Friday, July 03, 2026

This Old Heart

Another “blast from the past” with The Explodo Boys, a Minnesota-based multi-genre band from 1979.



The original was an early James Brown release on the Federal label in 1960. It reached #72 on the Billboard charts before fading away into obscurity.

When I made this recording The Explodo Boys band was on the verge of splitting apart. They had one last week booked at the Dinkytown nightclub Bootlegger Sam’s. Jimmy Derbis and Danny Rowles pulled this ‘nugget’ out of their collective hat—it may have been a tune they had sung together in Mainstreet, an earlier band. Del Gallagher was drumming, having joined the band only a few weeks earlier. Frankie Paradise (Paul Peterson) added the twangs and his brother Johnny Vincent laid down the bass groove. Paul Scher and Max Ray were on alto and tenor saxes.

This was the only time The Explodo Boys played the song.

By Professor Batty


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Wednesday, July 01, 2026

Not the Best Fireworks Ever

Twenty Years Ago on FITK

Barry, Brian, and me, on a juvenile fireworks shooting spree, through the northernmost fringes of Minneapolis, 40 years ago. I don't remember how I hitched up with those two: Brian the carefree, Barry the heart-breaker.

Brian had just come back from South Dakota with a grocery bag of fireworks, his summers were a continuous series of explosions. I had been to his house a few years earlier, his uncle and grandfather sat in the back yard with beer and eight-foot long strings of crackers, lighting them from their cigarettes—one after another, for hours. It was in his blood.

Barry, sinfully handsome even at 15, was a Bud Abbott to Brian's Lou Costello.

It was quite dark, after ten at least, as we made our way through various neighborhoods, randomly punctuating the songs of crickets with our explosive outbursts. We arrived at the Shingle Creek park, which had a sledding hill- the perfect site for shooting Brian's “big” rocket. We were trying to figure out a way to prop it up to shoot it when we saw a squad car in the street below. We took off in the other direction, laughing, over the creek where the police couldn’t follow, and headed off to the neighboring suburb, Brooklyn Center, leaving a trail of explosions on the way.

Even the most incorrigible delinquent can weary of this past-time, so we finally found an empty lot where there was an old bucket that we could use as a launch pad for our mighty missile. All that running that we had done must have loosened the rocket’s powder for when Brian lit the rocket it fizzled a bit, rose about six feet into the air, and exploded in a shower of colorful sparks. We thought that was really hilarious. Especially when Brian noticed that his polyester shirt was riddled with tiny burn holes.

By the next summer we could drive, take part-time jobs, go on dates, and have different kinds of fun/trouble.

The most memorable skyrocket of my childhood was the one that was a dud.


Image: ChatGPT

By Professor Batty


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Monday, June 29, 2026

Colorado Springs

October, 2013:

By Professor Batty


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Friday, June 26, 2026

Depth-of-Field

Ultra wide-angle lens views from Iowa (without the corn):
Des Moines, 2023

By Professor Batty


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Wednesday, June 24, 2026

burning feet.

Twenty Years Ago on FITK

The sandals of my life, I guess, have met the hot summer asphalt of adulthood… all warm and gunky, trapping my shoes, leaving me either stuck there in my melting sandals... or running out and burning the pads off the bottoms of my feet as I search out some kind of shade.

ah.

Mixed metaphors and manic hyperbole, as I try to distract myself. But I’m left with no distraction and just a further feeling of non-accomplishment, a further reminder of what the hell I do with my time... brood, write occasionally... work in a job that’s obscured in a bureaucratic mess... hoping to win the lotto, I suppose, or impress someone with my writings in some desperate painful hope to extricate myself from this mess... I can feel everything I hold dear slipping, the lines I swore never to cross getting fuzzier

Accuse me of laziness for not thinking that’s the answer - compare me to burnouts and cripples and failures for it. But damn if it doesn’t sound safe. Safe, stupid, fruitless, and arbitrary, but well-organized and constructed in a fashion where failure and success are easily rendered…

I am wasting my life, I think.
But not in the way that they think I am.

Stuck between hot asphalt and stupid sandals and the sun keeps getting hotter... Standing here for too long just makes me sweat.

~ RS

Reposted

By Professor Batty


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Monday, June 22, 2026

Scottsbluff

Nebraska, 2013:
Scottsbluff was the starting point for a nice drive across Nebraska, not the interstate but as an entry to Nebraska 2, which took us east to Farwell, which was also interesting.

By Professor Batty


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Friday, June 19, 2026

Þorst

A new Icelandic film is out, Þorst (Thirst) about a peculiarly selective vampire and friend who stalk the streets of Reykjavík. The trailer looks trashy but it is full of familiar faces and lots of scenes of the city. Now streaming on Pecadillo (link at YouTube description:

By Professor Batty


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Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Reverse Psychology

Sign in the window of a convenience store, Reykjavík, 2004

(Tobacco advertising is prohibited in Iceland)

Kristín Commenting:


Don't you just love our sense of humour…

By Professor Batty


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Monday, June 15, 2026

Outfit Fit

Iceland Airwaves performers, 2025:
GDRN, Lupina, Burlesque Queen

Jóhanna Rakel, Sigrún, Salka Valsdóttir

Freya Tate, K.Ola, Bríet

By Professor Batty


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Friday, June 12, 2026

Table Manners

There have numerous YouTube video interview “shows” lately, inspired by television shows going back to Edward R. Murrow. Some have been spectacularly successful (Rick Beato) while more of them have had an appeal limited to those sharing certain interests.

One that I have grown to appreciate is Table Manners, a production from the UK featuring singer/songwriter Jessie Ware and her mother, Lennie. They invite celebrities into their home for a meal which is prepared as they socialize with their guest(s). The episodes are hit-or miss, some of the minor UK celebs lack appeal for me, especially humorists. But those episodes that do work are really special, showing the human sides of actors, singers, and even chefs. They have been on a roll lately, with stand-out appearances from Jeff Goldblum, Giorgio Locatelli, Ralph Fiennes, and a very poignant show featuring Kristin Scott Thomas. They show themselves to be real people, and talk about their upbringing (centering around food, of course)

The mother-daughter dynamic is also a big plus. Lennie was a social worker for 40 years and has a bottomless well of empathy to draw upon. Jessie is vivacious to the point of being a bit brittle at times, but that contrast and the mild ‘spats’ between her and her mother add another dimension to the proceedings. The food looks delicious and while they often credit various cook books, it is easy to find similar recipes on the internet (the Greek Lemon Chicken with Potatoes is a delight.)

At 40 to 60 minutes in length, they can make your workout routine a joy.

By Professor Batty


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. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ©Stephen Charles Cowdery, 2004-2026 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .