“How Can You Mend a Broken Heart” by The Bee Gees

Midday Music Day 43. How Can You Mend a Broken Heart by The Bee Gees.
Let’s slow things down a bit…
Previews and Reviews that are Z's Views

Midday Music Day 43. How Can You Mend a Broken Heart by The Bee Gees.
Let’s slow things down a bit…

Final wills are interesting because they give insight into what a dying person finds important. Usually the person plans out their final will with the hope that it won’t be used any time soon.
That is not what Alan Boyle’s 10 Final Messages From People Facing Certain Death is about. Instead, his piece looks at, well, here’s how he describes it…
Death can take us at any time. But when you realize you have only hours or minutes left to live, you get a chance to deliver a final message to the world. Perhaps it’ll be a phone call or a text message or even just a note scratched into a nearby surface. They’ll be your last words. Make them count.
Source: Listverse.com

Midday Music Day 42. More Than a Woman by The Bee Gees.
Good times/great memories – cruising in my Mustang… drive-in movies… and of course Saturday Night Fever.

Cory Mahoney and Hollywood.com have posted 21 Wonderful Facts About The Wizard of Oz. There are some new [at least to me] facts and here are three of my favorites…
1. The snow the wakes Dorothy up from the poppy field was 100% asbestos.
Even though the health hazards had been known for years. [Hey – that is not a wonderful fact! – Craig]
4. And that horse [the horse of a different color see in Oz] originally had a much larger part in the film. The horse, which was originally a striped with different colors and could speak, joined the Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Cowardly Lion, along with the Wizard, to save Dorothy from the Witch.
6. Because Margaret Hamilton’s performance as the Wicked Witch of the West was so frightening, many of her scenes were trimmed or deleted entirely.
They were thought to be too frightening.

Midday Music Day 41. Fanny (Be Tender with My Love) by The Bee Gees.

Meena Jang and The Hollywood Reporter have posted Jackie Chan: His 7 Most Intrepid Stunts with links to videos!

Midday Music Day 40. Fool (If You Think It’s Over) by Chris Rea.
Today we have an optomistic sad song and one of my favorite “one hit wonders.”

Sean Hutchinson and Mental_Floss have posted 17 Things You Might Not Know About Scarface. Here are three of my favorites…
5. A budding screenwriting star brought De Palma back.
Producer Bregman offered relative newcomer Oliver Stone a chance to overhaul the screenplay, and Stone agreed to do the movie for two reasons. First, his 1981 film The Hand had bombed at the box office, so he needed the work. He also wanted to work with Lumet, who eventually dropped out of the project because he felt Stone’s screenplay became too over the top and too violent. De Palma, who had moved on to potentially direct Flashdance, then read Stone’s script and loved how exaggerated it was, so he dropped Flashdance and rejoined Scarface.10. Tony is only referred to as “Scarface” once, and it’s in Spanish.
Hector, the Colombian gangster who threatens Tony with the chainsaw, refers to him as “cara cicatriz,” meaning “scar face” in Spanish.14. Steven Spielberg directed a single shot.
De Palma and Spielberg had been friends since the two began making studio movies in the mid ‘70s, and they made a habit of visiting each other’s sets. Spielberg was on hand for one of the days of shooting the Colombians’ initial attack on Tony Montana’s house at the end of the movie, so De Palma let Spielberg direct the low angle shot where the attackers first enter the house.

The very cool Rambo: First Blood, Part II poster was created by Anthony Petrie and is available from Grey Matter art…
“First Blood: Part II” By Anthony PetrieGrey Matter Art under license from StudioCanal, is pleased to announce the next poster in our officially licensed Rambo series. A limited edition screen print for the iconic 80’s film, “Rambo: First Blood Part II”, by the very talented artist, Anthony Petrie…

Midday Music Day 39. How Much I Feel by Ambrosia.
Is there a sadder love song?

Erik van Rheenen and Mental_Floss have posted 15 Things You Didn’t Know About The Stand. As is our tradition, here are three of my favorites…
6. Christian Radio Made a Contribution As Well
King revealed a third inspiration for The Stand in Danse Macabre: A single line he heard in a radio broadcast of a sermon when he was living in Colorado. The line “Once in every generation the plague will fall among them” made such an impression on King that he wrote it down and pinned it over his typewriter. Later, when the author was struggling to write a fictionalized account of the Patty Hearst kidnapping (the unpublished The House on Value Street), he saw the gloomy quote and found the inspiration to start a new project that became The Stand.
8. The Extreme Length Led to Logistical Problems
The 1,200-page novel presented a serious problem – King’s publisher, Doubleday, couldn’t print a novel that long. Literally. In addition to whatever qualms the publisher might have had about trying to sell such a hefty book, its printing presses couldn’t create it. As King explained to Time in 2009, “Doubleday had a physically limiting factor in those days because they used a glue binding instead of a cloth binding, and the way it was explained to me was that they had so much of a thickness they could do before the glue just fell apart.”
10. The Cut Pages Weren’t Lost
Of course, when your fans are as rabid as King’s, it’s hard for lost pages to stay lost. In 1990 King restored the text he had hacked away to create The Stand: The Complete & Uncut Edition. King didn’t just slip all the cut pages back into the original manuscript, though – he retyped each one. He told Time he “had the manuscript on one side of an IBM Selectric typewriter and I had the pages of a book that I had torn out of the binding on the other side.” The restored edition had another quirk – King also updated the setting of the novel to the then-present day and included references to cultural touchstones like Freddy Krueger that had not existed in 1978.

Midday Music Day 38. I Can’t Tell You Why by The Eagles.
The Eagles have so many awesome songs and this is one of their best.

and i09 have posted an interactive Map Showing UFO Hot Spots Across the United States.
Its obvious that the west coast has more sightings than the east coast. Does that say more about aliens or those living on the west coast?

Midday Music Day 37. Baby, Come Back by Player.

Corey Mahoney and Hollywood.com present 21 Facts About the Movie Goodfellas You Never Knew. Here are three of my favorites…
5. When Joe Pesci was younger, he told a mobster that he was funny. The gangster’s ensuing anger was never forgotten and ended up inspiring Pesci to ask Scorsese to include it.
The director allowed Pesci and Liotta to improvise the now iconic “funny how?” scene. The other actors weren’t aware of the plan, so their reactions are genuine.6. The now legendary Steadicam shot through the kitchen of the nightclub was unplanned.
Scorsese was denied permission to use the front entrance, and the alternative is now film history.9. And while filming Spider’s death scene, actor Michael Imperioli had to be rushed to the hospital for breaking a glass in his hand; the doctors, however, attempted to treat what appeared to be a gunshot wound to his chest.
When they learned the real reason behind his hospital visit, he was forced to wait three hours before he was treated. Scorsese told Imperioli that he would one day share the story on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, and, ten years after the film’s release, in 2000, Imperioli did just that.