Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Fear and Loathing at the Drawing Board

Entertainment

I meant to post this a while back, but John over at Texas Best Grok linked to a fascinating page of Bill Waterson rarities.  I’ve always been a big fan of Calvin and Hobbes, and this is just cool.


Posted by Buckethead on 09/06/06 at 11:14 PM
EntertainmentPermalink

Herring Eating Norwegians suck

Lead Pipe Cruelty

From Rootsvilleburg, Oh, resident BTD Matt, we have another excruciatingly fun interweb sign generator thingy.  Behold, my creation:

image


Posted by Buckethead on 09/06/06 at 06:54 PM
Lead Pipe CrueltyPermalink

Wednesday Funtime Quizzery

EntertainmentWar

Over at Naked Villainy, we find a quiz that warms the cockles of our heart.  A soft and fuzzy quiz that probes at the feminine side of our soul.  This quiz asks, “What WWII Army would you be?”

The answer is clear:  Finland

You scored as Finland. Your army is the army of Finland. You prefer to win your enemy by your wit rather than superior weapons. Enemy will have a hard time against your small but effective force.

Finland

100%

Japan

81%

British and the Commonwealth

75%

Italy

69%

Poland

69%

France, Free French and the Resistance

69%

Germany

44%

Soviet Union

38%

United States

31%

In which World War 2 army you should have fought?
created with QuizFarm.com

[Wik] And what rule insists that the authors of these verdamt quizzes can’t write or spellcheck their way out of wet paper sack?

[Alsø wik] While I am utterly unsurprised that I ended up as Finland, given my genetic heritage and disposition, I am surprised that I ranked so low as America.  Granted, I don’t believe that the American strategic campaign was terribly useful, or even terribly moral, but I don’t think that those answers should have bumped the ‘ol US of A that far down the rankings.

[Alsø alsø wik] If I were to get all reckless and shit, and attempt to rank those nations without the assistance of an interweb quiz engine, it might go something like this:

  • Finland
  • USA
  • Britain/Commonwealth
  • Poland
  • Italy
  • Germany
  • Japan
  • Soviet Union
  • France, Free French or Resistance

[Wi nøt trei a høliday in Sweden this yër?] If I were to choose purely on the basis of prowess, rather than ideological preference, the list might go like this:

  • Finland
  • Germany
  • USA
  • Britain/Commonwealth
  • Poland
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • Soviet Union
  • France, Free French or Resistance

Strangely, the lists are nearly identical, with the exception of Germany moving up rather precipitously.


Posted by Buckethead on 09/06/06 at 04:21 PM
EntertainmentWarPermalink

There’s a million Chinamen at the door, and they ain’t deliverin’ lunch specials

EntertainmentWar

Operational Art of War III
Scenario “Taiwan 2015”

People’s Republic of China: Programmed Opponent (PO)
Taiwan: Yours truly

This scenario is a hypothetical sketch of an invasion of Taiwan by the PRC.  Discussion below the fold.


Posted by GeekLethal on 09/06/06 at 10:04 AM
EntertainmentWarPermalink

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Monkey say, Monkey say

EntertainmentUnmitigated Gall

If I’ve got this right, six monkeys, tossed in the air, would land on their heads as often as their tails… The internet, natural habitat of all things pointless and nevertheless fascinating, is of course home to the Monkey Shakespeare Simulator.  Here, billions upon quadrillions of electronic monkeys munch bananas and type, hoping to produce - despite a complete lack of knowledge of literature or even language - the complete works of the Bard.  The current record, according to the page, is 24 letters from Henry IV, Part 2. 

Amazingly, my monkeys - enlisted in my service when I loaded the page - managed to duplicate the first 40 characters of Romeo and Juliet:

After 6.18685e+77 pages in this session, a monkey typed:

Sampson. Gregory: A my word wee’l not caoyF
v9MYN;.(pGVEd0O?9LiCF.
:O(Y…

the first 40 letters of which match “Romeo and Juliet”
This occured after 3.92099e+73 monkey-years in this session,
when there were 8.00248e+73 monkeys.

