The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Destroyed attractions

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‘A worker hoses down debris as the demolition of the 2,000-seat Church of All Nations auditorium continues at the former Holy Land Experience theme park near the Mall of Millenia in Orlando, Thursday, June 8, 2023. The park closed permanently in August 2021 with plans for the 15-acre site to be developed into a new, 19,600-square-foot emergency room complex by AdventHealth of Altamonte Springs.’

 

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‘One of Singapore’s most iconic structures is about to be demolished, never to be seen again. At 37 metres tall, Sentosa Merlion towers over all the other 6 Merlion statues in Singapore. Ever since its ‘birth’ in 1995, this giant being has courageously braved the Singapore heat for over 24 years. Never failing to shoot out lasers from its eyes every night, this majestic statue has delighted Singaporeans and tourists alike during its nightly laser shows. Due to the size of Sentosa Merlion, there are currently no plans for relocation. The Merlion has been slated to be demolished on 20 October.’

 

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‘A mid-April blaze demolished the Victorian-era mansion that served as the Haunted Monster Museum as well as the centerpiece of a bizzaro place called Dinosaur World where dinos would gobble Union soldiers and where brave visitors could also hunt Bigfoot with a “redneck.”‘

 

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‘Hard Rock International plans to build a Guitar Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip, and that means something has to go.’

 

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‘World’s smallest Target store in Marathon, Texas, has been demolished. The Brewster County Sheriff Ronny Dodson told the property owner that the structure had become unstable and so the decided to tear it down before someone got hurt.’

 

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‘From 1976 until 2001, Mystery Fun House was a second-tier tourist attraction that operated in the I-Drive corridor in Orlando. It was an old-school fun house, with mirror mazes and creepy dungeon rooms and monsters and magic shows, and it was wildly popular with families in the 1970s and ’80s. Today, it’s a vacation lot full of garbage.’

 

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‘A Kansas water park operator says Verruckt, the world’s tallest waterslide, will be demolished following the death by beheading of a state lawmaker’s 10-year-old son on the ride in August. Verruckt is German for “insane.” Rafts on the ride made a 17-story drop at speeds of up to 70 mph.’

 

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‘Chinese police have destroyed an army of fake terracotta warriors in northern China at a copycat resort near the mausoleum housing the ancient sculptures depicting the armies of Qinshihuang, China’s first emperor. Authorities in Xi’an in Shaanxi Province raided a fake resort in Lintong, where the real terracotta warriors are also located, and destroyed over 40 copycat sculptures.

‘The fake statues were found at the Suyuanqinhuangling resort, which covers over 600 square metres. Unlicensed guides and taxi drivers working on commission would lure unsuspecting tourists to the site, “confusing visitors and damaging tourism in the district,” a local official told Xinhua. They also found fake terracotta figures for sale around the site, including life-size figures of David Beckham in imperial armour.’

 

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Ozark Wildcat (Celebration City, NC)

 

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A mother and her eight-year-old daughter were killed in Georgia Saturday when workers blew up a towering Soviet war memorial. The demolition, to make way for a new parliament building, has already been condemned by Georgia’s opposition and by Russia, which fought a brief war with Georgia last year. The victims were killed by lumps of concrete sent hurtling into the courtyard of their home in the country’s second city of Kutaisi, local media said. Reports said four other people were in a serious condition in hospital.

 

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Until the late 19th century, New Zealand’s Pink and White Terraces along Lake Rotomahana on the North Island, attracted tourists from around the world interested in seeing the beautiful natural formations created by a large geothermal system. They were known worldwide as the Eighth Wonder of the Natural World. But the eruption of Mt Tarawera on 10 June 1886 buried the terraces in sediment and caused the lake basin to enlarge, engulfing the land where the terraces stood.

 

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Cinderella’s Castle (Ellicott City, MD)

 

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May 17, 2014: ‘The Big Coffee Mug was either demolished or carted away around this date. Everything that once stood on the lot is gone, down to bare earth. We have no further information at this time. This huge travel-style coffee mug, perhaps large enough for two to three people to enjoy a hot java bath at the same time, served as the sign for a small drive-up establishment. The sign was also a fountain, spewing thick, dark brown colored water from the spout on its lid (when it was working).’

