Starkey’s Corner

Sullivan barns at Starkey's Corner overlooking Seneca Lake 2013
Sullivan barns at Starkey’s Corner overlooking Seneca Lake 2013

Vince Gilligan cited “The Twilight Zone” as the pinnacle of good storytelling. Peggi and I reach for old Hitchcock shows when we’re in a storytelling mood and have been working our way through the midfifties via Netflix. I have a red envelope in our mailbox this morning with “Rear Window” in it. I love movies that don’t go anywhere, that unfold in one location on one set. “Rear Window” is like an Advent calendar with all the windows open at once. It’s like a live video feed version of Facebook.

We watched the classic last night because we can’t make the Wednesday night Hitchcock series at the Little. Our band plays in the café on Wednesdays and last week we played to “39 Steps” goers as well as the regulars. Years before digital binging the Dryden Theater hosted a Hitchcock festival on the big screen and that cemented our reverence.

We drove by my aunt and uncle’s old farm last week. They downsized this year and sold the place. The house, just to the right of the photo above, was built in 1819 and was the only house they ever lived in. My aunt, also my godmother, cooked on a wood burning stove in the kitchen and we loved visiting their place as kids. My uncle called us “city slickers” even though we showed up with cowboy hats and jeans on. He’d set aside his chores and take us for a hayride through the back pastures that overlooked Seneca Lake. Feeding cows, collecting eggs, sheering sheep, this was the coolest place on earth.

We had lunch yesterday with my aunt and uncle in their new digs, a small complex outside Clifton Springs and it was a delight to hear her reminisce about their life in Starkey’s Corner. On the way home we stopped in the town itself, coordinates: 42°57′44″N 77°8′15″W, to see the “covered sidewalks” on Main Street that my uncle talked about. The sulfur springs appear to have kept this town, with interesting restaurants and shops and even an art gallery, eternally young.

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Lifeboat

Restored version of Alfred Hitchcock's Lifeboat at the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York
Restored version of Alfred Hitchcock’s Lifeboat at the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York

Don’t sell your Apple stock yet.

Our cable modem went out the other night so I rebooted it and then our Netgear router and then the old Linksys router that we use as a hub. Got everything working but the dumbest one of the bunch, the hub. So we rode our bikes over to Staples to pick up a hub or a switch and while we were there we sort of rethought our setup. A couple of our wired machines could go wireless and that would free up a couple of slots and we use our old HP Laserjet so infrequently that we figured we could share our clunky pc’s slot with it. We left without making a purchase but we did some good thinking over there. We decided to pick up an Apple Express to extend our wireless range and stream iTunes on the stereo at the other end of our house.

So we headed out to the Apple Store and got there about five o’clock on Sunday before Labor Day. The place was packed. The blue shirts had been swallowed up by the throngs. It was tough just getting at the products on the shelves and once we had our Express in hand we couldn’t find a free employee to do the transaction. I liked it better when Apple was the underdog.

Restored version of Alfred Hitchcock's Lifeboat at the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York

The Dryden Theater at the George Eastman House screened two newly restored, early Hitchcock shorts last night. “Bon Voyage” and “Avenure Malgache” were French WW2 propaganda films made in the UK and we got very confused as which side the spys were on. The feature film, “Lifeboat”, was straight forward and built like a train with a few spectacular wrecks along the way. The guy who introduced the film said Talula Bankhaead was rumored to not have worn any underwear and we confirmed that that was the case after a big wave crashed in the boat. The lifeboat became a miniature stage for all the world’s trials and tribulations to play out on. I won’t spoil the ending.

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