Excitement!  I set a record!  Instantly, I submitted my results to the webmaster.  My excitement abated dramatically when I realized that I was getting 38 and 39 letters of various plays with amazing regularity.  Checking back now, I see that I have racked up 40 letters from Henry VI, Part 2 and the Tempest over the last ten minutes or so.  My apparent record is, seemingly, more an artifact of inattention on the part of the people who run the website than due to any puissance inherent in my electric monkeys.  This is confirmed by a closer reading of the large type near the top of the page, which informs me that new entries are not being accepted thanks to a lack of resources.  Cheap bastards.

Still, until proven otherwise, I have the record!  Mine, mine, mine, mine.


Posted by Buckethead on 09/05/06 at 03:24 PM
EntertainmentUnmitigated GallPermalink

Yep, that’s about right

Just So You Know

Found on the wall of a cubicle:

Click on the pic for a larger, clearer, and more legible version.  You’ll feel better, trust me.


Posted by Buckethead on 09/05/06 at 03:19 PM
Just So You KnowPermalink

A Fix That Would Work, And Is Therefore Doomed To Fail

Partisan Politics

Kevin Drum notes that the California legislature has passed a measure that would direct the state’s electoral votes based on the national results, rather than the results in California. There’s speculation on whether or not the Governator will sign it; I hope that he does.  The odd and divisive strategies of national elections are driven by the craziness of the electoral vote system, and if enough states adopt this legislation, the country will be heading firmly back in the direction of “one person, one vote”.  With any luck the tyranny of rural America will end.

Under the legislation, California would grant its electoral votes to the nominee who gets the most votes nationwide — not the most votes in California....The California legislation would not take effect until enough states passed such laws to make up a majority of the Electoral College votes — a minimum of 11 states, depending on population.

It’s bad for Republicans, of course. More populous states would gain in overall power.  I do note the irony that under this system California’s electoral votes would have gone to Bush in the last election, which is fine with me (in the numerical sense).


Posted by Ross on 09/05/06 at 01:48 PM
Partisan PoliticsPermalink

Crystal Clear on Iraq-9/11

War

Once again, Bush makes it crystal clear that he, personally, does not believe there’s a direct link between 9/11 and Iraq.  Doesn’t it wear this guy down even a little to have to go out there and push this crap, continuously? Bush speaks.

We’re approaching the fifth anniversary of the September the 11th attacks—and since that day, we have taken the fight to the enemy. Yet this war is more than a military conflict; it is the decisive ideological struggle of the 21st century.

He spoke to the Seafarer’s union too:

And my message to the world is this: Just treat us the way we treat you. That’s all we expect.


Posted by Ross on 09/05/06 at 01:19 PM
WarPermalink

Monday, September 04, 2006

Fapfapfapfapfapfapfapfapfapfapfap

Music WonkeryPerfidy Responds

The following was published at blogcritics.org as a supplement and companion piece to my review of Pere Ubu’s Why I Hate Women:

Over the past decade and a half, I have probably written a couple hundred reviews of albums by artists from Sam Cooke to Samhain. When the PR firm handling the fifteenth album by the formerly Cleveland-based new wave band Pere Ubu, Why I Hate Women, asked me for a review, I agreed to give it a shot. I’m a big fan of Pere Ubu frontman David Thomas, and his last couple projects have been right up my alley. But as I sat there staring at the blinking cursor on a blank field of black, I tried to write a straight review and found I just couldn’t do it.

What I turned out instead was (very kindly) kicked back to me by an editor, who asked in essence, “um, this is very nice… what is it?”

Well, long story short, I love music, but I’m damn sick and tired of writing music reviews.

