When I was a very little guy my father woke me one night and sat me in front of the TV during the Jack Parr show. When I asked why he said, "Jonathan Winters is coming on next and I want you to see the funniest man in the world."
I lost my dad many years ago and today we all lost the funniest man in the world.
No double dipping!
https://stopproject2025comic.org/
Alexandros Veroucas (Greek, 1968), Seascape. Oil on canvas, 100 x 100 cm.
The last train on the last line of greater Los Angeles’ Pacific Electric streetcar network made its last run on April 9, 1961.
Between 1938 and 1950, one company purchased and took over the transit systems of more than 25 American cities.
Their name, National City Lines, sounded innocuous enough, but the list of their investors included General Motors, the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, Standard Oil of California, Phillips Petroleum, Mack Trucks, and other companies who stood to benefit much more from a future running on gasoline and rubber than on electricity and rails.
National City Lines acquired the Los Angeles Railway in 1945, and within 20 years diesel buses – or indeed private automobiles – would carry all the yellow cars’ former passengers. Does that strike you as a coincidence?
Read the full story.
Photographs: AP (top); Paul Popper/Popperfoto/Getty Images (middle); Dan Chung for the Guardian (bottom)