Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Party Down just got canceled. I'm not sure how it would've fared with Adam Scott moving to Parks & Rec, but still sad to see it go. But, I guess at this point with me, cancellation is pretty much the true mark of a top-tier comedy show. I can't think of any that weren't canceled (Mr. Show, Arrested Development, Home Movies) or beset by tragedy or cast turnover enough to force cancellation (Newsradio), so I guess it's something of a validation. Still, what a great show. If you haven't seen it, I can't recommend it enough.
Thursday, October 08, 2009
Anyway, a lot of the time it's because I'm sure these are points you might have felt, or stories you don't feel like revisiting, or that my own take on it isn't all that astute. Right now, one of the 6-7 books on my coffee table is a book of George Orwell's essays, which are both comforting and embarrassing to read, when I consider the crap dredge that gets thrown up on this thing. Because while I don't post a lot of things out of fear of appearing a self-important literary windbag, George Orwell manages to write these things in such an approachable, hospitable way that it leaves me dumbstruck.
But this is neither here nor there. Because I'm not writing about anything today that's critically adored or obscure. I'm not even writing about something that's all that unpopular. I'm referring, of course, to The Rockford Files, which aired on NBC from 1974-80. It's a show I never really watched as a kid, probably because it was off the air when I was 2, and unlike Columbo, I don't remember all that many reruns peppering the airways.
Jim Rockford fits some of the noir-ish standards for a detective. He's almost always at odds with the cops, he has a shady past (including a stint in prison as an innocent man), and he's got a real smart mouth that gets him into trouble. He's poor, and his home is a dilapidated trailer outside of LA on the Pacific Coast highway. Oh, and he seems to end up banging half of his female clientele.
He's still not quite noir, though. He generally avoids a fight, and almost never carries a gun (he keeps it in his coffee pot to avoid rust form the salt air!). He's a lot more genuine in his concern for clients than Marlowe ever would've been, and he often will end up working for free or at a reduced rate if he has to. Oh, and his dad is around all the time. I really like this last part, because his dad is a cheap old drunk who wants him to get out of the private eye racket. Oh, and unlike a lot of the old stories, Rockford isn't wearing a fedora and trenchcoat. If anything, he dresses cheap and garishly, which is to say, normal for the Seventies.
So why do I like this stuff? Why is it that after a decade of reading detective fiction and watching all those old black and whites that I find myself enamored with this program? A couple things. One is James Garner. There's just something about him that you want to root for. Ever since I was a kid and saw him as Hendley the scrounger in The Great Escape, I've enjoyed that guy. I remember going through a Maverick phase at some point, too. There's also the time period. One of the reasons that the seventies work so well for crime/detective stories, is because it's the last really good time frame for this type of story. I guess the Eighties might work as well, but something about that decade I find hard to take seriously. Maybe it would have to be all about drugs, or funny hairstyles.
But anyone my age or younger will view this show as impossible. There's no way that someone could get away with some of the things that go on here. Part of it is technology, part of it is people wising up to giving personal information out, etc... To write a good detective story set in the last ten years is to write... I dunno, to write like Ed Burns and David Simon.
The bottom line is that I'm amazed how much I enjoy a network TV show that's older than I am and isn't hosted by Rod Serling. It's a testament to our pop culture. But the best part is that you can go watch this for free right now. There are at least 3 seasons up on Hulu, and the entire run of the series is up on Netflix. So go check it out if you're bored one night and watching some shitty celebrity dance show. Seriously, you can do better than that. If you don't watch TV, hey, more power to you. But I know most of you do, and watch some pretty appalling stuff. Just my 2 cents. This show has car chases! Non-Italian mob bosses! Pretty ladies! Awesome celebrity cameos (so far, Abe Vigoda, a young James Woods, Bill Mumy, Strother Martin, Ned Beatty, Lindsay Wagner, etc...), oh and one of the best theme songs EVER.
if you haven't seen it yet, go watch an episode. It's been making my week.
Friday, July 17, 2009
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Triumph at Bonnaroo
I don't think I've mentioned how great Conan has been since the switch, but it's not like I have to. Nothing's changed, really, except he has higher profile guests than before. It's been a long bumpy road since the monorail episode of the Simpsons, but he hasn't skipped a beat. Go Conan.
Pt. 1 is over at the NBA site.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009

