billking ([info]billking) wrote,
@ 2008-08-04 10:59:00
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Current mood: drained
Current music:"My Soul"

Cut to the Quickies …
Quite a few topics I can’t resist as summer’s dog days get kinda loony (L.A.’s police chief outs Lindsay Lohan!), so here goes another batch of items of the short-attention-span variety …

Anyone surprised that the International Olympic Committee would knuckle under to Beijing and allow them to censor Internet access for the thousands of journalists covering the Olympics in China simply hasn’t paid much attention to the IOC over the years. Despite IOC chief Jacques Rogge’s claims that China would provide free and “uncensored” Web access for the foreign news media during the Games, reporters have been unable to access scores of Web pages, including those that discuss Tibet, Taiwan, China’s suppression of dissidents and sites for Amnesty International, the BBC and even several Hong Kong newspapers. If the IOC really cared about freedom of thought and expression, or freedom of any kind, it never would have awarded China the Games. But as we learned in Atlanta, the folks who run the Olympics may preach the purity of amateur athletics and world peace and cooperation, but the only thing that matters to IOC officials is how much swag they can pocket from the next sucker wanting to play host to the Games. …

Thanks to the Internet, the unsourced, speculative (and mostly fictional) show biz scoops that are a specialty of the British press now circulate quickly around the world and are reported as if they are legitimate news. A couple of recent examples concern The Beatles and Batman. Britain’s Daily Express ran a story quoting unnamed sources as saying that a DVD release of The Beatles’ film “Let It Be” has been blocked by Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr because it shows the group in an unflattering light. No quotes from them or even comment from their reps, of course. Just anonymous “insiders.” While the late Neil Aspinall had indicated in the past that some of the outtake footage being considered for DVD release still stirred up sensitive feelings within the Beatles camp, there’s never been any indication it won’t be released again. And I’m inclined not to believe the Express just because I’ve seen how unreliable these anonymously sourced reports have been over the years. Plus the Abbeyrd news site was told last week by Apple: “We do have plans to release it sometime in the future.” Then there are the frequent speculative U.K. movie casting reports, most of which have absolutely no more substance than a bunch of fans playing “what if.” The latest has Johnny Depp being in line to play the Riddler in the next Batman film after “The Dark Knight.” It may sound reasonable, but after “Batman Begins” came out in 2005, similar reports were saying the next film would feature Robin Williams as the Joker. Or Steve Buscemi. Or Mark Hamill. Or Paul Bettany. Or Sean Penn. Of course, when the announcement finally came in July 2006, it ended up being Heath Ledger, whom no one had predicted. The recent reports also have Philip Seymour Hoffman being considered as the Penguin. The same thing was reported in 2006, when they said the character would be reimagined as a British arms dealer. And, in one of the most predictable bits of casting speculation, they’re also touting Angelina Jolie as Catwoman. She’d no doubt be a great choice in the role. As Depp and Hoffman probably would, too. But the fact that these reports emanate from the British press makes them pretty worthless. …

Speaking of McCartney, he is the lead vocalist on a track from the forthcoming “London Undersound” album by British composer Nitin Sawhney (due out in Britain Oct. 13) that has been released online. It’s called “My Soul” and combines one of Macca’s nicer vocals in recent years with a fairly catchy tune. What’s most surprising about it, considering Sawhney’s Asian-influenced jazz-electronica background, is how MOR it sounds. You can check “My Soul” out at:
http://k848.vox.com/library/audio/6a00f48cf28ea5000300fa9683f07f0003.html

It’s been amazing up to now how much show biz mileage Freddie Prinze Jr. has gotten out of a famous name and no discernible talent, but that seems to be coming to an end with the announcement that Prinze Jr. has “joined the creative team” at World Wrestling Entertainment. Actually, come to think of it, most pro wrestlers probably have twice the acting talent of Prinze Jr. …

