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Tina Nyary

22 May

I  have been in touch with our wonderful blog member Tina Nyary who tells me she is the caregiver for a terminally ill family member and all of her time is now taken up with this – and that she is rarely on the computer. She says it is  all right for me to mention this on the blog so that nobody thinks she has abandoned us – she will return when it is appropriate to do so. My heart goes out to her and her family!

— David DeWitt

 
5 Comments

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German Movie Posters Gallery

12 May

Here are all the German/Austrian movie posters of Errol’s films I could find. What I find interesting is that he is sometimes depicted older than he was when the film was made. But this must be due to his popularity in Germany in his later years. Only look at the third Sea Hawk poster (Der Herr der sieben Meere)! Or the ones of Objective Burma. Hope you enjoy them. Any favourite?

German posters

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— Inga

 
 

Jack’s Back! On the radio…

06 May

Sent to me from Jack Marino!

GREAT NEWS

I am going back on the radio on LA TALK RADIO this FRIDAY MAY 11, 2012 at 8PM PST and 11PM EST -
JACK MARINO WARRIOR FILMMAKER SHOW

I invite you all to come and listen to my first show in a year.  Try to listen to the show LIVE since eachclick’ is registered like a rating.  Go to this link on Friday at 8PM PST and click on channel 2 where my photo will he displayed  - http://www.latalkradio.com/  a window will open and you will hear the show. You can also download the LA TALK RADIO app for your phone and you can hear the show on  your cell phone.

 If you miss the live show there is always the archived show that you can listen to at anytime  - http://www.latalkradio.com/Marino.php
Please feel free to call into the show during the broadcast the call in number is   1-818-602-4929

Also, I am working on a NEW WEB PAGE just for my show at – www.warriorfilmmakers.com   I will be posting who is on my show, I  will have a blog so everyone can put down their opinions of the show and my guest.  This first comeback show I will be going solo.

In the meantime if anyone wants to write their opinion of the NEW show please send me an e-mail and I will keep them until the site is up and fully operational.

I look forward to hearing from everyone about this show and future shows.

Thank you for all your support with the show in the past year…

Best wishes

Jack -

— David DeWitt

 
 

William Donati Chimes In!

04 May

William Donati says:
May 3, 2012 at 2:38 pm

Noted hoax biographer Charles Higham is dead.
For decades Higham feasted on the corpses of dead celebrities: Errol Flynn, Howard Hughes, Cary Grant, and others were victims of Higham’s degenerate imagination.
I proved that Higham engaged in the most heinous crime a non-fiction writer can perpetrate: he engaged in literary fraud to prove his thesis. Higham rewrote and published a government surveillance document to lie to readers that Flynn had been identified by authorities as a Nazi spy. The Los Angeles Times published my findings in “Shadows on a Legend” by Garry Abrams, March 24, 1989. Higham crowned himself as the worst hoax biographer in modern times.

William Donati

-Special Thanks to Karl Holmberg

— David DeWitt

 
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The Essentials: 5 Of Michael Curtiz’s Greatest Films, On The 50th Anniversary Of His Death

15 Apr

 

 

With the arrival of the auteur theory, filmmakers like Michael Curtiz no longer get as much sway among the current generation of directors. Curtiz (born Kertész Kaminer Manó in Hungary in 1886), was a journeyman, a man who flourished in the studio system after being picked out by Jack Warner for his Austrian Biblical epic “Moon of Israel” in 1924. He stayed at the studio for nearly 20 years, taking on whatever he was assigned at a terrifyingly prolific rate — he made over 100 Hollywood movies up to “The Comancheros” in 1961. And some of them are terrible, as you might expect.

But Curtiz was also responsible for some of the greatest films of the era, and those who diminish his abilities (including the director himself, who once said “Who cares about character? I make it go so fast nobody notices”) are ignoring his enormous skill behind the camera, and his undeniable capacity for getting great performances out of some of the biggest stars in history. And slowly, his reputation has been restored over time – Steven Soderbergh (who, coincidentally, joins Curtiz as one of only two filmmakers to pick up two Best Director Oscar nominations in the same year; Curtiz for “Angels With Dirty Faces” and “Four Daughters,” Soderbergh for “Traffic” and “Erin Brockovich“)  has praised his work, and the younger filmmaker’s “The Good German” is in many ways a tribute to his forerunner.

