Unique opportunity.
No, this isn't spam. This is real life. Real as it gets, man. Gravity, oxygen, water, the whole nine yards.
I was just thinking back to the bad old days in the 1970s when television was king and the internets were just a twinkle in DARPA's eyes. On about five million occasions - maybe slightly more than that - I can remember watching an ad for 120 Classical Masterpieces introduced by the well-known character actor John Williams (not the classical guitarist ... nor the composer of the Lost In Space theme song). Now that we are on the verge of releasing our third and perhaps silliest album ever, Cowboy Scat: Songs in the Key of Rick, I only wish we had a marketing powerhouse behind us like John Williams. Or even Guy Williams. (Except that he's dead too!)
Looks like, once again, Big Green will do the legwork on our own. We have some volunteer help, as you know. Marvin (my personal robot assistant) will tell all of his robot friends to download the album. (They don't even need a freaking smart phone!) The man-sized tuber will be in charge of rural distribution; we've provided him with the requisite maps of Nebraska and Idaho. The rest of the country will be handled by the two Lincolns, who - as candidates for the presidency - have tread that ground before with great success. We have great hopes for anti-Lincoln, who has made some friends in Nashville. (Actually, that's Nashville, Franklin, Idaho. Look it up.)
Yes, distribution is always a headache when most of your fans live on other planets. There's a cost-benefit issue in trying to ship discs via UPS to Neptune; it's hard to make that $9.95 per unit generate a profit against the transportation costs, even with our interplanetary handling surcharge of $45,682.53 per disc. Add in the exchange rate headaches, particularly in the Quatloo zone planets, and it's hard to make your nut that way. Still, we try. Mitch Macaphee has some ideas involving matter transportation technology. All very hush hush at this point. We'll let you know.
Hey, we live on crumbs. It's the art that matters, right? That's why we're assembling an all-star panel of reviewers for our June podcast - experts who will examine Cowboy Scat from multiple insane perspectives. So stay tuned. This may be the best batch yet.
I was just thinking back to the bad old days in the 1970s when television was king and the internets were just a twinkle in DARPA's eyes. On about five million occasions - maybe slightly more than that - I can remember watching an ad for 120 Classical Masterpieces introduced by the well-known character actor John Williams (not the classical guitarist ... nor the composer of the Lost In Space theme song). Now that we are on the verge of releasing our third and perhaps silliest album ever, Cowboy Scat: Songs in the Key of Rick, I only wish we had a marketing powerhouse behind us like John Williams. Or even Guy Williams. (Except that he's dead too!)
Looks like, once again, Big Green will do the legwork on our own. We have some volunteer help, as you know. Marvin (my personal robot assistant) will tell all of his robot friends to download the album. (They don't even need a freaking smart phone!) The man-sized tuber will be in charge of rural distribution; we've provided him with the requisite maps of Nebraska and Idaho. The rest of the country will be handled by the two Lincolns, who - as candidates for the presidency - have tread that ground before with great success. We have great hopes for anti-Lincoln, who has made some friends in Nashville. (Actually, that's Nashville, Franklin, Idaho. Look it up.)
Yes, distribution is always a headache when most of your fans live on other planets. There's a cost-benefit issue in trying to ship discs via UPS to Neptune; it's hard to make that $9.95 per unit generate a profit against the transportation costs, even with our interplanetary handling surcharge of $45,682.53 per disc. Add in the exchange rate headaches, particularly in the Quatloo zone planets, and it's hard to make your nut that way. Still, we try. Mitch Macaphee has some ideas involving matter transportation technology. All very hush hush at this point. We'll let you know.
Hey, we live on crumbs. It's the art that matters, right? That's why we're assembling an all-star panel of reviewers for our June podcast - experts who will examine Cowboy Scat from multiple insane perspectives. So stay tuned. This may be the best batch yet.
Comments