So, I wanted to post some stuff about Alex Andreev's art the other day when I first saw it, but seeing that I don't speak Russian, I found his website somewhat tricky to manage. Obviously, this is a stupid reason not to at least superficially explore a website, but then my computer hasn't dealt well lately with flashy websites, especially since the Flinstonesian bird living in it died of heatstroke a few weeks ago.
Of course, he has a page on Livejournal that I didn't know about until I came across it on English Russia this evening. He refers to his art as Hermetic (is this to say that it is entirely uninfluenced? I'm not so sure...), and it might well be. But that doesn't matter, because much of it is absolutely stunning. Airplanes weaving through massive pillars that shooy skyward from the cloudline. Cloud cities. A few where boxcars are suspended by a thin strand of cable. The imagery presented here is gorgeous, and shows more premise than most of the movies being made today.

so yeah, there's something pretty to look at. I should try to use one of those websites to translate what he says on his page about these things, but I kind of like the mystery attached to them either way. Click one of the links above or check out some more here.
and while I hate to cram two great artists into one puny thread (in a time where my posting is scant at best, I should really be milking this into two threads), I also hate to post twice in a row from the same website. Had I more time for browsing, I could've at least spaced these a few days apart, but this is what happens when I have to catch up on several weeks of my favorite sites in a sitting.
Anyway, there's a beautiful set up there of a series of pictures taken from a rooftop at dawn in St. Petersburg. I think many of these were treated with HDR, and maybe some other effects, but my favorites might be the ones that aren't touched at all.

I dunno, that's how I see it, anyway. See the rest of the set here.
Well, I'm off to watch one of my favorite episodes of the West Wing** and hopefully drift off to sleep soon after. Maybe I'll have something fun to write tomorrow when I'm done with my work?
*I was thinking at first that this term might seem offensive (I spend a lot more time thinking about that crap than you'd think while writing this. Or anything, for that matter), but then realized I would totally refer to myself in that way, so fuck it.
**I'm just starting this. Or at least I did a few momths ago, got through season 1, loved it, and now I'm watching it again to catch Carrie up. So far it's one of my favorite shows ever (I was seriously considering trying to get whatever friends I have that never watched it to start up a long-distance viewing TV club, but logistics somehow brought this down before it started), but I'm stuck a hell of a cliffhanger so I really wanna get the rest of this season out of the way.
If anyone wants to start watching this show now, I'm not going to hit season 2 for another couple of weeks. Think about how fun it would be, watch an episode or two a week, and comment about it! I'll start another blog for it! a ten year old sitcom that is one of the most watched shows ever! Ten years later!
okay, I'm going to bed... man, this post is all over the place....
Tuesday, March 03, 2009
"Sex Cauldron? I thought they closed that place down!"
Note: If I ever become a brainwashed sleeper agent who has a trigger phrase to remotely activate them, I want mine to be "They should call this book Johnny Deformed!"
Great. Now I'm seriously considering watching all of the Swartzwelder episodes in a row.
Note: If I ever become a brainwashed sleeper agent who has a trigger phrase to remotely activate them, I want mine to be "They should call this book Johnny Deformed!"
Great. Now I'm seriously considering watching all of the Swartzwelder episodes in a row.
Thursday, February 12, 2009

