Category Archives: MAPS

Steptoe Series 02

(continued)

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bb:

Hucka D., I may call on your help tonight. The Steptoe series is a tough one to analyze.

Hucka D.:

Not really. So in Collage 03 (above) we have the actual start of The Shining film depicted. Jack’s yellow Volkswagen is heading up the Going to the Sun Road in Montana — that’s where it’s shot. But the road has been replaced by the dirt road to Stipe Cemetery in Washington state.

bb:

I could have said that!

Hucka D.:

Yes but you didn’t. And now I’m here. So just listen [ basically]. Baker Bloch is front center in the collage. The collage is separated into 2 basic parts, the left side being the entrance to the Stipe Cemetery, and the right the field to its immediate west. There we have a mashup of Jack’s body with Hallorann’s, the African-American person he murdered in the movie (but didn’t in the source novel). And also Danny, don’t you think? That’s Danny’s head that Jack is holding, in effect.

bb:

It’s not but it is.

Hucka D.:

Yes. So this mashup of figures deals with all the confusions of The Shining, and Jack as abusing Danny, and Hallorann and Danny’s special shine bonding — an arm appears like a foot. It’s all the confusions of The Shining in one composite. A kind of mess, in a manner. The image started as just Hallorann lying in this field. Then he acquires Jack’s head, and Danny’s head along with it. Danny’s arm subs for one of Hallorann’s legs. It speaks of the intertwined destiny of these 3 characters: Jack is bound to axed Hallorann to death, and Danny is bound to then kill Jack in the maze. It’s all set up beforehand, like a play… like a movie of course. So the right hand side is all this, and the left hand side is the beginning of the movie, all lean and clean and cleared of confusion. Do you know what this is, then?

bb:

It’s the beginning of Carrcass-10, the trimmed down version of the film. Clean and lean, or cleaner and leaner.

Hucka D.:

Yes. It’s the same start as the movie visually — Jack Torrance’s yellow bug driving through the huge mountains to the lodge. But it’s — what do you call them?

bb:

What?

Hucka D.:

The variant band that plays here.

bb:

Oh. Tom’s Petty High. That’s Tom Petty’s variant band.

Hucka D.:

So it’s playing here instead. Just let, as you said I believe, the first of the music fall on the first frame of the film, where we see little Wild Goose Island. So cute. So mirrored. So the yellow bug accompanied by Tom’s Petty Band soundtrack now, a new, different music — not better…

bb:

No. Just different. Variant.

Hucka D.:

Yes. That now takes us up to the lodge and Jack’s interview. In your Carrcass-10, you still have part of the interview, the crucial part describing the past axe murders several years back in the hotel. Then you have the start of Story Room.

bb:

So the yellow ball Danny finds in the cemetery is the same as his father’s yellow VW bug.

Hucka D.:

Yes. A reinterpretation. A repurposing.

bb:

It’s the yellow bug at the hotel, which is the same as this cemetery, going back to the fact that the hotel was built on an Indian burial ground, perhaps.

Hucka D.:

The cemetery is the hotel. And that’s where we first pick up the Shining-Steptoe resonance.

bb:

So getting back to Collage 03, we have golfer Tom Kite, who is probably still playing on the senior circuit but who was more famous back in the 80s, I suppose.

Hucka D.:

About the same time as The Shining movie, yes.

bb:

He’s center as well, directly in front of Baker Bloch. He’s swinging a club. There’s an odd(er) object in the sky, an “i” shape. Perhaps the golf ball he hits is represented by this.

Hucka D.:

Yes. The golf ball is light.

bb:

Hmm.

Hucka D.:

We should… go ahead. You go.

bb:

We should probably state that McConnell Cemetery on the sign behind him is the same as Stipe Cemetery. Another variant name?

Hucka D.:

Perhaps. So another Tom — and the Kite part of his name refers to the expression, “high as a kite”. This has to do, then, with Tom’s Petty High again. The song is a drug song. Tom was flying in the car, singing his little Runaway Beach song.

bb (ignoring wrong title of song):

So Tom and the car are inextricably tied together. The golf ball or whatever that is in the sky, is high. The scene on the right, Hucka D., may represent the past of Jack, Danny, and Hallorann, before the events of The Shining movie take place. Jack and Danny already have a history in Boulder and before. Hallorann’s been shining since he was a kid. Jack himself could make a clean start as winter caretaker of the Overlook Hotel. It was a beautiful day and the sun shone down. Everything is flying, clean, different. He’s going to the sun.