 

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Jeffrey Dahmer’s apartment building (Milwaukee, WI)

 

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‘LeBron James has demolished a $37million Los Angeles mansion and started work on building his dream home. Built in the 1930s, the four-bedroom compound spanned across a 2.5-acre land with a view of both Beverly Hills and the Pacific Ocean. It came with eight bathrooms, two detached guesthouses, seven fireplaces, a tennis court, a movie theater, a swimming pool, and a pool house. A hedged-lined driveway led to a large motor court approaching the Mediterranean-style abode.’

 

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’18 year old Jesus statue was demolished at Kolar District in Karnataka, India. A 20 feet tall Jesus Statue at Kolar District was demolished. The administration demolished the statue at 3 am on Tuesday.’

 

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On September 12, 2012 at 7am, one of Cedar Point’s (former) tallest rides, “Space Spiral” was demolished in order to help make room for a new roller coaster called Gatekeeper. Gatekeeper was at that time the tallest, fastest, and longest Wing Coaster ever built. The new coaster also featured the world’s tallest inversion at 170 feet in the air.

 

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The Lego house built by Top Gear presenter James May has been demolished. May built the house using 3.3million plastic bricks and it had a working toilet, hot shower and a ‘very uncomfortable’ bed. But after no one agreed to take the toy house off his hands a demolition team was called in to knock the colourful bricks off its timber frame with mallets. Plans for Legoland to move it to their theme park fell through because transport costs were too high and despite a final Facebook appeal for someone to take it, no-one came forward.

 

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Twin Tee-Pees Pancake House (Seattle)
Opened 1937, Demolished 2002

 

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Twister: Ride It Out (Universal Studios, FL)
Just as its namesake, the news surrounding the closure of Twister hit as fast as a tornado, without any warning. There were the jokes when Jimmy Fallon made his first visit to Universal Orlando with the Tonight Show, that he was getting a ride and it was replacing Twister. But he’s a comedian, so it was taken with a grain of salt. Yet it was Jimmy himself who dished out the news, with confirmation shortly there after on the Universal Orlando Blog, that he in fact was getting his own attraction. It’s left more than a few heads scratching.

 

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Xanadu House of the Future (Kissimmee, FL)
Throughout the 1980s, tourists flocked to the Xanadu House, a futuristic home in Kissimmee, Florida. This domestic pleasure dome was made of polyurethane and filled with “friendly computer servants.” A large plastic balloon was sprayed with layers of expanding foam, which would harden and form the shell. The rooms were run by Commodore computers, which managed everything from spa temperature to home security – a robot voice would warn if trespassers had wandered into your turnip of a home. At its peak, the Kissimmee Xanadu House brought in a 1000 guests a day. What ever happened to Xanadu House? It closed in the mid-90s due to dwindling interests in the building technology, became infested with mold over the course of a decade or so, and was torn down in 2005.

 

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Amazonia (Great Yarmouth, UK)

 

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The Pacific Undersea Gardens, a floating tourist attraction on Victoria, BC’s, Inner Harbour was closed in the fall of 2013 and towed to Point Hope Shipyard where it was eventually demolished in 2014. The attraction, owned by the Oak Bay Marine Group, had been open for 50 years, first in Oak Bay and then on the Inner Harbour.

 

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‘5Pointz was an outdoor art exhibit space at 45–46 Davis Street in Long Island, New York City, where colorful murals were exhibited on the exterior walls of an old warehouse, drawn by artists from the world over. The graffiti space was curated by Jonathan Cohen, a graffiti artist going under the moniker of “Meres”, who billed the exhibit as “the world’s premier graffiti mecca”. Indeed, as its reputation as an epicenter of the graffiti scene grew, the industrial complex began to draw aerosol artists from across the world. Even the elusive British street artist Banksy got into the act. The high visibility of the building from the New York City Subway’s IRT Flushing Line attracted a large number of visitors, including prominent artists, musicians, filmmakers, photographers, and entire tour buses full of admirers soaking in the more than 1,500 murals. 5Pointz doesn’t exist anymore. It was demolished in 2014 after its owner decided to make better use of the neglected property and build a condominium complex instead.’

