Category Archives: Entertainment

Juicy Chunks O’ Wisdom For Tuesday, February 18th

‘Cause my head can’t decide if it’s going to just keep throbbing endlessly or if it’s going to explode and scatter skull shards everywhere, that’s why.

  • When did the California CHP start using radar on the freeways? I thought they couldn’t do that.
  • I hate repairing toilets.
  • Regardless of #1 above, have I mentioned more than a few hundred times how much I hate people who drive at 65 in the fast lane when it’s clear, dry, and otherwise wide open traffic?
  • I thought that these Olympics we were supposed to have four or five cable channels going 24/7 with every event available live, or at least something close to that. We have one channel on about twelve hours a day (night) with live stuff, sometimes a second channel for four hours or so, then the prime time replay stuff for three or four hours. Did I get that wrong?
  • No, I didn’t get a speeding ticket, nor did I get pulled over and then charm my way out of it
  • Computers are wonderful — right up to the point where they totally suck.
  • Speaking of NBC’s Olympics coverage (we were, weren’t we?), who is this guy they have doing color commentary on the biathlon and Nordic skiing events? Can we get this guy some decaf?
  • You know that you’re STILL in love with the convertible when you drive with the top down even when it’s only 55 degrees and foggy.
  • Spring training games start in eight days!
  • Why does a computer that was working just fine yesterday suddenly not be able to connect on ANY web browser (IE, Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Opera) while still well connected to the internet and other programs (Skype, Norton) can connect just fine?
  • I’m so glad that I can follow planetary scientists, astronauts, and other space and astronomy groups and individuals on Twitter.
  • “Game Of Thrones” Season Three is out on DVD now — time for another binge watching day! This time we’ll be ready when the new season starts next month. (“You know nothing, Paul Willett!”)

Remember, if it weren’t for the last minute, there wouldn’t be time to get anything done at all.

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Filed under Astronomy, Computers, Entertainment, Juicy Chunks, LA Angels, Space

A Few Hundred Notes On Today’s Big Sporting Event

Note that I’m not trying to be snarky titling it this way, I just don’t want to get sued for trademark infringement. That big national sports league has a LOT of lawyers that need something to do until fall.

Secondly, if you’re trying to avoid spoilers because you haven’t seen the game yet (hi, Steve!) you can stop reading now.

Finally, for what it’s worth, my grades are at the end for each commercial, where applicable. Times are Pacific Standard, ’cause that’s where I live!

