Friday, August 31, 2007

Noted.

On the way to work this morning, I was driving behind a cab that had a "Nixon/Agnew" bumper sticker.

I have no idea what to make of that.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

sorted

I wrote this post this past Sunday, but didn't post it. Not sure why. That how it goes sometimes.

Here's what I wrote:
After having my blog rejected by iTunes I have sought out an alternative, and have now signed up for eMusic. So now, anytime I refer to some music that is available on eMusic, I'll be adding the link.

In the meantime, I'm still going to be downloading all of the free items from iTunes. Just to show them.
iTunes responds by putting up free songs not by the usual obscure up and comers, but by Paul McCartney and Bruce Springsteen.

Shows me.

Hello, seekers of knowledge!

Why is everyone suddenly interested in "fainting goats?"

Monday, August 27, 2007

Breaking Down the Nervous Detectives - a quick bitch

For a while now, I've been wishing that there was some sort of licensing board that arbitrates what constitutes a DVD extra.

Subtitles are not DVD Extras.

Interactive Menus are not DVD Extras.

Listed on the Jason King box: "Jason King is presented in its original 1.33:1 aspect ratio"

Frequent visitors to this site will know that I tend to veer away from hyperbole, and I hope that readers will take that into account when they read the next sentence. The person who thought it was necessary to put "Jason King is presented in its original 1.33:1 aspect ratio" on the box as a selling point deserves to be shot in the head.

Breaking Down the Nervous Detectives - An opportunity arises!


About a month ago, I was skimming a message board someplace when I saw someone mention a new release of Jason King on DVD. Part of the message was a "pity I'm in the wrong region, I can't get this" lament, so I figured that it was out in the UK, and with the dollar the way the dollar is, it would likely be way too expensive for me.

I should have looked closer - turns out it's an American release.

It arrived today. I have just watched the first seven minutes of episode one. I think I'm going to have a lot to say about this.

Goodbye Beasthouse

I only just added Lawrence Miles' "The Beasthouse" to my list of links (I'd thought I'd done it ages ago but just noticed last week that I really had not), so naturally he decided to put a note up saying he was going to take the site down.

The last couple of posts have been humongous affairs, alternately bitingly funny and majestically thought-provoking. I'm going to miss the thing while it's gone (I suspect that it or something like it will pop up sooner or later). Here's a sample to entice you into having a quick (or not so quick) look:
I'm told that Sir Richard Francis Burton, nineteenth-century explorer and sexual experimentalist of repute, spoke twenty-nine languages. How good at a language do you have to be before you're said to "speak" it, I wonder? For example, I wouldn't truthfully say that much of the population of Feltham actually speaks English, even though they're capable of understanding some of it. The ability to shout "Happy Meal" can't really be called a vocabulary, as such. Burton may well have been familiar with twenty-nine languages, but did he speak some of them "just a bit" rather than with any degree of elan? Is your ability to speak a language measured by the context, or by some all-purpose yardstick? Because under the right conditions, I too could be said to have a working knowledge of any number of dialects. I know two really good words in Russian, "svetafor" (traffic light) and "precrassny" (pretty). Should I ever be queried about an attractive traffic light, or should a Russian girl ever ask me how she looks in her fetching new red hat, yellow jumper and green skirt ensemble, I might accurately be described as being able to speak Russian. Just not in any other circumstances.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

a little more about truth

Here is a site dedicated to scans of inscriptions found in books. It's sort of a cross between Post-secret and Found.

As I was poking my way through the site, I was particularly struck by an inscription from an old copy of Watership Down (US,UK) split up into two parts. A letter from a father to a daughter after three months of bedtime readings.

At first, I found this extraordinarily depressing. As the letter was dated in 2004, I had assumed that the book and the letter in it was found somewhere - a used book store or garage sale or something. Because of that, I had presumed that something particularly awful had happened, and the daughter would never see this note.

Then I read the caption to the first part a little closer, and realized that it was submitted by the father and that everything seems to be alright. Which makes me feel better. The idea that there are still children out there who are being raised to love books this much gives me more hope than I've had in quite a while.

