After all, the cultivated person's first duty is to be always prepared to rewrite the encyclopedia.--Umberto Eco
I'm pretty happy with my contributions to these entries, many started by others, some where I put a few lines that please me for some reason, some substantially original.
- Language: A, an; The; William Strunk Jr. and The Elements of Style, bits of E.B. White, stuck in brief descriptions and examples for almost everything in the list under punctuation, setting off a flurry of improvements by others in both content and linking; English plural, which I started, and Talk:English plural, in which I entertain myself; eh, mostly;
- Popular Culture: My personal favorite of all the pages I've worked on, Tom and Jerry, which includes first pair of that name and a great Frank Zappa story; the second paragraph of the article on Monty Python SPAM Sketch wherein it is revealed why SPAM is funny to Brits; Touch of Evil, the last of the B-movies; Slim Pickens and his brother Easy Pickens; Slim and Easy led me to clown, which I jump-started with the aid of Danny, including a description of the incredibly brave and resourceful rodeo clown;Colonel Bogey March, including the (R-rated) lyrics which Tarquin, who is bolder than me, added to the article where I had confined them to the talk page; Harry Paget Flashman, everybody's favorite coward; wah-wah, which involved some entertaining research; Three Little Pigs, mostly in the fairy-tale part; lullaby (What's with this down will come baby stuff!); Edgar Bergen, lip-moving ventriloquist;
- Rock and Roll: My as yet incomplete musings about the first rock and roll record have so far led me to Ike Turner, a key figure, a/k/a Jackie Brenston and his Delta Cats (The latter was my first consolidation since two articles on a nonexistent band was too much, now morphed into "Rocket 88". ) and of course Chuck Berry and Bill Haley and his Comets; Here's Minneapolis's own Prince with the completely reasonable story behind that "unpronounceable glyph"; The Who, whom I saw live many times; Soul music (which could use some other contributors); Big Joe Turner, the Boss of the Blues (if I were on a desert island, I'd be glad to have ten Joe Turner albums); Jethro Tull (agriculturist), the seed drill man (the band makes my teeth hurt); Bo Diddley; "Love is Strange", I love the strange convergences connected with this song;
- Jazz: Joe King Oliver; Louis Armstrong (Satchmo) wherein I peer over the NPOV edge; Original Dixieland Jass Band; Dizzy Gillespie; W.C. Handy and Saint Louis Blues
- That Spanish Tinge: Something nice about Desi Arnaz and Carmen Miranda; Castanets, a nice, clean entry; stuff about US music with a Latin influence in Latin American music, includes the "Spanish tinge" story; Maracas;
- Country Music: Jimmie Rodgers, "the singing brakeman" only, that other guy does nothing for me; Grand Ole Opry
- Politics and worse: Strategic bombing and the Strategic bombing survey (Europe), which I arrived at via Dr. Strangelove; bit at the end of Maria Theresa of Austria about the busty monarch's afterlife on the Maria Theresa dollar; section on how the Jehovah's Witnesses have fought to protect our freedoms under the First Amendment;
- Literature:Robert Louis Stevenson; Ford Madox Ford, Karel Capek; cranking up on Huckleberry Finn which was mostly about racism when I got there; picaresque novel, branching from previous; Farceur Georges Feydeau, which I wrote because I stuck a line in Fawlty Towers making a comparison; Literary technique, including many entries referenced from there (picaresque novel. word play, pastiche, satire, bits of parody); Samuel Richardson, horrible old phony; made sure that E. E. Cummings was known by his rightful, capitalized name; wrote cacotopia and contributed a little on dystopia and utopia;
- Lists started: Please join in on First rock and roll record, record producer, rock and roll anthem, roots of rap music, word play, English plurals
- Public Services: Wikipedia:1911 Encyclopedia Britannica, a how-to on using the grand old encyclopedia as a source, along with 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica, a tribute to the book itself; first draft of the Wikipedia:Manual of Style; first mentioned the idea of the village pump;