  • 15:00 I’ll be taking notes, primarily on the commercials, since I pretty much don’t want either team to win. If my beloved Chiefs can’t be there, I will insist on being pissy. Pbbbbbbbt!
  • 15:06 “A Million Ways To Die In The West” looks pretty funny. We saw a trailer for it in the theater yesterday.
  • 15:11 “Captain America: Winter Soldier” looks like a good, solid summer FX blockbuster. It’s not supposed to be Masterpiece Theater.
  • 15:13 Met Life ad — with Schroeder playing the National Anthem on his piano at midfield and the “Peanuts” gang joining him, this was great. Very well done, very classy, especially since the game’s at Met Life Stadium. (B+)
  • 15:14 Old ad for Sprint, along with ads for Fox’s “American Idol” (which I would only watch if you put a gun to my head), “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” (which is actually pretty good), and an old NFL Play 60 ad.
  • 15:19 Rene Fleming really belts out the National Anthem and hits every note, as we would expect from an honest-to-god opera diva. But she still sings it too slow. It’s a drinking song, not a dirge!
  • 15:24 “Noah” looks… I’m speechless, almost. I had heard they were making this, but I had no idea they had real acting stars and a huge FX budget for it. It will be interesting to see if it bombs or if the religious crowd push it into the black. On the other hand, Charlton Heston was Moses in “The Ten Commandments”, so I may be dead wrong. But really?
  • 15:25 Kickstarter/Mountain Dew — lots of pretty fireworks & rockets. I get it, it’s an energy drink, they want part of Red Bull’s market share. Whatever. (C)
  • 15:25 McDonalds McNuggets ad, not that new — but I just think that the “Bad Lip Reading” ads (and the videos that started the idea) are just the funniest thing in years. They crack me up every single time. (A-)
  • 15:26 Old ad for T-Mobile along with teasers for “New Girl” after the game and the Daytona 500 later in February. It’s annoying, but this is how Fox (or any other network) justifies spending hundreds of millions of dollars on the rights to these games. You may safely assume that at almost every commercial break we’re getting at least one, and often several, quick promos for some Fox show or another.
  • 15:28 The coin toss. Joe Namath looks good for his age. He may not have had class, but he most certainly had style. He came into a league that was dull as dishwasher with players as individualized as a bucket of oatmeal and changed the game forever. Now the ref almost messes up the coin toss by giving him the coin too early, before all of the legalese is done. A nice catch in mid-air though to stop a potential controversy. Ref’s got skills!
  • 15:30 Two ads for the Ford Fusion Hybrid, the first with Rob Riggle (another loyal KC Chiefs fan!) and the second with James Franco reprising the Rob Riggle role. It’s an odd set of ads, pretty well done, attention getting, but silly. (B-)
  • 15:35 Kickoff
  • 15:37 Major screw up by Denver on the first play of the game gives Seattle a safety. It’s now 2-0. There’s only seven seconds run off the clock, which has got to be the most bizarre start to one of these games EVER! The network can’t even go to a commercial in the couple of minutes it takes to kick off, it’s way too early.
  • 15:42 Bud Lite ad — The first of several in this “Are You Up For Anything” campaign that they’ve been teasing for several weeks. Flashy, extravagant, big concept, but I don’t know that I care. (B-)
  • 15:43 “The World Is Full Of Giants.” A really, really good looking ad that does a truly lousy job of selling anything. I love the philosophy, the sentiment, the inspiration, the anticipation of who the ad was for… Maserati? To a blue-collar, working class audience? Wrong demographic, guys, not even close! Did you feel it was necessary to blow all of that money on this ad because Jaguar did an ad? (A for production, D- for common sense in their marketing department)
  • 15:46 Denver’s defense steps up and they manage to hold Seattle to a field goal. 5-0, Seattle.
  • 15:47 The first of Doritos’ fan-created ads, this one “The Time Machine”. Cute, very nicely done, especially for a low-budget, amateur production. (B+)
  • 15:47 Chervolet “Romance” — poking fun at their own series of “A Man & His Truck” ads, this one had a perfect soundtrack and was very funny. (A)
  • 15:52 “Need For Speed” has the perfect trailer if they want to show that it’s simply a vehicle to put Aaron Paul on the screen for a couple of hours because he’s a big star now after “Breaking Bad.” It looks formulaic, a combination of “Cannonball Run” and “Fast & Furious. At least they got the right demographic, even if he’s not drag racing and stunt driving in a Maserati.
  • 15:53 Turbotax — Well done ad about how watching “Sean” at the prom snogging your favorite girl is like watching this game with your favorite team not there. Funny, some funky stuff in there, like stats for “Sean”, as well as watching him in slo-mo and replay after replay. Is that John C. Reilly doing the voice work? (B)
  • 16:04 Bud Light Part Two — getting more weird, but not better or funnier. Yeah, seeing Don Cheadle with a llama in an elevator is odd, but Arnold Schwarzennager looks like hell and I couldn’t care less about One Direction. I can guarantee that I’m the wrong demographic for this. (C)
  • 16:05 Beats Audio — Ellen DeGeneres is charming and I like the ad’s plot as a variation of Goldilocks & The Three Bears. The fact that she’s going to see “Into The Woods” at the beginning is a nice touch. Lots of nice touches, quirky and entertaining without being bizarre for bizarre’s sake. (Are you listening, Bud Light?) (B+)
  • 16:06 Seattle gets held to another field goal, 9-0 now. Denver’s defense is just barely keeping them alive.
  • 16:07 “Invisible” with U2 and Bono, sponsored by Bank of America. Go and get the free iTunes download within 24 hours and BofA will donate $1 to RED. Even if you don’t like U2 and won’t listen to the song, download it anyway. Help out a good cause. And the B&W video with Bono and the boys is pretty good. (A)
  • 16:08 Hyundai’s “Dad’s Sixth Sense” — funny while also getting their point across. I liked watching the beginning part where dad was constantly rescuing the kid from certain doom. Now that he’s driving and the kid is spending more time looking at girls instead of the road, the Hyundai’s auto-breaking system will keep him safe. Cute, funny. (A)
  • 16:10 Denver gets intercepted. Who are these impostors in orange and what have they done with the real Denver players?
  • 16:12 “Gracie” for Cheerios — a wonderful ad, a follow on to their great “Just Checking” ad. It was more than a little bit disgusting how many bigots and racists crawled out of their holes for the first ad last year. It’s so good to see that General Mills doubled down instead of caving in. As for this ad, it’s just as good as the first one, with the parents trying to use Cheerios to explain to the little girl that she’s going to have a little brother, and her explaining to them what’s in it for her. (A+)
  • 16:13 “A Better Web Awaits” for Squaresoft — lots of internet memes, spam, and malware come to life in a live-action, comic book-type scenario. Their way is better. Okey dokey. I’m less than impressed. (B-)
  • 16:13 “The 80’s Called” for Radio Shack — it was fun to see all of the 80’s icons such as Alf, Hulk Hogan, Mary Lou Retton (was that really her?), Twisted Sister, and so on. Did it convince me that Radio Shack is all new and shiny and completely different from what everyone remembers from the 1980’s? Not really, since I’ve been in Radio Shack recently and it was about 95% just like it was thirty years ago. (C-)
  • 16:15 End of the first quarter, 9-0, Seattle.
  • 16:16 Chevrolet’s charity feel-good ad for World Cancer Day on Tuesday. Lots of really nice photography of a couple riding across the US west at sunrise in a Chevy truck, not a word spoken, the sponsor and cause not revealed until the very end. Touching, without being sappy. The timing and relevance to this household however caused a bit of a reaction from The Long-Suffering Wife. As it should. It’s us, not them. (A-)
  • 16:17 GoDaddy — an ad which might be live (-ish) with Gwen starting her own business making puppets and quitting her job right here on national television in the middle of the game. Not the world’s best ad since they never made any connection that I saw to how their product tied in with their spokesperson. I’m guessing Gwen’s now successful and can quit her “day job” because she started a website with GoDaddy, but I could be wrong. At least GoDaddy stayed away from the really over-the-top sexism and seeing how much skin and innuendo they could get away with. That’s an improvement! (C+)
  • 16:20 Start the second quarter and Seattle almost immediately scores a touchdown. 15-0.
  • 16:24 Bud Light’s big celebration of their new aluminum can — snazzy, bright, loud, disco-based computer graphics, but who cares? Does an aluminum can really make that big of a difference over a bottle or aluminum can? This is how they’re going to differentiate themselves in the market? That’s the best they can do? I guess it’s no worse than Coors’ cans having mountains that turn blue when they’re cold, like you can’t actually touch the can to see if it’s cold or warm. Weird crap going on in the beer-selling business. (C+)
  • 16:24 T-Mobil’s “No Contract, No Worries” uses Tim Tebow to push the idea that they don’t have contracts (and neither does he) — but he’s doing fine, delivering babies (squatting down at the business end with his hands like they’re under center, yelling “Push!”), schmoozing with Bigfoot, addressing the UN and bringing about world peace, and playing football while walking on the moon. It’s big and flashy, and a bit clever, but just a bit. (C+)
  • 16:25 WeatherTech’s “Nobody Builds In the USA” ad — straight to the point, good marketing for their key differentiating points, high quality and made in the USA from US materials. A touch of quirky, satirical characters, but doesn’t go over the top, simply delivers their message. (B+)
  • 16:25 “Transformers: Age Of Extinction” is what, the fourth, fifth, tenth movie in this series? Is Michael Bey still involved or have they handed the reins off to a wannabe Michael Bey clone? Does Mark Wahlberg have an actual reason to take this gig now that Shia laBeouf’s three-movie contract is up and he’s been set free? Can’t Wahlberg do better? In fact, doesn’t he have better in the theaters right now?
  • 16:37 Denver finally had a drive going, actually got a couple of first downs. Then Manning threw an interception for a pick-six. 22-0.
  • 16:39 Volkswagen’s “Wings” ad — a cute idea, well executed, a funny and slightly risque punchline at the end, but… Why didn’t I really care? (B-)
  • 16:40 Wonderful Pistachios with Stephen Colbert — short, snarky, weird. The best thing is the bald eagle in a suit with a garish, bright green tie. (B)
  • 16:41 H&M ad with David Beckham — meh, I’m really not the demographic. Lots of Beckham running around and gradually stripping down to his briefs, with the implication that he even loses those. He’s a wonderful physical specimen, no doubt about it, but I had no sudden urges to drop everything and go buy any of his brand of underwear. (C-)
  • 16:41 The second Wonderful Pistachios ad with Stephen Colbert — still snarky and weird, but this time far, far more garish. Funny, good branding, I especially liked the green Colbert face on a pistachio inside of Colbert’s head. (B+)
  • 16:42 Another Denver turnover, already? Geez, Louise! It’s under review, I think Denver will keep it.
