(1) WHELAN PUTS ON HIS GAME FACE. “Pinball Wizard” by Michael Whelan and Michael Everett tells about Whelan’s unexpected encounter with a pinball machine that featured his likeness, and how he finally discovered the history behind it.

In 1980, Audrey and I returned to my home state for a vacation in Monterey, CA. We were enjoying ice cream together while out on a stroll when we dropped into the arcade next door. That’s where we discovered a most unusual pinball game.
I’ve run into unauthorized bootlegs of my art on occasion, and while it’s disappointing to see anything printed without my permission, it’s hardly a surprise. But what I found in the arcade that day was different. The pinball machine didn’t crib my work; it stole my face. It absolutely blew my mind to see me staring out from under that glass….
… My initial suspicion was that someone on the design team had picked up a copy of Sorcerers. Published in 1978, that art book enjoyed wide distribution through Ballantine, and it featured several of my paintings alongside a posed picture of me.
Likely long forgotten by now, Sorcerers was a hot title then, which included other notable artists, including Steve Hickman, Jack Kirby, Jim Steranko, and others. I was certain the designers took inspiration from what they found in those pages….
…As it turned out, Time Warp became a famous table—it even has a Wikipedia page! Interestingly, it made multiple appearances on the big screen, including in Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 and an Italian film titled “Troppo Forte,” which featured a passion for pinball that you have to see to believe….
(2) PKDFEST 2026. The 4th International Philip K. Dick Festival will take place at the Fullerton Marriott at California State University Fullerton from August 20-23.
The guests of honor are Sarah Langan, Brian Evenson, and Tim Powers. It also features the launch of a brand new Pink Beam Press featuring 7 new novellas by Langan, Evenson, and many others.
(3) THAT WOULD BE WRONG. “Wrong Genre Covers” is a series at Night Beats Extended Universe. Today the creator has rendered Jordan S. Carroll’s “Speculative Whiteness as a Golden Age pulp sci-fi cover”. See the image at the link.
(4) FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD SOUVENIR DESIGNER. “Spider-Man: Brand New Day’ Collectibles Revealed by AMC, Regal, and Cinemark” reports WDW News Today.
With tickets now on sale for Spider-Man: Brand New Day, AMC Theatres, Regal Cinemas, and Cinemark have unveiled a web of exclusive collectibles inspired by the upcoming Marvel film….
Well, this one looks moderately hideous!
Spider-Man Combo Container
This novelty combo container is shaped like Spider-Man’s hand shooting a web. The translucent web serves as the popcorn holder while the wrist section functions as the drink container.

It’s easier for me to imagine using another of these choices.
Wall Crawler Popcorn Tin
Regal’s signature collectible is a popcorn tin designed to look like a New York City apartment building. Fire escapes line the sides of the building while a small Spider-Man figure appears to be scaling the exterior wall.

