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Alexander

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Posts posted by Alexander

  1. I honestly do not understand the complaints about the streaming choices on Netflix. I have over 350 items in my streaming queue. They have TONS of wonderful foreign films, lots of classic Hollywood, TV series that I wouldn't see otherwise (as I don't currently have cable or even regular broadcast television), lots and lots of documentaries...

    I'm not saying they couldn't offer more. I'm sure they don't because of licensing issues with the content providers. The problems that Netflix is having, by the way, come from the fact that they are (as were the video stores that Netflix replaced) a middle man, and the streaming techology is so cheap that content providers can bypass the middle men and get straight to the consumer. One way Netflix could combat this would be to start providing original content of their own. This is essentially the same thing that basic cable networks had to do: For a long time basic cable channels like AMC and TNT showed nothing but movies and reruns. Over time, they were forced to create their own original content in order to stay in the game. I see a future where traditional commerical and even cable TV will be a thing of the past. NBC, ABC, CBS and FOX will become streaming channels that make all of their content available all the time. New episodes can be added weekly, just like today, but we won't all sit down at 8 PM to watch the Simpsons, or even set the TiVO to record it.

    Netflix has to keep up with the changes it has unleashed or perish, but the concept of Netflix (subscriber based streaming entertainment) is the future of entertainment.

  2. I've read some persuasive arguments to the effect that the precise reason that something is taboo (e.g., cannibalism, incest) is because it is/was so tempting to people. We seem to think that our aversion to eating human flesh is a part of the natural order of things. Not so, according to modern social science. Rather, our aversion is cultural. We say that it is wrong and unnatural precisely because, once upon a time, it was something we did quite often.

    I've heard tell that human tastes not like chicken, but rather like pork. This is the reason that some Australian aboriginal tribes referred to human meat as "long pig." It's the other, other, white meat...

  3. Johnny-Come-Lately that I am, I only recently started watching via Netflix. I am absolutely in LOVE with this show. The writing is top notch, the acting is consistantly excellent (to me, the actress who plays Betty (January something?) is the weakest actor in the cast, although her look is amazing, and she seems to warm up over the course of the first season), the set and costume design are spectacular...

    I just started season two (love Kinsey's Wellesian beard) and am really digging it. One thing that I haven't seen discussed a lot is the way the show really digs into the major themes and tropes of the period. One of the things I love about Don Draper is that he literally IS the "superflulous man": The hard working, post-war American male who is constantly in crisis over his identity; always suspecting that there's something more than the Eisenhower era American Dream he'd worked so hard to attain. Literally every protagonist on "The Twilight Zone" is an example of this character. Don has so much invested in appearing to be in control that he's always two steps from losing control completely. His "identity crisis" on the series (the fact that he really is NOT the man he appears to be) mirrors the more general identity crisis of his peers. ALL of these characters are in the process of inventing themselves, or at least attempting to do so. Don isn't the only imposter, so to speak. If anything, his impostiture makes him one of the most paradoxically honest characters on the series. At least Don knows exactly what he's running from. I think this is why Bert Cooper didn't give a shit when Pete tried to expose Don.

    So, yeah. Meaty stuff! Food for thought, as well as entertainment.

  4. Going back a bit in this thread, somebody brought up the question of why celebrity kills so many, and someone else stated that "it isn't the celebrity that kills, it's the disease."

    I would agree with that, for the most part. However, celebrity is a factor in several ways. People are less inclined to say "no" to a famous person with money to burn. That's why Elvis Presley was able to abuse prescription drugs the way he did. What doctor was going to refuse to write Elvis a prescription for sleeping pills or laxatives? It's why Michael Jackson was able to have plastic surgery until his face fell off. When a person gets famous, there are more opportunities to abuse, and fewer people willing to stick their necks out and try to intervene...

  5. I remember once looking for a Blind Lemon Jefferson album. There was a hole in the section, right where the CD was supposed to be, but the CD wasn't there. I looked through all of the discs I had out (I keep a pile of "to listen" CDs on one of the speakers at all time), but it wasn't among them. I began to have paranoid fantasies that someone had actually stolen it, before I decided to methodically go through my entire collection - disc by disc - to make sure that it hadn't been misfiled. Sure enough, there it was...in the 'L's...under "Lemon" rather than in the 'J's under "Jefferson." A completely wasted afternoon. But at least I found it!

