Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Archive for March, 2008

I have a million things I should have done today, including research a paper, read Portrait of a Lady, watch Black Books with a friend, watch Jean-Luc Godard films for a paper, look for jobs, look for apartments, get off the couch, etc. (I did get laundry and dishes done, and watch a lot of Deep Space 9, but eh.)

Instead, I did this: The Frame. Which is now a repository for articles and longer-form reviews and such that I’ve written, mostly school stuff. I found the WordPress theme that underlies it a few days ago (here), and couldn’t wait to see what I could do with it, and after spending most of the day fiddling with the code and posting stuff (some of which was already there from earlier experiments), I’m now officially in love with it. IN LOVE. Definitely one of the best CMS/magazine-style WordPress themes I’ve found, and also easier to modify than most.

Now, that doesn’t mean I’m moving over there or anything like that; it’s got a completely different purpose to this blog. Some content might be doubled, but that’s it. I did just post up the paper I wrote for Critical Theory earlier this semester, dealing with last year’s unplanned pregnancy films. It’s currently my favorite paper I ever wrote. Largely because the professor told me it was excellent, and that tends to improve my reaction to my own writing.

Anyway, I don’t know how many things I’ll actually post over there, but as I said, as of right now I love it. I love it so much I sort of want to make other people join me and start some sort of film/literature article/review co-op site.

Click through for reactions to Them!, The War of the Worlds, Superbad, 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, The Assassination of Jesse James, Sunshine, Vanity Fair, Bleak House, Call of Duty 4, and more.

Click here to read on!

I’m not sure how Pixar keeps doing this, honestly. The new Wall*E trailer has charmed me so much that I suddenly want to cuddle and coo over a hunk of metal. This little robot guy has more personality than many actors I could name. The only thing that worries me is usually I like Pixar’s teasers, am turned off by the full trailer, then love the movie. Does the fact that I love this trailer mean that I won’t love the film? Hmm. But I gotta say, I’m not particularly worried on that point.

No, I wasn’t at SXSW.  But that doesn’t mean I haven’t already benefited from it. 

Vampire Weekend

According to one of my friends, Vampire Weekend were one of the more hyped shows of the festival and she thought they lived up to the hype, and then one of their songs turned up on XMU (aka the best XM radio station there is) and I liked it, so I went and bought their album.  And I like.  So I share.

Vampire Weekend – Campus
Vampire Weekend – M79

Vampire Weekend
Vampire Weekend
Amie Street
Amazon.com mp3
Amazon.com CD

Sons & Daughters

I was vicariously excited that my friend was going to see Sons & Daughters at SXSW, but she ended up not being able to get in.  So I guess I’m glad that Sons & Daughters are apparently really popular?  Anyway.  Another friend sent me a mix CD ages ago with "Fight" on it, and her description was something along the lines of: "This song is sort of bizarre, but in a good way."  And she’s right.  Sons & Daughters are also a Glasgow band, which for me pretty much means instant love. (Both of these tracks are off the Love the Cup EP; I haven’t had a chance to get the newer album yet, though I’ve heard and enjoyed a couple of singles off it.)

Sons & Daughters – Fight
Sons & Daughters – Blood

Sons & Daughters - Love the Cup Sons & Daughters - This Gift
Love the Cup This Gift
Amazon.com CD Amazon.com CD


SXSW 2008 from mikehedge on Vimeo.

Lovely short film made up of stills taken by Mike Hedge before, during, and after this year’s South by Southwest. He hit all three parts of the festival: film, interactive, and music, and looks like he had a blast. I wish I’d made it down there. Someday, maybe. Although how I’d choose what to see and do among all the options (I swear there were 1000 bands down there and over a hundred films) I don’t know. I get paralyzed with indecision. Anyway. There’s some amazing photography and editing in this video, but each still is only up for 3 frames (4000 photos in about 4 minutes), so if you get motion sick easily you might pop a dramamine before watching. (via Cinematical and From Here to Awesome; click here to see it bigger)

And the liveblog’s back. [Feedreader/Facebook/Livejournal readers click through to see embedded liveblog].