  • 16:43 “Amazing Spiderman 2” seems extremely pointless since I never figured out why they need to make “Amazing Spiderman” to “re-boot” a franchise that was only a couple of years old to begin with. Hey, guys, if you have $100M to throw at a film, how about you give $25M each to four writers with original ideas and four directors who can make a decent film without 90% of it coming out of a computer? Let me know when that happens. In the meantime, count me in the “Who Gives A Crap?” camp.
  • 16:44 Carmax’s “Slow Clap” ad — there were some oddities in here, such as the dad letting his kid on the bike crash, Sean Austin as Rudy, the bear, and so on. But quirky and odd alone do not a commercial make. I’m no more convinced that I should buy a car from Carmax than I was thirty seconds ago. I don’t give a damn if Rudy or the bear likes me, I want to know if I’m getting screwed when I buy that used car. (C+)
  • 16:44 The stupid Geico ad with the animated pig at the DMV — how much did they spend to put this in the middle of this broadcast? Yet they want you to believe that you can save money with them? (D+)
  • 16:44 M&M candy — one of the big, animated M&M’s is in the trunk of an Eastern European mobster’s limo, being threatened (in what we presume to be Russian?) with how he’s going to be served up and eaten. Okay, we’ve seen many others in this series, and most were more clever and more funny. (C+)
  • 16:47 The first half’s 2:00 warning.
  • 16:48 Coca-Cola’s “America the Beautiful” — lots of fantastic photography showing our cultural diversity, the diversity in our lifestyles, our backgrounds, and our cultures. Over it all is being sung “America The Beautiful” with each phrase done in a different language. Very charming, very touching, the kind of thing that Coke can get away with without needing to hammer their brand name into your skull with every frame. (A+)
  • 16:49 Sonos Speakers — not a new ad for the game, it shows an immaculate and minimalist white-on-white house with different music playing in different zones of the house, each zone turning a bright shade as the music fills the area. Got it, we can put different music in different rooms. On the other hand, if I ever have to live in a house that white, that barren, that sterile, that museum-like, make sure that I don’t have any steak knives, ties, belts, or strong medications. (C+)
  • 16:50 A fifteen-second teaser for something, no ID at all except for the Fox logo. Fire, sirens, nada else.
  • 16:53 Denver turns it over on downs. Denver looks like it could get the crap kicked out of them by the Little Sisters of Mercy’s junior varsity team today.
  • 16:54 Toyota Highlander ad — Terry Crews and the Muppets. Wild, silly, over the top, outrageous, everything we would expect from anything involving the Muppets. Who doesn’t love the Muppets? How can they go wrong? (A+)
  • 16:55 Subway ad for their new sandwich with Fritos on it — not quite new, I’ve seen it for a day or two, but I also know that this was a very last minute buy by Subway. They must have gotten some kind of a deal for an open spot and just stuck in their current ad. (C-)
  • 16:58 Halftime
  • 16:58 Promo for Fox Sports Live on their network that wants to challenge ESPN (good luck, you’re going to need it) — quirky, weird, pointless. Having your anchors dress up as plants or furniture or Venus on the half shell doesn’t make me remember who they are or care why I should watch them instead of your competition, especially when I (and most of the rest of the world) already like your competition. (D+)
  • 16:59 Smart Electric — interesting ad, shows their product failing in epic style at four-wheel driving and trying to trundle over boulders as large as the car. They then point out that their car is as out of place in those situations as a huge, 4WD, gas-guzzling SUV would be trying to park in a normal parking spot in the city. Very good identification of your market segment and differentiation, as well as good communication of that one point. (A-)
  • 16:59 Carl’s Jr’s ad (not close to being new) with Terrell Owens, a Philly cheese steak burger, and a number of extremely well endowed women in extremely tiny string bikinis. Yes, Carl’s Jr is sexist as hell in their ads — but they’re honest about it, and I’m not sure any of those women are being exploited or harassed while they’re being typecast. (B- for the ad, F- for making me feel so guilty about enjoying the ad so much)
  • 17:00 GoPro’s ad showing Felix Baumgartner stepping off of the balloon porch a couple of years ago and starting to fall faster than Mach One — GoPro cameras are incredibly cool and useful and the whole GoPro environment of cameras and accessories has made almost routine the countless YouTube and pro videos that wouldn’t have been conceivable five years ago. I would like one, real bad. As for Mr. Baumgartner, he has a very, very large pair, and I’m not talking about his cameras. (A)
  • 17:00 Cadillac’s not very new “That’s Mine” ad — a snarky play on sibling rivalry. Whatever. (C)
  • 17:03 Jeep Cherokee “Built Free” ad — talks a lot about “the restless many”, shows lots of wilderness places (good) and people leaving urban (bad) places to have adventures. Good ad, keeps to what makes their brand special, pulls on the heart strings, makes you want to buy one and go have an adventure that you can’t have in your boxy little 4-door sedan commutermobile. (B)
  • 17:05 Why does Fox feel the need to stick in some lame set piece with Jerry Seinfeld and Jason Alexander? Aside from the fact that I was never a fan of “Seinfeld”, this unfunny bit of schtick is totally out of place here.
  • 17:07 It’s starting to rain! All day whenever anyone asked us who we wanted to win, we’ve answered, “The weather!” We’ve been hoping that about half time we could start a cold rain, by the early third quarter it could turn to freezing rain and ice, but the fourth quarter start snowing heavily, and by the end of the game be an absolute nightmare. Our evil plan is coming to fruition!
  • 17:08 Ad for Fox’s “Cosmos” series coming up — looks fantastic!
  • 17:08 Halftime show starts with the Pepsi “Soundcheck NYC” ad and intro — very, very nice, superb FX showing New York City being used to tune up and get ready for music. The strings of the Brooklyn Bridge are plucked, trains are slid back and forth like the sliding controls on a soundboard, smokestacks are treated like the valves on a trumpet, Columbus Circle is “scratched” like a hip-hop turntable. (A)
  • 17:09 Halftime show with Bruno Mars — he plays the drums? Who knew? I love the brass in his backup band. I like the hair style, although it makes him look a little like a pop singing parasaurolophus. The last note of his first song proved that he wasn’t lip synching — that’s a good thing! Lots and lots and lots and lots of lasers and lights. Bruno’s hip movements and dance moves are the exact same kind of thing that made my parents’ generation have a cow when Elvis burst on the scene. I liked the RHCP, and I’ll give them props for coming out without shirts when it’s in the 50’s and raining. I really liked the montage of dedications from active military preceding “Just The Way You Are.” Overall, one of my favorite halftime shows in years. (A)
  • 17:22 Another fifteen-second teaser with no identification, this time showing the top of a London landmark skyscraper and a huge cloud of smoke, sounds of chaos in the distance…
  • 17:23 A very not-new Living Spaces ad — are these local ads that the Los Angeles affiliate gets to sell and drop in? It really seems out of place here. (C)
  • 17:24 Bud Light is now pushing their Platinum beer, with lots of scenes of clubbing, partying, dancing, crowds, wanting us to “Turn Up Your Evening” — sorry, still the wrong demographic. (C)
  • 17:24 Questlove talking about drums and the joy of making music in a Guitar Center ad — another one that really feels local and out of place here, even though it’s a well done ad, even if it’s a little bit simplistic by the standards of the other ads being shown today. (B)
  • 17:25 Alex & Ani ad — very nicely done, nice sentiment, nice emotional touch. “This is main street.” Okay, I like the way you think. But… What do you sell? Who are you? Was there any clue at all in there to tell me those things if I don’t know and I’m not willing to drop everything at this second to google it? (C)
  • 17:27 NFL Network — building on a classic, one of my favorite ads from last year’s game. Talking about the 2014 draft, one of the color guys on the “broadcast” is “Leon Sandcastle”, supposedly last year’s first pick in the draft by my beloved KC Chiefs. Game footage of “Leon” photoshopped into all kinds of situations from real games this year. The 2014 draft’s number one pick is… “Jerry Ricecake!” Too many in-jokes to even start to list. Very, very clever! (A+)
  • 17:27 Scientology — is this an exercise in how fast you can recognize the ad (it’s not new) and mute the television rather than be exposed to this… this… “ad?” Out of curiosity, would Fox have sold air time to the Catholic Church or the Southern Baptists or the Muslim Brotherhood if any of them had ponied up the millions of dollars needed for an ad in that slot? (F-)
  • 17:28 Third quarter starts, Seattle runs the opening kickoff back for a touchdown. 29-0. Again Fox can’t go to a commercial yet when they normally would after a score, because we’re only twelve seconds into the second half.
  • 17:38 The Audi ad about the canine hybrid Doberman and Chihuahua with the tag line “Compromise Scares Us Too.” Like a Saturday Night Live skit that would be funny for two minutes but drags on for seven or eight, this was an idea that would have been funny in a fifteen second ad, but just is stupid in a sixty second ad. It is nice, if pointless, to see Sarah McLachlan. (C-)
  • 17:39 GoldieBlox & Intuit ad — wonderful, I’m so glad to see that GoldieBlox won the contest Intuit had to reward a small startup company with an ad here. The ad shows little girls bringing all of their pink & “girlish” toys together to build a rocket and launch it, all to a tune that’s a take-off on “Cum On Feel The Noize” by Quiet Riot. This is all the more satisfying after all of the folderol with GoldiBlox’s first ad, which was incredibly wonderful but used a take-off on the Ramones’ “Girls”, which cause the Ramones’ lawyers and heirs to get seriously bent out of shape. Congratulations to Intuit and GoldiBlox! (A+)\
  • 17:39 T-Mobil’s “Still No Contract” again has Tim Tebow, this time saving puppies from burning buildings, stunt car racing motorcycles and 70’s muscle cars, bull riding, being a rock star, and so on. Still done on a big budget, looks nice, but still not as clever as it could be. (C+)
  • 17:40 Another fifteen-second unidentified trailer, this time with a gun being cocked, and at the end there’s about two seconds of something kind of like a clock ticking… Wait, isn’t that from…
  • 17:44 Axe this year got away from selling bizarre, macho, studmuffin, borderline grotesque sex in their ad. Instead we see what looks to be US Hueys attacking in Vietnam, what looks to be a military arms display in some huge Asian city, and what looks like a terrorist or North Korean general getting ready to push a button. But the ad is for “Make Love, Not War” so what we thought we saw is not what truly is. Clever, still a bit on the bizarre side. (B-)
  • 17:45 Chobani’s “Ransacked” shows a small country store being torn apart as everyone flees in terror. The culprit is a large grizzly bear, who is finally satisfied when he finds Chobani yogurt, because it’s made from all natural ingredients. Big budget, pointless commercial, even if I did like yogurt. We get it, it’s “all natural.” So are a half-dozen other brands, or at least that’s what everyone claims. Why should I buy your brand or even remember your name? Because a CGI bear ripped apart a CGI store? (C-)