Fred Rogers happens to be one of those people. Like everyone else raised between 1968 and 2001 (!), I grew up watching Fred on PBS and loving it. Like everyone else, I got older and started watching other stuff and forgot about the show. I'm sure that on a very base level, that man taught me all sorts of things that I was taking for granted a few months later. The impact a show like his must have on a nascent mind is unfathomable. But I digress.
By the time I went to college, I had all but forgotten about Mr. Rogers. I didn't have kids and spent most of my time watching horror movies and smoking pot, so there really wasn't much I'd get out of his show. But what I didn't know is that he was from Pittsburgh. That he still lived in Pittsburgh, did the show there at WQED, and was something of a patron saint of the 'burgh. He wasn't forgotten there the way he had been in my mind. He was on street murals, and his portrait adorned restaurants. So, being in a new city and trying to get my bearings, I did what I always do; I went to the library.
Of course, my superficial research yielded a few results, but what I mostly took away from it was that he a)was an ordained Presbyterian minister, b)he was instrumental in the development/legalization of the VCR, and c)this guy was loved by everyone that ever met him. He was a minister? Despite his show definitely feeling like the church workshops I'd attended as a small child (namely lots of felt and sweaters), I'd never remembered him to be all that pious. After going back and looking, there are certainly elements of faith, but never anything substantial. Perhaps my upbringing was of that era when it was still overlooked. I don't know. But it still made me happy my parents had a resource like Fred to park me in front of when they could. There isn't much I could consider to be mandatory viewing to the general populace, despite what I'd like to foist unto the unsuspecting eyes of this world. But I could consider Mister Rogers' Neighborhood.
Of course I forgot about a lot of it. When he died in 2003, I wished I could've been back in Pittsburgh to attend some sort of memorial. I thought about him for a few days and it passed. Yesterday, though, I listened to a podcast all about him and I was reminded once again how special that guy truly was. I'm sure it'll sink back down into the clouds of my memory, but before it does I could share the podcast with anyone who wasn't as familiar with his story. So here you go. There's plenty of great stories and remembrances of the man here.
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Things I like in life:

The Sandbaggers
I'm going to write more about this later (i.e. when I'm finished watching the complete series), but at the moment I'm blown away by how good this show is. Look into it if you ever get the chance. Or buy me the DVDs, because those things are EXPENSIVE or outta print or something.
Okay, I get it that comic cons are now viable outlets of nerd passion/fashion, but honestly I don't need to see these people on TV. I don't need 200 cosplay updates, and it's impressive that the Princess Leia bikini is still getting mileage, but I don't care.
I read comic books. I talk about them, a lot. As the target demographic for these media updates, they are just making me hate TV. STOP.
Please don't make me hate TV.
(I'm sure that not many people feel as bombarded with this stuff as I do, but here we are)
I read comic books. I talk about them, a lot. As the target demographic for these media updates, they are just making me hate TV. STOP.
Please don't make me hate TV.
(I'm sure that not many people feel as bombarded with this stuff as I do, but here we are)
Monday, February 09, 2009
I had no idea that the Grammys were last night. I can't remember the last time I watched them, but I was probably in high school. I could go on here about how the expansion and ensuing collapse of the music industry coupled with the advent of the internet critic and disappearing radio formats have reduced this and truly all other awards ceremonies into a self-congratulatory farce, but I'm tired from other stuff at the moment, so I'll just say that I don't watch the Grammys because they're dumb. But...
BUT...
I find it interesting that the biggest story of the Grammys last night is who was NOT there. Hey Chris Brown, subtle, man.
Also, Robert Plant apparently looks even more like a mummy than the last time I saw him.
BUT...
I find it interesting that the biggest story of the Grammys last night is who was NOT there. Hey Chris Brown, subtle, man.
Also, Robert Plant apparently looks even more like a mummy than the last time I saw him.
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Since I know for a fact that I'm the only one here watching Battlestar Galactica, I've done you the favor of presenting to you my audible responses to the new episode tonight, the beginning of the end of the series:
"So they're space hobos. On planet Earth. Wait, why am I still watching this?"
.
.
"Oh, well that's really nice, to -OH MY GOD WHAT THE HELL? OOOOOH WHY?"
.
.
"Where did all those fistfights come from?"
.
.
.
"Wait, so he's making it with a robot now?"
.
.
"Seriously. where do they keep getting all this booze in space?"
.
.
"this is aggressive and disturbing."
.
.
"I need to know about this. Are they drinking space gasoline? It looks like scotch or something, but I cannot see any way how they could distill in that environment. Plus, these guys are all too drunk to gather the ingredients."
.
.
"oh yeah, these two."
.
.
"I'm trying to think of another show that's as depressing as this one. M*A*S*H? Mama's Family?
.
.
"Even in the future, an eyepatch is an eyepatch".
.
.
"There is absolutely no way that we see this happening in this show"
"So they're space hobos. On planet Earth. Wait, why am I still watching this?"
.
.
"Oh, well that's really nice, to -OH MY GOD WHAT THE HELL? OOOOOH WHY?"
.
.
"Where did all those fistfights come from?"
.
.
.
"Wait, so he's making it with a robot now?"
.
.
"Seriously. where do they keep getting all this booze in space?"
.
.
"this is aggressive and disturbing."
.
.
"I need to know about this. Are they drinking space gasoline? It looks like scotch or something, but I cannot see any way how they could distill in that environment. Plus, these guys are all too drunk to gather the ingredients."
.
.
"oh yeah, these two."
.
.
"I'm trying to think of another show that's as depressing as this one. M*A*S*H? Mama's Family?
.
.
"Even in the future, an eyepatch is an eyepatch".
.
.
"There is absolutely no way that we see this happening in this show"
So there you go.
Monday, December 29, 2008

