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Author Topic: Arther Conan Doyle Monkey Men & Lovecraft  (Read 825 times)
chrisblue77
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« on: July 30, 2011, 05:36:09 AM »

Arther Conan Doyle wrought a Sherlock Homes story about a ole man trying to regain his vitality by injecting himself with monkey brains, instead it started to turn his into a monkey-man.
So which came first the Arther Conan Doyle story, or the Lovecraft story, "the Facts Concerning Arther Jermyn & his Family"? Huh
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Bulbatron
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« Reply #1 on: July 30, 2011, 09:50:38 AM »

The Sherlock Holmes story you're talking about was called 'The Creeping Man'.  It was one of the stories from 'The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes'.

'The Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family' came first.  It was published in 1921, while 'The Creeping Man' (one of my favourite Sherlock Holmes stories) was published in 1923.
« Last Edit: July 30, 2011, 10:06:24 AM by Bulbatron » Logged
osyrisdiamond
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« Reply #2 on: July 30, 2011, 11:59:08 AM »

I've yet to get ahold of the Casebook stories, but that sounds fun. I hear that set has some of the crazier stories (like the "vampire"-related adventure). Wonder if there is any connection between the two.

Also, methinks this should be moved to General or the Lit section. :\
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« Reply #3 on: July 30, 2011, 05:57:47 PM »

Yep, 'The Sussex Vampire' is another good one.
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godwinshelley
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« Reply #4 on: August 02, 2011, 12:17:58 PM »

In the 1920s, there was a real-life Dr Brinkley in Kansas who had his own radio station - KFKB - where be broadcast about his great medical results like transplanting goat glands into men to help with their "flat tire" (his advertising) and other issues.   So it wasn't too far fetched back then to think along similar lines.

GS
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« Reply #5 on: August 02, 2011, 10:18:24 PM »

In the 1920s, there was a real-life Dr Brinkley in Kansas who had his own radio station - KFKB - where be broadcast about his great medical results like transplanting goat glands into men to help with their "flat tire" (his advertising) and other issues.   So it wasn't too far fetched back then to think along similar lines.

GS

Goat glands to help a flat tire!  OMG.
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« Reply #6 on: August 03, 2011, 02:58:46 AM »

In the 1920s, there was a real-life Dr Brinkley in Kansas who had his own radio station - KFKB - where be broadcast about his great medical results like transplanting goat glands into men to help with their "flat tire" (his advertising) and other issues.

Thus was born, El Chupacabra!
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« Reply #7 on: August 03, 2011, 03:38:03 PM »

Goat glands?  Wait, we're not in the Severn Valley yet, are we?
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« Reply #8 on: August 03, 2011, 05:30:57 PM »

Somewhere in the Gobi desert back in '37 or so there was a mad scientist transfusing ape blood into humans to take over the world for the Asian race, somehow. I heard a longish radio program about it. Then Peter Parker got bitten. Later, Peter Parker's friend the scientist injected himself with lizard genes to regrow his severed arm. It never ends well.
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godwinshelley
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« Reply #9 on: August 03, 2011, 09:51:16 PM »

Here is a short bio of the illustrious Dr Brinkley from the OnTheRadio Catalog website (listed at the end)

John Romulus Brinkley: Broadcaster, Medical Man, Politician, Marketing Genius
 
By Anthony Rudel author of Hello, Everybody! The Dawn of American Radio
   
            During the mid- 1920s one of the most often repeated jokes in the United States was: “What is the fastest animal on earth? Answer: A goat passing Doctor Brinkley’s office!”