  • 17:52 Kia’s “The Truth” uses a big name (Lawrence Fishburn) and a big movie spoof (“The Matrix”) and a huge budget to try to convince us that only they have true luxury and all of the (unnamed) other luxury car companies are just selling illusions of comfort. Going a bit beyond that somewhat simplistic (yet clever) idea, there are some very weird things going on after Fishburn starts to sing high opera. Yeah, I said “opera.” (A-)
  • 17:53 Another Sprint ad, similar to the old one that’s been running for a couple of weeks, but this time with a band instead of a family. Stupid idea, stupid ads. It might convince me that your brand is cheap, but does it convince me that it works? Why would I pay cheap if I’m not getting equally good service? (D+)
  • 17:53 Heinz’s “Where There’s Happy” is a big change for Heinz, which doesn’t  advertises that much to begin with, and has never advertised during such a high profile (and expensive) event. It’s a fun ad, cute, brings back warm and fuzzy memories, reinforces the brand’s identity with childhood, fun times, and the good old days. It finishes with a tiny little hint of a “grandma fart” joke, which is always a winner, right? (B+)
  • 17:55 The third Denver turnover of the night. It’s really not their day.
  • 17:56 Honda’s ad for car safety has Bruce Willis playing warm and a bit funny, not blowing anything up or shooting anyone. It points out that everyone around us are the most precious things in our lives, urges us to hug them (he’ll wait), and then remember how many safety features are built into Hondas. It’s a great use of a popular celebrity to get out attention, then deliver a very soft sell based on our concern for our loved ones. (A-)
  • 17:57 Budweiser’s “Hero’s Welcome” ad features Lt. Chuck Nadd coming home to a huge turnout in his small home town, a parade, and so on. No one does heartwarming and inspirational better than Budweiser, and they hit another home run with this one. It’s also great to see Lt. Nadd and his wife in the stands watching the game. (A+)
  • 18:01 The game’s getting chippy, then Seattle makes a great play on a fantastic catch to score yet another touchdown, assisted by really lousy Denver tackling. 36-0.
  • 18:03 Chrysler’s ad with Bob Dylan tries really hard. It’s sort of a follow-up to their “Imported From Detroit” theme of a year or two ago. Lots of nice pictures, lots of hard working Americans, lots of great, patriotic sentiments, all while Dylan walks around and acts icon-like. Let the Germans brew your beer, let the Asians assemble your phone, let someone else do something else — but “We Will build Your Car.” The only problem is that on the couple of occasions in the ad when Dylan stops and looks into the camera to speak, the tone and timbre of the lip-syncing is terrible. They should have just left everything in voiceover. Having all of the live and direct scenes in the exact same voice as all of the voiceover scenes is extremely jarring and unnatural. Good sentiment, good idea, but the execution could have been much better. (C)
  • 18:10 Denver finally scores, it won’t be a shutout. 36-8, and we’re done with the third quarter.
  • 18:12 Why does the NFL have to advertise in it’s own championship game, which is one of the biggest sporting events of the year? The “Together We Make Football” ad is very nice, showing a bunch of vignettes including a teenage girl playing, a kid who just got the letter telling him that he’s going to school on a football scholarship, little kids, pros, and everything in between. As always with the NFL products, the quality is great and the idea is solid. Just not sure why they couldn’t have sold this slot instead, the NFL’s not hurting for brand recognition or consumer approval. (A-)
  • 18:13 A new Jack In The Box ad that is as bizarre as they all are, but must be local. (B)
  • 18:14 A Time-Warner Cable ad featuring actors and characters from “True Blood”, along with about a zillion cameos from all kinds of shows on television. Everything from Jimmy Fallon to HBO to just about every kind of generic show (action, military, western, mystery, etc). I guess the idea is that TWC brings it all together for you. I’ve got a feeling that we’ll be seeing this one a dozen times a day. At least it might get rid of one or two of those lame ads featuring Bill Cower. (B-)
  • 18:19 Coke’s “Going All The Way” shows us a scrawny kid coming off the bench, too clueless to put on his helmet, being told to not screw up anything. When he finally gets the fumbled ball and runs like crazy all the way to the endzone, he keeps running, through the town, into Green Bay’s Lambeau Field, where the friendly groundskeeper gives him a Coke. Not bad, I guess, but Coke’s done so much better a lot of the time. (B-)
  • 18:20 Butterfinger’s ad has a family therapist talking to a couple, Chocolate and Peanut Butter. They’re together (obviously Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups, but not stated), but looking for something more and different. The therapist introduces them to a third person, Butterfinger. Then it turns into an odd, awkward, and somewhat uncomfortable threesome on the couch. Not sure what they were going for here, but unless it’s creeping folks out and turning them off, I’m pretty sure they didn’t hit the mark. (C-)
  • 18:22 Seattle wastes no time in scoring another touchdown. 43-8)
  • 18:23 Didn’t Peyton Manning just get the league MVP award yesterday? Might they not want to be reconsidering that just a teeny, tiny little bit?
  • 18:24 Microsoft has an extremely emotional and moving ad, featuring Steve Gleason of the New Orleans Saints who’s battling ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease) along with dozens of other people overcoming handicaps, cancer, and obstacles. The ad shows how technology “empowers all of us”, including things like a serviceman overseas seeing his wife live on a video link as their baby is born, and Curiosity driving around on Mars. A two-hanky ad, very well done. (A+)
  • 18:25 In Hyundai’s “Nice”, Johnny Galecki from “The Big Bang Theory” is driving his Hyundai and trying to impress a woman driving next to him in hers. He keeps point out features, such as “Nice acceleration”, to which she responds with something that puts his life in peril, like a mortar shelling or a ramp leading up to a jump surrounded by flaming hoops. Aside from the fact that it let them blow off a huge FX budget, what’s the point and couldn’t it have been made much more directly and simply? He comes off as kind of a stalker, she comes off as kind of a bitch. (C)
  • 18:28 Jaguar’s “It’s Good To Be Bad” features three prominent British actors (Ben Kingsley, Tom Hiddleston, and Mark Strong) who always play supervillians. They’re driving Jaguar F-Type coupes all over, when they’re not in helicopters, blimps, or jets. It’s very “James Bond-ish”. The ad is splashy, expensive, over the top, and has a bit of “Meh!” in it, but the car is fantastic. If I won the lottery tomorrow I would have an F-Type ASAP. They should have spent a lot more time showing the car (everything’s shot at night, to make it more sinister I guess) and less time showing their star actors. (B+)
  • 18:29 Oikos yogurt from Dannon has an ad that re-unites the leading actors of “Full House”, John Stamos, Bob Saget, and Dave Coulie. Other than that, it’s got a lot of innuendo and about as much humor and class as “Full House” did. As you might guess, I thought that “Full House” sucked, so I was not impressed by the ad. John Stamos is eating the yogurt, gets some on his lip, this beautiful woman kisses it off of his lip, he “accidentally” drops some into his lap, she gets a gleam in her eye, at which point Saget & Coulie burst in to help him clean the pants before the stain sets. If I never see this ad again it will be just fine with me. (F+)
  • 18:32 Folks who were expecting a 30-28 game or a 24-21 game were 100% correct in expecting that — right up until the second the ball was first kicked off. Since then, not so much. Denver has really and truly been their own worst enemy tonight and this one’s been a rout since about the middle of the second quarter.
  • 18:35 Another T-Mobil ad, this time with no Tim Tebow, just a pink screen, white text, goofy music and whistling. I wonder if it actually gets anyone to abandon their existing contracts at T-Mobil’s expense and then sign an extended contract with T-Mobil. At least they didn’t spend a ton of money on the production of this ad. I could have done it on my PC in a day or two. (C-)
  • 18:35 The SodaStream ad starring Scarlett Johansson has had a LOT of controversy over the last week or two. Ms. Johansson and OxFam have gone their separate ways in a huge kerfuffle having something to do with SodaStream being an Israeli company, maybe? I haven’t paid a lot of attention, but it seemed pointless and odd. Then Fox refused to let SodaStream air the ad as it was originally made, since it ended with a tagline something like, “Sorry, Coke and Pepsi!” Since Coke and Pepsi are huge, huge sponsors and SodaStream really isn’t, there was no way that was going on the air. Instead it ends with, “I love helping people.” Expect to see the original on every conceivable show within minutes after the end of the game. As for the ad, who cares? I’m just a bit addicted to Diet Coke, so I don’t care how cheaply this thing makes soda “just like the real thing.” (B-)
  • 18:36 The fourth teaser with the fire, smoke, London, gun cocking, finally confirms that it’s for the return of “24” later in the year. Okay, that was an effective teaser campaign. (B+)
  • 18:43 Someone’s hurt but the color commentators are just blathering on and on and on. I’m guessing we’ve run out of paid commercials until the 2:00 warning.
  • 18:45 We’ll see how well my beloved Chiefs do next year against Seattle, New Orleans, San Francisco, or whoever.
  • 18:47 Yet another Denver turnover, not that it matters at all any more. Finally, the 2:00 warning.
  • 18:51 The most anticipated, huge Budweiser ad of the day, “Puppy Love”, shows the cutest puppy on the planet who keeps running away from home to come and visit his pal, one of the Clydesdale horses. Time after time he has to be brought home and taken away from the horses. Finally the horse jumps the fence and chases after the car, getting a few of his friends to block the road. Finally the humans figure it out and let them hang out together and live happily ever after. Okay, said like that it sounds sappy and syrupy, but it’s really done well. Again, no one does these things like Budweiser. (A+)
  • 18:51 GoDaddy’s second ad of the day has a whole crowd of over-muscled body builders (including a very CGIed Danica Patrick) running through the streets and piling up against the window of a newly opened tanning salon, presumably because the new business owner used GoDaddy to… Yeah, we saw it before. Cute, not great, but at least it’s not horribly sexist. (B)
  • 18:52 Doritos’ final ad of the day, also fan made, shows two kids playing in the yard, when one goes running for the Doritos. The younger kid calls the dog, a huge mastiff of some sort, gets his rope, and rides across the yard as if he was Gene Autry or the Lone Ranger to lasso the chips away from his older brother. Cute. Wonderful for an amateur effort. I still don’t eat Doritos. (B+)
  • 18:56 It’s finally over, 43-8 final. They’re doing the onfield interviews with a fish-eye lens that makes everything look bizarre.
  • 18:59 One last ad, from Esurance, something about giving away a boatload of money to someone who tweets or texts or does something. Don’t care. Maybe we would have cared if it was a 21-20 game. (C)

