Showing posts with label Nostalgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nostalgia. Show all posts

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Happy Super Bowl Sunday, Planet Earth!

It should be a US (world?) holiday. The Monday after has long had one of the highest rates of sick days of the year. Productivity dips, churches are empty, stores close (Green Bay only), and every TV station NOT covering the game plans strategic marathons of shows aimed at the non-game crowd.

That's right, once again, the Super Bowl is upon us. And I'm stuck in Europe...

The game won't kick off until almost midnight local time, and will last AT LEAST an hour longer than a normal (already long) NFL game. It's gonna be a late night, but I'm dedicated to enjoying this one little bit of my American heritage to the last.

It really is impossible to compare Super Bowl Sunday to anything here in Ireland. Hurling and Gaelic football finals are great, to be sure. Rugby Six Nations championship? Exciting and thrilling of course, but the preamble and postgame is a bit deflating. World Cup? Yeah, it's big -- especially if your team is hanging in to the late stage of the tourney -- bit it's much less of a spectacle. That's right, I said it.

The Super Bowl is a big piñata-pop of all things American, the culmination of an entire autumn and winter of football fandom. Every high school season is long in the books, the college football bowl season has passed, and all American sporting eyes turn to the all-day coverage of the Greatest Game of the Year.

It falls at the perfect time. After the NFL season, America enters a sporting doldrums. Football is over, the baseball season is still months away, and sports networks struggle to find interesting (non-NASCAR) programming on weekends.

But.. Basketball! And ice hockey!

I know, basketball is still in full swing, and the college hoops season is really amping up as the conference standings fall into place in the buildup to the conference tourneys and the ever-loved March Madness championship tournament. The NBA is... the NBA. Professional basketball, a few nights a week. Those games that are always playing on mute at the local bar, with scores running into the triple digits and celebrities sitting courtside for their obligatory out-and-about shots. Compared to football? Yawn.

Ice hockey, enjoyed by a small but incredibly passionate fanbase, still occupies a second-class spot in the pro sports world. Just like the NBA, it suffers from a too-long season and bad television deals (outside of the home markets) and gets relegated to game-on-mute-at-the-one-bar-owned-by-that-guy-from-North-Dakota.

No friends, the Super Bowl is the LAST big game of 2014 -- even though it takes place a month into 2015. Like the traditional Chinese or the fiscal year, sports function by their own calendar not set down by the Romans (and later refined by monks) all those years ago. And much like the Western New Year celebration, Super Bowl Sunday is a big party held in the middle of winter, and the following day we wake up hungover, jaded, and looking ahead into a void of cold nothingness.

So enjoy, friends! However you celebrate (if you celebrate), do so safely and with as much America in your heart as you can fit. America is pretty big, much bigger than any human heart -- use caution. Even if you don't care one lick about that start-and-stop game where all the fat guys give each other head trauma, get yourself a watery American light lager, plug your nose, and release your inner North Dakotan. Get on YouTube tomorrow and watch as much of the halftime show as you can stomach, especially if there is a wardrobe malfunction -- but not if it happens to Steven Tyler.

And while you're watching the game, know that I will be sitting on an uncomfortable couch in our cold apartment in the middle of the night, full of nachos, quietly celebrating every sports fan's favorite holiday right there with you. God bless you, God bless football, and God bless America!

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Happy Holidays!

It's Christmas Day, for those who celebrate. It's our second holiday season away from the States, and boy how time flies. It seems like just yesterday that we were spending a quiet (and cold) Christmas in Cork, Ireland's other capital.

But looking back, so much has happened since that little holiday away. We've checked off a number of other travel destinations, like Belgium, Derry, Munich, Prague, and Scotland. If it counts as a travel destination, we visited our families back in Iowa and New York.

Family has come from America to see us in Galway, Mayo, and County Clare (writings of those trips coming soon).

I've accomplished a number of personal goals, finally pushing "publish" on my free eBook, and it's been very successful so far. The downloads creep up slowly each day, and as it becomes available on more platforms, I know it will grow. I hope to continue promoting and updating the book as the new year begins.

I'm well into writing my second book, pumping out my daily writing quota without much trouble. Instead of spending those hours every day on new blog content, I feel like I'm getting a better product with longform, pictureless, personal essays. Hopefully the new year will see another book on my e-bookshelf.