(5) BEAR BOUND FOR BROADWAY. The New York Times says “The ‘Paddington’ Musical Is a Hit in London. Next Stop: Broadway.” (Behind a paywall.) “The show, which revisits the story of a marmalade-loving bear, plans to open next April at the Hirschfeld Theater in New York.”
The musical is a retelling of the cherished, enduring and quintessentially British stories about a kind, courteous and marmalade-loving Peruvian bear who is taken in by a family that discovers him at a train station shortly after his arrival in London. The character was the subject of children’s books written by Michael Bond, the first of which was published in 1958; Paddington has also been the subject of three recent movie adaptations.
The stage adaptation, a family-friendly adventure story, was named the best new musical at this year’s Olivier Awards — London’s equivalent of the Tony Awards; British critics were also won over….
…The Broadway production is scheduled to start previews on March 30, 2027, and to open April 18 at the Al Hirschfeld Theater, whose current occupant, “Moulin Rouge! The Musical,” is set to close on Aug. 30. It is directed by Luke Sheppard (“& Juliet”), and features songs by Tom Fletcher and a book by Jessica Swale….
(6) SALLY WOEHRLE (1942-2026). Chair of Sasquan, the 2015 Worldcon, Sally Woehrle died June 12. William Sadorus announced her passing on Facebook.
It’s with a heavy heart that write this. I’m sad to announce that Sally Woehrle passed away last Friday. I believe her death was from congestive heart failure due to a fib made worse by complications from Alzheimer’s. She was my friend, my soulmate.
Initially, Woehrle and Bobbie DuFault were co-chairs of Sasquan, but DuFault died two weeks after the bid was won.
Woehrle also chaired Westercon 73, Westercon 50, and ConComCon 23. She was a member of the unsuccessful Seattle in 2002 bid committee, and of SWOC (the Seattle Westercon Organizing Committee), had been a member of the Northwest Convention League. She worked on innumerable conventions.
She was a UW alumnus and proud grandparent.
(7) ANITA FELLER. Nashville fan Anita Feller died June 17. Her husband Tom Feller made the announcement on Facebook.
My wife Anita passed away quietly in her sleep during the night. I will post the funeral arrangements when I have them.
Anita Feller was a past President of the Middle Tennessee Science Fiction Club.
(8) MEMORY LANE.
[Written by Cat Eldridge.]
June 17, 1960 — Twilight Zone’s “The Mighty Casey”
What you’re looking at is a ghost, once alive but now deceased. Once upon a time, it was a baseball stadium that housed a major league ball club known as the Hoboken Zephyrs. Now it houses nothing but memories and a wind that stirs in the high grass of what was once an outfield, a wind that sometimes bears a faint, ghostly resemblance to the roar of a crowd that once sat here. We’re back in time now, when the Hoboken Zephyrs were still a part of the National League, and this mausoleum of memories was an honest-to-Pete stadium. But since this is strictly a story of make believe, it has to start this way: once upon a time, in Hoboken, New Jersey, it was tryout day. And though he’s not yet on the field, you’re about to meet a most unusual fella, a left-handed pitcher named Casey — opening narration of “The Mighty Casey”.
Before you ask, yes, I really do like this series. I think it’s the best fantasy genre series ever done bar none. And when an episode is stellar, it is among the best genre fiction done, period. So it is with “The Mighty Casey” which first aired on CBS sixty-six years ago this evening.
Obviously the episode title is in homage to the “Casey at the Bat” baseball poem.
A really bad baseball team somehow acquires a robotic pitcher (really don’t ask how as it makes no sense) but the League says Casey is not human and cannot play. So Casey is, sort of Wizard of Oz-ish, given a human heart, which makes eligible Casey to play.
Unfortunately the human heart makes him realize that he shouldn’t be throwing those really fast balls. Oh well.
With the team sure to fold soon without its star robotic pitcher, the creator of that robot gives the manager Casey’s blueprints as a souvenir. Looking at them, McGarry suddenly has a brilliant idea, as he runs off after Dr. Stillman to tell him his idea so as he and the scientist so they can engineer an entire pitching staff of Casey robots.
Rumors later surface suggesting rather strongly that the manager has used the blueprints to build a world-champion pitching staff of Casey robots. Did he? This is the Twilight Zone so who knows? Ask our narrator as he closes out our story…I
Once upon a time, there was a major league baseball team called the Hoboken Zephyrs, who, during the last year of their existence, wound up in last place and shortly thererafter wound up in oblivion. There’s a rumor, unsubstantiated, of course, that a manager named McGarry took them to the West Coast and wound up with several pennants and a couple of world championships. This team had a pitching staff that made history. Of course, none of them smiled very much, but it happens to be a fact that they pitched like nothing human. And if you’re interested as to where these gentlemen came from, you might check under ‘B’ for Baseball. — Closing narration
The entire production was originally filmed with Paul Douglas in the manager role. (Douglas previously played a baseball team manager in the Fifties film Angels in the Outfield.) He died right after it was filmed and Serling decided that it needed to be done again with a new actor. CBS being cheap wouldn’t pay for it, so he paid for the entire shoot.
It was filmed at Wrigley Field, a ballpark in Los Angeles that hosted minor league baseball teams for more than thirty years. (In addition to being a baseball venue, many Hollywood productions were shot there.) The Wrigley footage, with the stands empty, was supplemented by brief clips of stock-footage crowd scenes, from the Polo Grounds and Fenway Park.
The series is streaming on Paramount+.