Curtiz died fifty years ago today, on April 10th 1962, and to commemorate the anniversary, we’ve picked out five of the director’s finest works as a starting point for those who want to dig into his wider career. There’s plenty more gems where these came from — the filmmaker was incredibly versatile, ranging from action-adventure to musicals, comedies to melodrama — but these are the five highlights of a colossal output.

The Adventures of Robin Hood” (1938)
In 1935, Curtiz had helped popularize and legitimize the cinematic swashbuckler with “Captain Blood,” a thrilling pirate tale that picked up a Best Picture Oscar nomination, and saw Curtiz come second in the director category, despite not having been nominated (write-in votes still held some power back then…) Three years later, Curtiz returned to the big screen, along with his ‘Blood’ stars Errol Flynn (who would become a favorite of the filmmaker: this was their second of twelve collaborations) and Olivia De Haviland, having refined and perfected the formula, with “The Adventures of Robin Hood.” In fact, Flynn wasn’t the first choice: Jimmy Cagney had originally been targeted for the part, but left Warners, causing a huge delay until Flynn eventually took over. And it’s hard to imagine anyone else in the part: Flynn’s roguish charm and sheer pleasure in his adventures (a far cry from the joyless takes by Kevin Costner or Russell Crowe) has defined Robin Hood for generations to come. And his supporting cast are absolutely his match — de Havilland is sweet as Marion, and having Basil Rathbone and Claude Rains as the pair of sniveling villains is pretty much an unmatchable combination (it’s like having Gary Oldman and Alan Rickman playing a duo of evildoers today). Despite the attempts of Costner and Ridley Scott over the years, this is still the definitive cinematic take on the British outlaw who robs from the rich to give to the poor, with genuinely glorious Technicolor (the film was only the studio’s second experiment with color at the time), and action sequences as thrilling as anything that’s ever been seen on screen — principally because so much is done for real, right down to the famous scene of the arrow being split in two (albeit aided by bamboo arrows and wires). It’s perhaps too sincere and irony-free for contemporary audiences, but it remains one of best action-adventure movies in cinematic history.

Angels With Dirty Faces” (1938)
The dawning of the Production Code era meant that, however popular the gangster picture was, it would always end the same way: the antihero would meet his demise, normally through a hail of bullets, to demonstrate to the audience that crime didn’t pay. But that ending’s rarely been pulled off with as much a sense of genuine tragedy as Curtiz managed with “Angels With Dirty Faces.” It’s a familiar tale by now, following two kids from the wrong side of the tracks who take divergent paths. After Rocky (James Cagney) takes the fall for a streetcar robbery pulled with his pal Jerry (the actor’s great friend Pat O’Brien, who would co-star in nine films across nearly forty-five years, up to 1981′s “Ragtime“), the former would grow up to be a powerful mobster, the latter a priest, trying to keep kids — played by the young actors who would go on to be the Dead End Kids/Bowery Boys – on the straight-and-narrow. But Jerry’s drawn back in when Rocky comes up against a pair of sinister businessmen, Frazier (Humphrey Bogart) and Keefer (George Bancroft); Rocky kills them when they target Jerry, who’s about to expose their corruption, and is sentenced to death. To stop his death becoming a martyrdom to the kids, Jerry persuades Rocky to go the electric chair as a coward, and he dies screaming. It’s undoubtedly moralistic, but the relationship between Cagney and O’Brien feels so etched in truth that it carries a weight and heft that’s rare for even the golden era of gangster movies. Curtiz is in fine, noirish form, particular in the climactic shootout, and the rat-a-tat script (thanks in part to a polish from Ben Hecht andCharles MacArthur) remains eminently quotable.