We hope you are kickin' it with someone you love this holiday season, whichever holidays you celebrate. If you are away from your close family and friends like we are, we feel you. Try to spend some time connecting with them with this amazing world wide web through which you're reading my words now.

Best wishes for a safe and happy holiday season and new year to all!

Cory and Sara

Cory and Sara in Cong, Co. Mayo
Cong, Co. Mayo
(Photo: Keri Hanson)

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Thanksgiving 2014 Live Twitter Bash

It's that time of year again, turkey and football fans! Thanksgiving is upon us again here in Dublin. While the rest of the country goes about their regular pre-Christmas routine, we'll be cooking up a traditional (ish) Thanksgiving feast for two in our tiny Dublin kitchen. Follow the action all day on Twitter (www.twitter.com/hansoncory1 and www.twitter.com/hansonsaraj) or right here on this blog post. All new tweets will be embedded (with pictures) on this page as the day goes on.

Happy Turkey Day!












Friday, July 18, 2014

Reflections Wrap-up and Future-spective

What have you enjoyed the most so far in Ireland?

Cory
I have generally enjoyed the change in lifestyle of living in Ireland, specifically Dublin. We are adjusting not just to living in another country, but we are also going from the suburbs to the city, from a single family house to a small apartment, from an educated college town to a gritty, diverse international capital. The day-to-day operations in urban Dublin are much different at a basic level, before we even consider the cultural and meteorological differences. It's also nice to take a few years off from mowing the lawn and shoveling snow...

Sara
Although much of the novelty of living in Ireland has worn off, I still love the possibilities presented to us by living here. Most of these are tied to traveling. We still have so much to see! We have barely made it to the west coast of this tiny emerald isle, which seriously needs to be remedied. Living in Dublin, we have the added bonus of extremely easy and inexpensive travel both within Ireland and to other countries in Europe. The ease of traveling can make it hard to quell the travel-bug between trips, but I love that we are in such a fortunate position.

What might you have done differently in the past year, knowing what you know now?

Cory
I feel like we could now be champions of the government bureaucracy battles we fought when we first arrived. Navigating the murky waters of the PPS office, GNIB registration, setting up utilities (especially internet...), and working with phone support were all sweaty palms and elevated heart rates for us. The old adage youth is wasted on the wrong people applies here. Why is it that the people who have the least experience with a new government, a new setting, and new expectations have such great demands made of them? Why can't we NOW fill out our initial paperwork and get our bank account set up?

Sara
I would have adopted a more relaxed and go-with-the-flow attitude more quickly. All of the paperwork Cory listed was very stressful at the time, and I was always worried that we would do something incorrectly or that we would miss an important step. Turns out that people here are generally pretty relaxed, especially when it comes to bureaucracy. Adopting a patient attitude and trusting that everything will work out is critical when the to-do list seems like it's a mile long and that you will never get settled. I should of just made a cup of tea and uttered the tried-and-true Irishism: "Ah sure, it'll be grand". 

What is your new favorite Irish influence or custom?

Cory
For me, maybe the most entertaining social custom I observe here is the loud, open, no-holds-barred distrust of politicians and bankers. We in the States have some implied mistrust of our system in general, but people are generally pretty quiet about their disdain for politicians- except during the occasional political earthquake that sweeps the system. Irish folks in pubs, on the street, and on the radio make no bones about their mistrust of the people they blame for the country going financially nuclear in 2008. "Bunch o'crooks, all of 'em!" is a common, family-friendly sentiment shared around town. I can't speak for pre-crash Ireland, but maybe folks were more trusting of their public figures when the economy was growing like a magic beanstalk?

Sara
I'm enjoying the process of understanding Irish and European sports. It certainly is a process because we have yet to find simple explanations for how all of the different leagues work for all of the various sports. That said, once we were able to figure some of them out, we had a blast following them. Six Nations rugby was thrilling to watch, and the uniqueness of gaelic sports has made them very interesting to learn and follow. I even started to get excited for the World Cup. Who know, maybe over the next couple of years I will be a bona fide soccer fan!

Besides your loved ones, what do you miss most about Iowa?