(9) COMICS SECTION.
- Bizarro has odd criteria.
- Free Range knows the hangout.
- The Argyle Sweater wants an implant.
- Tom Gauld has a graph:
(10) SUPERYESTERDAY. “DC Announces New Black Label Series ‘Superman: The Stranger’”.
DC today announced that it will return readers to the first days of the Man of Tomorrow with Superman: The Stranger, a new six-issue DC Black Label comic book series launching in September, written and illustrated by Wes Craig. Set in an Art Deco-inspired 1938 Metropolis, the series reimagines Superman’s earliest adventures through a modern storytelling lens while drawing heavily from the visual language of DC’s Golden Age of comic books and the Fleischer Studios Superman cartoons….
…In Superman: The Stranger, readers will follow Superman at the very beginning of his journey. During the day, Clark Kent does what he can to make ends meet in the bustling city of Metropolis, but when the sun goes down, he leaps into action to keep the city streets safe. As Superman, Clark fights for a better tomorrow, but he feels like he’s not affecting change. The rich keep getting richer, and the poor struggle to survive. Can Superman truly save the downtrodden?
Superman: The Stranger, a six-issue DC Black Label comic book series written and illustrated by Wes Craig with colors by Jason Wordie and lettering by Tom Napolitano, will feature variant covers by Dave Johnson, Goran Parlov, and Ethan Young on the debut issue. Superman: The Stranger #1 arrives wherever comic books are sold on September 2, 2026, with all covers printed on cardstock for $4.99 US, and will carry DC’s Ages 17+ content descriptor for mature readers.

(11) LEFT BEHIND. In The Onion: “E.T. Admits Shock At Not Even Being Called For Cameo In ‘Disclosure Day’”.
Saying a courtesy call would have been nice even if nothing ever came of it, E.T. told reporters Monday he was shocked at not being contacted by director Steven Spielberg for a cameo in his new sci-fi movie Disclosure Day….
(12) LITTLE TOOL USERS. “’They surprise me every time’: bees can use tools to solve problems, study finds” – in the Guardian.
Bumblebees can use tools to solve a problem, according to experiments that demonstrate their remarkably advanced cognitive abilities.
The bees were given an adapted version of an experiment that, 100 years ago, first demonstrated chimpanzees could work out how to retrieve an out-of-reach banana by stacking boxes. Since then, various other primates, elephants and crows have joined an elite cohort of species known to be capable of this level of insight and spontaneous problem solving.
In the latest research, bees were shown to be able to roll a polystyrene ball to a specific location and climb on to it in order to access an artificial flower on a low ceiling. The findings challenge the longstanding assumption that insects operate purely on instinct and mindless trial-and-error learning.
“Most people think insects are reflex-based machines,” said Dr Olli Loukola, a behavioural ecologist at the University of Oulu, Finland, and senior author. “That they can’t have any emotional states or feel pain. Some people don’t even realise that they have brains. I hope that these results change the worldview about that.”
(13) SPACE BREW. Heritage Auctions’ “The Art of Paul Stanley” event includes this “RARE Burgie Beer 4ft Store Display”.

“Burgie is brewed for refreshing people, Burgie is crisp and cool and bright!” Burgie and his Burgermeister beer are showcased in this out-of-this-world exceedingly rare 4ft tall store display designed by Paul Stanley (d. c. 1980s) for the Burgermeister Brewing Corporation….
…The character Burgie was used extensively in the brewery’s marketing and merchandising even appearing in animated commercials throughout the mid-century, while his Stanley flying saucer display has occasionally reappeared in the pop culture zeitgeist being used (sans beer cans) in the opening of the Spice Girls music video for “Say You’ll Be There” (1996) and more recently seen in the “Pinball Jack” episode of the antiques/collectibles reality series American Pickers (2022)….
[Thanks to John King Tarpinian, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Heather Cleary, Chris Barkley, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Kathy Sullivan, Steven French, Mike Kennedy, and Andrew Porter for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel Dern — who says his inspiration came via the song, “Ain’t Nobody Here But Us Chickens”.]



