Happy All Saints Day
01 Sunday Nov 2015
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01 Sunday Nov 2015
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31 Saturday Oct 2015
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Or, happy All Saint’s Eve!
I’ll keep this very short.
Here’s some hilarious advice for little bugger beggars.
Here’s a warning.
Here’s something in between.
Rick McKee.
Cheers!
27 Tuesday Oct 2015
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This is another off-subject post which crept in this morning. Yes, it interrupted my cleaning of the backlog but it’s worth it.
I get up early each day and read a lot of news and commentary. To keep sane I always read the funny papers (in print or online). Frequently, they are the best part of a newspaper. Here are four of my favorites:
Often criticized as too self-referential, its just funny as heck. Good commentary on people.
An old favorite.
Puts the Z in zaney.
If you work a 9 to 5, Dilbert speaks to you.
Read, laugh and have a great day.
Dilbert. Scott Adams.
25 Sunday Oct 2015
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articles, blog, books, drafts, Perrin, perrinlovett.me, procrastination, writing
At least one of my readers is a professional firefighter. Firemen know what a backdraft is – a serious threat to them when fresh oxygen rapidly enters a fire thus causing an explosive eruption of flames.
I face nothing so dangerous behind my keyboard. However, in place of backdrafts I have back drafts. Semantics? No. When I hit the “publish” button for this feature I will still have 66 draft articles in the hopper. Some of them go back to the beginning of the blog. Some are works in progress (some more actively working than others). Some are obsolete. Some I have forgotten about and need to re-evaluate. Others, I don’t know what to do with.
By the way, this post you’re reading is NUMBER 300!!!!!
Party Time!! Google Images.
Okay, where was I? The drafts. Every week I scan newsworthy events, mostly legal and political in nature, which fit with my ideology and themes. I then craft articles for you. Of course, I also write wholly original material. I do updates like this. I’m now hawking books for sale. All this puts a damper on cleaning out the old draft backlog.
What am I to do? Likely, I will keep on keeping on. But, I pledge to speed up some of those best drafts for publication. An axe needs be taken to others. Some may need to simmer a little longer.
Sixty-six is a substantial number. I hate the idea that I hold anything back which might entertain or educate. I don’t want to be selfish.
Thanks again for reading. Post 301 is coming soon!
14 Wednesday Oct 2015
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Today I posted double commentary on American society: Fall of the House of Gibson and We’re Number One.
I’ve also been working behind the scenes on a number of projects. The books are coming along; one, at least, shall be released soon. I have simplified my blog header with 3 sections: “About,” “Books,” and the old legal disclaimers. The rest was clutter and removed.
Please have a look at all of this and enjoy as usual. Great things are just around the corner!
14 Wednesday Oct 2015
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As time passes by I have noticed happy memories are occasionally tinged with sorry. So it is lately. I learned recently of the passing of a great institution, a dynasty if you will, in Athens, Georgia.
Several years ago, unbeknownst to me at the time, George Gibson’s Menswear closed its doors after half a century of servicing the Classic City.
George Gibson’s Menswear closed its doors Monday after almost 50 years of doing business in Athens.
Owner Thomas Hinson, who bought the business after the founder’s son died in 2008, said Monday was their last day as a full-service shop. Employees will be on hand to fill pre-made orders and hand over clothing dropped off for alterations for the rest of the week, he said.
…
He said the decline in business could be partially attributed to the economic recession, but also increased competition in a market of changing tastes.
“There’s increased competition in town, with the opening of some other men’s stores, and I think a changing in trend in how men dress,” Hinson said. “We live in an age where men dress more casually than they did even 10 years ago. You go the bank, and you can see that. Ten years ago, the guy at the bank wore a suit. Now, you don’t see that.”
The store opened in 1964 in the Beechwood Shopping Center, but moved in the mid-2000s to Baxter Street. Hinson said he started working at George Gibson’s in the 1990s while going to college and rejoined the shop in 2006.
He said he looked forward to coming to work every day.
Athens Banner Herald.
Gibson’s was a classic Menswear store. It was a fine shop which catered to fine gentlemen. One would find only the best clothes, shoes and accessories inside. Polo and Nautica were to common and, thus, were excluded. The front of the original store was filled with buffalo skin dress shoes, hand-crafted pocket knives and sportswear by the likes of Ike Behar. The back was reserved for suits and business and formal wear – all of which could be tailored on-site. It was a place where money did not matter (expensive) because the goods were worth it.
It was a men’s store. No women’s section. No children. Men only. Gentlemen only. At a time when even Brooks Brothers became Brothers, Sisters, Kids, and Everyone Else, Gibson’s held the line.
Few stores like this have survived. Given the increasingly obese and slovenly direction of America’s males the store seems a relic of the genteel past, a more formal and civilized age.
One can still catch a glimpse of Gibson’s grandeur here at their old Facebook site.
Times have changed. I write this with face bearded and shirt untucked. Yet, I am one of few who still, from time to time, dons a suit, who still weighs an appropriate number of pounds and who can still lift more than he weighs. Maybe I too am a relic of the old America.
I know much about Gibson’s and mourn its demise because I was a customer there long ago. For a short time I was also an employee. During my final summer at the University of Georgia I spoke to Andy Gibson, son of the founder, of my future plans and search for my first “real” job. He offered me part-time work while I searched. I only worked there a few months as I soon landed a position with real estate powerhouse Trammell Crow. My short tenure was, however, enjoyable and memorable.