Cory
For me, it might very well be freshwater river fishing. I have easy access to great stream and ocean fishing here in Dublin, but I don't have nearly three decades of knowledge and practice with these strange and wily fish species. Gone for now are the days when I can walk down to the Iowa River and pull in as many carp as my arms can carry with but a bare hook and a dough ball. Maybe if I live in Ireland for a few more years, I can catch as many trout as I could carp...

Sara
Without a doubt it's the weather. Sara of a year ago would not believe that I am saying that, and all of my friends and family back home will think I'm bananas, but I miss Iowa weather. A mild climate is convenient and comfortable, but it sure gets boring after awhile. I want a day where the buses aren't running because it snowed 6 inches in one hour. I want a day where the skies open up and unleash their fury upon the mere mortals below. I want it to be so hot and humid that I am sweating while just sitting on the couch. I want it to be so cold that my nose hairs freeze and I can't take a full breath without coughing. I don't want it every day, but once in a while it's nice to be reminded who is really in charge in this world. That would be Mother Nature. For some reason, she pretty much gives Ireland a pass, and I have to say I miss her fury. 

About which European travel experiences are you most excited?

Cory
I am looking forward to heading farther east than I've ever been. I particularly am eagerly waiting for a trip to Istanbul, Turkey, where I can walk across the Bosphorus Bridge and stand on the continent of Asia, thus bringing me to a tie with Sara for number of world continents visited. Solo trip to Antarctica for the win?

Sara
Can I say "all of them"? Is that allowed? If I had to rank them, I guess the top of the list would include our plans for a trip to Morocco (ok, not actually Europe, but it's pretty close) and traveling with my younger sister. The former because, like Cory, I want to add another continent to my tally. The latter because I can't wait to share a European adventure with my baby sis before she spends a semester in Austria. We haven't decided where we are going yet, but I know that it will be unforgettable!

What are your goals for the next year?

Cory
I am hoping to continue to improve my writing skills in my time away from full-time employment. Maybe this can turn into something more than a hobby for me. Having the daily blog post is a nice goal, and other writing projects force me to write in different formats for non-personal-blog audiences. With more practice, I hope to be able to communicate clearly and easily in all of the genres of freelance writing. 

Sara
I do not want to become complacent. I feel as though we have adjusted well to living in a foreign country far from home, but I do not want to allow myself to become lazy. I want to keep learning new things about Ireland and visiting new places. I think that after a year it might be easy to stay in the comfort zone that we have carved out for ourselves here. My goal is to keep pushing us to explore and take full advantage of living here.

Whew! That was an exciting week of anniversary retrospectives! We have certainly learned, grown, and changed a lot in one year away. After having looked at how much our habits and viewpoints have changed in the last year, we are excited to see that we are still flexible and open-minded enough to make such big changes comfortably. We're glad we did this series this week- not just for readers, but for ourselves! We can't wait to look at these posts next July to see what has changed in two years in Dublin! Will we have learned everything? We doubt it, but we are looking forward to smiling at the young, naive, Cory and Sara of today, just as we read the old posts from last Summer and smile at that Cory and Sara.


Cera Sara and Cory

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

An Irish Year in Frugality

It probably comes through loud and clear with many of our blog posts, but we should begin by stating clearly here that we are frugal. Cheapskates, penny-pinchers, tightwads, thrifty, call us what you will.

In Iowa, it became something beyond a necessity, beyond a hobby, beyond a skill; it became a way of life. Thrift store shopping was just the beginning. Learning to live high on the hog and low on the price tag was a mission; and we were good at it.

When we were getting ready for our move to Dublin, we knew that we would have to change our financial reality and our perspective. We knew that Dublin was the most expensive city in one of the most expensive countries in the world. Our spending power would be much lower, especially with only one income.

Could we still find ways to feed our cheap addiction in a new land? How have we learned to adjust our thrifty expectations and techniques in one very fast year?

Cheap Goods?


When we arrived in Dublin, we tried to work with all of our old thrifty habits. It was all we knew. To set up our new apartment, we visited a block of thrift stores thinking to fully stock our kitchen, bathroom, and closet with bargain basement secondhand goods... but sadly it was not to be. Thrift stores here are small and comparatively expensive. We were left to stock our home with the cheapest department store home goods we could find- after looking all over town.