The father signed his name and I tried Googling it, to see if I could find out more about him. I found my way to this site about the history of "Froggy Went a-Courtin'." This seems to be the same sensibility, but I'm not sure if it is the same person. It is, nevertheless, the sort of project the internet was built for.

Monday, August 20, 2007

The Estate of Robert E Howard takes a moment to clarify things

I post this in its entirety. It is impossible to summarize without losing the joy:

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Clarification regarding the character Red Sonya

To All Conan and Robert E. Howard Fans and Licensees:

It has come to our attention that there may be some Conan and Robert E. Howard fans or licensees who could be confused about the origins and ownership of Red Sonya (with a “y”) and Red Sonja (with a “j”) and their relationship to Hyboria. We don’t believe that there should be any such confusion and would like to do all that we can to clear up any that might exist.

The Red Sonya (with a “y”) character was created in 1934 by Robert E. Howard. Howard’s Red Sonya of Rogatino first appeared in the Howard story The Shadow of the Vulture. She was a 16th century Russian woman fighter who participated in the battle against the Turks in Vienna. She had absolutely nothing to do with Conan, or the Conan world of Hyboria.

The Red Sonja (with a “j”) character was created by Roy Thomas in 1974 and was set in Conan’s Hyborian Age. This Red Sonja was the heroine of the 1985 Film entitled Red Sonja and is featured in the current Dynamite Comic books.

Ownership of all Robert E. Howard characters, including Conan®, Kull®, Bran Mak Morn™, and Red Sonya™ (with a “y”) was acquired by either Paradox Entertainment, Inc. or by its affiliated company, Conan Properties International LLC, from the various entities which held the rights to the Howard characters and the derivative characters created over the years by such licensees as Marvel.

Red Sonja® (with a “j”) is owned by Red Sonja LLC which is not affiliated with either Paradox Entertainment, Inc., or Conan Properties International LLC.

Conan Properties International and Paradox Entertainment, Inc. own the copyrights and trademarks to the Robert E. Howard world of Hyboria™. Red Sonja LLC is a licensee of Paradox Entertainment, Inc. and Conan Properties International LLC and has been granted the non-exclusive right to use the Hyboria world and setting as the home for its Red Sonja character, but only in that context, as long as there is no use of the Conan character in connection with any use by Red Sonja LLC of its Red Sonja character.

At the moment neither Paradox Entertainment, Inc., nor Conan Properties International, LLC has any intention of using the Red Sonya (with a “y”) character in any stories set in Hyboria, or otherwise, nor has it granted any of its licensees permission to use the Red Sonya character. Anyone desiring to use the character Red Sonja® should observe the trademark of Red Sonja LLC in this respect and contact them.

If there is any remaining confusion about this issue, please bring it to our attention so that we may clear it up.

Breaking Down the Nervous Detectives - Next Time Won't You Play With Me?

Z-Cars - "Happy Families" March 18, 1964

I'll Get the the meat of the episode in a moment, but first I have to tackle a question. And before I can do that, I have to tackle a different question.

Why do Americans say "zee" and Brits say "zed?"

Good question.

It turns out that long ago, as written English was being put into rules, the letter "Z" was one of the last ones to be recognised as a separate letter. The prevailing theory seems to be that the symbols were invented to correspond to the sound, and the actual names of the symbols came later. For "Z" there seems to have once been three popular possibilities: "zee," "zed" and "izzard."

"Izzard" seems to have gone out of fashion entirely. (Fans of Harry Stephen Keeler will recognise it - he likes to use the phrase "A to Izzard" most likely due to the oddness and the obscurity of it.) (I also like to think that there's an alternate universe somewhere where there's a cross-dressing stand-up comedian named Eddie Zed.)

So anyway, we're left with "zee" and "zed." It seems that for a while "zed" was the favorite on both sides of the Atlantic until American schoolchildren were given the dubious gift of the "ABC" song ("Now I know my ABC's/Next time won't you play with me?"). You see, "zed" doesn't fit the rhyme scheme and "zee" does.


The next thing to clear up:

What the heck is a Z-Car?

Good Question.