Thankfully, the U.K. media reports earlier this year that the extremely irritating and overexposed Amy Winehouse might do the theme song for the next James Bond flick turned out to be … you guessed it … wrong. Instead, Alicia Keys and Jack White have recorded the theme for “Quantum of Solace,” due to open Nov. 7. …

The first couple of episodes of the second season of AMC’s critically acclaimed “Mad Men” series, set in the world of Madison Avenue advertising in the early 1960s, have shown the same aversion to network TV drama formula that made the first series so refreshing. Instead of cashing in on all the awards and media hype by doing some sort of stunt scripting for the season premiere, creator/writer Matthew Weiner (a vet of “The Sopranos”) maintained his extremely leisurely pacing and emphasis on nuanced character development. Not much actually seems to happen amid the constant drinking and smoking, but you get beneath the characters’ skin in ways you almost never seen in most TV dramas. And the period detail continues to be impressive. …

Speaking of enjoying shows where it’s all about character, fans of the beloved Britcom “As Time Goes By” know all about that. I’ve caught the show off and over the years as my mother and daughter Olivia have watched in on Saturday nights on our local PBS station but mostly had only seen episodes from the show’s latter years. Over the past couple of weeks Olivia has been catching me up as we’ve watched the first six series (generally only six to 10 episodes each), which she’s collected on DVD. The gentle interplay between Judi Dench and Geoffrey Palmer as former lovers who rediscover each other after 38 years apart makes for a nice escape from the real world. Paired with a nice steaming mug of English tea, it’s the perfect way to wind down after a day amidst the buyouts and layoffs that dominate the newspaper industry these days. …

AT THE MOVIES: Over the past two weekends, Olivia and I have caught a couple of films that didn’t fare all that well with critics but which we found mostly enjoyable. “The X-Files: I Want to Believe” isn’t the big summer CGI blockbuster about aliens from outer space that some reviewers apparently wanted. Instead, it’s a quieter, more character-driven thriller. Some critics complained it’s like an extended episode of the old TV series, but that’s sort of the point. This film is aimed at fans of the series, particularly those who found the complicated relationship between Agents Mulder and Scully (David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson) more compelling than the aliens-among-us story arc. The plot of “I Want to Believe” may border on run-of-the-mill police procedural with a particularly grisly twist, but seeing Mulder and Scully openly expressing their feelings provides the payoff for longtime X-Philes. If you’re one and you haven’t yet seen the film, do so. And be sure to sit through the credits. Enough said. … Meanwhile this weekend we saw “The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor,” the third in the current “Mummy” series starring Brendan Fraser. Set in post WWII China, it actually has nothing to do with mummies (think terracotta soldiers brought to life by a fire-breathing undead evil emperor who bears more than a passing resemblance to the Batman comic villain Clayface) and is flawed by some storytelling leaps of logic (which probably won’t bother you until you think about it later) and characters that are much less developed than in the first two “Mummy” movies. And acclaimed actress Maria Bello is a bit of a disappointment taking over the lead female role from the delightful Rachel Weisz, who played it in the first two films. Nevertheless, it’s still a fun action picture (my daughter objects to that description, apparently because she finds it somewhat condescending, but to me it’s a bit more to the point than the popular phrase “popcorn flick”), and has fairly convincing computer-generated special effects. Plus you get to see martial arts stars Jet Li and Michelle Yeoh duke it out (although their battle would be more effective if it didn’t suffer from the choppy fast-cut editing that plagues so many films nowadays). This is mindless fun, not a film you want to think much about, but there’s certainly a place for that in the megaplexes this time of year.

Besides the terrific 007 “Quantum of Solace” trailer that’s been out a few weeks, the coming attractions before “Mummy” also included the new trailer for this fall’s “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,” featuring a look back at when Dumbledore first encountered the young Tom Riddle, who would grow up to be the evil Wizard Voldemort. The creepy kid is portrayed by Hero Fiennes-Tiffin, the 10-year-old nephew of Ralph Fiennes, who plays the grown-up villain. You can catch the trailer online at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBGbKCm_pQQ

If you'd like to add to or have your say about anything in this column, just click on comment below. You don't have to be registered with Live Journal.