 

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1232-4 Druid Hill Avenue (Baltimore)

 

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‘The fifth and final season of The Bates Motel, the A&E adaptation of the Alfred Hitchcock classic Psycho wrapped up filming earlier this month, so the replica Bates Motel and the menacing house that loomed above it were both torn down.’

 

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Phantasmagoria (Bell’s Amusement Park, OK)
Opened: July 1973
Demolished: June 19, 2007
Number of levels: 2
Duration: approx. 5 minutes
All of the ‘bang doors’ close solely by the power of gravity.
There are nearly as many smoke detectors as there are spooks in the ride. Not one fire occurred in the ride’s history.
Items commonly discarded in ride: Stuffed animals, hats, litter, cigarette butts, ladies undergarment, feminine products, condom wrappers
Means of mischief: Getting out of car (most common), making out, occasional stink bombs.
Number of tricks: 23

APPENDIX B: List of tricks

1. The spinning eyes (exterior)
2. The lunging dog (exterior)
3. Three ascending bang doors with circular cuts (originally diminishing squares)
4. Guard dog sign/barking audio
5. Dip #1
6. Grim Reaper (originally hung above the dip in the long corridor)
7. Skeleton in the graveyard
8. Singing skulls
9. Buzzard in the nest
10. The psychedelic room (aka tinfoil room aka strobe room )
11. Skull faced “lady of the night”
12. The witches head
13. Dip #2
14. Collapsing mine shaft (aka Falling Timbers)
15. The Skull Pond with rattling floorboards
16. Cloaked skeleton lady in front of shingles
17. The giant rat
18. Rotating naked/bikini woman
19. Skeleton in the noose
20. The bus (formerly the tilted room where water ran uphill)
21. The mirrored hallway
22. The spinning tunnel
23. The bat cave with water curtain

 

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Splendid China (Kissimmee, FL)
The park was owned by the Chinese government and controversial from the day it opened until the day it closed in 2003. Now, ten years later, the remains of Splendid China, located at Formosa Gardens Blvd. and Funie Steed Rd., are about to disappear forever. Mickey Grossman, of Pro Demo, said all of it will go during a four-week feast of destruction.

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‘The Lakeville Haunted House closed three years ago and now the town has torn it down. Town Meeting voters have OKed the movement of $50,000 of free cash to do it. Michael Nogueira, a volunteer at the haunted house for more than 15 years, talked with us about the decrepit Lakeville structure. “They couldn’t get anybody to take it over,” he said. “There were two sets of directors over the 27 years. The first set burned out and the new directors took over. When they burned out, they weren’t able to put together a set third set of directors, so it all fell apart.”‘

 

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Ghost representation of Manor Heath Mansion in Halifax, Canada, built by carpet magnate John Crossley in 1852. Sadly it was demolished in 1958.

 

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Chute Out (Six Flags, TX)

 

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The Cockenzie Power Station’s (in East Lothian, Scotland) 487 feet (149 meters) tall iconic chimneys were demolished on Saturday by placing dozens of explosives into holes on the sides of chimneys so that they collapsed exactly into each other.

 

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Following the opening of the Jaws ride at Universal Studios Orlando on June 7, 1990, it experienced extensive and persistent breakdowns as a result of the elaborate special effects involved, as did fellow original rides Kongfrontation and Earthquake: The Big One. However, while Universal was able to eventually contain the technical bugs in the Kong and Earthquake rides at “utmost consistency”, the effects in the Jaws ride constantly refused to work at all, resulting in the ride having to be evacuated almost daily. Following the Summer opening of the park, Universal temporarily shut down the ride in August 1990, and sued Ride & Show Engineering, Inc. for failing to properly design the ride. Throughout 1991 and early 1992, Universal attempted to refurbish the effects of the ride for an eventual re-opening, but with no success. Some reports leaked that the high-tech electronics used in the sharks was damaged due to inadequate waterproofing.