An interesting subset of the study of car design is the design of cars that are preferred by people in positions of authority. Frequently one variety of car becomes the default symbol of upper government and law enforcement. Examples of this are the American Crown Victoria, the Soviet Volga and in the UK, the Ford Zephyr. (The luxury variant of the Zephyr was the Zodiac - I infer that the Zodiac was used for the higher ranks, in the same way that the Crown Vics have a police standard (The "P7" or "Interceptor") and officials use the civilian (luxury) model.)

Now, to business.

Z-Cars ran for sixteen years and clocked in at 667 episodes. It seems to have been one of those things that (if half the episodes hadn't been destroyed) one could just watch episode after episode spotting actors that were better known from somewhere else.

So, as an example, here we can see Brian Blessed starting out as one of the series regulars, before he grew a beard and started doing that thing where he opens his mouth really wide and goes "arrrrrgh" for no apparent reason.

I've already hit two shows that promised on their debut that they would be more gritty and realistic (and by extension, truthy). Here we have the granddaddy of the phenomenon (at least on UK television.

The nature of this episode's grit? Looks like a kid has come into a handful of naughty pics, and his mother has decided that now that the child has looked at, well, whatever he's supposed to have looked at, his brain is fried, he is now a criminal, call the police and lock him up for the good of society.



I suspect that this particular episode was trotted out for a recent repeat because it was more of a curio, than an example of the show at its best.

Now you have the song virus

Careful with this, it might stick in your head forever.

Coming in just a bit


I'm still slowly writing up the Police concert.

I've put all the photos that aren't rubbish on flickr.

It's all crowd shots (Damn those Police and their insistence on moving around). It was my first non-ballgame at Fenway, so I was struck by how other-worldly it all seemed.

More later

Sunday, August 19, 2007

OK. So what *is* Plan B?

Frequent readers will have noticed that I sometimes attempt to add value to my posts by putting links to my Amazon stores in my posts (US UK).

I noticed that some other folks had links to iTunes as well, so if I were to mention a song or an album that was sold on iTunes, I could add a link that way and get some iTunes store credit.

So I went through the process of setting this up.

In response I get an e-mail that starts:
We regret to inform you that Apple iTunes has chosen not to accept
you into their affiliate program.
And goes nowhere from there.

I unpacked my first Apple Computer in the summer of 1979, and (apart from work where I've had little choice) have used nothing else up to the present day.

Thanks Guys. Tell me when I'm good enough for you.

Here's a fun game



Originally uploaded by Frappet
Play along with the Name That Film flickr pool.

Helpful hints

Here are two of the new channel ID's that have started running on BBCAmerica:



Friday, August 17, 2007

Listening to the World - Angola

The pattern that has emerged in the process of doing these posts is this:
  1. I start looking at my next country.
  2. I find some radio stations on the internet.
  3. I fail to connect to the radio stations.
  4. I write a draft of the post explaining how I was unable to listen to the radio station in question.
  5. Just before posting, I double check the links.
  6. In the process of double checking, I find a way to connect to the radio station.
  7. I chuck the post and start over.
This is the link to Angola's Radio Luanda, which seems to be Radio Angola's music station. The live feed will not load for me, but you can click on the link labeled "Oiça as músicas que estão no top" (Angola's "official" language is Portuguese) to get a nifty mp3 of excerpts of all the songs in their top ten countdown. I venture a guess that all the songs are from local artists. Which makes my inability to log in all the more frustrating.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Buying the New Yorker 1976 - page 43


The Westin Peachtree Plaza is now the 11th tallest hotel in the world. (The tallest is the Rose Rotana Suites/Rose Tower in Dubai)

It was the tallest in 1976, the year it was built. In 1977 it was surpassed by the Detroit Marriott, which was one meter taller.

It must have been nice while it lasted.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Technology works for you.

Let us suppose that you are attending a rock concert.

The band is rocking and you want to give them positive reinforcement and perhaps request them to play "Freebird."

Unfortunately, this being the twenty-first century, smoking is banned, so you do not have your handy concert-modified Bic Lighter.

Well, if you have an iPhone, just bookmark this link. When the time is right, click it and wave your iPhone aloft. Problem solved.