  6. I've been on anti-depressants since 2003. Glad to say that I've had no problems (a few of the usual side effects some years ago, but nothing disabling by any stretch of the imagination. No side effects whatever in recent years). I'm certainly glad to hear that things have improved for you, Shawn. However, I'm not inclined to throw the baby out with the bathwater. Eight years ago, I was experiencing severe depression, crippling anxiety, suicidal thoughts, and impulses to self-harm. Today, I'm a far, far healthier individual. I've managed to navigate a bout of un/under-employment and a divorce, something that would have been completely impossible before I was on medication. I've also taken chances that I would have been afraid to take before, resulting in a part-time acting career.

    So, it's great that you discovered that the meds you were taking weren't for you, and that you got off of them. However, I don't want to see your experience generalized to include everybody on anti-depressants. Drugs help a LOT of people lead normal lives. Just because you weren't one of them, that doesn't mean they don't work.

  7. Yep. They had some of the top songwriters and studio musicians in the biz making some great sounding records. It's only the hang up over "authenticity" that turned listeners against them for such a long time. And, as I noted above, the Monkees themselves had no pretensions to authenticity. They were actors hired to PLAY a band on a TV show. It wasn't until they were marketed as a band, and subsequently forced to play as a band, that they actually BECAME one. I was pleasantly surprised to learn that much of the music they wrote, played, and produced themselves was on par with the material produced for them...

  8. I remember once reading that Mike Nesmith became EXTREMELY irate when he learned that the music recorded for the first few episodes of the show was to be released as individual singles as though by an actual band, rather as a part of a soundtrack album for a TV show (which he was under the impression was going to happen).

    Certainly not the best of anything, but from what I've read and heard, they had a good deal of integrity...

  9. I enjoyed The Long Goodbye as a movie, but not as an adaptation of a Chandler work.

    I enjoyed very much both Robert Mitchum Chandler movies. I also enjoyed the few HBO Chandlers that I saw (can't remember the star's name), and would like to see the rest. Maybe they're on DVD.

    PS - A search at Amazon shows me that it was Powers Booth, and that all eleven episodes are available on DVD. On to my wish list!

    My first exposure to Chandler was through the Powers Booth "Philip Marlow" shows. Still a HUGE Chandler fan until this day!

    Best Chandler film is "The Big Lebowski." No question. The Coens capture Chandler's LA perfectly...

  10. as for Russell's book, the musicians I knew who knew Bird and who read the book - Howard McGhee, Curely Russell, Al Haig, Tommy Potter - were unanimous in telling me that, when it concerned incidents with which they were directly familiar, it was pure fiction -

    I remember reading similar things about it.

    It's an entertaining read, when viewed as fiction rather than fact...

  11. To those who dismiss or "don't get" Bruce Springsteen, I recommend listening to The Wild, The Innocent, and the E-Street Shuffle. It's all there, and it's all good (actually great, imo).

    That was the album that turned me on to him, actually...

    I find Elvis Costello somewhat annoying - he doesn't have any real vocal abilities (IMHO), although I like the fact that he has a taste for good American standards.

    I once saw him performing on tv, playing a beautiful vintage Gibson L5 jazz guitar - he was literally banging on it with lots of distortion - painful for me to watch.

    Costello's nickname in the studio is "The Little Hands of Concrete" because he abuses his guitars so...

    I disagree completely with the people slagging Bernie Taupin's lyrics. Listen to the "Captain Fantastic and the Brown Dirt Cowboy" album and a song like "Bitter Fingers." Love Taupin's lyrics. They work organically with Elton's melodies, to the point where you can't really tell if the words or the tune came first...

  12. I wasn't judging Costello against these others, he was just another artist I never "got" and decided I didn't need to expend the effort. However, there is definitely something about Costello that irritates the crap out of me...so at least he does cause an emotional response (these others don't really).

    On a side note, my version of hell would be having to listen to Born To Run for eternity...

    See, I love Costello and own everything he's ever done. And I mean EVERYTHING. I even have the limited edition Costello/Nieve live box...

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