Eventually, Universal collaborated with Totally Fun Company, ITEC Entertainment, Intamin and Oceaneering International, who together installed an entirely new ride system and special effects to create an almost entirely new version of the ride. Some of the changes, which resulted in a re-design of the ride, included the replacement of two major ride scenes; the first being where Jaws bit onto the tour boat and turned it by 180-degrees (which was replaced with a Gas dock explosion scene); and the second being the finale, which was originally loosely based on the first Jaws where the skipper shot a grenade into the shark’s mouth causing it to explode underwater (which was replaced by a finale loosely based on the ending for Jaws 2 where the shark was electrocuted after biting onto an underwater cable attached to a high-voltage barge). Oceaneering provided the animatronic shark for the redesigned ride, their first theme park-based project. The ride was then officially re-opened by Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary and Steven Spielberg in Spring of 1993.

Following the hurricanes that struck Central Florida in 2004, Universal was forced to temporarily close the ride in January 2005 due to the rising cost of petroleum, which was used to fuel the numerous pyrotechnical effects throughout the attraction as well as the tour boats. The ride finally reopened in December 2005, but was listed as “seasonal” and only open on busier days. This lasted until February 2007 when the ride was finally opened full-time again after numerous guest complaints. During the 2005 closure, several renovations were made to the ride. The attraction was further refurbished every year from 2008 – December 2, 2011 when Universal Orlando Resort announced that the Jaws attraction would close permanently on January 2, 2012 to make room for the second phase of The Wizarding World Of Harry Potter.

 

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Dudley Hippodrome (Dudley, UK)

 

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The Gu Tian (Fujian, China)
The cement ship was built during the 1970s when there was a lack of steel in China as a cheap solution during the ‘cultural revolution’. It was launched to herald in a new age where China had mastery of the seas. But after her first voyage in 1974, Communist officials realised it cost far too much to power a concrete ship through the waters, and she was driven ashore and grounded. The 345ft long, 48ft wide, 26ft 7in high Gu Tian became a squat for locals and a minor tourist attraction and spent 40 years beached on the bank of the Mingjiang River. It was also used as a training base for Fujian Ship Communications Vocational College. It has previously been ruled too expensive to destroy but since the land was bought by a re-development scheme, the process began to dismantle it to build a block of flats.

 

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‘Few people have seen it with their own eyes but the legend of Little Venice lives on through nuggets of evidence and word of mouth passed down the generations since the brief existence of the canal attraction beneath what is now Queens Market from 1902 to 1905.

‘Contemporary newspaper reports and adverts described it as a “faithful reproduction in miniature of Venice” including “real gondolas” among leading Edwardian attractions including 40 “modern” shops, ballroom dancing, varieties, an orchestra, ice cream-making and a roof garden.

‘A fire in 1907, in which the glass dome roof of Queens Palace collapsed, is said to have cut off the underground attraction which was then abandoned and forgotten in subsequent decades. The lack of hard evidence over Little Venice’s existence has raised doubt over whether it ever existed to begin with. It was not included in the original blueprint for Queens Market and photographic evidence is limited to a single old black-and-white print.’

 

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50 Years Ago, Donald Trump’s Father Demolished Coney Island’s Beloved Steeplechase Park.

 

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Airstream Ranch (Tampa, FL)

 

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The giant statue representing the late Gilbert Bourdin, founder of the Triumphant Vajra cult of Mandarom, collapses after demolition workers set off explosives at the base of the 110-foot structure in Castellane, southern France, September 6, 2001. French authorities said the monument to Bourdin, the focal point of the sect’s “holy city of Mandarom” in the hills above Castellane, was built in 1990 without permission.

 

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‘The early Miracle Strip along Panama City Beach was, and is, traditionally known for its outlandish attractions designed to entertain visitors to the Florida Gulf Coast. One such attraction was Jungle Land. Originally begun as housing for a roadside zoo attraction in the mid-1960s, the oversized artificial volcano reflected the whimsical architecture of reinforced stucco and concrete that was beginning to dot the coast.