The Sea Wolf” (1941)
Never released on DVD in the U.S., and mostly forgotten by this point, surviving principally through rare TV airings, Curtiz’s adaptation of Jack London‘s sea-set adventure is probably the best candidate for the hidden gem of the director’s filmography. The story follows a writer (Alexander Knox) and an escaped convict (Ida Lupino, excellent as a character invented for the screen by writer Robert Rossen of “All The King’s Men” and “The Hustler” fame), who are caught in a shipwreck, and retrieved by the tyrannical Captain Wolf Larsen (Edward G. Robinson), who faces mutiny from his cabin boy, George Leach (John Garfield). Rossen’s script is a model of great adaptation, departing from London’s text to make it more cinematic while still capturing its spirit and its characters, and given it was released as the Second World War was underway, Larsen’s near-fascistic figurehead has a resonance that still rings today. It’s one of Curtiz’s most complex works — a world away from another Flynn vehicle, swashbuckler “The Sea Hawk,” which landed the year before — with a psychological realism that would pave the way towards the likes of “Mildred Pierce.” And once more, there’s a titanic star performance at its center. Edward G. Robinson was best known for gangster movies like his star turn in “Little Caesar,” but he gives arguably his finest performance here as Larsen, a complex monster who isn’t without his moments of sympathy; his final scene, blind and raging, going down with the boat, is staggeringly brilliant work. The film suffers a little from a rather bland protagonist in Alexander Knox, but for the most part it’s a forgotten classic that we hope turns up on the Warner Archive sooner rather than later.

Casablanca” (1942)
Based on a play that was, by all accounts, pretty terrible, and made under a frantic production that had a well-documented casting back-and-forth, few expected “Casablanca” to be anything but a forgettable programmer, a cash-in on the now-overshadowed 1938 box office hit “Algiers.” That it became a Best Picture winner (and responsible for Curtiz’s only directing Oscar), and one of the greatest American movies ever made, is a case of how, every so often, the stars align just in the right way. Because “Casablanca” is perfect across the board: a rich, gripping story, told through a script that never puts a foot wrong forward (thanks to the Epstein Brothers,Howard Koch and an uncredited Casey Robinson), helmed with uncanny sense of pace and tone by Curtiz and performed by a colorful, charismatic cast that once more showed the director’s capacity for picking the right face for a part (has any supporting cast ever matched the likes of Claude Rains, Conrad Veidt, Sydney Greenstreet and Peter Lorre here?). And the film is a tricky balancing act, because it has everything that you could want in a movie — comedy, thrills, a great love story — but it takes a craftsman in the best sense of the word to make the elements work in harmony, and one can only wonder what would have happened if original choice, William Wyler, had helmed the film instead. Technically, it’s superb too: DoPArthur Edeson, who was also behind “The Maltese Falcon” and “Frankenstein,” was perhaps the finest cinematographer working at the time, and he lights Ingrid Bergman perhaps better than anyone’s ever lit a star, while giving the North African setting an unforgettable noirish tinge. If you’ve somehow never seen it, drop whatever you’re doing and fix that.

Mildred Pierce” (1945)
By 1945, Joan Crawford had been a star for twenty years, but wasn’t exactly at the peak of her career: she’d been labeled as box office poison in 1937, and was bought out of her contract by MGM for $100,000. She went across town to Warner Bros in 1943, wanting to star in a movie version of “Ethan Frome,” but when that film didn’t happen, she stepped in for nemesis Bette Davis on an adaptation of James M. Cain‘s “Mildred Pierce,” despite the initial objections of Curtiz, who had to be convinced by a screen test. But the gamble paid off in a big way in the film that sees Crawford play a self-made woman, the owner of a chain of restaurants, tormented by her horrible little shit of a social-climbing daughter. It proved to be a major hit, and Crawford won a Best Actress Academy Award, putting her right back on top again. And even in light of Todd Haynes‘ five-hour HBOminiseries last year, an excellent, religiously faithful take on the same material that dumps the noirish murder subplot, Curtiz’s film holds up today in a big way. The director’s expressionistic experiments in light and shadow reach their apex here, with a flashback structure that feels like a knowing nod at “Citizen Kane,” and as ever, the cast is immaculate, and the pacing moves along at a neat clip. But ultimately, it’s Crawford’s show, and she’s phenomenal in the film. Her hunger to get back on top is almost palpable, but there’s little ego to the performance, with a maternal love that had rarely been seen from the actress before, and a true heartbreak when she sees how little gratitude her little monster Veda (Ann Blyth) has for her. As superb as Kate Winslet was in Haynes’ version, it’s always going to be Crawford that’s associated with the role.

Honorable Mentions: Most of his pictures with Flynn, including the aforementioned “Captain Blood,” “Charge of the Light Brigade,” “Dodge City,” “The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex” and “Sante Fe Trail,” are worth checking out, while his Oscar nominated work on musical “Four Daughters” is pleasant entertainment (as are “White Christmas” and “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” the latter of which has dated a little, but features a brilliant performance from James Cagney). He also virtually invented the sitcom, in big-screen form, with William Powell in “Life With Father” and helmed one of Elvis Presley‘s best films, “King Creole.”

