Things I Like (May 2005)

1. The “op-art carnival vs. 1970s futurism” design aesthetic of Braniff Airlines.

braniffairlines

2. The “Visual Music” exhibition at MOCA in Los Angeles. Don’t miss the companion book.

visualmusic-moca

3. The ridiculously charming and catchy Volkswagen Jetta ad known as “Independence Day.”

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4. The fantastically groovy 1966 cult German television show Raumpatrouille.

raumpatrouille

5. Logic System. YMO spin off band that circulates around moogsploitation, straight-up technopop, and leftover tracks from the Cosmos television series. I somehow picture this playing at a western-themed truck stop in Japan somewhere.

logicsystem_orientexpress

Things I Like (April 2005)

1. The retrofuturism of Tales Of Future Past.

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2. The ABC Movie Of The Week. Specially the opening graphics.

abcmovieoftheweek

3. Italian Police Lamborghinis

italian_policelambo

4. The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project

lemans57poster

5. Penny Postcards. There are lots of vintage post card sites on the web, this is one of the better ones.

pennypostcard_laguna

6. The 1947 Project blog which is a day by by account of crime, vice, and free-floating hostility in 1947 Los Angeles.

Crazy Eddie

crazy_eddieAfter a couple years of floundering around, Court TV has finally put together an outstanding program schedule with some terrific shows. The standout being Masterminds, a half-hour show that details a specific heist from planning and execution to the inevitable hubris point where the “not-so-master mind” makes an error, hires the wrong accomplice, or runs into just plain old bad luck.

Of course the real “perfect crime” wouldn’t make for good television because you would never get the thieves’ side of the story. Last year’s big heist in Antwerp would be a perfect story for Masterminds‘ current week of diamond thefts, only it doesn’t look like they’re going to get caught anytime soon. Nevertheless, the Bill Mason story is worth checking out.

Last week’s episode however… I only knew of Crazy Eddie as the much-parodied east coast electronics dealer who shouted about how his prices are INSAANNNEEE! I had no idea that Eddie Antar scammed suppliers, auditors, and the Feds to the tune of $150 million dollars with the most outrageous schemes that would shame even the most hard core mafia captain. I’m assuming that his story has been optioned for a movie and if not, someone really should.

Some more background on the case (scroll down). And don’t miss the Crazy Eddie Tribute Page either.

Random Linkage I

Homemade macaroni and cheese is one of the greatest things ever and Gothamist links to New York Magazine’s review of the poshiest mac and cheeses in New York.

I like the idea of a Mac mini home media server, but nothing has inspired burning technology lust more than a Mac mini-based synth controller/sound module.

Phone phreaking in the early days – recorded for posterity. I still miss the different dial tones and rings from the old analog switches.

Ladies and gentlemen, the Casio VL-80 Kraftwerk Pocket Calculator.

Na + H20 = boom. This guy optimizes that equation to its ridiculous and inevitable conclusion.

And sadly it looks like TiVo will be out of business before I find an apartment.

Will the younger demographic please step to the rear of the air waves?

First the Food Network dissolved most of it’s “how to cook” programming in exchange for stunt shows and even more of the execrable Emeril. Then the Game Show Network dumps it’s classy 50s-era reruns for a “contemporary, youth-based image”. Then, Al Gore buys out my favorite news channel NWI and plans to transform it “into an independent station for twentysomething viewers.” Now, TechTV, which admittedly I didn’t watch much except for the occasional rerun of Max Headroom and The Thunderbirds has been bought out:

One laid-off employee told me that in pursuit of the young male demographic, Comcast has an incentive to replace these veteran computer-industry personalities with twentysomethings.

If that’s true, I worry that we won’t be seeing any more of TSS’s trademark interviews with brilliant-but over-30-industry pioneers like Jef Raskin, Robert Moog, Don Norman and Douglas Engelbart.

In fact, you have to wonder what interviews and cutting-edge demos they’ll offer at all, since Comcast is moving what’s left of TechTV from San Francisco (high-tech country) to L.A. (video-game country).

Then there’s the new Web site, G4TechTV.com, which is a blinking, pulsing organizational disaster. Its chaos doesn’t say much for the show’s new guardians, although the G4TechTV spokesman reminded me that the two channels merged only last Friday, on a holiday weekend. He assured me that the Web site will constantly improve.

The real tragedy is that a merged gamer-PC channel might not be any more likely to succeed than two separate channels did; in fact, you might argue that the combined channel will disappoint both constituencies equally. As one disappointed fan wrote on G4’s feedback board: “They think they can attract a larger, younger demographic by just putting on younger faces. These people, however, will not feel the pinch until the ratings plummet down the road. It happened where I worked before.”

Three things: First off, if network programmers really want to capture the younger demographic then suspend all programming and only distribute shows via BitTorrent. Otherwise you’re only wasting electricity. Second, if you are a network programmer and are reading this, FUCK OFF! Third, if you are a network programmer then before you fuck off please hire me as a cultural consultant. I’m always a good year to two years ahead of Big Media in determining what is cool. My success rate is 100% and I’m ready and willing to sell out.

Getting back to the Food Network, Alton Brown is asked what he would do if he ran the network and his answers are interesting and pretty much on the money.

I would put old cooking shows on in late night…Julia, Kerr, all the old classics that are really cool. I’d turn late night into a food version of TV land but not before my one hour talk show in the 11:30 slot. That’s right Dave, I’m comin’ after your worn out butt!

I’d produce more documentaries and specials and I’d make Tony Bourdain actually cook something on television, by force if necessary. I’d give a cooking show to a lunch room lady from mid-America. I’d produce more Iron Chefs but I’d find a female Iron Chef first.

I’d find someone to do a realistic, but within reason Mexican food show. I’d bring back Bill Bogg’s Corner Table and David Rosengarten…though I’d make the later shave. I’d do away with stock photography and Voice Overs would be restricted to 8% of a show’s total run time.

That’s all just for starters. Oh, and I’d never, ever put a show in front of a focus group….ever.

Black And White Overnight

Matt over at Scrubbles has a nice write up of the Game Show Network’s ‘Black And White Overnight”:

The New York Times did a nice article on the wonders of ‘Black & White Overnight’, the Game Show Network’s graveyard shift programme of vintage ’50s-’60s quiz shows. This has quickly became a favorite of mine since getting the TiVo, giving me the warm fuzzies for a time which I never experienced firsthand. The shows (‘What’s My Line’, ‘I’ve Got a Secret’, and ‘To Tell the Truth’) conjure up a swanky, Manhattanish world of cigarettes and martinis, intermissions and urbane small talk. Concepts were simple, sets were utalitarian, and personality was everything. Being smart and well-rounded was a given among all participants, something nearly unheard-of nowadays. For example, the effortlessly witty Bennett Cerf of ‘What’s My Line?’ was the head of Random House — can you imagine a publisher being on today’s game shows? I could go on and on, but instead I’ll point to Evan Izer’s wonderful weblog entry on the same subject from last year. Arlene Francis must be smiling down on him.

TiVo Rendezvous support?

From Apple’s Rendezvous site:

“TiVo’s upcoming premium service package will use Rendezvous technology to automatically discover Macintosh computers within the home network and determine which services they provide, allowing customers to listen to their shared music or view their shared photos on their TV,” said Jim Barton, Co-founder and CTO for TiVo. “We are excited about working with Apple on other ways Rendezvous can help TiVo Series2 DVRs connect to a Mac to deliver future services.”

OK, so how many microseconds before someone creates a way to copy the DV files in the TiVo back onto your Mac? W00t!