The usual formula goes as follows:

“Band X formed in Year A and influenced Y1, Y2 and the incredibly obscure Y3, who had one single on the Kankakee, MI based Fancypants label. Their newest album, X’, is a (adjective) non/departure from their previous work. Adjective, adjective adverb quality assessment, subordinate clause hedging previous assertions. X’ is recommended to fans of A, A’, and A’’, but is not as essential as classic album X’’. “

There’s a lot you can do with that basic template, and a quick glance back through my Blogcritics archive will reveal a number of (if I do say so myself) pretty good variations on that classic theme. Unfortunately, templates are limiting. If you’ll permit me to disappear up my own bunghole for a thousand words or so…


Posted by Johno on 09/04/06 at 08:58 PM
Music WonkeryPerfidy RespondsPermalink

We’ll be first to go when the glaciers come

Just So You Know

To celebrate Labor Day, the Ministry continues to riducule and belittle the states of our glorious Union.  On deck is the last of the ‘M’ states, Montana, where the buffalo roam and home is a shack in the wilderness.

  • We’ll be first to go when the glaciers come
  • Population: 12
  • Where what a man does with his cattle is his business
  • Now with 50% fewer radical dissidents
  • At least our cows are sane
  • The New Jersey of the Upper Midwest
  • Mountainous, know what I mean?  Nudge, nudge
  • It’s where you’re wanted
  • Big Pie Country
  • We Dug up Our State to Enrich Eastern Mining Interests
  • Anti-Government-Isolationist-Compound Conventions Welcome!
  • Bring Your Own Guns
  • If you’re tracing the steps of that Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance guy, get the fuck out.
  • Land of the Big Sky, and and a lot of dirt
  • The Stubtoe State.  Don’t Ask
  • One nation, under God, with liberty and justice for all. Unless, of course, you don’t believe in that sort of thing, in which case you can find a patch of land, build an arsenal, write a manifesto and start your own damned government.
  • Turn The Lights Out When You Leave
  • Proud Home of Gary Fucking Cooper
  • Your Militia Is Safe Here
  • We could all fit in Cleveland, Ohio
  • We’ve got lots of 10’x10’ shacks in the woods
  • Land of the Big Sky, the Unabomber, Right-Wing Crazies, and Very Little Else
  • Is Mercury Poisonous?
  • More guns per capita than Detroit
  • More Prairie Dogs than People


Posted by Buckethead on 09/04/06 at 07:14 PM
Just So You KnowPermalink

Saturday, September 02, 2006

Pere Ubu: Why I Hate Women (CD, Smog Veil: September 2006)

Entertainment

It gradually dawns on you that the drive from Vermont to Cleveland probably shouldn’t have been attempted at night, especially given the circumstances. Tarry highway coffee can’t beat back the buzzing behind your eyes and the vile taste of exhaustion rising at the back of your throat. The last time you looked in the mirror, the bruises around your neck had blossomed from faint red suggestions of violence into splendid purple and blue memorials of the last hour you’ll ever spend in that town. You need a shave and a transfusion probably wouldn’t hurt either.

You reach down to press in the cigarette lighter, and as you look away from the road the edge of your eye catches sight of the furry… thing… driving the white panel truck as it blows past you on the right. What the hell?

Later, pitching the dead end of the same cigarette out the window, you swear the trees furring the black hills to the north suddenly resolve themselves into a gigantic man-shaped figure rising out of the woods against an inky Berkshire sky and striding off to the west. A second later, you pass a tractor-trailer. When you are able to look back north, there is nothing there but trees and sky.

As the exhaustion creeps deeper into your chest, you drift in and out of awareness, the center line a punctuated commentary on the tedium of driving through upstate New York. You climb that line hand over hand, every mile one mile closer to Cleveland. The radio cuts in and out, a jittery melange of classic rock, bad country, and paranoid ranting about God, UFOs and government conspiracies. 