We have yet to find the golden goose large thrift store dealing in piles of clothes priced by the bin- not individually- and shelves of out-of-style cookware, candle-holders, garden supplies, electronics, tacky wall art, dirty toys, and mostly-unbroken lawn furniture.

Grocery shopping has been more or less a wash for us. Certain kinds of goods are much more expensive than those in the States, while a (very) few can be picked up more inexpensively. We have changed our diet to match the prices of certain foods, namely meat. Our protein sources now come mostly from dry beans and lentils, which are cheap and easy to carry. Meat, which used to be a staple, is now more of a luxury item for us. On the other hand, milk chocolate digestive cookies were unheard of at Hy-Vee in Iowa, but these delicious, buttery, chocolatey cookies are so tempting on the shelf for 50 cents... is it OK to replace meat with cookies in the diet?

How Have we Saved?


In one area, we have excelled in saving- transportation. This has been one of our great savings success stories in Dublin. Because Sara has a short commute to work and I have... no commute to work, we don't have to rely on daily transportation on Dublin's good-try-but-not-quite-there public transportation system or (Heavens, no!), a car. We have definitely pumped our walking and cycling muscles since moving here, but more importantly, we've adjusted to the planning required for a largely foot-powered lifestyle. Shopping trips can't be quick runs... unless we are literally running to the store. We have to plan our trips to and around town, always keeping in mind time and carrying weight. Need something bulky and heavy? Better pick it up at the end of the day out and as close to home as it is available.

With almost everything costing more here, we have learned to be selective about our chosen pastimes and entertainment. It would not quite be accurate to say that we are living without or depriving ourselves of comfort and leisure activities, but do sometimes have to make difficult choices. This isn't all bad, as it happens. We have learned to appreciate our luxuries when they come, because we can't make them happen all the time. When we do go out for a pint, we usually keep it to one overpriced round, which is nursed and savored with the knowledge that the next one might not be for a while.

Maybe we can take these habits with us when we move on to an almost certainly cheaper place than Dublin. We could be the champions of thrift and economy!

Friday, July 4, 2014

Happy Independence Day USA!

Today, July 4, is a very important day for Americans. Today we celebrate... our Independence!



Not from aliens (yet), but from those pesky red-coated British. We have of course had to repel several more British invasions since 1776, and The Beatles' music catalogue is now firmly in control of the Michael Jackson estate, so I think we can now officially declare eternal victory.

Seems like it was just in time, too. If Jason Isaacs (Colonel Travington) had actually fought Mel Gibson in real life, things might not have gone so well for George Washington and the Continental Army.



Joking and British slights aside, we will miss the modern American Independence Day traditions, especially in our homeland in the Midwest. Parades, outdoor barbecues, baseball, and fireworks displays all come to mind. That and the Midwestern heat, humidity, and mosquitoes.

Here in Europe, declaring your love for your national affiliation in the face of all other nations is usually seen as impolite in mixed company. It seems to be accepted in a few circumstances, mostly at national sports games (except in mixed-country teams like the Irish Rugby Football Union with its own politically-neutral song), but people don't usually break out into national anthems at the drop of a hat.

Not so in America, where we don't have to worry about offending neighboring countries that still suffer from political tension and the uneasy, suspicious compromise of the European Union. We've long ago settled our differences with Canada and Mexico, and they usually just ignore the Americans and our annoying chants of "U-S-A! U-S-A!"

To all those back in America, enjoy your holiday. To all those irritated by our unbridled nationalism, please forgive us. We understand your frustration and we'll try to keep it down.

...And now, for the education of our European readers and to bring a smile to the faces of our American Iowan readers, the moment that in our opinion sums up the best (and worst) of American nationalism.


"If you don't love it, leave it! USA, number one!"

Preach on, Ricky Stanzi, preach on!

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Birthday Care Package

Almost real-time update.

I had a birthday (number 30) recently, and I got a thoughtful and hilarious care package from my loving parents.

Yeah, Baby!

