I worked out the chords for about half of the final joint scat in “Sacha Distel et Jean-Pierre Cassel’s Song and Dance” by Serge Gainsbourg.
I played my Gibson electric guitar during song practice and it stayed in tune up until just before the last two songs.
I weighed 86.45 kilos before breakfast.
Around midday I filled a lot of holes on the east and north walls of the bathroom. I also filled the gaps between the walls and the underside of the top shelves and top of the lower shelf, and where all the shelf brackets meet the shelves and the walls. I filled an enormous hole under the upper shelf on the north wall. Even if I never sand and paint it looks better now than before. I still have the area under the lower shelf to do, plus the inside of the bathroom door, the door frame, and a little bit of the southern wall.
I weighed 86.6 kilos before lunch. I had the usual tomatoes with avocadoes and lemon juice with a glass of Garden Cocktail.
In the afternoon I took a bike ride but it was misting heavy enough that if I’d gone all the way downtown I would have gotten wet. So I only went as far as Ossington and Bloor.
I weighed 86.8 kilos at 17:30, which is the heaviest I’ve been in the evening since March 19.
I was caught up on my journal at 18:30.
In the Movie Maker project to create a video for the studio recording of my song “Seven Shades of Blues” I imported all of the clips I’d gathered from “Lime Kiln Club Field Day” the first movie with an all black cast. I put them all at the end of the timeline and edited out the credits and the people talking about the movie. The one clip that Total Video Converter wouldn’t convert and that Cloud Covert did convert, just froze and so I deleted it. I have about 3.5 minutes of the movie now and I’ll try to edit it some more tomorrow.
I compared the videos of my acoustic song practice performances of “Sixteen Tons of Dogma” on September 6 and 9. On September 6 I look friendlier and I played the E flat chord a little better. I compared September 22 to September 6 and although on September 6 I play the E flat a little better, on September 22 I looked and played better in general.
I had a tomato, avocado, cucumber, and scallion salad with lemon juice and a glass of Garden Cocktail while watching episodes 23 and 24 of The Adventures of Batman.
In the first story, in the back room at Mother Appel’s Pies and Pastries, Simon the Pieman (who talks like WC Fields) is hosting a meeting with Joker, Penguin, Riddler, Catwoman, and Mr. Freeze. Simon flips a switch and they all fall through a trap door into an oubliette. His crime wave has five stages: Lady fingers, marble cake, graham crackers, pound cake and Napoleon. At the Gotham World’s Fair, in the House of Jewels the Wayne Diamonds are on display by beautiful models. During the show a giant pie with candles is delivered. A model named Cookie suggests to the designer that the candles be lit. This produces a blinding light so Batman and the cops are helpless, then Simon pops out of the pie and they steal the diamonds. When Barbara Gordon hears of the crime she changes to Batgirl and heads out on her Batgirl Cycle. She guesses that a Mother Appel truck might hold the crooks and follows it until she gets a pie in the face that causes her bike to crash. Then the Batmobile follows them to a carnival midway where Simon’s men are taken out with various game instruments like balls and mallets. The cook crooks get away but the diamonds are saved. Later Batman learns that Pieman has pulled off three more robberies at the fairgrounds. He’s stolen marble busts from the Greek Pavilion, cracked the safe at the Graham Trust Exhibit, and robbed 20,000 Pounds from the British Museum exhibit. The Bat Computer determines that Pieman might next go after the toll house receipts at the entrance gate or the painting of Napoleon at the French Pavilion. Batman and Robin split up to stake out both possibilities. At the museum, Robin sees Mother Appel plotting to take the painting but she sees him and reveals herself to be Simon the Pieman. This is the first cross dressing Batman villain and he’s never appeared in a Batman comic. She knocks Robin out with gas from her rolling pin. Robin is placed under the grindstone of a windmill. When the wind comes up he will be crushed. The wind begins and the stone starts to turn. Appel is now Simon again and he doesn’t allow any of his cronies to follow an order until he says “Simon