It is some time before you realize that the whirring you hear is the car’s front wheels grasping blindly at mud. You open your eyes. It is some time before you realize that you aren’t driving any more, and that you probably shouldn’t try to move in case it makes the pain hurt worse. It is some time before you realize there had been someone in the car with you, and you don’t remember where they came from. You wonder what could be making that thrashing sound in the brush down below you.

The night is getting colder, and over the occasional whoosh of passing cars on the highway above, the radio is playing again, a curious mixture of agitated rock, stealthy nightmares, and electronic squealing that echoes the buzzing behind your eyes. There’s a theremin playing like a demented steel guitar, and the singer’s disembodied nasal voice hovers just above you like a wisp of fog, intoning cryptically about lost luggage, two slices of white bread sealed in a ziploc bag, and bars where the beer don’t walk on him. He’s got a job for life.  In your head—in my head is a white room where all the good things go. A man with a bag walks in, drops it on the floor and he goes. Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye.

I gotta get out of this place else I swear my head will crack - crack!
I gotta get out of this place else I swear my head will crack
What will you do for me?
Johnny Two-Toes says to Betty Groove

I wait for the dawn but I fear the dawn will not come back
I wait for the dawn but I fear the dawn will not come back
What will you do for me?
What will you do?

There’s something that’s closin down on me feels like a hand grabbed round my throat
There’s something that’s closin down on me feels like a hand grabbed round my throat
What will you do for me?
Johnny Two-Toes says to Betty Groove
What will you do?

I gotta get outa this town for I swear this town will be the death of me
I gotta get outa this town for I swear this town will be the death of me
What will you do for me?
Johnny Two-Toes says
What will you do for me?

Sleep finally overcomes and the night is split by the red pulsations of emergency vehicles. The activity comes nearer, and the man and the electronic buzzing sing together just for you, with the infinite love of a father for his helpless newborn child,

My eyes are growin tentacles for to grab you
My eyes are growin hand grenades for to have you
My eyes are growin tentacles for to grab you
I live in a house without any windows

My hands are growin spectacles for to grab you
My hands are growin half the night for to have you
My hands are growin spectacles for to grab you
My hands are growin spectacles…
I live in a house without any windows
I got a 40 watt bulb to light up my life.

As the music grows to a stormy climax and abruptly fades into the busy sounds of an upstate New York freeway night, it gradually dawns on you that Cleveland is going to have to wait a while.


Posted by Johno on 09/02/06 at 05:24 PM
EntertainmentPermalink

Dispatch from the Ministry of Hops (vol. 10)

Entertainment

When my parents drive out to visit goodwyfe Johno and myself, they usually bring a giant haul of goodies; vegetables from their garden, blueberries or apples from their bushes and trees, and jams, jellies, and pickles.  Usually, they bring more than we can possibly use.

Two weeks ago my parents came to town, and when they left, our refrigerator and pantry were bursting: leeks the size of baseball bats, summer squash of every size and description, tomatoes, cucumbers, and green beans, dozens of yellow onions tasting of the Ohio earth they grew in, enough shallots and garlic to see us through to spring 2008 (at least), and a good eight pounds of blueberries.

Now, my parents’ blueberries are spectacular. Some of them are gigantic and mellow specimens, but others are much smaller and a little tart, but absolutely full of flavor.

And me being me, the first thing I thought this year when faced with eight pounds of berries, was “hey - I can make beer out of that!” (Of course, that’s what I think every time I see a potato, pepper, bag of kaffir lime leaves, cherry, apple, or old shoe, so it’s not like I’m exactly making a leap here.) Many, if not most, blueberry beers are made with blueberry essence or extract, which imparts the flavor of blueberries without turning the beer purple. Unfortunately, blueberry extracts tend to behave a lot like imitation vanilla - if buried way down in the mix as part of a recipe, they work great and do the job of providing acceptable flavor for a minimum cost. However, once they take center stage, their shortcomings (mainly the one-dimensionality of their flavor) become apparent. And although I could certainly come by canned blueberry pulp or several kinds of extract from a beer supplier, here I am with fresh berries and an overzealous desire to do everything the hard way.