It was almost literally a box of dreams. I found inside all my standard favorite American foods, gummi candy, taffy, beef jerky sticks, and in-the-shell sunflower seeds. I know gummi candy is available in Europe, but it's mostly the Haribo style of gummi. Good, but different than the squishier Trolli candy and the juicier Black Forest candy. This man knows and loves his gummi candy.

Beef jerky sticks, what a treat! Usually found in the checkout lines of every gas station and convenience store in America, they are not as common here. It was nice to taste the freedom of chewy, salty meat again.

After posting here that we were making pizza with chorizo instead of pepperoni as the go-to cheapest kind of cured meat at the supermarket, my folks included packs of sandwich and pizza-sized pepperoni and salami.

Sunflower seeds in the shell are a summer favorite of mine, especially nice for outdoor activities. Correct eating etiquette of sunflower seeds differs by present company and skill with the tongue and teeth, but I choose to throw in a handful of seeds, crack them open one by one with my teeth, and spit out the shells as I eat each one. The constant chewing, drooling, and spitting make these an exclusively outdoor snack.

I also found a box of various trout flies and lures. I can't wait to try these out on the Dodder now that things are slowing down a bit here in Dublin.

Thanks, Mom and Dad!

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Natural History Museum

On a recent (and rainy) trip to city centre, we made a stop to a museum we had kept hearing about but hadn't had time to stop in.  The National Museum of Ireland Natural History Museum is housed in the suite of buildings around Leinster House- home of the modern Irish Parliament.  The building of the museum itself was constructed in 1856 to display the collection of the Royal Dublin Society, then headquartered in nearby Leinster House.  The museum, being part of the fantastic (and free!) National Museum of Ireland is well-run, clean, and informative.

Just inside the front door are the real stars of the museum.  The full skeletal remains of three Giant Irish Deer stand regally and imposingly facing the entrance hallway.  These animals lived on this island and other parts of Northern Europe until about 10,000 years ago.  The antlers of these huge mammals have roughly the same size and shape of those of a full-grown bull moose (more on him later.)  What an animal this must have been to behold in prehistoric Europe.

Giant Irish Deer at the Natural History Museum Dublin, Ireland
Giant Irish Deer
Sara knows I love seeing seals in the wild here.  I totally geek out whenever we are on a coast and I get even a hint of these cute sea mammals.  She called me away from staring at the predatory bird display to say, "Hey Buddy!" to this spotted little guy.

A stuffed seal on display at the Natural History Museum Dublin, Ireland
Stuffed Seal
Yes, the predatory birds exhibit waited for me.  After all, the animals in here have been stuffed for decades.  They'd still be there.  The birds exhibit (and many others from the museum) don't have a photo in this post- because we aren't uninhibited photo-machine-gunners.  A comprehensive museum like this with thousands of displays of all sizes would take hours or days to catalogue thoroughly.  Further, if we were that determined to collect photos, would we actually get to see any of the exhibits?  I mean, actually see them, not look at them through the camera display to do a double check of the zoom and focus.  Case in point-  I was looking at a large sea eagle (there's that raptor display again...) carefully.  I was leaning in to examine the length of the talons, the size of the wingspan, the shine in the eyes, and the variations in feather color.  When I stepped to the side, two younger museum-goers walked up to the display while having a conversation.  Each had a smartphone in hand.  Without really looking at the bird, both pointed the smartphones at the display and snapped a shot- without interrupting the (unrelated) conversation.  They checked the photo for focus (on the phone screen) and moved on, chatting all the while.

I wasn't disturbed or annoyed, mind you.  They weren't loud or obnoxious in their conversation, and they waited for me to step aside before moving in to take their pictures.  I just found myself wondering if they had actually appreciated the bird they had thought enough of to capture in a photo.  Just not my kind of museum-going.

One of my goals while living here is to see a live wild hedgehog.  I know I'm not in a very good place to see them, as I've heard they usually live outside the bigger cities and are mostly nocturnal.  This day I was happy just to see one of these native mammals that so fascinate me- even being from the land of raccoons, skunks, and opossums.

A stuffed hedgehog at the Natural History Museum Dublin, Ireland
Hedgehog
The ground floor of the museum is mostly dedicated to animals native to Ireland- both living and extinct.  From birds and mammals we continued to some of Cory's favorites- the fish.  Most of the fish were stuffed and mounted, but some (of extinct or threatened species) were models not created from a real organism.  I must register here my strong agreement with this responsible choice.  Taxidermy as a craft is mostly model-building anyway.  A well-constructed model of these organisms (as these were) gives the viewer a more-than-satisfactory idea of their size, shape, color, and characteristics.

