Music Education
  Shopping Stores
  Auctions
  Audio Electronics
  Books
  Business
  CDs
  Concert Tickets
  Downloads
  DVDs
  Magazines
  Memorabilia
  MP3 Players
  Musical Instruments
  P2P File Sharing
  Pro Audio Recording
  Promotion
  SEO Search Ranking
  Sheet Music
  Video Games
  Videos
   
  Artists
  Bands
  Biography
  Blogs
  Charts
  Education
  Forums
  Free Music
  Genres
  Guitar Tabs
  Lyrics
  MySpace Friendster
  News
  Newsletter
  Personals
  Radio
  Resources
  Reviews
  Ringtones
  Shopping
  Web Directory
   
  About Music.us
  Affiliate Program
  Contact Us
  Link To Us
  Marketing Advertising
  Music Industry
  Partners



Rube Goldberg

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/a/a3/0102history-rg.gif
right


Reuben Lucius Goldberg (July 4, 1883 - December 7, 1970) was a cartoonist, cofounder and first president of the National Cartoonists Society. He earned a degree in engineering from the University of California, Berkeley in 1904.

Biography

Goldberg was hired by the city of San Francisco as an engineer out of college. However his affinity for drawing cartoons prevailed, and after just a few months he left city employ for a job with the San Francisco Chronicle as a sports cartoonist. The following year he took a job with the San Francisco Bulletin where he remained until 1907, when he relocated to New York City.

He drew cartoons for several newspapers, including the New York Evening Journal, New York Evening Mail, and New York Journal. His work entered syndication in 1915, beginning his nationwide popularity. A prolific artist, Goldberg produced several cartoon series simultaneously; titles included Mike and Ike, Boob McNutt, Foolish Questions, Lala Palooza, and The Weekly Meeting of the Tuesday Women's Club.

While all these series were quite popular, the one which led to his lasting fame involved a character named Professor Lucifer Gorgonzola Butts. In this series, Goldberg would draw labeled schematics of comical "inventions" which would later bear his name. In 1995, Rube Goldberg's Inventions was one of 20 strips included in the Comic Strip Classics series of commemorative US postage stamps.

Goldberg took a job with the New York Sun in 1938 as a political cartoonist, and was successful in this endeavor as well; he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for his political cartooning in 1948.

Later in his career Goldberg was employed by the New York Journal-American, remaining there until his retirement in 1964. During his retirement he occupied himself with making bronze sculptures. Several one-man shows of his work were organized, the last one of his lifetime being in 1970 at the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. Shortly afterward, he died at the age of 87; he is buried at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/b/b7/Goldbergmachine.JPG
left


Rube Goldberg machine

A Rube Goldberg machine is any exceedingly complex apparatus that performs a very simple task in a very indirect and convoluted way. Rube devised and drew several such pataphysical devices. The best examples of his machines have an anticipation factor. The fact that something so wacky is happening can only be topped by it happening in a suspenseful manner.

The term also applies as a classification for generally over-complicated apparatus or software. It first appeared in Webster's Third New International Dictionary with the definition, "accomplishing by extremely complex roundabout means what actually or seemingly could be done simply." In Britain such a device would be called a Heath Robinson contraption, after the British cartoonist who also drew fantastic comic machinery, in his case tended by bespectacled men in overalls. In the cartoon series Futurama, Professor Hubert Farnsworth often makes huge complex machinery performing in an overstated and dramatic way to produce simple things such as a glow in the dark nose (it also translates Alien into equally incomprehensible Galactic). The Norweigian cartoonist and storyteller Kjell Aukrust created a cartoon character called Reodor Felgen, who constantly would invent highly complex machinery build out of often unlikely parts, but always performing very well. Reodor Felgen stars as the inventor of an extremly powerful but overly complex car Il Tempo Gigante in the Ivo Caprino animated puppet-film Flåklypa Grand Prix (1975). A related phenomenon is the Japanese art of useful but unusable contraptions called chindogu.

The Ideal Novelty and Toy Company released a board game called Mouse Trap in 1963 that was based on Rube Goldberg's ideas. (This game is currently being made by Hasbro.) Rube's machines are often featured on television or in movies, too, for their ingenious nature and pure craziness. Sierra Entertainment released the computer game The Incredible Machine on CD-ROM for either PC or Macintosh computers, designed around the Rube Goldberg concept. Two other games in the series, Return of the Incredible Machine, and The Incredible Machine - Even More Contraptions are no longer available.

External links

© 2005 Music Entertainment Network. A Cyprus Roussos Music Entertainment Company. All Rights Reserved.

Articles from Wikipedia Encyclopedia are licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license. You must provide a link to http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. All trademarks and service marks including Napster, Rio MP3 Player, iRock, Creative MP3 Player, iRiver, Apple iPod Portable MP3 Players + iTunes, eMusic, Guitar Center Musicians Friend, Zzounds Musical Instrument Equipment Store, BMG Music Service, Columbia House DVD Club, eBay, Amazon, Netflix, Jamster, Gamefly, Friendster, Music123 Musical Instruments, Billboard, MTV, Yahoo Launch, Overture Yahoo Search Marketing, MusicMatch, Kazaa, Kazaa Lite, Morpheus software, Real Rhapsody, Bose, Sheet Music Plus, Billboard Magazine, Rolling Stone Magazine, Walmart Downloads, Barnes and Noble book store, CDUniverse, Tower Records, MSN Music, MySpace, Limewire, WinMX, Google Adsense, Alibris, TicketsNow, MusicSpace, uBid are property of their respective owners. Music.us has no affiliation with MySpace or Friendster, but offers alternative services. Disclaimer: Uploading or downloading of copyrighted works without permission or authorization of copyright holders may be illegal and subject to civil or criminal liability and penalties. Please buy music and refrain from any illegal downloading activity. User submitted free content, including Wikipedia encyclopedia or modification thereof by end users, do not reflect the views and opinions of Music.us and are for educational and research development purposes. Our website offers advanced search for bands and artists bio and albums and browse options for artist band biographies resources and information. We offer blogs and community building tools for authors, bands and users. The Music.us Entertainment Network is web's most comprehensive one-stop shopping, community networking and education site. Find song lyrics, guitar tablature, posters, ring tones, free MP3 downloads and hourly updating news feeds on musicians and any genre style including rock, pop, hip hop, country, christian, rap, classical, folk, dance, latin, R and B, blues, punk, heavy metal, alternative, guitar, bass, drums, gospel, wedding, arabic, jazz, soundtrack, world, reggae, soul and more. Privacy Policy - Site Map - MP3 - Music Downloads - Song Lyrics