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Filed under Entertainment, KC Chiefs, Movies, Music, Sports

Nothing Remarkable Happened Today

It was just a normal Sunday at Castle Willett. We slept in, went out to breakfast, did our grocery shopping. A friend from high school had a birthday. (Hi, Diane!) I took down the rest of the Christmas lights, I didn’t fall off of any ladders or drop any hammers on my head, we watched some football. My son called from Germany, my daughter called from Sacramento, I wrote a little bit. The cat broke something, the dog was a good girl when other dogs came by our yard. No one died, no one went to the hospital, it was not in any way a red-letter day for any of us.

That was my initial perspective, and it is 100% valid and accurate.

Then I started thinking about what my grandfather, when he was the same age as I am now, might think of everything I did today. (We’re talking mid 1940’s on a farm in South Dakota.) About the only thing he would recognize would be the bacon and eggs, the cat, and the dog.

The digital alarm clock? His probably got wound up by hand.

The HD flatscreen television? I’ll bet that he didn’t have a television in the 1940’s, and the big thing in the 1960’s when he died was color TV.

The iPhone and iPad on my bed stand? I doubt that he had a phone in the 1940’s. I’m not 100% sure they had electricity by that point. Even if he did, then you’ve got that whole comparison of a 1940’s  rotary dial phone with a world-class computer that just also happens to convey phone calls.

Our car, the convertible with the big engine? OK, so the 1940’s Indy cars might or might not have had more horsepower (pole position was won with a speed of 126mph and I’m pretty sure our car could do that on a track), but any car my grandfather ever drove in his life most certainly didn’t. His tractor didn’t have a roof other than his hat, does that count as a convertible?

The 737’s going over our house into Burbank and the 747’s and 777’s going over our house out of LAX toward Asia? Sixteen hours non-stop is a long haul from LAX to Tokyo (been there, done that), but compare that to sixteen hours (with three refueling stops) to get from Los Angeles to New York on a DC-3. As for how commonplace air travel is today, I’m not sure my grandfather ever flew in a plane, ever.

The computers that I’ve used all day to write, do accounting, surf the Internet, read online newspapers? They weren’t even a theoretical dream to anyone on the planet in the mid 1940’s.

If we went to see a movie today, it would be wall-to-wall digital effects to make anything utterly believable, as well as on a huge screen, with flawless projection and eight-channel high quality sound. In the 1940’s, the big, new technological breakthroughs in film were color and stereo.

The ISS went overhead today with six men on board, a vessel that has allowed us to have a continuous human presence off-planet for over thirteen years. The moon’s just rising now, and there are six manned landing sites and twelve sets of boot prints in the dust. We’re driving two separate vehicles on Mars (one of them over ten years old), we have spacecraft currently orbiting Mercury, Mars, and Saturn, we’ve done long duration missions to Jupiter, we’ve swung by Neptune and Uranus, we’re currently on the way to Pluto, and we have spacecraft that have left the freaking solar system and are now in interplanetary space. In the mid 1940’s, only Wernher von Braun and a few of his friends that that his would ever happen.

I’m listening to music from satellite radio and watching live tennis from the Australian Open. Our car radio has dozens of AM stations (all talk and news), several dozen FM stations, or we could plug in our iPods or iPhones. He had a radio the size of my desk with maybe three or four stations he could get during the day, maybe a couple dozen at night. It would have been a big deal to hear something live such as a presidential speech from Washington or war news from Europe.

That was my more introspective perspective, and it also is 100% valid and accurate.

It’s all a matter of perspective, which we forget all too often. “Nothing remarkable happened today” — when you compare today to yesterday. “Mind blown, gobsmacked, and miracles everywhere” — when you compare today to just fifty or sixty years ago, well within a normal lifespan.

Maybe something remarkable did happen today.

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Filed under Castle Willett, Cats, Computers, Dogs, Entertainment, Space, Travel

Little Signs That Your Television Show Is In Trouble

Let’s say that you have a block of four half-hour comedies on a major US television network. We’ll call them Shows A through D.

Show A is in its fifth year and has had a couple of Emmy nominations.