Cory Checkin' out the Fish at the Natural History Museum in Dublin, Ireland
Cory Checkin' out the Fish
Not pictured for reasons stated above, the ground floor continues with displays of other aquatic and marine life, even (admirably) the not-as-beautiful-but-just-as-important-to-an-ecosystem organisms like worms, mollusks, shellfish, and other invertebrates.  The displays of preserved insects and spiders were covered with liftable leather covers- presumably to prevent light damage.

Thinking of responsible stewardship of wild animal populations... The next floor(s) house animals of the world beyond Ireland.  Just inside the entrance, a stuffed giant panda from nearly 100 years ago welcomes visitors.  Pandas, critically threatened and closely guarded by the Chinese government today, were apparently not so in the early twentieth century.  The specimen here in the museum was collected by missionaries to China and was one of the first stuffed pandas to reach museums in the western world.

Further down the floor, we are reminded that some threatened animal populations are still being poached and irresponsibly managed.  The rhinoceros in the photo below has had its horn removed to prevent its theft for sale on the black market.  Rhinos are still commonly poached and horns cut off for sale for their mythical medicinal properties.  Researches have found absolutely no evidence of these black magic remedies improving any medical condition.  These horns are, chemically speaking, one large, thick hair or fingernail.  Wanna grind up some finger and toenails into your healing potion?  Write me and I'll send you some of my own clippings.

In the meantime, a prosthetic replacement horn is being constructed for the rhino specimen in the museum.  Good on you, museum curator.  Bad on you, rhino poachers- and you, too, museum rhino horn thieves!

Rhino Waiting for a Nose Job at the Natural History Museum Dublin, Ireland
Rhino Waiting for a Nose Job
Near the temporarily hornless rhino is an elephant skeleton, with its record-setting tusk on display below.  Apparently elephant tusk theft isn't as much a concern as rhino horn smuggling.  Good thing, too- it was an impressive specimen and would have been a shame to miss.

A large elephant tusk at the Natural History Museum in Dublin, Ireland
One of the largest elephant tusks ever collected
Above the busy displays on the upper floor, I almost missed the huge whale skeletons as my eyes were darting from strange mammal to strange mammal in the central floor exhibits.  Humpback and fin whale skeletons hang over the floor case with the smaller members of the cetacean family- dolphins and porpoises.  Upon closer inspection, one can see the small vestigial bones of what were once the back legs of these marine mammals evolved from land mammals going back to the sea.  

Whale Skeletons hanging in the Natural History Museum Dublin, Ireland
Whale Skeletons
The specimens on this floor, as stated above, are collected from around the world.  Most of them are grouped by their families- Kangaroos and wallabies, anteaters, sloths, and others are shown with their relatives- sometimes both living and extinct.  I have to admit, though, among all those strange, new, and exotic animals, I had little nostalgic jolts every time I saw some of my favorite North American classics like raccoons and our buddy, bearded bull moose.

A moose on display at the National History Museum Dublin, Ireland
Don't mess with Texas Maine.
The animal displays were engaging and entertaining, of course, but I was brought many more big smiles watching some of the living human specimens in the museum- the kids.  Many young families were enjoying a Saturday out at the museum with the kids, and the kids could simply not get enough.  Mothers and fathers were often pulled in two or three different directions by their children desperate to get a closer look at that "Bear!" "Antelope!" "Elephant!" "...What is that!?"  I could imagine, and remember myself, some of that wonder and total euphoria felt by young kids around so many different animals.  They, the children are the real target audience of collections like this.  After all, they- the children- will be in charge of this world someday.  If we can educate them at a young age of the beauty, importance, and fragility of our natural systems- maybe the world won't have to worry about rhino poaching, overfishing, and habitat destruction.  Maybe I'm too optimistic...

For a more comprehensive look at the museum and its displays, get off this blog and go yourself!  It's convenient, it's free, and it's great.