‘Owner Val Valentine hired young women dressed (more or less) in full “Jungle Jane” gear to serve as tour guides leading visitors on a “dangerous” (again, more or less) tour through a winding cave to the center of the structure. Along the way, people could peek through holes in the cavern’s walls to get a glimpse of the “lava” bubbling at the core. Valentine also had the volcano fully stocked with smoke pots to emit smoke and flame from the opening which could be seen from quite a distance. Wild animals were kept at the center of Jungle Land and were trained by his “cave girls” to put on various performances for the tourists.

‘Jungle Land closed in the late 1970s. Alvin’s Island, a chain of stores selling souvenirs, beachwear, and other related items, took over in 1981 and named the place “Alvin’s Magic Mountain Mall”. In 2018, the store closed after damage from Hurricane Michael. It was demolished in 2020.’

 

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‘TIL was a waterpark attraction in Japan that consisted of over 50 interwoven slides that was completely destroyed in the Great Hanshin Earthquake of 1995.’

 

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‘The attraction Solido opened in 1993 and had been a symbol for the French theme park Futuroscope ever since. The building was composed of a sphere 33m in diameter, divided symmetrically by a long black crest. It housed a hemispherical screen 27m in diameter which occupied half of the interior surface. The Solido was renowned throughout the world because it was the only room in the world that offered double 3D projection. Each film was projected at 18m on the screen and a relief effect was rendered using liquid crystal glasses.’

 

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‘Fantasy Island says it is looking at the damage and re-evaluating plans for the Killer Villa Halloween attraction after a devastating fire. Fire crews were called to Fantasy Island in Ingoldmells at 12.24am on Thursday after a spent firework from an evening display set the wooden building and its contents ablaze. The resort had been hoping to stage Killer Villa as part of the ghoulish attractions at ‘Fear Island’ for Halloween. We asked Fantasy Island if the Killer Villa attraction had been damaged and if it would go ahead. A spokesman said: “Look at it, idiot:, pointing at the charred pile where the gothic manor once stood. “Does that look like it’s going ahead?”

 