— tassie devil

 
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Ah! Yes – the sons-in-law of Errol!

06 Mar

Ah! Yes – the sons-in-law of Errol! I don’t think we ever touched that subject!

So who knows what – about these two lads?

Beautiful model Arnella Flynn, very much looking like her mother Patrice Wymore married Carl Stoecker – Fashion Photographer extraordinaire  (aka Karl Stöcker, Karl Stoecker) but when?

We do know that Errol’s grandson was born in Jamaica under the name of  Luke Stoecker on August 21, 1975  as the only child of his daughter Arnella Flynn (1953-1998) and fashion photographer Carl Stoecker.

Question:  when did they get married and when did it end? And why?

Now there is another Ms. Stoecker on the scene here, wife of Carl with daughters in this article below.

A Vintage Trove in South Beach

By RUTH LA FERLA
Poshvintage in Miami Beach.Posh Vintage in Miami Beach.

Patti Stoecker is a hoarder, the rarefied kind. In the 1980s, Ms. Stoecker, then a model, used to party all night at the Mudd Club, wearing, as often as not, one of her mother’s silky old slips. By the early ’90s, she had begun collecting her own ’40s-era variations, amassing them by the score and tie-dyeing them on her stove top in Easter-egg hues. For a time she consigned her slinky designs to local secondhand shops, but before long she was selling them from her house, against a dreamy backdrop of mottled peach-tone walls.

“I had hundreds of slips hanging here,” Ms. Stoecker recalled. “It came to the point that I couldn’t keep making them. I just couldn’t go into my kitchen and boil up another batch of fuchsia or blue.”

A self-described “natural enthusiast,” she was quick to adopt a new passion, snapping up vintage fashions on her travels and scattering them throughout her house. Filmy Ossie Clark gowns, ’50s Pucci jersey T-shirts, ’80s Givenchy silk dresses and punchy floral-patterned ’80s tunics have all found a home in Posh Vintage, - Read  > Patti Stoecker – Owner  < ALL About Here – her “showroom,” a revamped storage space that once housed her weed whacker and little else. Other treasures, including vintage rock ’n’ roll tees, Holly Harp and Biba designs, are strewn on sofas, suspended from walls or stowed in cartons on an upper floor.

A tireless researcher, Ms. Stoecker can wax encyclopedic on the romantic attributes of a ’70s Jean Muir jersey dress or Thea Porter caftan. “You gain such an interest in these things that you learn everything you can about them,” she said. Her eclectic enthusiasms extend as well to photographing Miami interiors (an image of Morris Lapidus’s baroque-modern Miami Beach residence is framed on one wall) and to collecting gilt-embellished Florentine nesting tables and paperback novels by F. Scott Fitzgerald, whose melancholy fiction she devours.

Clients and curiosity-seekers craving a glimpse of her fashion archive must pass through a garden — more like a rainforest, really — to reach the concrete 1920s house where Ms. Stoecker lives with her daughters and husband, the fashion and rock photographer Karl Stoecker, who will likely offer a visitor a glass of Pernod to help her settle in.

“I call this place a showroom, but it isn’t really,” Ms. Stoecker said. “This is a personal business to me. I don’t actually expect anybody to come here to buy anything.”

But buy they do, clients who have included Nicole Richie, Mia Farrow and the writer Lena Dunham, making appointments to view the collection firsthand or ordering from her Web site, poshvintage.com, or from 1stdibs.com, where covetable pieces from Geoffrey Beene, Bill Tice, Donald Brooks and Pucci fetch prices in the hundreds.

“Over the years I have collected the gamut,” Ms. Stoecker said. “Every ’50s jersey moment, the best of little ’60s Courrèges coats and every little ’90s slip dress.” Recently she has noticed a stepped-up demand for vintage Dior, Valentino and Versace, she said, though not necessarily the raucously colorful signature pieces inspiring a forthcoming Versace-H&M collaboration. “Not everybody wants to parade around in bright medallion prints,” Ms. Stoecker said. But a sinuously curved black dress is something else. “People can still see the quality in it. They can still see the sexiness.”

I would say this is after Arnella and there are half-sisters of Luke?  So anybody  knowing what is what in this scenario ?

