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Found this cute little silent film today on YouTube with the respective title:
Funny how what seems to be a Yost can cause so much trouble back in the day!
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"I hear you were very smitten with my typeweriter," AAh! there was the trouble. Back then, a secretary, or typist, was called a "typewriter." So Tubby's wife thought that, instead of her husband admiring a machine, he was admiring a woman--presumably a woman typist, or secretary. The rest, they say, is history. Incidentally, this year--1916--they had a very good Royal 10. I wonder what he would have thought of those machines?
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I just love what computers can do in the processing of old movies nowadays. This one has had motion stabilization to get rid of the frame jitter. But they haven't "de-speckled" it. Stabilized movies are much, much easier on my eyes! It may also have had some gray tone work done on it to bring out the shadows. Good looking clip now.
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It's amazing just what they can do to clean up sound and video in a way possibly better than it was when it came out. I just wonder, incredibly young man that I am, if these older silent pictures always jittered and the "talkies" always crackled. And now that technology came along to clear up these problems, we can enjoy these old classics like never before--like they cleared out the sogginess in animal crackers when they started sealing them in mylar bags instead of ones made of wax paper.
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Today they need the Mylar bags because cookies now have a shelf-life of 2 years and are flown around the world. In 1916 a cookie made in New York probably never got further than Sacramento and was eaten within a month
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Rushwarp wrote:
Today they need the Mylar bags because cookies now have a shelf-life of 2 years and are flown around the world. In 1916 a cookie made in New York probably never got further than Sacramento and was eaten within a month
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Good thing--because they didn't have as many of those yummy preservatives and gmos we have now. Back then, when food was decidedly more perishable, it had better be eaten by a certain time, or it spoiled quickly.
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Rushwarp wrote:
Today they need the Mylar bags because cookies now have a shelf-life of 2 years and are flown around the world. In 1916 a cookie made in New York probably never got further than Sacramento and was eaten within a month
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I am sometimes amazed at stated shelf lives. There has been a small bottle of cayenne pepper kicking around my table for years and I happened to notice the 2019 expiration date yesterday. Huh? Why bother - just say it's eternal and be done with it. OTOH I found a partially eaten box of "Smacks" cereal recently cleaning out a cubicle at work, expired 2004. Just to be a hellion I sampled a single sugar coated puffed grain... ah, pretty much as it must have tasted before 2004. Apparently it is completely chemically inert and and only sign it was not best by anymore was that all the cereal had clumped together.