So I say, “nuts to all that!” If my beer must be purple, so be it! I have fresh berries to use, and as God is my witness, they shall be beer!


Posted by Johno on 09/02/06 at 04:35 PM
EntertainmentPermalink

Friday, September 01, 2006

I’ll audition once I clear it with the lawyers

Holy Shit!Music Wonkery

I play the guitar.  By which I mean that I know some chords and can improvise a lame lead built in a pentatonic box.  That knowledge pretty much grants access to the entire AC/DC catalog which, really, ought to be enough for anyone. 

But there are legions of folks in this great land of ours who are just starting and can’t yet play by ear.  Others seek more than what Angus Young can teach us- odd, yes, but they’re out there and I’ve met them.  They want an edge, a little more knowledge, or at the very least, a more refined dabbling in the guitary arts.  Some people take private lessons which, judging by the fliers I see at any given moment on any campus or metro area, must be a booming business. 

The quickest way though to learn how to play a song yourself, and if you can’t do it by ear, is to use tablature.  Tab is a graphical shorthand that explains where your fingers go on certain strings.  Tab can help you fret a weird chord you didn’t hear in the song, or with a spiffy lead run you can’t pick out yourself.  It also has the benefit of having near instantaneous utility, as opposed to having to train to read formal sheet music.  If you can see, you can apply tablature.  Its main drawback though is that tab cannot help you if you don’t already know how the song is supposed to sound. 

As with every other perversion, the internets are full of tablature sites.  Typically, more skilled players will post their shorthand interpretations of popular songs for novices.  They are free, and understood to be a sort of fraternal public service.  Yours truly, not 2 weeks ago, consulted a site because I knew the tuning of a song was all fucky, and didn’t get it.  In about 10 seconds I was able to find the song, see the layout, go “Oh, THAT’s how...”, and presto-change-o, could play the song.

But now the lawyers got wind of it, so it’s all fucked up for everybody.

The site I used for tab, OLGA, has been down for awhile.  They’ve now posted links to the nastygrams they got from the law firm representing the National Music Publishers Association and the Music Publishers Association of the United States that accuse OLGA, and several similar sites, of copyright infringement and ordered them to stop operating.  Their argument is that because music writers, transcribers, and related fields have to go through the legal hassle of following copyright law when they do their business, the result of which is selling songbooks and such to musicians, offering what is ostensibly the same service for free (yet still generating an income with blogads and such) is illegal.

So dig, I can get- marginally- the infringement argument.  That’s the law, the publishers feel threatened, and seek remedy through legal action.  As far as a reasonably well-adjusted society’s legal mechanism working, I get it.  But the MPA said a little too much with this remark:

We are doing this to protect the interests of the creators and publishers of music so that, the profession of songwriting remains viable and that new and exciting music will be continued to be created and enjoyed for generations to come.

So- just so I’m clear- the Music Publisher’s Association’s position is that, if the broader population know how to play older, previously released music, musicians will no longer care to produce new work? 

I’m pretty sure that wide popularity has not yet worked AGAINST a musician.  And it’s odd that a dilettante has to explain this to the MPA, but here you go: musicians are artists.  Artists create because if they don’t, they go mental.  Admittedly sometimes they are mental beforehand.  But regardless of their personal sanity timeline, artists make art because they have to, not for the friggin pay; are you kidding?!  As for the income, I am highly skeptical of the claim that some schmoe running a tab site is winning the big money and fabulous prizes.  The whole point is to share information to enjoy the music, not to play musical capitalist.  It’s not like Russell Simmons made his gajillions on tablature.

