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I was definitely seeing this coming, though it took place a little earlier than I expectedâŠ.But that makes Grandma about the age I surmised, since that road trip with the Merry Pranksters happened in 1964 or 65, and she was probably in her mid 20âs. They werenât teenagers on that bus⊠Kesey was 30-ish.So⊠Agnesâ mother (or possibly father) would have been born in â65 or â66âŠ.(and Grandma was apparently still a rocker 10 years later)We still have to figure that nobody has aged much in the dozen years since this strip began in 2002:Agnes about 10, missing parent about 37, Grandma in her early 60âs.. What does amaze me is that, after all these years of church, restraint, and enforced propriety, and what I thought of as trying to lead her granddaughter in a safer direction, Grandma is suddenly telling Agnes about it!
There are after all only a limited number of stories in this universe. But it behooves any author to make the reading/listening public care who those stories happen to. Shakespeare was mostly not original either. But heâs gotten mostly good reviews by making us care about his characters.
https://explore.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/show/sixties/walkthrough/kenkesey.Interesting article. All the way at the bottom is a photo of the Merry Pranksters. I think I see Grandma!
Dogday⊠no, beatniks. At least, in 1964, on that bus, cos there were no hippies yet, not in general parlance.
Ken Kesey later called himself the bridge between the two, too young to be a beatnik, too old to be a hippie. As for caring about the characters, of course we do, or we wouldnât read their stories every day.Ever started a book and put it down cos you just couldnât find anybody in the story to care about? Sad? No, itâs life-affirming⊠proves weâre humans, not droids. Thatâs why society works⊠because humans have an innate tendency to care about other creatures, whether theyâre other humans, animals, or fictional characters. We play with dolls and stuffed animals as children, give them names, pretend to feed them⊠even though we know theyâre toysâŠ.in fact, I worry about children who abuse dolls. Meanwhile, some of the people who think itâs pathetic to care about comic characters probably play online games where they become one.
Chuck beat me to it. The busâs name was âFURTHURâ â deliberately misspelled.
The bus is immortalized in the Grateful Deadâs song The Other One which says
Escaping through the lily fields, I came across an empty spaceIt trembled and exploded, left a bus stop in its placeThe bus came by and I got on, thatâs when it all beganThere was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of the bus to never ever land
Chuck beat me to it. The busâs name was âFURTHURâ â deliberately misspelled.
The bus is immortalized in the Grateful Deadâs song The Other One which says
Escaping through the lily fields, I came across an empty spaceIt trembled and exploded, left a bus stop in its placeThe bus came by and I got on, thatâs when it all beganThere was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of the bus to never ever land
SusanSunshine Premium Member almost 10 years ago
I was definitely seeing this coming, though it took place a little earlier than I expectedâŠ.But that makes Grandma about the age I surmised, since that road trip with the Merry Pranksters happened in 1964 or 65, and she was probably in her mid 20âs. They werenât teenagers on that bus⊠Kesey was 30-ish.So⊠Agnesâ mother (or possibly father) would have been born in â65 or â66âŠ.(and Grandma was apparently still a rocker 10 years later)We still have to figure that nobody has aged much in the dozen years since this strip began in 2002:Agnes about 10, missing parent about 37, Grandma in her early 60âs.. What does amaze me is that, after all these years of church, restraint, and enforced propriety, and what I thought of as trying to lead her granddaughter in a safer direction, Grandma is suddenly telling Agnes about it!
rshive almost 10 years ago
There are after all only a limited number of stories in this universe. But it behooves any author to make the reading/listening public care who those stories happen to. Shakespeare was mostly not original either. But heâs gotten mostly good reviews by making us care about his characters.
1MadHat Premium Member almost 10 years ago
Did Grandma get hold of some of BCâs toadstools from yesterday?.8^)
SallyLin almost 10 years ago
https://explore.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/show/sixties/walkthrough/kenkesey.Interesting article. All the way at the bottom is a photo of the Merry Pranksters. I think I see Grandma!
ladylagomorph76 almost 10 years ago
FunnyâŠ..all us kids just called it âthe yellow busâ.
ChukLitl Premium Member almost 10 years ago
It was âFurthur.â
Seeker149 Premium Member almost 10 years ago
It looks like she hasnât been very âmerryâ in a long time.
Last Rose Of Summer Premium Member almost 10 years ago
âŠ..and yet youâre reading it.
SusanSunshine Premium Member almost 10 years ago
Dogday⊠no, beatniks. At least, in 1964, on that bus, cos there were no hippies yet, not in general parlance.
Ken Kesey later called himself the bridge between the two, too young to be a beatnik, too old to be a hippie. As for caring about the characters, of course we do, or we wouldnât read their stories every day.Ever started a book and put it down cos you just couldnât find anybody in the story to care about? Sad? No, itâs life-affirming⊠proves weâre humans, not droids. Thatâs why society works⊠because humans have an innate tendency to care about other creatures, whether theyâre other humans, animals, or fictional characters. We play with dolls and stuffed animals as children, give them names, pretend to feed them⊠even though we know theyâre toysâŠ.in fact, I worry about children who abuse dolls. Meanwhile, some of the people who think itâs pathetic to care about comic characters probably play online games where they become one.
1148559 almost 10 years ago
I think people who canât bring themselves to care about fictional characters are pretty sad.
SusanSunshine Premium Member almost 10 years ago
Wow, thanks SallyLin!After I wrote that I thought it was silly cos nobody would ever see it⊠but I left it cos I had to say it anyway.
str82Hell almost 10 years ago
Chuck beat me to it. The busâs name was âFURTHURâ â deliberately misspelled.
The bus is immortalized in the Grateful Deadâs song The Other One which says
Escaping through the lily fields, I came across an empty spaceIt trembled and exploded, left a bus stop in its placeThe bus came by and I got on, thatâs when it all beganThere was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of the bus to never ever land
str82Hell almost 10 years ago
Chuck beat me to it. The busâs name was âFURTHURâ â deliberately misspelled.
The bus is immortalized in the Grateful Deadâs song The Other One which says
Escaping through the lily fields, I came across an empty spaceIt trembled and exploded, left a bus stop in its placeThe bus came by and I got on, thatâs when it all beganThere was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of the bus to never ever land
Skoally almost 10 years ago
Grandma really got around
rshive almost 10 years ago
We still wonder why Granny is choosing to tell this now. And is her memory reliable?