says”. Meanwhile Batman is caught in a traffic jam. Robin manages to reach him with his utility belt radio. Batman calls for Alfred who arrives above in the Bat Copter. Batman climbs up and then Alfred climbs down to wait in traffic. Since there is a fair going on there must be lots of people in that traffic jam with cameras. If they saw the Batmobile they would want to photograph it and then would get pictures of Alfred in the Batmobile. Some of those pictures would have to get published and someone who knows Bruce Wayne and his butler would logically put two and two together and figure out Batman’s secret. Batman arrives to save Robin in the nick of time. They head upstairs to nap Simon but it turns out that the windmill blades are actually the propeller of a craft that takes off. The Bat Copter follows but the crooks dump flour out as a screen and they escape. back at Simon’s hideout he discovers that his men have captured Batgirl. She is put in the chocolate tank and chocolate syrup begins to pour in. Far at the top of the tank is a small air vent. Batgirl releases luminous powder that rises up through the vent and is noticed by Batman and Robin as they fly over. They land on the roof to investigate and Batman goes inside what seems to be a deserted dessert factory. He falls into a giant vat of batter. Robin enters and falls into a vat of butter. Simon turns on the heat to melt the butter and powers the mixer to blend the batter. Simon and Cookie dance the Cakewalk. Batman jams the mixer mechanism with a thrown Bat Hook, then he swings out. He frees Robin who tells him they have Batgirl in the chocolate tank but how would he know that? On emptying Batgirl’s prison, Batman sprays the chocolate through a hose at Simon and Cookie. The final fight begins. Robin frees Bat Girl and she joins in. The heroes throw a lot of pies into crooks’ faces. Batman sends them all down into the same oubliette where his main villains are being held.
In the second story, at the annual dinner of the Gotham Antique Society, the entertainment is provided by Chapeau Fedora and his crew. He pulls several rabbits from his hat and they begin to steal the priceless silverware. Batman and Robin are called and arrive just as Chapeau, who is really the Mad Hatter, escapes in his Hatmobile (This version of the Hatter talks something like Mr. Magoo). Seeing the Batmobile behind him the Hatter releases a lot of his trained rabbits to successfully block the road and so the Hatter escapes. Later Batman figures correctly that Hatter is modeling his crimes after the tea party in Alice in Wonderland. Hatter’s next caper is to steal a rare tea pot. In the Gotham Gallery a rare Chinese tea pot is on display. Above on a balcony, Hatter pushes Humpty Dumpty over and it lands to break and emit tear gas. The gas mask wearing crooks steal the pot. Batman and Robin arrive just as Hatter is leaving. The Hatter shoots goo from his hat that sticks the heroes’ feet to the floor. They use their Bat torches to free themselves. They pursue the Hatmobile but this time their way is blocked by Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum. Batman and Robin capture them and then take dirt samples from their shoes. Back at the Bat Cave the computer determines that there is only one locale with the same soil content. They head there in the Bat Copter and find a cave, which they investigate but fall down a trap door onto a revolving floor with walls studded with sword blades. Hatter speeds up the floor and the centrifugal force will pull them to the wall to be cut by the swords. Batman throws a Batarang with a rope that wraps around one of the swords with the other end at the hub of the turntable. It stops the wheel from turning. Batman and Robin escape and then easily capture Hatter and his gang.
I felt very sleepy after dinner and decided to go to bed for a while. I think I slept for about an hour.
Some of the animation for these two Batman episodes was done by Robert Bentley, who started in 1929 as an assistant animator at the Van Beuren Animation Studio in New York. Later he worked for Les Elton on Simon the Monk. Then he became a full fledged animator of Porky Pig for Warner Brothers. He then worked on Gulliver’s Travels for Fleisher Studios. In the early 1940s he animated Andy Panda and Woody Woodpecker for Walter Lantz. In the 50s he worked at Hanna Barbera. In the 60s and 70s he worked for Filmation on Star Trek and Spiderman.