Well, we finally got to Friday.
Hip, hip hooray!
Nothing much is going on in my neck of the woods, to be honest about it.
I have been fairly busy with work, so the week has kind of passed by pretty quickly.
And with my son's athletic activities put on hold by the break, the only real responsibility I have to fulfill for the remainder of the week is to do our family's food shopping with my wife--
And that is today, this morning.
That is it.
So I have a pretty dull couple of days coming up, with not much doing later today or on the weekend.
When that happens, I try to stay away from the TV, because once I sit down to watch for too long, I invariably end up taking a nap.
I almost cannot help myself.
So I have to find other things to do.
Lately, I have been getting into my record collection again, digitizing records I hadn't listened to in 40 years or more.
Some of the artists I have been digitizing--and invariably getting into again--including Devo, Cyndi Lauper and Gary Numan.
Devo was very popular on FM radio back in the day. Led by Mark Mothersbaugh--who later was very involved in the music used on "The Simpsons"--the band put out catchy pop music using electronics, such as "Whip It."
Before becoming a darling of Broadway--and way before she admitted to having skin maladies--Lauper was quite the pop princess in the 1980s, putting out one hit record after another starting with "Girls Just Want To Have Fun."
Like Devo, Numan used electronics in his pop music production, and while he was extremely popular in Europe, over in the U.S., he put out a couple of catchy singles, only one of which was successful here, and that was "Cars."
In my opinion, music from the early to mid-1980s doesn't really hold up; it is simply a product of its time, often very mechanical and robotic, and these three artists certainly were mainstays during that period.
The use of synthesizers and electronics seemed to be the next level of pop music, but honestly, listening to these artists and tunes in 2026--more than 40 years after the fact--nothing really holds up, everything sounds kind of tinny, and I have to wonder how I got into this stuff in the first place.
But I was in my mid to late 20s when this stuff was popular, so listening to the old WNEW-FM in New York, this is what they played, so this is what I was into.
Even back then, I preferred the earlier pop and rock of the 1960s through the early 1970s, but you can't knock the popularity of Lauper, Devo and Numan during the 1980s.
And that I hadn't put these records on my turntable for decades shows that at least to me, they were just a passing fancy--
But I am still happy that I have these records in my collection.
I digitized a lot of their stuff, and the true measuring stick is listening to this music in the car--
Because that is where this stuff was originally delivered to the masses, on stations like WNEW-FM, so this is where these songs were probably heard first with my ears.
This digitizing frenzy won't last long.
Baseball is stirring, so there will be plenty to watch as the 2026 season begins in spring training and unfolds in games shown on TV.
My responsibilities--to myself and to my family--pick up in March, where I, personally, have several doctor appointments as we get back to normal after the break.
And I always have work, which gives me something to do, and sometimes too much to do.
But for now, I will continue to digitize music so I can listen to these tunes in the car, and remember--and wonder--where I was at more than 40 years ago.
Certainly in a different place than today.
Have a great weekend, and I will speak to you again on Monday.

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