Show B is a new show and has had mixed reviews.

Show C is in its fifth year and has had a boatload of Emmy wins.

Show D is a new show and has gotten off to a slow start but has good reviews and is slowly building a following.

We’re now getting to the holiday season when most shows are having their “fall finales”, then going away for a few weeks. The weeks between mid-December and mid-January are ratings hell unless you’re a football game, a parade, or a Christmas special. ESPN and The Hallmark Channel dominate in late December.

At the end of the “fall finale” show the first week in December, while the credits are rolling, for Shows A, C, and D, there’s an announcer voice over (blasted out in an excited, professional, TV announcer’s voice) to the effect of, “Join us again on January 8th for exciting all new episodes of Show A!!”.

However, at the end of the “fall finale” show for Show B, same night as above, there’s an announcer voice over that says, “Coming up next, a new episode of Emmy Award winning Show C!!”

Hmmmm….

I understand that entertainment industry executives have a well-deserved reputation for not being subtle (or having souls or consciences), but it seems to me that the cast and crew of Show B shouldn’t be putting down money on any new cars or homes in the new year. Their show is not long for this world.

Typically new shows are given an order for a block of thirteen episodes. If they’re successful, they get picked up for seven or nine (maybe eleven) more shows to finish their first year.

In the case of Show B, the “fall finale” was show number ten. Anyone want to bet that after the new year we don’t see any sign of it at all, until sometime deep into the summer reruns, probably in a Saturday night at 8:30 time slot opposite a blockbuster awards show on another network, we’ll get those last three episodes shown without benefit of any advance warning or advertising? The network’s paid for them, they’ll stick them on the air to fill time somewhere. Once.

On the other hand, it’s a better fate than the shows that are only on for four, or three, or even two episodes before they get yanked. You may make thirteen shows, but if you get yanked after two, the other eleven will never, ever see the light of day. Those episodes are going to be stored in a lead case somewhere in that warehouse where the Ark went at the end of “Raiders Of The Lost Ark”.

It seems like there’s one of these “two & out” shows every year now. This year it was “We Are Men“, which was bad. Last year it was “Work It“, which may well have been the worst television show ever put on the air. Not even a “campy, over the top, so-bad-it’s-good” kind of bad. More of a “holy crap, who in hell gave the okay for this and please make sure they never work in this city again” kind of bad.

Shows like that really make you wonder about what’s going on in Hollywood.

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Odds & Sods For Wednesday, November 27th

Item The First: Should it be “The Long Suffering Wife” or “The Long-Suffering Wife”? I’ve been going with the former, but someone suggested that could be construed as her being “nine feet tall and suffering” as opposed to “suffering for a long time”. Now, I would think that “The Long, Suffering Wife” would be “nine feet tall and suffering” and that no hyphen is necessary. Punctuation is important, you know. (Ask Grandma tomorrow when the kid either yells “It’s time to eat Grandma!” or “It’s time to eat, Grandma!”)

Item The Second: I have been known at times to rant about the “freakin’ idiots” of the world, and this often targets politicians and our legal system. (Sorry, I’m not the one who invented the system. If politicians and lawyers would like to stop being highlighted as freakin’ idiots, they’re free to stop doing freakin’ stupid things any time they want. But I digress.)

Having gone off at the mouth about some of the bad things I see, it’s time to highlight a good thing that caught my eye. NPR has an article (and I went hunting and found a more detailed article at the Chicago Tribute) about a couple in Illinois that’s being allowed to get married immediately, rather than being forced to wait until June, 2014 when the new Illinois law allowing same-sex marriages goes into effect. Their circumstances are extreme, and tragic, and I think we should all congratulate the judge, US District Judge Thomas Durkin, for making a ruling that demonstrates compassion and common sense.

Item The Third: I understand why are there television shows that start with a voice-over and a card that says, “This show is a work of fiction and is not in any way based on any actual person or event”. (Hint, it rhymes with “too many lawyers”.) What I don’t understand is why they do that after the previous two hours of sitcoms have had teaser commercials for the show at least once every half hour and every single one of them screams “AN EPISODE RIPPED FROM TODAY’S HEADLINES!” Doesn’t that by definition mean that either the marketing department or the legal department is lying? (Yes, you get extra credit if you immediately pointed out the excellent odds that both of them are lying.)

Item The Fourth: The last two days NASA-TV has been running live interviews where NASA folks (astronauts, scientists, researchers, etc) have been going through these long series of one broadcast interview after another being done and recorded. On Tuesday it was scientists from Goddard being interviewed about Comet ISON, on Wednesday it was interviews about what the astronauts eat on ISS for Thanksgiving.

I understand that TV news anchors and personalities are no longer hired for having the same journalistic chops as Walter Cronkite or David Brinkley. They’re hired because they look good in front of a camera and can be pleasant on command. This leads to a fair number of them who appear to be unable to recite the alphabet without a teleprompter. It’s never more clear than when they’re doing these interviews. Leading off with statements like, “There are three people in space right now, one American and two Russians” is not only blatantly incorrect, it’s hideously lazy journalism. How hard is it to go the the NASA website, or simply type “Who is on ISS right now?” into Google to get a dozen correct answers. (Like, here, and it’s currently six people, which breaks down as three Russians, two Americans, and one Japanese.)  You can do that on your phone, for crying out loud! I commend the various NASA personnel being interviewed for not spending their entire interview correcting the stupid things said.

That having been said, is there an astronaut training course called “1,001 Ways To Say ‘That’s A Great Question'”? You hear it when they’re doing interviews in the studio, on orbit, from Houston, or at a public event like a Google + Hangout. They say it whether they’re talking to the president, a reporter, or a fifth-grader. They say it on every, single, freakin’ question asked! Is there a Department Of That’s A Great Question at NASA? (I rant, but I still love NASA and the astronauts and the scientists, would kill to work with them.)

Item The Fifth: Tomorrow is do-or-die day for Comet ISON as it slingshots around the sun, only 730,000 miles above the solar surface. (For reference, that’s only about three times the distance between the Earth and the moon.) That qualifies it as a “sun grazer” and it will be the point where it’s most likely to shatter into pieces or simply evaporate. The astronomers who have been tracking Comet ISON think it’s big enough to survive and come around the other side toward Earth (it can’t hit us, even if it falls apart, closest approach will be over forty million miles away), which will at least give it a chance to be spectacular in December.

The reports it might be “as bright as the full moon!” are total nonsense and always have been. There have been comets that have been bright enough to be seen in daylight and some early estimates thought Comet ISON had the potential to do it, but now it doesn’t seem that will happen. But for the last week or ten days it has been visible to the naked eye as it approached the sun, and there are some truly spectacular photographs out there on the Internet. Assuming it survives, once it comes around the other side of the sun it will start to be visible before dawn and by mid-December it will have gone far enough north that it will “circumpolar”, which means it will be visible all night long for northern hemisphere viewers. (Sorry, southern hemisphere folks!)

Tomorrow, despite it being Thanksgiving in the US, there will be a lot of astronomers skipping the turkey and monitoring Comet ISON’s progress. You can do it as well online (you can’t see it yourself, it’s right next to the sun, you’ll go blind, use common sense) since NASA will be having a Google + Hangout from 13:00 to 15:30 EST, 10:00 to 12:30 PST. (Perihelion is at 13:25 EST, 10:25 PST.) You can send in questions via Twitter, or you can just watch as the satellite images come down (here‘s the latest one, with Comet ISON approaching the sun from about the 4:00 position) and see what happens.

If you want to know more, there are hundreds of articles and news stories online — I recommend you start here, with Emily Lakdawalla’s excellent live blog on The Planetary Society’s website.

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Filed under Astronomy, Death Of Common Sense, Entertainment, Freakin' Idiots!, Odds & Sods, Ronnie

Tech Support For Mom

I’m pretty tech savvy, which leads to all kinds of “Can you fix my computer?” type questions. It goes with the territory.

