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As a random aside, They Might Be Giants (the band), despite starting as alt-rockers, has found a niche as one of the few geek rock bands in the Gen X era. If you liked Star Trek and anime in the 1990s, you played TMBG as sort of a coded signal. (It's not clear the band was all that fond of this initially, but people have to eat.) Given your writing on older male friendship, I thought it an interesting coincidence.

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They are definitely a band I like. I saw them play at a record store many years ago, and I missed the Flood 30th anniversary tour thanks to the pandemic.

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I'll have to see the movie.

Under the category of "theses I will never write," I have kind of a collection of -- I don't even know what to call it? Art that hints at our collective notion/desire/belief that we do in fact live in a world that's full of abundance and that could more than satisfy all of our needs if only we were better stewards. From Ben Johnson's "To Penhurst":

Each bank doth yield thee conies; and the tops,

Fertile of wood, Ashore and Sidney’s copse,

To crown thy open table, doth provide

The purpled pheasant with the speckled side;

The painted partridge lies in every field,

And for thy mess is willing to be killed.

(https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/50674/to-penshurst)

Then there's all those old Dutch still lives of abundance. Oh, and then there's the ones where people are actually made of food! Compare that to hip hop boasts about fur coats, etc. I think it all probably comes from the same place -- a sense that we do live in a world of plenty, but also I think people tend to write more about this from a place of poverty. I think they tend to see how badly things have gone wrong when it's gone wrong to them personally.

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Well yes. Poverty isn't due to scarcity of resources, at all

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Ooooh! Sounds interesting and I am curious. Will check it out. Thanks!

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Superb premise.

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Agreed. I teach a class called "THE TAKE" and the first thing I make them do is watch about five takes on Sherlock Holmes, of which this is one. Also put it I the category of Time After Time .

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That's the one where Holmes uses the Time Machine from HG Wells to hunt Jack the Ripper? It's been so long. I'm not a big Holmes fan. But I find him and Doyle fascinating

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Love love love this film. Am always recommending it to my students and really interesting to watch right now in light of the Newman/Woodward doc. Thanks for posting!

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It should be a bigger cult film than it is. Up there with Harold and Maude, another satirical love story with a dark tinge.

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