
[Original image found here.]

[Original image found here.]

The Big Dipper roller coaster, Santa Cruz, California. Schmuel Thaler, photographer, 2024. [Found here via FB.]
Click for larger, all are the work of Michael Paulus, more at the link.
Brown, Boop & Flintstone bones previously posted here.

The Car Of Your Dreams, Taj Mahal (1996)
Henry Saint Clair Fredericks Jr., aka Taj Mahal, has been writing, recording and performing since 1964. A true chameleon of roots music, his discography includes blues, rock, R&B, reggae, jazz, country blues, Caribbean and West African styles. He was an early pioneer of what’s now called world music.
All Chuck [h/t Corinne L.]
“Which people would say that?”
Young Terry & the valiant effort.
This is NOT Toonces [h/t Gord S.]
Noodlin’ Cajun girl [via Bunkerville].
My favorite scene from Jurassic Park.
Climate Change over the past 4000 Years.
90 Animals Ranked by Eyesight [via Mme. Jujujive].
The paintings of Jules Worms [via Memo Of The Air].
A Female Science Fiction Character Written by a Male Writer.
[Top image found here. It appears to be a 1952 Chevrolet Bel Air.]
From the Archives: 1 year ago. 5 years ago. 10 years ago. 15 years ago.
Born and raised in Ozark, Arkansas, Jesse Welles began his career around 2012, performing as Jeh Sea Wells. “It’s obvious that Wells will always be comfortable in some dirty rock and roll kitchen where, as he says in one song, ‘everyone’s kinda ugly in that way that looks pretty.'” – NPR
60s-70s soul sounds from San Francisco: The Anthony Paul Soul Orchestra (APSO) features Willy Jordan.
R&B soul singer Curtis Salgado won the Blues Music Awards’ Soul Blues Male Artist Of The Year two years in a row (2021 & 2022). Salgado was the inspiration behind John Belushi’s creation of the Blues Brothers characters in the late 1970s. They met in Eugene, Oregon, and became friends while Belushi was filming the movie Animal House [Wiki].
Nice Louisiana dixiefunk. Vanessa Collier fronts an 11 piece band that includes Laura Chavez (guitar), Doug Woolverton (trumpet) and Mark Earley (sax).
Gonna take my hatchet and get a Christmas tree tomorrow. Not gonna cut it, I just get a better price with a hatchet in my hand. Don’t know why, I just do. In the meantime, help yourselves to the porch and I’ll be back soon enough.
[Found here, location unknown.]

[Image with typos found here.]
The Project G stereo, produced by Canadian company Clairtone from 1964 to 1967, was a design marvel with its rosewood cabinet and rotating “sound globe” speakers. Famous owners like Hugh Hefner and Frank Sinatra showcased it as a symbol of sophistication. Despite its $2,000 price tag (around $20,000 today) limiting its market, fewer than 400 units were sold. The Project G has since become a collectible icon, epitomizing the sleek 1960s Jet Age style. Pictured here is Jazz pianist Oscar Peterson and an unknown model. Photographer unknown, circa 1964.


[Images are of different models of the same series, found here, on the Clairtone website and elsewhere.]