I suppose I ought to mention

Today is my two-year bloggaversary!

I suppose that's what one calls it.

Listening to the World - Andorra

Before I commence with the latest installment, a question.

What is the word for those goofy sound effects that seem to be present on every single music radio station on the planet? The things that go:
Important Voice: "You are listening to Radio Example" Neeeeeeeee-- Yooooowwwwww Clud Clud Clud Clud "All Hit Radio."
Or:
Stern Female Voice: "It it two minutes past the hour." Bink-dink-a-dink diddly dink "Time for News Update." Bink-dink-a-dink diddly dink "With Chet Example." Bink-dink-a-dink diddly dink.
I'm curious about how these things have come to be so ubiquitous and so similar.

Anyway, to business.

The Principality of Andorra is a small pseudo-independent country (While it is an independent nation, the title of "Co-Prince" is given simultaneously to the current Prime Minister of France and the current Bishop of Urgell. I love crap like this! I want to go there now!) occupying a hunk of the Pyrenees between France and Spain.

The language spoken there is Catalan. I'd always presumed that Catalan was a close sub-dialect of Spanish. I was wrong. It seems to be more related to Portuguese than anything, but I do hear a bit of French rattling around in it.

I've been beating my head against this site for a while and had found loading the radio feed was impossible. But then I found my way to this site which has the correct feed.

You will notice that the station (94.2 FM) is listed as being "local music."

Local music in Andorra is nuts.

I'd put about 20 per cent tops as "local music" although for all I know the songs that seem local are from France and Spain. The rest is what I am forced to call "eclectic."

I hate to use the term "eclectic" because it has come to imply a sort of willful effort to go digging for rare and obscure nuggets that the presenter is delighted for the opportunity to share with an audience that will appreciate the musical nuances of the juxtapositions created when one track follows another of a seemingly unrelated style.

This station might be doing that. Or it might be just some guy in the control room throwing tapes in the machine at random. My favorite moment was when I heard Popcorn followed by the Fine Young Cannibals followed by someone covering The Crash Test Dummies on pan-pipes. Did someone sit down and come up with that, or was it just a fluke? I can't decide. I love that.

Breaking Down the Nervous Detectives - Two for the road

The Persuaders! - "The Old, the New, and the Deadly" - November 12, 1971

Ages ago, when people discovered that I had a hobby of accumulating British television, I always seemed to have the same reaction from males born between about 1957 and 1962.

"Do you have The Persuaders!? I loved that show!"

My response: "No."


I came to learn that The Persuaders! were Tony Curtis and Roger Moore as millionaire playboys who fight crime. It sounded like a jolly romp, but not anything I wanted to work terribly hard at getting a copy of, no matter how many party acquaintances were interested in a nostalgia trip.

So when my Tivo informed me that The Persuaders! was on BBCAmerica, I hit the little thumbs up button and waited. The episode that came my way was one that the Tivo likely picked out because I have Doctor Who thumbed up - the villain is played by Patrick Troughton.

I am now going to say something awful that I realized as I watched this episode. Something that I think will cause me to be shunned by the old school Doctor Who fen that I used to run with.

I don't think that Troughton was all that good with the dialects.

The story as I tried to follow it is this.

Danny (Tony Curtis) is believed to be in possession of a Nazi artifact. He is in fact, not. His ex-girlfriend is the one who has brought it with her on her honeymoon. Nasty Former Nazi (Patrick Troughton) sees the artifact is (not really) in Danny's possession and sends his henchmen after it. Hilarity ensues.

The punch line comes when the henchmen - after a few of their number have been arrested and/or killed discover that NFN was not after the Nazi artifact because it was incriminating to him (as they believed), but because NFN thought that Hitler was teh hunky and wanted to snuggle with it. So the henchmen shoot him themselves.

Much of the commentary on the show seems to come from the question of how much Curtis and Moore actually got along with each other, followed by just how drunk they actually were on set. It's hard to find a definitive answer to this other than to point you to a recent photo of the two of them at a function somewhere:



I understand and wish to continue

These last few months I have been kicking around the idea of starting back on the blogging train.  It hasn’t been much of an idea, but never...