Andy had taken over his father’s business a few years earlier. He strived, with great success, to keep things just as they were. He was a dedicated businessman and a wonderful person. He always smiled. He was always happy. He always shouldered the burden. He was a mentor, a friend, a big brother.
I continued to shop at Gibson’s years later as a budding attorney. My last visit was some ten years ago. I was going to a PGA tournament and needed something special. With my young daughter’s assistance I found it – a subdued, casual but elegant sports shirt. On a beer run at the links I actually bumped into the young man who sold me the cloth. Magical.
I knew that Andy died in 2008, much to young for so vibrant and dedicated a man. The picture below is the only one I could find of him – from his obituary. I don’t like it. It’s him but not at all as he was. The image is conservative enough but I remember him as more mature yet exuberantly happy.
Andy. Athens Banner-Herald.
Mr. George Gibson died in 2013. His lovely wife, who ran the alterations department in the back of the store, is also gone. I only met Mr. Gibson once maybe; I saw Mrs. Gibson regularly. She was a sweetheart.
Following Andy’s untimely departure the store was purchased by long-term employee, Thomas Hinson. I don’t remember him but it seems he held the helm admirable until the end. A year after Gibson’s closed Hinson died at the too young age of 35.
It’s all gone now. I have been in similar men’s stores from Atlanta to New York to Boston. None of them have the same feeling. None is special. Most of my better clothes these days come from Joseph A. Banks, a nice store but a chain store. I guess some things belong in the past.
Gibson’s will be missed and not just by me.
George Gibson’s Baxter Location, circa 2010. Facebook.
23 Wednesday Sep 2015
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Happy first day of fall!
From today until the end of December is my favorite time of year. I’ve heard more than a few of you agree from time to time. Here is a short list of things that makes the fall incredible:
I’m sure you can think of many more to add.
Cheers!
UK DailyMail.
17 Thursday Sep 2015
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This is a short follow up on yesterday’s short bit about writing in the new economy.
The implacable Fred Reed muses the coming age of automated unemployment. As usual with Fred’s work, this is a must read.
Today we will reflect that the economy will shortly wither, no one will have to work, and we will all die of starvation sitting on street corners and trying to sell each other pencils.
Work is going the way of the dodo, the Constitution, and common sense. Won’t be any.
…
If an automated economy employing a small fraction of the population were spewing out goods, perhaps the rest could be given EFT cards with some amount of “money” on them. Call it PAWS, Pathologically Advanced Welfare System. We do this now with welfare folk. Which is to say that the problem I am talking about already exists, though we haven’t quite noticed it.
A great question would then be: Can people handle leisure? The intelligent and educated, probably. They read books, write them, enjoy the internet. The distributed cognitive stratification embodied in the net would let them talk with each other around the world. For them, so good. But for others?
Classic Reed. I’ll handle my leisure by reading Fred. You?
16 Wednesday Sep 2015
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I write a lot of words, some you read here, some you don’t. In the not to distant future I look forward to earning a full-time living as an author. You can help by purchasing my forth-coming works (sooner or later, I promise…).
Today, according to some, it is harder than ever to make it as a full-time writer. A new survey suggests that author income is down due to the digitalized age of publication. I see bad and very good news in this story and related material I have read.
The survey said income for full-time US authors in 2015 fell 30 percent from 2009 to $17,500, and part-time authors saw a 38 percent drop in income to $4,500.
“Authors’ income is down. This is the result of a confluence of factors,” the study found.
“The ubiquity of e-books means that online book piracy is more of a threat than it was in 2009. We’ve seen major consolidation within the traditional publishing industry, which means less diversity among publishers and their increased focus on the bottom line.”
Traditional publishers’ dominance of the marketplace meanwhile is being eroded by the rise of self-publishing, the study noted.
Yahoo News.
Income for writers is down, which is not good. However, it’s also indicative of pay in general. Wages have not recovered from the last recession (even amidst the onset of the next one).
The truth is the average author never earned that much before 2009 or 1999 or in 1959. Stephen King and John Grisham are rarities. Ordinary writers are content to make a living doing what they love, trading the security of higher income for intellectual freedom. The greatest stifle of said freedom traditionally came from the large publishing houses.
As the story notes those publishing houses are falling apart thanks to the rise of nearly effortless and professional self publishing services. That’s great! People like James Altucher are making more money than ever by self publishing.
True, with publishing easier than ever the market is being dilluted, slightly, by a glut of new works on Amazon and Kindle. And, yes, these businesses have helped shutter “real” bookstores coast to coast.
The best news is that all of these things will even themselves out. The free market will weed out bad books – anarchy in action! The proliferation of Amazon and ebooks means more sales and more profit for good authors.
I read elsewhere, in an article I can’t find now that writing is one of the select endeavors which will benefit from the looming robotic revolution. Smart machines are poised to take 30% of all jobs in the West over the next few decades – from manufacturing to service jobs like sales and bar tending. Creative arts cannot be so easily automated and should see an increase in human demand.
Google.
All of this, of course, depends on people still reading. So, keep on reading! You can start by clicking the “next” or “previous” buttons below this column. Cheers!
24 Wednesday Jun 2015
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Today the blog turns 3 years old! It all started with this simple post:
In a few days I’ll be celebrating the anniversary of my first real post. See you then.
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