Here are some links about Carl Stoecker’s photography and more to be found in Google images!   http://www.karlstoeckerphotography.com/  http://scrapheap.info/2011/01/olympia-v-the-roxy-girls/

Luke’s IMDP   http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1415566/bio

Then there is  Gideon Amir, husband of Rory and Father of  Sean Rio (Amir) Flynn.  Now we know pretty much everything about Rory and her son Sean Rio Flynn but what do we know about Gideon Amir?

Here is a Bio on Sean Rio, which states that his father is a director/producer but no other details.  Are there any more details known to anybody in our group???

Sean is the son of director/producer, Gideon Amir and Rory Flynn. He is popular for his role in Nickelodeons Zoey 101 as Chase Matthews. He appeared in the first episode of season 4 and in series finale of Chasing Zoey.

His career started as TV commercial model and doing small roles in television like MADtv and Sliders as well as casting in small films. When he was ten years old, he was the second choice of Hillary Duff to portray the role of her younger brother in Lizzie McGuire. In 2005 he was given a big break to be the lead actor in Zoey 101.

Apart form being model and actor, Sean also loves music.  He plays guitar and has great skills as a guitarist, in fact, he is a band member in his school band.

Sean also composed guitar songs which are posted in You Tube. In August 2009 he released and EP where his two songs are included and is planning to out his debit album soon.
General Appearance

Birth Name : Sean Rio Amir
Other Name: Sean Flynn
Occupation: Actor, Singer
Height: 5’11′(1.80m)
Sean Flynn is the grandson of actor Errol Flynn.  Read more: http://people.famouswhy.com/sean_flynn/#ixzz1oJkNNOHL

Family extensions can be very interesting too!

 

 

 

— Tina

 
 

Welcome to the new home of The Errol Flynn Blog!

23 Feb

This is the new home of TheErrolFlynnBlog.com! It will be awhile before I am able to say I know how to run this horse and buggy, due to a technical problem with my ability to work on it for a few day before it went “Live” so please bear with me as I set things up and learn how they run… there will be a learning curve for all of us!

In the moment, I see that all Authors have been migrated to the Users section which is something I did not expect. However, all previously registered Readers do not appear in any list.  I have added a Photo Gallery Plugin called NextGEN that I think will serve us well! This gallery has the ability to move photos between albums, for instance!

With any migration, things are not exactly as they used to be, or in the same place, necessarily. But much should look familiar!

There is an entirely new look, and a new posting window that includes a Visual tab and an HTML tab. I will be exploring what we can do here right along with you! We will undoubtedly be making some changes and trying to reset some things to reflect what they used to be, as well as moving in new directions. We have an anti-spam plugin that I need to become familiar with and for a time any post with more than 2 links in it may be moderated until I am able to set the plugin up the way it will work best for us. I have eliminated the need to give your name and email address every time you make a comment – which may or may not last if it welcomes a lot of spamming… I have new spam filters to play with, so it could get dicey up until I learn to set them up the right way. Please bear with me.

There is also the fact that most posts and comments pre-migration have “anonymous” attached to them! I may be able to fix this! For now, if you are a reader you will need to sign up again. Authors, I am adding email addresses to the login page for you. I am uncertain about passwords!  That is how fresh this place is… I have just this moment started kicking the tires, myself!

Note: your first comment will be moderated! After that, you will be able to comment just by logging in! This is a feature of the blog that allows me to see who might be spamming us before they can leave a comment.

 

David

Admin/TheErrolFlynnBlog.com

 

— David DeWitt

 
 

The Errol Flynn Blog will begin our move to WordPress Next week!

15 Feb

Hello, everybody! We should begin to move the blog to our WordPress install during the next calendar week! I will let you know what happens next. Our present location will remain accessible until March 31st for use as reference for any work we may do to preserve attachements which will be lost on every post ever made here. It is unfortunate but this is what would happen no matter where we moved the blog to.

There are some very valuable attachments on this blog and I hope that we can save them!

I will explain how to reach this blog after we are moved. But moving alone isn’t the end of the work that must be done. All of our galleries, as I understand it, will become posts in the new location. So these will have to be reorganized into galleries.

We will lose all names associated with comments and posts, too, I believe. Horrid. But unavoidable!

These can be added back in, a painstaking process.

And we will lose all memberships! Each of you will have to sign up again at the new location. That shouldn’t be much of a problem.

The migration takes a couple of days to finish. I will keep everybody posted about what is going on but if the blog seems to be down or missing this weekend it is likely because it is in this transition period. I do not yet know what domainmonger will tell me is the url of our current blog after the transfer – our domain name is also being transferred.