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(Anonymous)
2008-08-04 03:46 pm UTC (link)
Yes, I've also become an admirer of "Mad Men" recently, thanks to the episodes from the first season becoming available on-demand. In the last week, I've watched seven episodes, and will probably finish the first season by this weekend. The period detail is impressive, and it's a really fascinating look at that Eisenhower/Kennedy era in America before all hell broke loose. If I were teaching a class on postwar American history, particularly at the high school or undergraduate level, I'd show an episode or two of "Mad Men." It illustrates some of the ideas put forth in key books from the period like "The Lonely Crowd," "The Feminine Mystique," etc.

--Brad Hundt

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[info]billking
2008-08-04 06:28 pm UTC (link)
Yes, the writers of "Mad Men" seem to have a good grasp on the early '60s and what a transitional time it was. In your "on demand" viewing, be sure to watch the final episode of the first series. The "carousel" sequence is spellbinding work by Jon Hamm and the writer.

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[info]asuss49
2008-08-04 03:59 pm UTC (link)
Frankly, most of my interest in the Olympics evaporated once they beagn letting pros compete so I'm certainly not surprised that the IOC would sell its soul to the Chinese and allow the restrictions dictated by the Chinese government, not to mention exposing the athletes to the foul condition of the air over there.
The most ludicrous part of this most recent "Let It Be" rumor is not so much the rumor itself as the subsequent spasm of speculation, particularly on the AbbeyRd site, on what Apple should do with the "Get Back"/"Let It Be" material, both audio and video. And much of this comes from otherwise knowledgeable names familiar in the Beatleworld. NONE of this "wish list"-type speculation is going to happen. Apple will put the original film out on DVD when it has the needed unanimous vote of the four directors and that's all there is to it. Wishing for reconstructions of the footage and more audio releases of the material is futile. Admittedly, this does come from someone who's never had much affinity for those endless hours of the bored, cranky Beatles slogging through yet another run at "Dig A Pony" or "Get Back" but stop dreaming!

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[info]billking
2008-08-04 06:30 pm UTC (link)
Frankly, I think re-editing "Let It Be," as has been suggested, is the worst possible option. From an artistic standpoint in general, I think re-editing film releases is an abomination. Unless you do it as a bonus on the DVD and still include the original version. I don't even like a director going back and tweaking things, like George Lucas and Steve Spielberg are wont to do, without keeping the original version as the standard one.

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[info]asuss49
2008-08-04 08:08 pm UTC (link)
Exactly. "Let It Be", as it was released in 1970, is what it is and tweaking or reconstructing it just to make it more palatable to offended parties would be a travesty. If leaving it "as originally intended" means that it never makes it to DVD, then we'll just have to, yeah, "let it be".
Are the "on demand" episodes of "Mad Men" on digital cable or the AMC website or where? I need to play MAJOR catch-up on this series.

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[info]billking
2008-08-04 08:48 pm UTC (link)
They're currently available on the "on demand" channels of digital cable and satellite.
You can go to this page of AMC's "Mad Men" site for details"

http://blogs.amctv.com/mad-men/on-demand/


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(Anonymous)
2008-08-04 09:06 pm UTC (link)
The first season of "Mad Men" is available on Comcast On Demand through Sunday. They're putting new episodes up the day after they air. The first season was also released last week on DVD.

There's no way they should re-edit or otherwise mess with "Let It Be." If they want to include more footage, put it on a bonus disc, but don't try to integrate it into the original cut. Like it or lump it, it's part of their history.