Hucka D.:

Good. So we have a new start. Old problems left behind, hopefully. The “i” points up instead of down. But the right part of this collage also speaks of the inevitable doom that lays ahead. Jack-Danny-Hallorann, all bound up with each other in the end. So he’s carrying all this with him, like an impossibly large amount of luggage packed in this little car.

bb:

Baker Bloch is attached to the car because it is his Carrcass-10, through me his user.

(continue)

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Funny story about 2 mannequins…

… from “The Green Acres Learning Curve” blog of a Whitewright, Texas woman, home of Nazi art thief Joe Meador as mentioned in another of her blog posts (and how I stumbled upon the blog in the first place).

http://uptodatewithjamie.blogspot.com/2011/10/10-year-in-life-of-two-mannequins.html

Note: the woman and her husband now own an art gallery and second hand shop in Denison, Ike’s home. It’s called Et Cetera.

—–

Hucka D.:

Don’t you think this blog represents the story book? Er, the scrapbook Jack brings back up to the Colorado Lounge from the boiler room? In the King novel, I mean.

bb:

The Green Acres blog is about moving from the big city to small town Whitewright, with its perks and drawbacks both. Unusual landscape/street art comes to the fore. Now she sells it in a compromise mid-size town of Denison. Makes sense. Perhaps I should monitor the shop for articles.

Hucka D.:

Articles. He he.

2009shining_scrapbook

bb:

Whitewright is white, like the white Adler typewriter, pre-boiler room. Denison is Gray(son), post-boiler room.

Hucka D.:

Something to think about.

bb:

This is a pretty good collage itself (!) And she has some even better ones later on in that same post.

roxscar2

—–

So’s this…

If Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall Traded Characters in The Shining (1980)

the-shining-face-swap

Just some bizarre (and funny) stuff from Martha the mannequin mother.

roxy6

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Steptoe

Links/photos:

http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=131968

hand01
Hand01

hand02
Hand02

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collage06test02

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Experiments w/ a Bullsear (Test continued)

collage04a01

collage04b01

collage04c01

collage04d02

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January 15, 2014 · 5:13 am

Start

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January 14, 2014 · 1:04 pm

Stipe

http://celebritycemetery.blogspot.com/

ms_blog

AIDS-ey REM singer Michael Stipe has always looked a bit peaky, but is it enough to shove him through the door of life down into the deep, dark wine cellar of death? Let’s wait and see, eh?

Predictor: Alistair Reid, Brighton
Mortality Status: Alive

Stipe Cemetery.

secorner

collage02a

steptoe04

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Postcard from Steptoe

steptoe03

Story Room consists of 3 individuals who don the geometric shapes sphere, tetrahedron and cube to mask their true identities. Sometimes lead singer Steptoe Butte is from Whitman County, Washington.

From the Uncyclopedia entry on Steptoe Butte:

“He was a striking-looking guy and he also bought weird records, which not everyone in the store did”, collaborator Pete StarBuck recalled. The two became friends and eventually decided to form a band.[1] StarBuck and Steptoe started writing music together;[2] at the time Steptoe also spent time in a local group named Raid.[3] The pair were soon joined by Bill Mills and Mike Berry and named themselves Murmur, a name Steptoe selected at random from the dictionary.[4]

—–

“Hucka D., clarify for me something. Wouldn’t Steptoe be the blue figure here?”

Hucka D.:

Sometimes.

bb:

Is he the yellow figure as well?

Hucka D.:

No.

bb:

The red figure is the boss.

Hucka D.:

That’s Story Room.

bb:

I’m confused. I thought the name of the band was, or is, Story Room.

Hucka D.:

It is. (pause)

bb:

Where does Tom’s Petty High fit in[ here]?

Hucka D.:

Yellow. Lemon yellow.

bb:

Each… sorry.

Hucka D.:

Each rule over their portions of The Shining that come before or after. So Tom’s Petty High rules the psychiatrist-Danny scene. What have you renamed that recently?

bb:

The Story Room. Oh, wait. That’s — I know what you’re talking about now — that’s the Bear Pillow Scene, with all the little blips and sparkles, at least a handful that seem to mean something.

Hucka D.:

Sorry as well: actually Story Room rules that scene. So that’s why you have the word “strange” highlighted spoken by the doctor, and then the Duck just afterwards. The duck is both the lemon colored VW that protagonist [sic?] Jack drives to the Overlook Hotel to start the movie, and also Duck, WV, then. The presence of The Duck demonstrates the rule of Story Room, see.

bb:

Let’s see.

