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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: member, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. paperpopups @ 2016-02-21T18:44:00

Just got notified they accepted me as a member to the:
GAP - Guild of American Papercrafters
Turning cut paper into Art.

https://gap.wildapricot.org/

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2. Is It True What They Said About John Dillinger?

Elliott J. Gorn is author of Dillinger’s Wild Ride: The Year that Made America’s Public Enemy Number One, is Professor of History and American Studies at Brown University.  John Dillinger, celebrity outlaw extraordinaire died 75 years ago today.  In the wake of his death a photo leaked to the press which showed Dillinger to be much larger than legend.  In the original post below Gorn explores the myth of Dillinger’s member in honor of the anniversary of his death.

I’m reasonably sure that most American boys who reached adolescence in the 1960s knew about Dillinger’s dick. It was enormous, preserved in formaldehyde at the Smithsonian Institution. Friends of mine who grew up on the east coast told me years later that on high school trips to Washington, the boys would spread out and look for it. Some even claimed that they saw it. A less well-known version of the story insisted that no, it wasn’t in the Smithsonian, but at FBI headquarters, that for years it rested in a jar on J. Edgar Hoover’s desk. Others said it actually was nearby at the Army Medical Museum. Anyway, boys identified with the dead gunman and his parts—everyone knew what you meant when you referred to “my Dillinger.”

As it turns out, the Smithsonian keeps a file of letters from citizens enquiring about the legendary dingus. People write in trying to resolve arguments or settle bets or finish term papers on human anatomy. The Smithsonian has a form letter they send out routinely, denying any knowledge of Dillinger’s missing member.

Even before the Smithsonian legend, Dillinger’s manhood was part of oral tradition. Back in Indiana, the outlaw’s home state, some said that he was so large that he was not a great lover; he’d lose consciousness when aroused because so much blood drained toward his groin. Others claimed that the Woman in Red betrayed him that July night in Chicago in 1934 when the feds gunned him down because Dillinger was her lover, and she just couldn’t take it anymore.

The story of Dillinger’s legendary proportions originated with a morgue photo that circulated just after he died. There he is on a gurney, officials from the Cook County Coroner’s office gathered around, and the sheet covering him rising in a conspicuous tent at least a foot above his body, roughly around his loins, though truth be told, it looks more like where his naval should be. Probably his arm, rigid in rigor mortis, was under the sheet. No matter. It looked like he died with an enormous hard-on. Newspaper editors quickly realized how readers interpreted the photo, withdrew it, retouched it, then reprinted it in later wire-service editions, with the sheet nice and flat against the dead man’s body.

But the damage was done. Soon, Dillinger’s likeness appeared in crude pornography. Mostly, however, rumors of his enormous manhood persisted in oral tradition until roughly thirty years after his death, when it congealed into the urban belief tale centered on the Smithsonian.

In a literal sense, the story is almost certainly not true. Dillinger’s autopsy reported nothing unusual about the man. Government workers just look perplexed when asked about the legendary object. No one has ever produced substantial proof that the famed member exists.

So what does the story mean? It is a trope, a metaphor, a symbol of the whole Dillinger saga. He must have had a big one. In the midst of the Great Depression, with hunger and hopelessness everywhere, Dillinger went out and took what he wanted. He robbed from banks, which many Americans assumed had robbed them. Guns blazing, he escaped the feds time after time, and humiliated local authorities. He broke out of prisons, once famously with a wooden gun.

On the side, he had multiple liaisons with good-looking women, and they aided him in his exploits. Even as he walked out of Chicago’s Biograph Theater to his death, newspapers reported, he had a woman on each arm. The Dillinger story was one of America’s great noir moments of sex and violence, freedom and betrayal.

Americans are fascinated with rebels and renegades. We love stories about escape from the hum-drum of daily life. In fantasy, anyway, we admire those who walk away from crushing boredom and killing routine. We make heroes of anyone bold enough to live on the open road. We love our outlaws, men who oppose the over-civilized life with virile action, and who dispense rough justice.

But we also take care not to get too close, and certainly not to emulate them. Even as it makes Dillinger larger than life, the Smithsonian story is also a cautionary tale. It warns that the price of living so free and defiant is death, and in the legend, castration.

Metaphorically, it certainly was true what they said about John Dillinger. True because he lived his wild year hard and died young. True because he did it with style, coolness, and élan. And true because, in reality and in legend, he paid for it.

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3. Because you are awesome. Yes, you.

One of the things I love most about maintaining a blog is the people I meet. It’s a huge thrill when a conversation gets going in the comments. Even when everyone doesn’t agree, it’s still super cool because I get the privilege of hearing new ideas and perspectives. I read every comment and when I think I might actually contribute something of value to the conversation, I’ll jump back in.

I love questions in the comments that keep things rollin’. That’s amazing. Even if you don’t comment and just enjoy lurking about, that’s fine too. Happy to have ya.

You’re all awesome (yes, you reading this right now). I appreciate how valuable your time is and with all the blogs to read out there, I’m happy that you include mine in your list. You simply rock.

As thanks to you fun people who keep coming back, I’ve decided that I’m going to offer up a free illustration every month. Yep, that’s right - a free, original, unique, probably strange, Sparky Firepants illustration to have and to hold from this day forward as long you both shall…  Sparky Firepants Member Badge

Well, you know. You can have it.

Use it for whatever you feel like. Print it on a t-shirt, put it in a frame, use it as your desktop wallpaper, your twitter background, in your blog, on your web site, the list of possibilities is endless. Tape it to your teacher’s back. Tape it to your student’s back. Tape it to the side of an airplane and see if it’s still there when you arrive. Bring it to the International Space Station. Please, have some fun with it (and if you’re going to the ISS, can I come?).

The only thing you can’t do is sell the image or sell stuff with the image on it. My lawyer says that’s a no-no and I listen to her because she wears very sensible shoes.

So what do I do?

It’s easy. It’s free, no hidden costs, taxes, shipping, handling, or foam peanuts in your living room.

I’ve created a fantastically weird and fun Sparky Firepants Members Club. To join, all you have to do is sign up here. Every month (starting with this one, hooray!) you’ll get an e-mail from me with a password that allows you to access your free illustration. You’ll also get fun little tidbits and special things that those regular people you see in line at Starbucks aren’t getting.

That’s because you’re awesome.

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