Then there’s my mom.

Mom has never been a tech person. Mom has always been a practical joker. This leads to some interesting conversations where I’m never quite sure if she’s pulling my leg, totally clueless, or both. Today would be a good example.

Mom has a satellite TV setup and she wanted to watch all of the KC Chiefs’ football games this year, so she paid for the NFL package. Almost every week this season, I’ve gotten a call asking what channel the game is on. Sometimes it’s because she’s looking for it at 1:00 when the game doesn’t start until 4:00. Or the other way around. Last week the same question, but this time the game was at 8:30. She’s looking for the game on CBS, when it’s on NBC. That sort of thing.

Today I got a call because she wasn’t getting the Chiefs game, seeing a different game instead. Turns out that she was watching the local CBS feed, while the KC/San Diego game was also a “local” game, but for different markets. There was some confusion over this, where it seemed to me that she kept turning it back to the CBS affiliate or to ESPN or to the NFL Network. I kept trying to explain that there should be a whole block of channels, probably up in the higher-numbered pay-per-view and premium channels, where channel N would have Game A, channel N+1 would have Game B, Channel N+2 would have Game C, and so on. She just had to find that block of channels and pick the Chiefs game.

Still no go. She wasn’t understanding what I was describing and didn’t know how to search the listings. (DirecTV does have some sort of search function or directory channel, right?)

I was online and she wasn’t.  (There’s a good reason she wasn’t. Mom doesn’t have a computer, pad, or smartphone. I’m not even sure she has a cell phone. No email, word processing, social media, games, photos — nada! The Internet and Mom are not on speaking terms.) So I pulled up the DirecTV web page and tried to search for her. For the record, at least on an iPad, the DirecTV site sucks when it comes to trying to search for a specific program.

Fine, I had the webpage for display of the channel lineup, current show, and shows for the next two or three hours. We’ll do it the old fashioned way, I’ll just scroll through hundreds and hundreds of channel listings looking for this mysterious NFL block that I knew had to be there. (It’s in the low 700’s.)

In the process of getting there, I’m talking to myself and I’m wondering if DirecTV carries NASA-TV on one of their channels. I’m a huge fan of NASA-TV and when Time-Warner dropped it here a few years ago I did my best to be politely annoying at every opportunity, wondering when they could put it back on and why they had dropped it to begin with. I watch a LOT of NASA-TV. (Still scrolling through the channel listings.)

Mom asks what I’m talking about. I tell her that I was wondering about NASA-TV. “Never heard of it,” Mom says.

“Really? NASA?”

“Never heard of it.”

Okay, maybe I’m not enunciating or we have a bad connection. “NASA, the guys who put people on the moon? The space shuttle?” (Still scrolling through the channel listings.)

“Oh, right, I know them.”

“Okay, they have a channel you can watch that I like.”

“Oh, no,” Mom says, “I have a Samsung.”

Count backwards from ten. Slowly. “No, Mom, I’m not saying NASA makes TVs. I’m saying that they have a channel you can watch with space stuff.”

“Don’t I have DirecTV?”

Again, take a deep breath. Count backwards from ten. Slowly. In German. I’ll (foolishly) try again. (Still scanning the channel lineup.) “No, Mom, DirecTV is the service provider that you pay to get the signal that goes into your Samsung TV. You have a lot of channels on there, like CBS, NBC, ABC, Fox, CNN, ESPN, HBO, and so on, right? NASA-TV is one of those channels.”

“Never heard of them.”

Deep, deep sigh. When working tech support it’s not nice to get frustrated and start yelling at the customers. This is doubly true when the customer is your mother. Fortunately, at this point I found the channel carrying the Chiefs game (#707). Mom changed the channel, found her game, and I was able to get off the phone and take a deep breath.

The Long Suffering Wife came in to watch the game, having missed the conversation with Mom and wondering why I was looking pissed. I started relaying the details. As soon as I got to the “I have a Samsung” line, she starts cracking up. As in, she might fall out of her chair type cracking up. That gets me laughing as I realize how silly the whole conversation was. When I mention the “Don’t I have DirecTV” line, the laughter just gets worse.

An hour or so later my son calls from Germany and we’re talking about the game. I mention the conversation I had with Mom. When I get to those lines, The Long Suffering Wife again starts laughing like crazy, my son is laughing as well, and I’m off the deep end again.

Later on, when I checked with Mom to see if she was okay with me telling this story, she claims that the “I have a Samsung” line was a deliberate joke. Well, she got me good if it was. I fell for it hook, line, and sinker. In my defense, it’s pretty tough to tell the difference between her being confused and her being a prankster.

Wait… Maybe she’s been doing that all along! Maybe this has all been a diabolical plot of hers, a fifty-year performance art piece to “play dumb” and see how long she can keep me falling for it! Decade after decade of her testing me and seeing if she can drive me insane! When I was a teenager I was sure that she was, but now I know it!!

Well done, Mom! Well done!

P.S. — FYI, Mom’s fine with me sharing the story. But she has no idea what a “blog” is. I wasn’t going to open another can of worms. I’ll print out a copy and snail mail it to her. WITH AN ENVELOPE AND A STAMP! (How barbaric.)

P.P.S. — For the record, the DirecTV channel lineup search works just fine on my desktop. Maybe on an iPad there’s an app you’re supposed to use instead of going to their web page.

P.P.P.S. — NASA-TV is on Channel #346 on DirecTV. HEAR THAT, MOM? CHANNEL #346!

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Filed under Entertainment, Family, KC Chiefs, Paul

“Gravity”

A few days ago I mentioned that I was in awe of the trailers coming out for the movie “Gravity”. I had concerns simply because the last time I saw trailers that grabbed me this hard, the movie in question (“Pearl Harbor”) really sucked. I can still taste the betrayal and disappointment.

Today the Long-Suffering Wife and I saw “Gravity” in IMAX 3-D. It was the first time in years that we’ve tried to go see a film on its opening weekend. Especially a movie that could end up being one of the year’s blockbusters. There was a huge crowd, even at the 2:00 afternoon show, so it was also the first time in years that we had stood in line for a movie. Was it worth it all?

Oh. My. God.

I can guarantee you that “Gravity” is no “Pearl Harbor”!

Everything you have heard about “Gravity” is true. It is an incredible feast for the eyes. It is on-the-edge-of-your-seat tense for about eighty-seven of its ninety minutes. It has multiple intricate, amazing, spectacular tracking shots, some of the longest that I’ve ever seen. (The opening scene that establishes the setting and story must be at least fifteen minutes long, one humongous, diving, looping, zooming, roller-coaster like tracking shot.) For many of us, this may be as close as we ever get to really being in low Earth orbit.

Amazingly, during the whole film we only see two actors and a couple of voices on the radio. What you see on the screen is probably more than 95% special effects. But what a job! The special effects are never of the “gee whiz, look what I can do” variety. Instead, they allow a fantastic story to be told that couldn’t be told any other way. The special effects are tools, used like a surgeon’s instruments, not an end unto themselves.

No spoilers from me here — but I will let you know that there aren’t any little treats or “easter eggs” buried in or after the credits. So if the credits start rolling and your bladder is about to explode but there was no freakin’ way you were going to leave during the movie, it’s OK the to start your applause and sprint for the restroom.

If you have the option, I would highly recommend seeing the 3-D version at least once. There is so much depth to “Gravity” that gets brought out in that format. Even better if you’ve got the option, see it in IMAX 3-D. That extra $5 or $6 will be the best money you spend this year. You can thank me later.