—–

Hucka D.:

Story Room had a lot of fun with that room.

bb:

Isn’t Story Room, though, the room in the exact center of the Shining with all the rainbow colors, Hucka? Rainbow man Hallorann lies in the middle. Soon to shine. [no answer]

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January 13, 2014 · 10:38 am

Bean

Tom Bean ghost sightings (multiple):

http://www.ghostsofamerica.com/7/Texas_Tom_Bean_ghost_sightings.html

Tom Bean turns White Mound into ghost town.

https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hrw20

When the St. Louis Southwestern Railway’s right-of-way missed White Mound by three quarters of a mile in 1887, the community declined. Tom Bean was built on the railroad and attracted 75 percent of the population, many businesses, and all of the churches from White Mound. White Mound quickly became a ghost town.

Nearby White Rock (also of the White Mound – White Rock – Whitewright triangle) doesn’t even seem to exist in a manner, not listed in the otherwise extremely thorough Texas Almanac atall. It has this in common with White Rock, Robertson County. And another White Rock that’s listed in the GNIS database as being in Fannin County immediately east of Grayson County is actually just inside Lamar County to *its* immediate east. In this blog post, I compare this to a similarly GNIS displaced Herbert population place from Alabama.

https://bakerbloch.wordpress.com/2013/04/10/more-whitehead-related-maps/

Void, null.

whiterocktexas01b
White Rock, Lamar County, Texas (near Petty) on Ghost Creek.

I’m going to quote something directly from this post now:

https://bakerbloch.wordpress.com/2013/04/10/more-whitehead-related-maps/

There is no article in the Texas Alamac for White Rock, Robertson County, unlike for nearby Headsville and Bald Prarie. However, this comprehensive almanac has a listing for a White Rock in Fannin County, which happens to be near a Petty according to the below stats, as White Rock in Robertson County is very near a Petteway (Pett—y + ewa in effect).

whiterocksintexas
White Rock population places in Texas. Notice that White Rock, Robertson County is on a Petteway topo map and White Rock, Fannin County is on a Petty map. This clued me in to their possible association.

4/11/13:

But getting back to the White Rocks of Texas, I noticed that the above mentioned White Rock near Petty is actually not in Fannin County but just over the east line in neighboring Lamar, about a mile and a 1/2 from Fannin County. So the GNIS database got this wrong, harkening back to the Herbert error discussed several months ago on this blog. But then in looking at that listing again, it’s interesting to note that a White Rock lies on a Whitewright topo map, and this particular White Rock is just beyond the *west* Fannin County line, in Grayson County in this case, about 4-5 miles in. Besides Whitewright we also have a White Mound near this White Rock, making a type of White Rock – Whitewright – White Mound triangle, with two more interestingly named population places within this established triangle, or Tom Bean and Kentucky Town.

This is where I originally uncovered the White Mound – White Rock – Whitewright triangle, then.

shinig5901ab

Continuing…

Another perhaps odd thing here: White Rock in Lamar County, unlike the great majority of population places on the topo map involved, is marked with a black dot. So is White Rock in Robertson County. If we make White Rock, Lamar County the retrograde inversion of White Rock, Robertson County merging these two black dots, we find that each lies about 2 1/2 miles from their Petty (Lamar County) and Petteway (Robertson County) and in the same direction.

whiterocktexas02b

whiterocktexas01b

whiterocktexas01c
Retrograde Inversion of White Rock-Petty, Lamar County. You can kind of make an animation by toggling this with this.

Call me crazy, but I think these black dots standing in for Texan White Rocks have something to do with the meaningful placement of *black dot* like specks in various Shining shots, most prominently, for now, in the scene involving the Danny-psychiatrist interaction — another interview of sorts, per the title of the movie section (“The Interview”).

But which ones?

Read about what I called the film flaw occurring right where Wendy walks over the spot where Jack later axes Scatman Cruthers’ Hallorann character. I’ll quote a key sentence of mine from the “strange? 03” blog post on this:

I think there’s a strong possibility that mad genius Kubrick purposely constructed this as one of those “burnt toast” spirits.

Spirits… ghosts. White Rock, Robertson County next to Ghost Creek, a White Rock that doesn’t seem to exist in a way. Another White Rock (Grayson County) made a ghost town by nearby Tom Bean, named after a denizen/alien or pseudo-extraterrestrial. Tom Bean itself as haunted by ghosts. Another White Rock in Fannin County a ghosted or basically non-existent population place, and forming a retrograde inversion through PETT(EWA)Y with the similar White Rock spirit ghost thingie in Robertson.

Burnett County, Texas pronounced like “burn it”, as in burnt toast. 125 = 1.25 = 1/8.

It has to do with Texas.

