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The first two episodes of "The 100." This is a WB show with lots of pretty twenty-somethings (including a busty Australian Reese Witherspoon resembles-a-lot) and a post apocalyptic Earth plot that is part Lord of the Flies and may become a Planet of the Apes clone before it's all done. :) Entertaining so far in a mindless TV way. Has Paige Turco and Henry Ian Cusick as grown ups in the cast and also Isaiah Washington as Chancellor Thelonious.

Edited by jazzbo
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The first two episodes of "The 100." This is a WB show with lots of pretty twenty-somethings (including a busty Australian Reese Witherspoon resembles-a-lot) and a post apocalyptic Earth plot that is part Lord of the Flies and may become a Planet of the Apes clone before it's all done. :) Entertaining so far in a mindless TV way. Has Paige Turco and Henry Ian Cusick as grown ups in the cast and also Isaiah Washington as Chancellor Thelonious.

I watched the pilot, it's actually not one of the better CW shows I've seen but was still mildly entertaining. The few CW shows I watch all have better actors, production values and writing but I will still probably end up watching the season to see how it progresses. They launched 5 new dramatic series this season, 2 of them were immediate hits and were promptly renewed (The Originals, Reign), the other 3 either flopped (Star-Crossed) or are borderline whether they will be renewed or not (The 100, The Tomorrow People). Star-Crossed and The Tomorrow People were both horrendously bad and deserve to be cancelled.

Next fall the new series about The Flash begins (Arrow spin-off) and there is also a Supernatural spin-off in the works. No word on other possible shows yet, they will probably have enough programming space to launch 2 more series in the fall depending on how many they cancel at the end of this season (which could be as many as 3).

The current plan to only launch genre shows (comic book, horror and sci-fi) is still in effect as far as I know.

Posted

Prohibition by Ken Burns & Lynn Novick. Finished watching this one tonight. I thought it was a very good documentary on the forces that caused Prohibition, the effects, and repeal of the 18th Amendment. I actually learned a lot about its history.

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Posted

More Flip The Frog...fire demons sucked up by vacuum cleaner underwear remover and a hothead horse that says "Damn", and so very much more, all in about six minutes.

Who ever the percussionist is who played these things, they earned their pay, no doubt!

And this, the first(?) color sound cartoon ever?!?!?!?!

Posted

And this, the first(?) color sound cartoon ever?!?!?!?!

First cartoon with a soundtrack was My Old Kentucky Home (1926) though it was an early experimental system and wasn't completely synchronized with the picture. The first cartoon that used a click track for synchronization was Steamboat Willie (1928).

The cartoon you linked uses 2-strip technicolor, several filmmakers experimented with that process. The first cartoon to use real 3-strip Technicolor was Disney's "Flowers and Trees" from 1932.

Posted

Ok, but this would have been the first color and sound cartoon, then, correct? Albeit with a more primitive system, 1930.

I know next to nothing about this area, just enjoy watching, but apparently this Ub Iwerks guy who did Flip was working closely with Disney pretty early on, and left because he felt he wasn't getting his share of credit. These Flip things are pretty crazy stuff, really, and do very much have some of the characteristics of the early Disney work I've seen.

I wonder if that's Roger Kellaway playing the piano on the opening?

Posted

More Flip the Frog, this one with the moral that people should practice birth control, but if they don't, then fathers should be allowed to kill their babies (once they learn to properly shoot a proper gun, that is), otherwise they'll end up being adopted by inept show-biz frogs practicing to be Tibetan monks, never learn any table manners, and life will be hell for everybody.

Still trying to figure out why Flip kinda faded into obscurity among general audiences. The message is universal.

Posted (edited)

The first couple of episodes of the recent 'Endeavour' series. Contrived plots and the main character overdoes the 'I've just had a brainwave' facial expressions but an enjoyable way to spend 90 minutes. I've got to the stage where when I'm in Oxford I hear Barrington Pheloung scores in my brain.

Also Ian Hislop's 'Olden Days' - episode 1 about the changing fortunes of Arthur and Alfred over the centuries in British perception. Popular historiography - the construction of the past, a subject dear to my heart. He'd have a field day with jazz....or music in general.

Edited by A Lark Ascending
Posted (edited)
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Monday Michiru "Routes Live in Japan." Bass is recorded too high at the beginning of the show, but damn, this is a good concert video. What a woman!
Edited by jazzbo
Posted
Also Ian Hislop's 'Olden Days' - episode 1 about the changing fortunes of Arthur and Alfred over the centuries in British perception. Popular historiography - the construction of the past, a subject dear to my heart. He'd have a field day with jazz....or music in general.

That was a very good programme ! Looking forward to Episode 2 tonight when he ponders the Victorian era.

Posted (edited)

Also Ian Hislop's 'Olden Days' - episode 1 about the changing fortunes of Arthur and Alfred over the centuries in British perception. Popular historiography - the construction of the past, a subject dear to my heart. He'd have a field day with jazz....or music in general.

That was a very good programme ! Looking forward to Episode 2 tonight when he ponders the Victorian era.

Watched that last night - very enjoyable. Though I'm not convinced that an obsession with re-imagining the past is a particularly English characteristic. He made the point about English law being based on precedent whilst elsewhere there is more of tendency to base it on reason (or what is considered to be reasonable at the time). I suspect it's more complicated than that.

Next week looks good - the invention of the English countryside. Though you know in advance what he's going to say.

Edited by A Lark Ascending

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