- Above and beyond the rambot: I coined the word and also added substantially to the articles on Newton, Massachusetts, my home, Valdosta, Georgia, my home town and the high school football capital of the world, Moody Air Force Base, where I mention the beloved Miss Peaches and her immortal "Callin' Moody Field"; and Cedar Key, Florida, where I stayed overnight and was served gruel for breakfast; identified the namesake of Deaf Smith County, Texas;
- Rescued from the Votes for deletion death row: Hans Selye, discoverer of stress; Arts and Crafts Movement, Mouthpiece, Ununennium, which led to boilerplate entries on the rest of the undiscovered Unun elements, which were immediately hopped up by Vicki Rosenzweig; Camp; Undocumented feature; Big Joe Turner; William Gaines, founder of Mad magazine; the interesting social impact of the sleeping car, threatened with death row but never actually there;
- Removed from Most Wanted list: Copra, NTIA Manual of Regulations and Procedures for Federal Radio Frequency Management, Chicago Tribune, Soul music, Patricia Hearst, sausage,
- Quirky Links: W.C. Handy to synthetic polymer; Agatha Christie to thallium; Muddy Waters to Bo Diddley and David Bowie; Clown and Intellectual property;
- Favorite etymological discovery: Brace is R-rated, Bracket is X-rated
I try to keep my entries concise, but I'm a sucker for an illuminating anecdote. I've added this and that to hundreds of articles, frequently etymologies or unexpected aspects. I lurk in Talk pages where I have no particular right to be and try to speak up for the hapless reader. I also started a crusade to add one-liners, dates, and such to entries on what I call "naked lists", those dreary endless lists of unidentified people, places, or things that infest the Wikipedia. See List of novelists, for example, where most one-liners are by other folks. I got the idea from List of battles. See Talk:List of famous operas for a brief manifesto. See Talk:List of novelists to gauge how hopeless this crusade is against Yeatsian "passionate intensity". Sometimes I lose a little enthusiasm for this crusade, but I keep doing it. List of famous cemeteries has been fun.
I enjoy adding a little bit to an entry and then taunting someone else into doing the job right with provocative summary comments. I also like fixing links and adding links and sticking summaries in near the top of entries. I did all that with Julius Caesar which other people have vastly improved. I also like the three paragraphs on tactics that I added to Coup d'etat. I only put a few words in Uncle Tom, but someone wrote it after I almost, but not quite flatly, wrote that Louis Armstrong was not one. On the other hand, I managed to torpedo an ugly prejudiced article on white trash and turn it into something like an encyclopedia article.
I think copra is a good example of an encyclopedia article as opposed to a dictionary definition. Castanets too.
I'm a writer by birth, trade, and inclination. I have been writing for publication since 1957 and have earned my living by my pen since 1962. I started as a police reporter and political reporter and newspaper rewrite man in Chicago. Since then I have worked as magazine writer, an academic ghostwriter at Washington University and Harvard, and technical writer for DEC, Symbolics, Apple, and Atria Software.
As a technical jack-of-all-trades, I developed numerous schemes for online and printed documentation as well as helping design user interfaces and a couple of markup languages. I also managed groups of tech writers, software engineers, training developers, and sysadmins. I have also written rock and roll songs and advertisements and an unpublished novel about Richard Nixon. I started the Desperado mailing list in 1978, one of the oldest mailing lists on the Internet. I have just finished a book on language purism and English usage which I am flogging. I've been married 40 years and have two sons and three granddaughters.
Mail me: Tom Parmenter
Post scriptum: After forgetting any number of boring AIM user names based on various pieces of my straight name and numerous three-digit numbers, I invented a nom de guerre that no one else would ever have. The ortolan is a bird the French eat whole with napkins over their heads to prevent splashing of grease and bodily fluids, and 88 is in memory of Dr. John's boast after a particularly spectacular piano run, "dat's what dey call radiatin' on de eighty-eight".
- Il ne faut jamais
- faites les choses a moitié
- Jacques Prevert, from a children's poem about a bird devoured whole by a cat.