbling into the right place at an earlier time? Recently here at SimanaitisSays I’ve mentioned the fall of … Continue reading

June 5, 2017 · Leave a comment

HOLMES AND VAMPIRES

I’M NOT really into vampires, apart from the frisson delivered by Bram Stoker’s wonderful Dracula and my appreciation of Buffy Summers (truth be known, it’s actually Sarah Michelle Gellar and … Continue reading

June 4, 2017 · Leave a comment

THEATER ARTS—BENOIS PÈRE ET FILS

LIKE FATHER, like son, they say. Fortunate indeed for the Russian-born theater arts pair of Alexandre and Nicolas Benois. Their careers extended from 1895 to 1978, encompassing costume and set … Continue reading

June 3, 2017 · Leave a comment

MIXING CHURCH AND STATE—THE GORDON RIOTS

A DECADE BEFORE American rebels ratified the United States Constitution, including its First Amendment definitively separating church and state, Britain was roiling in the Gordon Riots—largely on grounds of religion. … Continue reading

June 2, 2017 · Leave a comment

CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT AND THE S-WORD (SCIENCE)

TWO ARTICLES on the same two-page spread of Science, May 5, 2017, suggest the turmoil taking place in scientific communities funded at least in part by the federal government. One … Continue reading

June 1, 2017 · Leave a comment

THEY’LL HAVE MANHATTAN; I’LL HAVE PHOENIX, OMAHA, CHICAGO, SALT LAKE CITY…

The New York Times, May 28, 2017, celebrated “the celestial eye candy known as Manhattanhenge” with a usual fervor directed to those living immediately east of the Hudson River. Despite … Continue reading

May 31, 2017 · 1 Comment

A LAMENTABLE TALE OF A FORD F-250

KEITH MARTIN’S Sports Car Market is an entertaining and informative magazine, even if, like me, you’re not into buying or selling collector cars at auction. In this magazine’s July 2017 … Continue reading

May 30, 2017 · 1 Comment

GREAT ACERBIC LINES

H.L. MENCKEN was a 20th-century journalist who specialized in acerbic writing that’s still a delight to read. I don’t always agree with Mencken’s view, but I savor his expertise with … Continue reading

May 29, 2017 · 2 Comments