As Bill pointed out with Spielberg and Lucas, sometimes the first cut is the best cut. A prime example would be "Apocalypse Now Redux." The original version, at 150 minutes, is one of the best movies of the 1970s. "Redux," though, can be meandering and draggy. The extra hour of footage that's in "Redux" often slows the story down or brings it to a grinding halt. You sit there thinking, "Fer cryin' out loud, just get up the river and kill Kurtz!"

--Brad Hundt

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[info]billking
2008-08-04 09:52 pm UTC (link)
The "Mad Men" DVD set, which comes in a a package shaped like a cigarette lighter, has tons of bonus material, including numerous commentaries.

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AS TIME GOES BY
(Anonymous)
2008-08-04 08:20 pm UTC (link)
BEING ONE OF THE PEOPLE WHO ENJOYS AS TIME GOES BY MORE THAN ANY OTHER PROGRAM - I SUGGEST THAN ANYONE WHO IS INTERESTED IN THIS PROGRAM BUY THE DVDS SO THAT YOU GET THE FULL IDEA OF THE PROGRAM. SEEING THEM OUT OF ORDER LOSES A LOT OF THE FUN OF THE PROGRAM. BECAUSE THIS GOES BEYOND BEING A SITCOM - IT DOES, INSTEAD, SEEM TO FOLLOW THIS COUPLE AND THEIR FAMILY THROUGH DAY TO DAY LIFE.

JUDI AND GEOFFREY ARE THE VERY BEST AT THEIR CRAFT AND IF THEY WOULD MAKE MORE EPISODES WE WOULD GLADLY WATCH AND PURCHASE THEM. I HAVE THEM ALL AND WATCH THEM ALL THE TIME.

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Re: AS TIME GOES BY
[info]billking
2008-08-04 08:50 pm UTC (link)
yes, that's why I asked my daughter if we could go back and start with Episode 1 of the first series. The first couple of series trace their at first very tentative steps toward re-establishing their romance. It makes it a lot more enjoyable watching the later episodes when you have this background.

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Dhani Harrison
(Anonymous)
2008-08-05 12:20 pm UTC (link)
Dhani know looks and sounds more like George Harrison than even George did. Anyone hear his new album now on ITunes? The boy has some talent!! In a fashion layout he just completed for some magazine or other, it's eerie how he looks just like George circa 1967.

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Re: Dhani Harrison
[info]billking
2008-08-05 01:58 pm UTC (link)
If he wants to have a career that's more than a flash in the pan, he ought not to play up the resemblance.

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OLYMPICS
(Anonymous)
2008-08-05 08:02 pm UTC (link)
I agree completely with your views in regard to the Olympics, and the IOC in particular. The Olympics have little to do with athletics, amateur or otherwise -- their real purpose has to do with corporate profits. As is the case with most things nowadays, greed has the final word. China is using the games to gain political acceptance in the world, at the cost of truth and freedom. (How is it that China can host the Olympics, but Cuba is still subject to restrictions by the USA?) Anyone who cares about human rights should avoid the Olympics entirely.

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Re: OLYMPICS
[info]billking
2008-08-05 08:38 pm UTC (link)
When you've emerged as one of the world's largest markets, it's amazing how your lack of representative government and abysmal human rights record no longer matters.

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Bush's trip to China is shameful
(Anonymous)
2008-08-06 02:17 pm UTC (link)
George Bush is widely regarded as being the worst President in US history. One of the lowest points of his career is going to China to help them with their public relations problems.

China is a brutal communist dictatorship with a horrendous record of human rights abuses. By going to China, Bush is sweeping the brutal repression of Tibet under the rug. What a disgrace! I whole heartedly believe we should be engaging China. We should be talking with them and even trading with them.

We should also be speaking out forcefully in support of the human rights of the Tibetans and the Chinese.

And instead of embracing free trade agreements that open the US up to dog food laced with poison and children's toys laced with lead, we should have strong consumer protection standards that regulate the safety of imports.

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Re: Bush's trip to China is shameful
(Anonymous)
2008-08-06 02:23 pm UTC (link)
You'll never get "strong consumer protection" under Bush, McCain or any other Republican administration. It's not what they're about.

