From Zombos Closet

January 2016

Thomas J. Wright Night Gallery Interview

Pickman's ModelGhost (http://friendlyghost.typepad.com/) sent me a link to the Thomas J. Wright interview conducted by TV Time Machine in 2011. Trying to listen to it, I discovered it didn’t play in contemporary browsers, as it needed an mplayer plugin. Or so each browser I tried indicated. Trying to retro fit the plugin, I had too many issues, so I gave up and captured an MP3 version instead.

So here it is. Right-click the link and “Save link as…”

Thomas J. Wright Night Gallery Interview

And perusing Wikipedia’s entry on Mr. Wright, I found he was quite the all-rounder: “Wright has directed episodes of Smallville,One Tree Hill, Firefly, and many other programs. He also worked extensively on Chris Carter’s Millennium, on which he was a producer as well as directing 26 of the show’s 67 episodes. He also directed the 1989 Hulk Hogan film No Holds Barred.” 

Monster World Issue 1
Part Two

Go to Monster World Issue 1: Part One

Here's the second half of Monster World Issue 1 magazine (aka Quasimodo's Monster Magazine). A few funny-photo-captions, a Find a Monster Puzzle, and  nods to screen vampires and Avco Embassy's television series, Nightmare Theater, fill this second half. Oh, and I shouldn't forget to mention the 70,000 Year Old Teenager, Korg, and the ad for Sun-Flower, the Chinese Handmaiden Doll every horror fan would want to own. At least this second half of the magazine has more ads suitable for monsterkids, like the Night Gallery and monster-sized Quasimodo posters, as well as the fine craft books on dress design and basic knitting. I wonder how many cosplayers started this way?

Monster world 1_0027

Monster World Issue 1
Part One

After reading Cranston Macmillan's Quasimodo's Monster Magazine chapter in the recently released 70s Monster Memories (yup, shameless plug here!), I dug out my first issue of Quasi's, which was called Monster World. At least for the first three issues, then it changed title to Quasimodo's Monster Magazine. It's a lot of pages if little else, but there's a charm to its simplicity (okay, poor layout and cheap printing). The covers were always to die for. In this first half of the magazine you'll read about Kolchak, The Night Stalker, The Monster Comics World of Jose Delbo, and Frankenstein, Through the Years. But nevermind that. What's really killer here are the advertising pages: you can drown your plants with love by giving them Water Stiks, stay healthy with Arco books on fitness, buy $20.00 sport action watches, plug in the miracle TV antenna (I can tell you from personal experience it sucked), and grab a fine collectible Chinese Doll (but that's in the second half of the magazine, which I'll post shortly). While other horror and monster mags had copious ads for fan-favorite merchandise, this first issue went for the wrong target audience. How terrifying!.

Monster world 1

The Monster Times Issue 20
March 1973

Star Trek stays alive in issue 20 of The Monster Times.  An episode guide, coverage of the book adaptations by James Blish, a fan clubs yellow pages, and a smashing Keep on Trekkin' pullout centerfold make this an all warp speed issue.  Toss in Karloff's The Mask of Fu Manchu and a look at the stage play, Warp, with costumes designed by Neal Adams, and you've got your typical TMT smattering of 1970s pop culture nirvana. Warp began in 1971 at the Illinois Organic Theatre Company before moving to Broadway in 1973. A science-fantasy trilogy and space opera, it circulated before Star Wars hit the big screens in 1977.

Monster times 20_cv