You may see a temporary site if you type in the name of our blog at some point next week!

I will have to redo all of our settings in the control panel. And take advantage of some new things we will be able to have running at our new location. There are a lot of plugins available to WordPress users!

We knew this was coming for a long time and finally, the day is fast approaching…

I know we will pull together and go on our merry way after this is transition is finished!

Hugs, d~

— David DeWitt

 
 

Moving The Errol Flynn Blog to WordPress!

28 Jan

When we move The Errol Flynn Blog to WordPress which will be soon… there are some things to consider, according to Domainmonger Support. Please read this over carefully! There will be some difficulties to overcome and we will overcome them… There is both good news and bad in the support reply I received.

The worst bad news is that it is difficult to move comments over to our new home at WordPress! Since this is an essential part of our blog's lifeblood, we are going to move them, irregardless. Please read through this reply to see what difficulties lay ahead and we will figure out how to overcome them before we put an oar in the water or a unfurl a sail…

This is what I received from support:

What
content can be migrated from Blogware to WordPress?




All Articles and posts from your Blogware blog can be
migrated to your WordPress blog.



Photos in Photo Albums are migrated. Photo Albums become
Categories of your WordPress blog .



Comments can also be migrated. However, a bug in the
Blogware export file causes the author information for a comment to not be
retained. So all the comments when imported into WordPress are attributed to
“Anonymous”.

The problem is with the Blogware export file unfortunately so this
issue would happen whether you move your Blogware site to WordPress or any
other hosting service. Therefore, you can request, and in fact we suggest, that
we do not migrate comments from your Blogware blog to your new WordPress-based
blog.


URL Redirection – You are currently hosting on your own
domain name, so, we will be able to redirect your original Blogware URLs to
your new WordPress URLs so not only will all your old links continue to work,
but you will main your current Google ranking.


All files uploaded to your blog’s File Manager will be
migrated. So if you have uploaded images to accompany your blog articles for
example, we’ll move those images to your new WordPress account.




What will not be migrated?




The layout or Color Scheme for your blog will not be
preserved. The WordPress Theme format is completely different from the Blogware
Color Scheme format, so you will have to choose a new look for your blog. The
good news is that in WordPress there are thousands of free themes available at
the WordPress Themes Directory, or you can create your own custom theme.


Sidebar components are not migrated. If you have created
any custom components for your blog sidebar, you would need to recreate them on
your new WordPress blog using WordPress’ Widgets feature. Neither custom
components nor Favorites components are migrated.


Attachments are not migrated unfortunately as they are
not exposed by the Blogware migration tools. If you have added attachments to
your articles, they will not be migrated to your new account.
Trackbacks are not migrated.


Blog Settings are not migrated. Since the Blogware
system and WordPress system are so different, it is not possible to take any of
the settings for your Blogware blog and simply migrate them to your new
WordPress blog. Please check out this excellent guide to WordPress
Administration Settings for information on configuring the Settings of your new
WordPress blog.


Web Pages are not migrated. If you have any Web Pages, a
special type of post which is not dated, you will need to re-create them using
the analogous Pages feature in WordPress.


Permissions are not migrated. Category settings and
permissions work very differently in WordPress, and we are unable to apply any
of the permissions in your Blogware blog to your WordPress-based PressHarbor
account.


User accounts are not migrated. So if you have users
with permissions to your current Blog, those user accounts will not exist on
the new WordPress site. You will need to reconfigure your site using the
WordPress Roles and Capabilities framework.


- Domainmonger Support

This means that all current members will have to rejoin The Errol Flynn Blog, once it has been moved. You will be able to find the blog using the same URL as it has now: http://theerrolflynnblog.com when it has been moved and is ready for shipmates, again!

At this point, I am as new to all of this as you reading this. I hope there will some expert advice over at WordPress about how to reassign comments to their original owners! And about how to keep our attachments which are so vital to some of our posts!

I will be writing to WordPress for some advice regarding all of this! Nothing is happening immediately, but it will happen soon from the sound of things…

— David DeWitt

 
 

A Curious Photo For All You Detectives

19 Jan

Take a look at the attached photo and tell us what is peculiar about it. So far, I have no answers, as I don't own the photo and can't properly analyze it at it's prohibitively small size.

R

— Robzak