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p.s. Hey. ** Charalampos, Hi. Oh, it feels pretty exciting to finally be near the film’s finish line. We started trying to find a way to make it six years ago, so it’s a relief too. We’re hoping to have it absolutely finished and ready to go by the end of the year. Congrats on the publication! Everyone, Pick to click from Charalampos: ‘Very good news from me is that my DRAW OVER PICS series I did earlier this year just found a home in Feral Dove Magazine which made me so happy wooo!’ Looks great at a first glance, man. Love from P-Town. ** Steve Erickson, Thanks! It’d be nice if the ‘Closer’ reprint does well enough that they reissue the whole Cycle, but no plans yet. Everyone, Here’s Mr. Erickson: ‘I’ve had three reviews published this week, on Karen Tongson’s book NORMPORN: QUEER VIEWERS AND THE TV THAT SOOTHES US, on Paul B. Preciado’s film ORLANDO, MY POLITICAL BIOGRAPHY, and on Aesop Rock’s album INTEGRATED TECH SOLUTIONS.’ Christ, you have to nail down your 2023 lists already? Progress … we’re in the finals for a grant that would pay for most of the post work that needs to be done, so we’re hoping to get that. We’re contacting tech people to work with, and we’re starting to lay in Puce Mary’s final score, and we’re about a week from having the final edit. So that’s pretty good. Thank you for asking. ** _Black_Acrylic, It’s … charming. A week or 2 of finger crossing from me should you need it. You definitely sound in writer mode, which is awesome. Way early happy birthday, sir. ** Dominik, Hi!!! Yes, you’ve been here for a while now, so cool. I live close to a bunch of very fancy hotels where super wealthy and famous celebrities stay, so maybe I’ll go hang out in their lobbies and hope my ghost realises there are far more lucrative people available for them to haunt. French bureaucracy is world famous for its hellishness. Ha ha, I’m sure listening to ‘Baby Shark’ for all eternity is a much better option. Love making the shop keepers not look at me with daggers in their eyes when I hold out handfuls of loose change to pay them, G. ** Bzzt, Thanks, man. You and your piece convinced me to get the Valerie Werder book, and it’s wending its way to me now. Thanks! What are your potential projects, if you want to say? Me? I’m in the middle of tying to put together a book of short fiction that’s been waysided by the film work. Zac’s and my next project is an audio novel, sort of a radio play-like novel, sound only. It’s all written, so we hope to start working on that as soon as the film’s finished. And we’re just starting to bat around ideas for a new film. Awesome day to ya! ** tomk, Hey. Oh, sorry, I’m way behind on my email. I’ll go find it, but yes, definitely very into doing a ‘welcome’ post for your new book. Absolutely! ** l@rsty, Noise! My favorite sound! I’ll be on that ASAP. Everyone, l@rsty and another dude ‘retired to [said dude’s] basement with two samplers and a modular synth and made noise for 2 hours’ and here’s 20 minutes of it for the ears of the discerning among you. A friend saw Devo just the other day and they were almost shockingly still great live. Have fun. ** Bill, Hi. No, I’d never heard of him until I wandered into his story during some online exploration of some sort. Okay, I’ll lift my finger away from the Purchase button re: Christine Lai’s novel, and thank you for that. ** Sarah, Hi. That’s interesting about people getting less emotional about their pets than about themselves. I guess that makes total sense, although people sure do get emotional about their healthy pets at least. Your evil vlogger novel sounds very tempting and intriguing, of course. I hope it pans out, selfishly or not. When I’m writing, it’s definitely more about quantity than quality because I always do a ton of revising and refining and stuff later, so I don’t worry if the first language output is sloppy or uneven anything. It can amazing what you can polish out something that seemed like blah blah when you typed it. I know a little of Babytron and really like it. I don’t know the others by name anyway. Huh, cool, I’ll go make a serious investigation of that gang. Thank you, I need a new exciting bunch of sounds right now. You feeling good, I hope? ** Nick., Hey! Ha ha, peanut butter is weirdly evil. Peanuts, no, but their butter, def. It does sound pretty special with the guy. It sounds like the kind of thing that could achieve a very weird perfection or explode, and either is probably worth it. Pray tell. I do like board games. I did a big blog post about them at some point that I should probably restore. I haven’t actually sat down and played a board game in forever though. In Zac’s and my last film two of the characters briefly play this board game where you or rather your board piece is trapped drifting down a rushing river toward a murderously huge waterfall, and you have to try not to go over it. I can’t remember the name. A bunch of us were playing that during the shooting breaks. That was my last IRL game experience, I think. I used to like the ones where you build some weird machine-like structure during the game, like Mouse Trap is/was a famous one. Does Magic the Gathering count? I have friends who are constantly trying to get me to play with that, and I’m, like, no fucking way. When they talk about playing that, they all sound slightly insane. I ate way too much pasta last night, so whatever you do today, don’t do that. ** Audrey, Hi, Audrey. Wow, cool! Thank you! I’m not sure what the author is going to use as his nom de plume, but his name is Wolfe Margolies. His book will come out next spring. I’ll keep you up on it. USC, ok, so west downtown. Around there? Hm, there’s the Natural History Museum and the Science Museum. I tend to go look at art when I have free time. These are probably too ambitious for your time frame and mobility, but The Museum of Jurassic Technology is really weird and poetic and great. I have a thing for the Graveline Tour where they drive you around LA in a converted hearse and show you where all the famous people died. It’s morbid but really fun. On the film, we have about a week of editing left and then maybe a month and half of the technical stuff (VFX, color grading, sound mix & design). The class I’ll be a guest at is called ‘Writing the Impossible’ and it’s at The New Centre for Research & Practice, which I think is in NYC. I’ll let you know about the Miyazaki. I hope life is being your best friend too. Love, Dennis. ** Okay. Today a made a post for you combining two of my favorite things: attractions, many of the theme park variety, and defunct/ demolished things. A potent combo if you’re me, and, maybe even if you’re you or some of you? See you tomorrow.