It's gonna be a pretty sparse week around here, but I did want to point out that Eartha Kitt died. In addition to being the best Catwoman ever, she was an outspoken activist and general world-shaker. She will be missed.
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Friday, December 19, 2008
Stephen Chow No Longer Directing Green Hornet

But I have to admit that I was hesitant to see Stephen Chow direct it. I've thoroughly enjoyed every one of his movies I've seen, from God of Cookery to Kung Fu Hustle (still dragging my feet on CJ7 for some reason). But I'm not sure I'd understand how he'd fit with a project like this. I guess he isn't sure anymore, either. He's still playing Kato, which I'm sure he's doing solely as homage to Bruce Lee, who really made his reputation in this country in the mask.
So, I guess this is my roundabout way of saying I have no clue what's going on with this movie. I'm sure I'll see it, hell, I'll probably even like it. Comedy + Action is tough to pull off well, especially when you're writing and acting. That was one of the bonuses of having Chow direct this. I mean, there's a strong chance that this movie could be the next Casino Royale (obviously I mean the Woody Allen one and not the one with the hilarious ball torture scene). Wait, Edgar Wright is still busy doing that Scott Pilgrim movie, right? Goddamn I hope that's funny. Later, though, he's doing Ant-Man, which could very well herald a return of the comedy superhero movie.
holy shit. They're going to remake Greatest American Hero, aren't they? Mark my words, in 5 years, this there will be a development deal on this.
I scare myself sometimes with my chilling prophecies.
Edit: That's really, really green. It was probably time for a change anyway.
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
V: not over yet?

and yes, I'm painfully aware of how stupid this looks. But as a near-avid watcher of Battlestar Galactica remake, I will give this the benefit of the doubt until I see it. or at least until I see screen shots of how shoddy the production values are. I wish they'd keep the old uniforms, lizard molds, and spaceships*, but something tells me they're gonna have to mess with a good thing.
*I remember the transport ships from V looking uncannily like the old McDonald's McNugget styrofoam containers. So much so that I think I used to use one for that purpose for my action figures as a kid. Man, I should really keep stuff like that to myself.
Monday, October 06, 2008
#1 at the box office this weekend? Beverly Hills Chihuahua.
Which has me wondering if this is merely stupid people that attended the movies this weekend, or worse, stupid parents.
Either way, this is pretty depressing news.
(fortunately, more people probably saw SNL this week than that terrible movie)
Which has me wondering if this is merely stupid people that attended the movies this weekend, or worse, stupid parents.
Either way, this is pretty depressing news.
(fortunately, more people probably saw SNL this week than that terrible movie)
Wednesday, October 01, 2008

40% vocabulary words + 20% cold medicine + 15% geometrical equations + 10% considering the sludge that would ooze out of my brain after self-trepanation with a leftover chopstick. oh and 15% phlegm. Sorry.

This might be the delirium, but I'm nearly certain I just heard Bob Odenkirk doing the voiceover for an Outback commercial. Can't we give him better work than this, people?
and since I'm not watching enough TV right now* I have to say I'm super excited for this HBO series starring Danny McBride. I can do without a remake of Land of the Lost, though.
*I'm not really watching that much TV at all. I tried to watch Pushing Daisies tonight, but I got distracted and studied instead. I basically am stuck on Thursday and Sunday TV until Lost comes back in mid-2010.
Tuesday, September 23, 2008

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