            The idea that is central to that joke was also repeated in movies and cartoons of the era and its popularity was due in great measure to the fact that Dr. J. R. Brinkley was one of the smartest and cagiest broadcasters of his time.
            It was the Roaring Twenties and sexuality was coming out of the bedroom; while liquor was prohibited, flappers danced and teased and luminaries like F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald set the tone for a new, freer society. Meanwhile, in tiny Milford, Kansas J.R. Brinkley—the town doctor whose medical degree was purchased through the mail for $100—was performing sexual enhancement surgery on depleted men. Using tissue from goat reproductive organs, Brinkley implanted the tissue into men who’d lost their vitality. It was revolutionary, if not quite medically sound, and it was reviving Milford’s economy. After a visit to Los Angeles where he was present for the opening of the Los Angeles Times’ radio station KHJ, Brinkley realized that he could attract more patients if he had his own broadcast facility from which to encourage embarrassed, troubled men to come seek help.
            Returning to Milford, Brinkley applied to the Commerce Department and was granted a license to open KFKB which may have stood for Kansas First, Kansas Best. Now, armed with a transmitter that often strayed far beyond its power limitations and had a signal strong enough to reach New York, especially at night, Brinkley’s medical practice—or perhaps it should have been called mal-practice—thrived. The good doctor went on to start a mail delivered prescription medicine—actually colored water in nice bottles—business, and then, when the American Medical Association finally got the FRC to shut KFKB, the doctor ran for Governor of Kansas and, had it not been for a backroom deal between the democrats and republicans, he would have won the 1930 election as a write-in candidate.
            Brinkley’s story is uniquely American; he was at once an entrepreneur and a crook, a doctor and a quack, and anti-government and a political candidate. But, for our purposes, what Brinkley was truly greatest at was developing radio broadcasting. KFKB was among the very first stations to have a complete program schedule running from early morning until late at night. That schedule, all supported without any commercials, included shows for children, story time, information, live music performances often done by Brinkley’s own choir and musicians, and other shows that filled the day. But the programming that still resonates today is the radio talks by Brinkley himself. Spoken in his reassuring baritone and done with a measured, calming delivery, Brinkley reserved the early morning and late evening times for himself. During those hours he would talk to the men in the audience, telling them they didn’t have to suffer any longer with flat tires—a sweet euphemism for erectile dysfunction—or prostate trouble. He preyed on the insecurities of men who were not in bed, but were awake at odd hours listening to his counsel.
            Another important aspect of Brinkley’s radio skill was his innovative approach to using the medium to encourage behavior. Reading letters from listeners, the good doctor would suggest that all the patient needed to get better was a natural cure, and that cure invariably could be found simply by sending money to The Brinkley Clinic which would dispatch the appropriate elixir back to the patient. There isn’t a direct response ad on radio or television today that doesn’t owe something, if not everything, to the innovative Dr. J. R. Brinkley.
            Brinkley’s is an amazing story of cheating, fighting government and regulatory forces, struggle and success, but most of all radio development.

from - http://www.otrcat.com/John-Romulus-Brinkley-Broadcaster-Medical-Man-Politician-Marketing-Genius.html
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« Reply #10 on: August 04, 2011, 01:55:50 PM »

Excellent find, godwinshelley!

Along the same lines, sort of, Enter.... the Mankurt!!!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Day_Lasts_More_Than_a_Hundred_Years

"Mankurt

N. Shneidman stated "The mankurt motif, taken from central Asian lore, is the dominant idea of the novel and connects the different narrative levels and time sequences". In the later years of Soviet Union Mankurt entered everyday speech to describe the alienation that people had towards a society that repressed them and distorted their history. In former Soviet republics the term has come to represent those non Russian who have been cut off from their own ethnic roots by the effects of the Soviet system."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mankurt

"The Turkic legend mentioned in the novel tells about a cruel way of making a mankurt of a captive man in the hopes that he will forget everything but basic activities and, thus, becomes an ideal slave of Djungar masters."

(Basically Fritz Springmeier's Perfect MJ-12 MK-ULTRA Mind Control Slave, but with zoological dimensions, I guess.)

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We live on a placid Rhode Island and Providence Plantations of ignorance in the midst of the black seas of an infinity of dark foreigners, and it was not meant that we should voyage too far.
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