Is the movie 100% factually accurate? No, it’s not a documentary. But having said that (and for the record I am a real nit picker when it comes to continuity and stupid, unbelievable crap in movies), the attention to detail and realism in “Gravity” is simply astonishing. I have seen articles, comments, and tweets from a number of astronauts that have said that “Gravity” nails the little details and facts like no movie ever has before. (Later on, after everyone’s seen it, I’ll be happy to do an analysis of the nits to be picked, why I’m willing to ignore the one really huge one, and why the one that bugged me the most is probably one that no one else paid any attention to at all.)

Go see this movie. I command you by all that is good and sacred and holy, you must see this movie. Probably multiple times. Maybe not “Star Wars” kind of multiple times, but more than once, for sure.

(And we also got to see the new trailer for “Ender’s Game”… I’m sure more on that and the debate surrounding it as we get closer to its release date.)

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Good, Funny, & Upbeat (RIGHT!)

Some days…

Let’s not dwell on the negative. There have GOT to be some good, funny, upbeat things today, right? I said, “RIGHT?!”

There’s another incredible new trailer for “Gravity”, opening October 4th, which may be the movie I’ve been most excited about seeing since “The Fellowship Of The Ring” or “Star Wars”. WARNING: Do not read the comments on YouTube! Except for places that strictly moderate the comments, like Whatever or here, you should probably NEVER read the comments, but it goes double for this batch. They are full of bile and hatred from misogynistic trolls and will make you hate a significant portion of your species. Just watch the trailer, it’s amazing.

If you’re on the US east coast on Saturday night, September 7th, about 11:21 PM EDT, between Maine and South Carolina as far inland as Montreal, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, or Winston-Salem (maps here), watch for the LADEE launch out of Wallops Island in Virginia. The closer you are to Virginia the higher and brighter the launch will be, but it’s not that often you get to see something being sent to the moon, so take the chance if you get it.

Today ABC announced the cast of this new season of “Dancing With The Stars” (stay with me, here!) and while it contains the usual assortment of smiley-faced balloon heads who are “famous for being famous”, it also will have Bill Nye the Science Guy.

These truly are interesting times in so, so many ways.

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Filed under Entertainment, Space

Odds & Sods For Monday, September 2nd

Item The First: A couple of times in August I wrote about favorite movies. Another to add to the list, “Iron Giant”. I don’t care how sappy the ending was, I still love it. I know that it belongs on this list because I came across it about a third of the way through the other night and ended up watching the rest of it. I think that was literally my definition of how a movie qualified for that list.

Item The Second: The Hugo Awards ceremony from San Antonio last night was supposed to be live streamed, but there were issues again this year. Last year everything worked fine right up until they started showing “Doctor Who” clips for the Best Dramatic Presentation (Short Form) award, at which point some DRM-bot assumed that they were streaming pirated and copyright protected material and killed the feed. This year they took care of that issue, but apparently had problems with getting the signal out of the hotel and convention center so the feed was offline more than it was on. I think the longest period we watched without it crashing was maybe fifteen minutes.

Disappointing, to say the least. Let’s hope that the folks in London can get a better handle on this, or that I’m in London and can just live-tweet it to folks myself. On the other hand, and to emphasize something that I didn’t make clear yesterday talking about Worldcon, all of these conventions are run by unpaid volunteers, fans who give a LOT of their time, energy, and often money to make things happen so that the rest of us can enjoy the con. I might be disappointed and on occasion I might offer suggestions about changes that could be made to make something run better. I’ve even volunteered to do the work to make things better – the lack of west coast filking is one of the reasons that my friends and I started ConChord. But I won’t be snarky and/or critical. For better or for worse, it’s work being done by volunteers on a shoestring and they’re doing the best that they can.

Item The Third: Despite the problems seeing the Hugo Awards ceremony, I was not displeased by the results of the Hugo voting. John Scalzi won the Best Novel award for “Redshirts: A Novel With Three Codas”, which I liked a great deal. I was very happy to see Stanley Schmidt get the Best Editor (Short Form) award at last, as well as a Lifetime Achievement award from the LoneStarCon 3 committee. I was very happy to see a “Game Of Thrones” episode win the Best Dramatic Presentation (Short Form) award instead of a “Doctor Who” episode. (Sorry, I really like GoT but never got into “Doctor Who”.) It was great to see Seanan McGuire and her cohorts at SF Squeecast win another Hugo for Best Fancast.

Overall I was not terribly unhappy with any of the results. I also noted that creating this blog and getting involved with Twitter has made me much more aware of the range of the nominated works and artists. I hope that this means that next year I will be even more involved and knowledgeable. In other words, expect more books to be read and more reviews to be posted here. You’ve been warned.

Item The Fourth: This afternoon came word that one of the Grand Masters of Science Fiction, Frederik Pohl, passed away today at the age of 93. There’s a detailed obituary on the Locus Magazine site. Mr. Pohl was not just an author, but also a fan, an editor, an agent, and a past president of SFWA. He won Hugo Awards and Nebula Awards for his writing, as well as Hugo Awards for his work as an editor. He wrote volumes of short stories as well as novels, with his career stretching back to the 1940’s.

I’m pretty sure that the first time I ever saw a Hugo Award up close was when I ran into him holding his at that very first convention I went to, Iguanacon II in Phoenix in 1978. He won Best Novel for “Gateway” and I remember him as being very gracious to a very wet-behind-the-ears newbie who wanted to take his picture. He will be missed.

Item The Fifth: In the last hour or so we’ve heard that Time Warner Cable and CBS have decided to mutually declare victory and cancel their particular little multi-national, multi-billion dollar corporate pissing contest that has left us peons (i.e., “customers”) as pawns caught in the middle. I wish that this “inconvenience” to the consumers caused by both sides would mean that both CEOs and management teams would be getting their multi-million dollar salaries and bonuses dinged this year, but who are we kidding?

More importantly, since it’s becoming increasingly clear that we live in an information-based society and the corporations that have monopolies on delivering that information seem to be operating in 100% loose cannon mode, it would be nice to think that the FCC and Congress would do something to prevent this sort of thing from happening again. “Protecting the public trust” and all of that.

Again – who are we kidding?

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Filed under Entertainment, Fandom, Odds & Sods, Science Fiction

Irony Or Spite?

This morning one of our cable boxes died. I tried the standard simple reboot fixes, but it won’t reboot at all. When trying to boot up it says it’s downloading new software, but the process hangs (apparently at the same point every time) and there’s nothing to do except pull the plug and try again.

A call to customer service puts me on hold for over thirty minutes, then the tech is unable to remotely reset the box or access it at all, so I’m told I need a new box. Would I like to schedule an appointment for September 10th or bring it in myself to swap it?

Obviously I’ll bring it in, but they’re closed Sunday and Monday for the holiday, so it’s time to hustle over to their office to get it done today. Of course, being Saturday, there’s the line from hell here, take a number and wait. They were on #84 when I came in forty-five minutes ago, they’re now on #02, and I’m holding #18.

It is what it is. None of that is what I find “amusing”.

Here in the lobby they have a handful of TV’s showing various things, mostly college football games at the moment. But on the main screen they’re showing the US Open tennis coverage.

On CBS.

Me and a few million of my closest friends in New York, Dallas, and Los Angeles can not get CBS in our homes because of the current corporate pissing contest. (Extended rant here.) But they’ve got it on here in the lobby. So, is it on here because:

A) it’s irony. Probably lost on them, but they know there’s a really long line here and a lot of folks are missing this at home and would really like to see it and they’re cutting us a little slack because they’re warm and wonderful people.

B) it’s spite. They just want to make sure that we know that they have it, we want it, they’re not going to let us have it until their ass gets sufficiently kissed, and as long as they have us as a captive audience here in the literal sense as well as the figurative sense, they’re going to take the opportunity to really rub it into our faces.

Yeah. That’s what I thought, too.

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Filed under Entertainment, Freakin' Idiots!