14 Comments

  1. scunnard

    Hi Dennis, is it just me or would smashing bootleg terra cotta Chinese warriors (or david beckham ones) be really satisfying?

  2. Mitch

    Hey man, off topic but started the day with New Day Rising and finally! instead of mild annoyance… I actually listened to the words of I Apologize and realized its genius. Love you D.

  3. Charalampos

    Thanks for the shout-out Dennis I hope you guys liked them I am so happy with it and for sure will make more cycles. I am claiming it as my thing so it blossoms

    I go through today’s post and I like it.
    I never told you before but my father used to do as serious lifetime hobby the thing called Scale modeling or Plastimodellismo. He did destroyed WWII buildings and ships and stuff. After decades of doing it there was exhibition featuring his stuff here in Crete, I remember it like in a haze. I actually took some very pretty pictures of them today after I saw your post and felt inspired. We have some of them stored in attic room in glass case and boxes. You can’t imagine how many hours, days, years he spent in his desk chain smoking and doing all that. It extremely detailed and needs major patience but I was always impatient going up and down so I was admiring from afar

    It has not appeared yet in my art but it’s big inspiration to me. Maybe it is good idea to buy my first kit to start myself. It is very beautiful idea

    Is the audio novel like a radio play? Is it going to appear audio only? That is very interesting and forward as idea. Did you conceive this at first as audio novel or existed as text in your files?

    Good vibe from Creta

  4. Dominik

    Hi!!

    That’s not a bad idea – trying to tempt your pickpocketing ghost that way. Or… you could become a pickpocket yourself instead. I mean, the place is full of celebrities; I’m sure you could grab a few pretty attractive wallets, haha.

    I used to work at a bookstore, and we were always strapped for change, so it was such a massive gift when someone could pay that way. I would’ve appreciated you a lot.

    So, as tradition dictates: love offering to transport one of the above dead attractions to Paris, specifically to be part of your haunted attraction collection (but he won’t restore it because what’d be the point then?) – which one would you like? Od.

  5. Mark

    Alas, when attractions repulse… My favorite lost attraction is Richard Neutra’s Gettysburg Cyclorama. I was able to walk around the building before it was demolished in 2013. Thanks National Parks Service. So much for: “The National Park Service preserves unimpaired the natural and cultural resources and values of the National Park System for the enjoyment, education, and inspiration of this and future generations.” Neutra is most famous for his residential architecture and did relatively few public buildings. https://lamag.com/news/architect-richard-neutras-modernist-cyclorama-demolished

    In other news… last week John Waters did a instagram cameo holding our Cookie Mueller zine at Atomic Books in Baltimore. We pissed our pants! New ‘For the Love of…’ issues will be out before Thanksgiving: Julius Eastman, Joe Dallesandro & Holly Woodlawn, and Peter Hujar (by guest editor poet Steven Reigns). Dennis, it’s pretty funny that six months ago we were speculating about the status of queer zining and now José and I find ourselves deep in the weeds – lol! https://www.instagram.com/mattazine_society/ xoxoxo

  6. _Black_Acrylic

    It’s a shame that Jeffrey Dahmer’s apartment got destroyed. I’d wager that his living quarters would be a major attraction now, given all the TV coverage his crimes have received of late.

    Seeing as how it’s my birthday next week, I thought I’d go ahead and treat myself to this acid-themed T-shirt being hawked by the Glasgow-based nightclub Optimo. My thinking is that it will go with my Jeremy Deller ‘Bless This Acid House’ print and the smiley face rug in my front room.

  7. Corey Heiferman

    @Charalampos I liked DRAW OVER PICS a lot. I’m in Tel Aviv so we’re practically neighbors.

    How could a Lego house be too expensive to move? Wouldn’t it’d be easy to dismantle + ship + re-assemble? Isn’t that the whole point?

    The 1964 New York World’s Fair was a highlight of my dad’s childhood and he always used to point out the remains of it in Flushing Meadows Park.

    6 years is a Biblical amount of time to work on a project. Sounds like year 7 is a sabbatical from filmmaking?

