Spent the rest of the morning doing more research on home-buying. Today, I went further into closing costs and terms like appraisal, escrow, and underwriting. I'm beginning to realize that I went about house-hunting all wrong. I should have done this months ago, probably over the winter, then talked to banks or the government about loans after I learned more about them and got help to please my case.
Next week, I'll look into the human side of house-hunting and do research on housing counselors. mortgage brokers, and anyone else who helps you find a home. I may talk to Rose later in the week too and see what she knows about the legal side of things. Rose bought her home over a decade ago when things were a little less rigid and expensive, but she did buy it and knows what it's like to want a home of your own.
Watched Li'l Abner while I worked. I go further into this 1959 adaptation of the Broadway show and famous comic strip at my Musical Dreams Movie Reviews blog.
Watched two episodes of The Adventures of Superman as I ate my leftover fries and gyro for lunch. In "The Case of the Talkative Dummy," Lois and Clark investigate when a ventriloquist complains that his dummy seems to talk on his own. Turns out this "dummy" and what he says may be linked to gang of crooks and a series of armed car robberies.
"The Mystery of the Broken Statues" doesn't seem like much of a mystery when Lois sees a pair of con-men breaking cheap animal statues. She and Clark later discover that the statues hold clues to the location of a valuable gemstone.
Hurried out to the Thomas Sharp School after the second episode ended. Got there just in time, which was a very good thing. Though we only had 22 younger kids today, they were still pretty antsy, including the 8 at my table. I'm glad we got them outside earlier this time, especially given it's supposed to get really hot next week. Some of the kids chased the college-age teacher. Others gathered around the chain link fence and tried to call out to Mr. Softee in the hope that he'd stop so they could buy ice cream, but to no avail. Some of the smaller ones danced to "Zoo" from Zootopia 2, "I Like to Move It," the themes from Bluey and PJ Masks, and songs from Moana, Frozen, and KPop Demon Hunters.
I did have to argue with them over the swings. One little girl accidentally ran into me with her head when she was laying stomach-first on the swing and I was arguing with her. She knocked into my bad knee, and I let out such a loud yelp that I was able to get her off. Later, when she and her best friend were legitimately allowed on, I apologized for the yell and explained that they'd scared me. I also told them that everyone has to wait in line, even adults in line at the grocery store or at the doctor's office.
Went straight into Match Game '73 when I got home. These episodes finished out the week with Patti Deusch and Jim Bakcus. Probably the most notable moment that week was when Gene said "Can we get a little milk from Patti" in response to a question, and she took it a whole different way.
Finished the night listening to another extremely 50's musical on LP. Redhead debuted on Broadway in 1959 and was a huge hit, winning a Tony for the show and for its lead Gwen Verdon. Verdon played Essie Whimple, a plain young lady in Victorian London who works for her aunts' wax museum. Their latest display showing the death of chorus girl Ruth LaRue brings out policemen and her former co-workers, including handsome strong man Tom Baxter (Richard Kiley). Hoping to attract Tom's attention, Essie lies about knowing who the murderer is and even fakes attempts on her life...but the fakery turns real when the actual murderer believes her fibs and comes after her.
Without the lavish dances and the huge production that made this such a hit in 1959, this is...just ok. Verdon's obviously having a ball on big dance routines like "Erbie Fitch's Twitch" and "The Right Finger of My Left Hand," but Kiley's big ballads are dull, and as in Li'l Abner, the dance routines are more there for dance's sake rather than to move the story along. I suspect this is too lightweight for a major revival, but there's a few fun titles if you're a fan of Verdon or comic mysteries.