Friday, January 17, 2014

Forbidden Planet Comic Shop





On one of my recent Dublin rambles, I set eyes on Forbidden Planet Comic Shop.  Sitting just South of the River and just West of O'Connell Street Bridge, the shop has a great location.  Inside, they honor their great location with a great comic shop.

What makes a great comic shop?  That varies greatly depending on who is asked.  Nerd-dom can be frustratingly elitist and unwelcoming to "outsiders."  Anyone who has seen the Comic Store Guy in The Simpsons is aware of some of the worst kinds of fan-rage and the geek elite.  People like Comic Store Guy don't seem to really like or enjoy anything in life, especially mainstream entertainment.  

If one is asking me what makes a great comic shop, it is very simple.  The shop has to be set up to appeal to "outsiders" and people like me, who would be a "verger?"  I enjoy reading (old) comic books, gaming, and a few other "nerdy" pursuits- but I would not consider myself anything like Comic Store Guy.  I enjoy comic shops that are well-lit and inviting.  I enjoy a good selection of comics, action figures, gaming books and games, sci fi/fantasy novels, posters, T-shirts with funny slogans, and other surprises.  I don't actually collect most of those things, but I do enjoy browsing them in a friendly atmosphere.  Forbidden Planet has a large showroom with a wide selection of just what I was looking for.

Forbidden Planet Comic Shop display window
Outside Display Window
What I do enjoy collecting from comic shops is old back issues of comics.  I don't look for comic titles specifically, but rather from a time period.  When I was in high school (early 2000's), I found a comic shop in Iowa with boxes of old comics from the 1980's and 90's for $1, sometimes less.  My friend and I began buying them up for some entertaining fast reads.  I found in them not gripping comic art and storytelling, but amazing advertisements, letters sections, and news from my childhood.

I was amazed at seeing ads for products I remembered but no longer exist, upcoming movies that I remembered wanting to see, snack food and drinks that would no longer be edible today (Surge soda?) and video games I had or wanted for my NES or Sega Genesis.  Many of the ads (or others in the same ad campaign) I could remember vividly.  "Mortal Monday" ads heralded the arrival of the new Mortal Kombat game to home systems.  80's and 90's sports superstars with impressive mullet haircuts like Joe Montana hawked their endorsed products from the yellowing pages.  

Older issues from the early 1980's still had comic book ad holdovers from the Golden Age of comics.  Multi-ad pages offered helpful lines like, "Are you too skinny for the girls?  This new Charles Atlas program will make you the King of the Playground in no time!  Just send..." and "Looking for extra income?  Sell GRIT newspapers to your family and neighbors, keep all these great rewards!  Just send..."  I have no living memory of GRIT newspaper, and I only know Charles Atlas from the reference in The Rocky Horror Picture Show, so these little bits of retro-youth Americana were sometimes entertaining, sometimes touching, and... sometimes a bit racist.  

Comics from this era had letters and fan art sections to print user feedback.  The letters from readers were usually pretty entertaining, and I could just about see myself as a boy of twelve in bib overalls and a bowl cut carefully drafting a letter with my yellow pencil to the creators of my favorite X-Men editors praising (or criticizing!) their work.  Seeing one's name in print in those days must have been a big deal.  Quite a change from the modern-day website comment section, no?  Speaking of comment sections, there is one at the bottom of this article, if you care to...

Someday I may make a project of scanning and collecting in a digital medium these (copyrighted...) gems, because sadly, reprints of back issues of comics leave out the ads (understandably) but they also usually omit the reader letters and responses, artist profiles, "This month at (comic publisher)" news pages, and the infamous Marvel Stan's Soapbox.  I'm sure licensing deals and little reader interest will keep many of these bits of treasure locked forever in the yellowing pages of aging comic books.


Kiss, Transformers, and Strip Magazine
Kiss, Transformers, and Strip Magazine
What did I find at Forbidden Planet that day?  Well, some retro-ish titles were available in F.P.'s own discount bin.  The Transformers issue cover looked just like some of the Marvel Transformers issues I have in storage right now.  The content is new, but I had to applaud their shot at a retro cover.  The rock band KISS still have active issues being published, and I found an old issue of a U.K. weekly comic magazine, Strip.  I'll be back for more next time I'm in City Centre with some time to spare.