    This week’s BDSM social meetup didn’t do it for me. Background music was USA gay bar favorites of the 2000s, a big turnoff. I started experiencing club-that-will-accept-me-as-a-member syndrome, geeky hobby club vibes.

    The perfect Hebrew chapbook contest for me has a deadline next April, the first literary deadline that’s ever meant something to me. My literary style, however it develops between now and April, would almost definitely be a good fit. I have enough friends on the editorial board to be taken seriously but not enough to be a shoe-in. Even if they reject me I’ll be happy to have written something in this framework.

  8. malcolm

    hi dennis – how’s november treating you? today is a movie day for me – i’ve watched three shorts and am on my third feature. will probably do one or two more features after this. i’m just watching in bed (i have a tv in my room), but i was wondering, how are theatres for you in france? do you get all the major american movies? are they subtitled in french? how is your french?

    so far everything i’ve watched today has been new-to-me but i might end the day with a rewatch – maybe crybaby, because it’s the john waters i’ve seen the least amount of times (once) and john’s been heavy on my mind since halloween. i didn’t really care for it as much as his other movies but i’m thinking i need to give it another try

    trying to watch a lot of movies i haven’t seen before this month, recommendations are welcome. what’s your #1 all time favourite, if you can pick one?

  9. Bzzt

    Sounds like you guys have plenty of stuff on the horizon, I’ll keep my eyes out. As for me I’d like to make progress on my fiction. I wrote a good single page of a story last year and I keep trying to extend that page into an opening chapter. But Ive been stuck in the mud since January……But where else does one get stuck, right.
    I feel like a bum, I do, but I also feel like there’s some positive energy coming soon. My instincts are growing and they’re becoming powerful……I have to be brave like Joan of Arc.
    Thank you for being supportive/encouraging/benevolent.

    Q

  10. Steve Erickson

    Once the film is released, will Puce Mary’s score be released as a soundtrack album?

    I only have one slot left open on the best albums list, and I think I’ve filled up everything on the singles list. The contrast between the two is pretty telling – there’s almost no hip-hop or pop on the albums list, much more among the singles.

    I’ll be buying a new mouse for my laptop tomorrow. It’s been decaying for months and finally completely broke after I dropped it yesterday, but I assume that a new one will make producing music much smoother.

  11. Sarah

    I am feeling good! Thanks for asking. At the start of the year you said every year is better than the last and that’s definitely been the case for me this year. I hope it’s been the same for you.

  12. Nick.

    Hi. See that board game sounds crazy fun and just sort of wacky like what an odd situation to be put in with such a static medium. And Magic is super cool well the art and brand are I have no clue what’s so interesting about card games aside from the literal cards being nice to look at sometimes so I get that aversion. I think I’ve been under eating so being stuffed full of pasta sounds fun but I know it’s not so I hope you’re better now. And somehow it’s not exploding but that’s probably because it’s exploded like 3 times before literally like we’ve had some insane space inbetween our interactions but now it’s pretty consistent it’s really funny to have your own behavior mirrored back but it’s the cheat sheet to evolution I believe or at least my own personal one. I change he changes I open up a bit he does too it’s the best game of cerebral chess I’ve ever played honestly and it’s a plus he’s so hot behind it all. Oh see I’ve never played anything like mouse trap but I remember the commercials for it sending me into a frenzy cause of how fun it looked. Speaking of commercials do you have a favorite you’ve ever seen be it for a product or whatever? I think mine would any of the early 2000s art stuff they would sell like those markers you could turn into airbrushes or something. I know the products never worked when you actually got them cause I was fortunate enough to get a few of them and play with them for exactly two days and be rendered severely underwhelmed after waiting weeks to months for them. I need to eat more candy since I’ve moved my appetite for trash has diminished I think it’s the being sick so be well and have something sweet for me I’ll be right back.

  13. tomk

    Oh Man, thank you so much. Been a bit of a rough time (tho mixed with joy) which is what I was trying to explain in the mail and why I’ve not been around so much. Thank you so much

  14. l@rst

    Devo was spectacular!

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