From: Patent Tactics, George Brock-Nannestad
Dear All,
most of the contributions to the thread (40!) about the location of 1950s-
1990s record shops really did concern those venerable locations. All of
them
will obviously be searchable on the:
www.stanford.edu/dept/SUL/waiscool/H/MoreLists/arsclist/
If nobody objects, I would like to post the relevant ones on the Fiction
and
Crime Writers' Resource Site:
http://ficriwrisource.loc
They will contribute mightily to the chances of creating atmosphere in
future
detective stories, along with the bars, sleezy hotels (and lately bagel
shops) that are already featured, complete with links to Google:
www.googlesatelliteimages.com
Imagine the gumshoe flagging down a yellow cab (a Checker it was in those
days) and saying to the driver "there is a buck in it for you, if you get
me
to the Spider Woman before they close". And he says, "would you settle for
Record Hunter instead?".
I treasure video footage of scenes featuring 78s, but I cry when they are
broken. On the other hand, knowing that I offer physical repair services
to
the community, another side of me says "bucks coming my way". The featured
78s are frequently anachronistic: 1940s Deccas presented as acoustic
records.
Possibly that is why no props man has ever contacted me to have a broken
record repaired.
Of course you have all seen the Charlie Brown cartoon where Snoopy throws
a
black disc in the air, shoots, and exclaims "bull's eye every time" when
it
comes back down.
Kind regards,
George
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