And thinking about it, are they going to file cease and desist orders on every cover band in the Union?  Because not only do they play copyrighted material, they profit from it too.  Sure some get paid in cocaine, but it is, strictly speaking, compensation.  And as much as I would love to see crummy cover bands wither and fail, I’d rather it done through people telling them they suck by not paying to see them, than by playing lawyer-ball.  Although, to be fair, they may have tried serving them with court papers, but often those folks have no fixed address and it’s tough to deliver to “the van with all the bondo on it in the field behind the old fire station.”

But let’s test the waters here, and see how music publishers feel about this.  I will reveal the most secretest secrety secret of rock and roll, right here and now.  I am gambling that this revelation will not cause popular music in general, and rock n roll in particular, to screech to a jarring and disastrous halt.  I am willing to gamble that, contrary to the MPA’s weird assertion, its transcribers will continue to be able “to feed their families”.  It is nothing less than the Key to Rock.  It is the entry path to Chuck Berry; through Crosby, Stills, Nash and (sometimes) Young; past KISS; on to the Ramones, Pearl Jam, and the nu-metal flavor of the month.

I stand at the cliffside now, Prometheus-like, and hereby give the gift of rock and roll fire to the yearning multitudes:

A-C-E-A

Use it wisely, my children. 

Now let’s see if they send their legal vultures to peck at my innards for all eternity.


Posted by GeekLethal on 09/01/06 at 01:23 PM
Holy Shit!Music WonkeryPermalink

That’s “The Complete Jacket of Metal” in Amsterdam

Entertainment

One of my favorite flicks, Full Metal Jacket, was on last night. 

For me, the whole movie is the first half or so.  Everything after the suicide scene gets weirder and weirder, it starts to drag, and byt he end I really don’t care what happens to these characters, who I nominally cared about to begin with anyway.  But every scene that includes Gunnery Sergeant Hartman cracks me up.  And the harder he pushes his recruits, the harder I laugh.  Lady Lethal, who I have asked to endure the movie in the past, doesn’t really get it.  Even after I pause the scene, and repeat the rapid-fire obscenities just to make sure she got them, she agrees they’re terrible but can’t quite get from there to humor.  So, alas, I laugh alone.

And for no better reason than because I fucking feel like it, here are two quotes from FMJ that crack me up to tears.  These have been washed and then, heh, back-washed through Altavista’s web translator:

Who said that? To whom did the Bumsen say that? Who has slimy little communist shit, Twinkle toed more cocksucker down here, who signed straight its own Exekutionsbefehl? Nobody, huh? Fairy fucking the patin said it. From bumsenden standing. I will pint it all cube bumsender to it. I will pint you to their ass hole suck butter milk.

And my personal fave:

Private Pyle you had the best place your ass far and beginning shitting I them cufflinks or me of Tiffany get stuffed will certainly upwards.

Curiously, with the movie fresh in my mind, astonishingly perceptive-and loyal- reader Othershoe provided me this link to discussion of what Joker calls “the Jungian thing”.  I went two ways with this exchange.  First, I was excited at reading reasonably detailed explanations or interpretations of Kubrick’s intentions and results with Jungian philosophy in the film.  Then, about halfway through, I thanked the Dark Ones that my college days are safely behind me and I didn’t have to listen to a roomful of students discuss the hidden, and probably made-up, meanings in movies.

Mad props to Othershoe for providing a trifecta of entertainment, nostalgia, and the creeping feeling you’re going to blow the final, all in one swell foop.


Posted by GeekLethal on 09/01/06 at 12:43 PM
EntertainmentPermalink

Latin American Soap Operas - Not just for Mexico any longer

Entertainment

God bless the lowly search function.  I knew that, at some time in the past, Minister Johno had admitted his admiration for the Mexican soap opera.

Due to my advancing years, it helps, of course, that said admission happened within the last three months, but never mind that.  I remembered.