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Denizen? I think not.

(continued from)
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This…

… in combination with this…

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eisenhower%27s_farewell_address

… makes sense. He was a Texan from Denison. But apparently there are denizens.

In the same county (*Gray*son) as Denison, the b-place of Eisenhower, appeared this seemingly peculiar triangle of Whites: White Rock, White Mound, Whitewright. Tom Bean (center figure) is a denizen, and maybe even of that [extreme] type we’re talking about here.


Mr. Bean the alien. We never find out his first name.

Meador meaning? Settlement? See here for one that could have been made.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/14/eisenhower-met-aliens-says-timothy-good_n_1277133.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordic_aliens

On the other hand we have Bald (Prairie) Head(sville) also highlighted by a resonant White Rock, Texas, Ike being famously bald. Cube Brick knew something.

shining12126

Eisenhower is part of a mindf*ck.

Words of caution from the Corbett Report…

But I think Chris White has his own emotional agenda. We all do, and maybe that’s his point.

—–

More on Mr. Bean:

Mr. Bean often seems unaware of basic aspects of the way the world works, and the programme usually features his attempts at what would normally be considered simple tasks, such as going swimming, using a television set, redecorating or going to church. The humour largely comes from his original (and often absurd) solutions to problems and his total disregard for others when solving them, his pettiness, and occasional malevolence.

At the beginning of episode two onwards, Mr. Bean falls from the sky in a beam of light, accompanied by a choir singing Ecce homo qui est faba (“Behold the man who is a bean”). These opening sequences were initially in black and white in episodes two and three, and were intended by the producers to show his status as an “ordinary man cast into the spotlight”. However, later episodes showed Mr. Bean dropping from the night sky in a deserted London street against the backdrop of St Paul’s Cathedral. At the end of episodes three and six he is also shown being sucked right back up into the sky in the respective background scenes (black scene in episode 3 and street scene in episode 6). Atkinson himself has acknowledged that Bean “has a slightly alien aspect to him”.

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3 Whites don’t make a wright.

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitewright,_Texas

Quedlinburg treasures
Main article: Theft of medieval art from Quedlinburg

Whitewright was the home of US Lieutenant Joe Tom Meador, who after World War II looted several major pieces of art from a cave near Quedlinburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.

On April 19, 1945, American troops occupied Quedlinburg. Various treasures of art were secured in a cave near the castle Altenburg. Meador was responsible for the security of the cave.

Meador, a soldier with good knowledge of art, recognized the importance of the treasures (among them being Gospel of Samuel and the Crystals of Constantinople). He sent the treasures to Whitewright via army mail, and the art was placed in a safe at the First National Bank of Whitewright.

Meador died in 1980, and his heirs tried to sell ten pieces of Beutekunst (looted art) on the international art market. After a long search and judicial processes, the art was returned to Germany in 1992 and were investigated because of damages to the pieces. At first those stolen artefacts were exhibited in Munich and Berlin but were finally returned to Quedlinburg in 1993. However, two of the pieces stolen by Meador are still in the United States at an unknown location.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theft_of_medieval_art_from_Quedlinburg

On April 20, 2000, the IRS and the Meador family settled for $135,000.

3whites02
Kentucky town.

http://www.texasescapes.com/They-Shoe-Horses-Dont-They/Three-Bean-Salad.htm

Tom Bean
Tom Bean was a mysterious character that showed up in Grayson County one day – having just traded his horse and pistol for a wagon with a yoke of oxen carrying a barrel of whiskey. He had everything needed to open a saloon and so he did – naming it the White Elephant for what he considered his end of the trade. His profession other than saloonkeeper was said to be that of surveyor.

He bought or traded his services for so much land that it was said he could ride to Austin (a three day trip) and camp out every night on property he owned. Reportedly he owned 25,000 acres in Grayson County alone.

When asked where he hailed from – his usual reply was “from a Bean patch.” Bean carried books with him and volumes of Shakespeare and Dickens seemed to be favorites. He was a Mason and a clean-shaven man – rather unusual for that period. According to one source he had one blue and one brown eye. He was not married, although he had a woman with him and quite a few children running around the place. He was described as always carrying an umbrella and wearing a bee-gum hat – whatever that was.

He granted 100 acres of land to the railroad – having the town named in his honor in return. When he died, over 100 people filed claims against the estate, making it one of the most famous of Texas civil law suits. Tom Bean is buried in the Willow Wild cemetery in Bonham, Texas.

The Tom Bean Tom Cats are the local high school football team.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_elephant

Snapshot6888_001
Mr. Bean.

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