I was into the Olympics for a long time, but have pretty much lost interest in recent years with all the doping scandals. An Olympic record is sort of meaningless now.

Taking it to China just makes me that much less interested.


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Re: Bush's trip to China is shameful
(Anonymous)
2008-08-06 06:20 pm UTC (link)
Bravo on your IOC comments and to all those who commented on China and the Olympics. How are the athletes there going to breathe while racing, etc.? China leads the league in pollution. And what's this about the candidates not announcing their VP's till after the Olympics? The Olympics are so newsworthy and exciting that it wouldn't be a good time? Is anyone that interested in the Olympic games? Will the theme song for 'Quantum of Silence' actually have those words as part of the lyrics? Maybe if Rush was recording it. The latest Rolling Stone had a list of multisyllable egghead words used by that group in some of their songs. And how come the Rolling Stones or Elton never penned a James Bond theme? Amy Winehouse should be singing the theme song of that drug themed Seth Rogen/James Franco film 'Pineapple Express. Thanks Bill for the 'My Soul' Macca site. GW

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Re: Bush's trip to China is shameful
[info]billking
2008-08-07 02:11 pm UTC (link)
The Bond themes went into rather a severe decline there for a couple of decades. So they weren't the coveted gig they once were. But somehow I can't see Elton and 007 as a good mix.

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Re: Bush's trip to China is shameful
(Anonymous)
2008-08-08 02:10 am UTC (link)
Have you seen that ridiculous news that Billboard has revised its list of the artists with the most No. 1 hits so that Elvis is demoted? They arbitrarily don't count the 10 chart-toppers he had before they renamed their Top 100 the "Hot 100." That makes no sense at all!

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Re: Bush's trip to China is shameful
[info]billking
2008-08-08 02:40 am UTC (link)
The Billboard list in question is arbitrary, yes, but it's really just a promotion for the 50th anniversary of the Hot 100. Unfortunately, that distinction is mostly lost when such lists get posted elsewhere. It's a silly practice, really. Why should a change in name for the chart invalidate the hits that pre-dated that name? Billboard missed the boat on this one.

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Re: Bush's trip to China is shameful
(Anonymous)
2008-08-08 10:09 am UTC (link)
Yippee! Does this make Madonna the new number 1? Well she is more worthy of the distinction than Elvis. GW

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Re: Bush's trip to China is shameful
[info]billking
2008-08-08 08:10 pm UTC (link)
Nope, The Beatles are on top.


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Paul's Excellent Adventure
(Anonymous)
2008-08-08 11:23 am UTC (link)
So here we have Paul and his girlfriend Nancy driving across America on Route 66 in a very ordinary looking Ford Bronco!! Hmmm. How cool and surreal is that?

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Getting his kicks on Route 66
(Anonymous)
2008-08-08 03:08 pm UTC (link)
Gotta give the man credit for dreaming up a heck of a vacation (or Nancy if it was her idea). Two multi-millionaires driving an '89 Ford Bronco (though I always think OK when I hear Ford Bronco) through alot of rural and beautiful America. Without any entourage to boot.

Glad to see that so far it appears they have been able to largely travel unencumbered by fans mobbing them.

Just surreal to think you could bump into Macca at a Circle K in the middle of America.

So far I guess the sightings are
Joliet, ILL
Springfield, ILL
Lebanon, MO (stayed in a tent at a State Park?!)
Oklahoma City, OK
Amarillo, TX
Vega, TX

Local Amarillo TV has video of Paul leaving his hotel in the Bronco.

What a cool trip - would love to take the same trip sometime in my lifetime.

RamblinRed

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Re: Getting his kicks on Route 66
[info]billking
2008-08-08 08:12 pm UTC (link)
Lennon did a similar drive (though not sure if it was Route 66) years ago in a stationwagon that Yoko later auctioned off for charity.

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