And while it wasn’t the key point of his missive, or even anything other than a footnote, the second of many such footnotes, it caused me to stop and pay attention to a story in today’s Wall Street Journal, entitled “With Sexy Story Lines, Low Budgets, News Corp. Will Launch MyNetworkTV” (sadly, unless I get lucky by linking to the “print” page, subscription required).

Now, my entire exposure to the Mexican soap opera can be found in old episodes of “Whose Line Is It Anyway?”, when Ryan Stiles was called upon to do improvisations on such things, and always made his point by using his hands to simulate having big, bouncy, heaving sweater puppets.  So I, perhaps more than the average normal reader, was taken by the phrasing used by Brooks Barnes in describing the upcoming offering from News Corp.  To wit:

Every time News Corp. launches a new television business, it turns to programming that entrenched players decry as schlocky and culturally debasing. Then, in many cases, the company starts printing money.

What?  This sounds like fun, even for a guy who’s got perhaps two TV shows he watches with any regularity.  The article continues:

On Tuesday, Roger Ailes, chairman of News Corp.’s Fox Television Stations, will flip the switch on MyNetworkTV, a new broadcast network that will feature a novel format for mainstream U.S. television: Super-sexy—and super-cheap—prime-time soap operas that air six nights a week for limited runs.

It’s an over-the-top format borrowed from Spanish-language broadcasters. While story lines on American soaps can drag on for years, Spanish soaps, or telenovelas, deliver immediate gratification. They wrap everything up after 13 weeks, offer a cliffhanger in each episode and culminate with shocking finales that can rack up Super Bowl-size ratings—just the formula that MyNetwork hopes to duplicate.

U.S. viewers may be jolted by the style and content of the two shows MyNetwork is rolling out next week—“Desire” and “Fashion House.” But “Fox has a way of turning unsophisticated, simplistic programming into a success,” says Laura Caraccioli-Davis, an executive vice president at ad-buying firm Starcom Entertainment. She adds: ”And this is definitely unsophisticated.

(emphasis, of course, mine)

I’m not sure if they’re trying to up the sophistication, or to provide full employment for second-tier talent in Hollywood (neither of which would offend me, nor would they improve my quality of life), but their approach might provide something to help waste more of Johno’s increasingly limited free time:

MyNetwork has largely hired actors with limited experience. And in another bid to save money, it is buying telenovela scripts from Mexico, Cuba and other Spanish-speaking countries and translating them into English. It employs a staff of writers to smooth out the story lines and winnow the shows down to 65 episodes from 120, and taping is done on union soundstages well outside the Hollywood infrastructure in San Diego.

Schlock TV, but now in English, with “smoother” story lines, and shorter runs.  What more could we ask for in mindless entertainment?

And it’s not that I have a problem with mindless TV.  Perhaps I’m the only guy who remembers a feature that used to be on (the Comedy Channel? - fuck, it might still be on for all I know), called Short Attention Span Theater.  Reading the plot development for one episode, SAST was the first thing that came to mind, minus the alleged comedy:

The plot points are rapid-fire. “Desire” is the tale of two brothers who are on the run from the Mafia and happen to be in love with the same woman; one brother sleeps with two different women, dodges a spray of bullets and escapes from an exploding building—and that’s just in the opening 10 minutes of the first episode.

For those rare cases when I’m in the mood to watch crap (and of course, sometimes I am), I prefer that it be really efficiently delivered crap, so that I can either watch twice as much in the allotted time, or spend half as much time watching it.

News Corp to the rescue, it would seem.  And I’m rather looking forward to seeing just how bad this stuff can possibly be.

[Wik] This all reminds me - I really miss MST3K.  Is it still shown anywhere on cable?

[Alsø wik] I was surprised to preview this story and see the phrase “...fuck, it might still be on for all I know”, and came back here to the entry to find out if I had suffered Tourette’s Syndrome.  Nope - I typed “h e c k”. Honest.  Blogging software is amazing, no?


Posted by Patton on 09/01/06 at 02:10 AM
EntertainmentPermalink
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