We got back from spring break last night, but I just got around to watching last week’s American Idol tonight. And let me just say, I’ve been clammering for a Beatles-themed night for the past two years (i.e., all the years I’ve been watching), and I WAS NOT WRONG. I didn’t love everyone’s performance, but by and large, the quality of the show was high. Did anyone else think it was interesting that they refused to call it Beatles night, but instead called it Lennon-McCartney Songbook night? I mean, yes, that gave the contestants the option to choose songs they wrote for other bands, but who’s gonna do that? I bet it had something to do with the rights, again. Sheesh. They apparently already have the rights to George Harrison-penned songs, since Taylor did “Something” in Season Five, so I guess maybe they wanted to make a big deal about having the OTHER, MORE FAMOUS Beatles songs now? I dunno. It was strange. Relatedly, I wonder if they have the rights so that contestants can choose Beatles songs on other nights, or if it was just this one time?

Anyway, the performances. Brooke’s “Let It Be” was easily my favorite by a mile. I would absolutely go see her live right this very minute. She and Jason should team up and tour all the little intimate venues around. Using the piano? Genius. Keeping it simple? Genius. Infusing it with more sincerity than I thought Idol could ever manage? Genius. When I say Idol is better with instruments because it attracts better artists, that performance is EXACTLY what I’m talking about.

Carly came a close second with her killer take on “Come Together,” which has always been a Beatles song that I respect but don’t really like that much; I don’t know that she made me like it better, but her performance definitely made me like her better. I’ve been feeling like the judges are over-promoting her for the past several weeks, but this time she deserved the praise, and I’m on the Carly train. And Chikezie did the best job of mixing up an arrangement and coming out with something very cool; it might’ve helped that I didn’t know the song very well, but I enjoyed his version. Jason, of course, with “If I Fell”. I actually liked him better this week than last, but I wish he had gone for more of the high notes instead of swallowing them…that style works for him, but I think it would work better if he didn’t do it all the time.

Amanda scared me to death when she seemed not to know the Beatles at all in her interview (and picked a song she didn’t know before?!), but she pulled out a performance that was both definitively her and recognizably the Beatles. I didn’t love it, but I liked it. And as far as Simon’s criticism that it wasn’t as good as last week, that’s definitely true, but last week she was incredible–so that’s not a particularly harsh critique. David Cook, I’m not sure what I thought. I think he did a fine job singing it, and I really like him (very glad he eschewed the guitar this week; he smartly knew it would be too much). I think I just disagreed with his interpretation; I don’t feel like “Eleanor Rigby” is that angry of a song, but his rendition was definitely angry.

Michael and Syesha were both adequate, but not outstanding; Ramiele has one of the purest, prettiest voices, but she has got to stop singing so boringly. I’ve defending her for a few weeks when the judges have called her boring, but at this point she really does need to step it up. David Archuleta. Oh, David, David, David. I love you, and the judges love you, and we all love you, but you don’t know the Beatles? Really? And so you decide to cover a Stevie Wonder cover of a Beatles song? Not a great idea, even if you can remember all the lyrics. And “We Can Work It Out” is one of my absolute favorite Beatles songs, and I was so disappointed. Bring it back next week, David. Bring it back.

And the definite bottom two. Kristy, stop listening to the judges when their advice makes you do things that are crazy. Sticking to a country vibe does not mean taking a classic rock song and turning it into THAT. Whatever THAT was. I mean, in all fairness, “Eight Days a Week” is a great song and I could actually see putting a country twist on it, but you took it WAAAAAAY too far. Gutsy move, but ultimately dumb. On Australian Idol last year (sorry, tried to make it without a reference, but couldn’t), one of the judges, Dicko, said “You’ve got to stop being a contestant and start being an artist.” That’s exactly what Kristy needs to do. Saying “I turned this song into a country song because the judges said I needed to stick to county” is not being an artist, it’s being a contestant; it’s making choices based on what you THINK the judges want, which you THINK is what the country wants, which you THINK will make you win. That kind of decision-making doesn’t really work, because what the judges and the country really want is for you to become a self-confident artist who knows who she is and what she wants (and BTW, what you want is not to win American Idol; American Idol is, or should be, a means to the end of becoming a recording artist, not an end in itself), something you will never become if you spend all your energy trying to out-psychologize the judges.

And David Hernandez. Way to define “karaoke performance.” Thank you for that at any rate. I liked you before, man, but you lost me completely here, and apparently I’m not the only one. Well done, America, for getting at least two of the bottom three spot on. I wouldn’t have put Syesha in the bottom personally; my guess is her forgettably mediocre performance coupled with her going first put here there.

At first I was thrown off by having all the bottom three sing their songs again on the elimination show (and I’m still not completely sure it’s not just waste-of-time filler), but at least it did make it so that they didn’t have to sing AFTER being eliminated. It’s really hard to sing when you’re completely crushed, and I usually just feel bad for them. And KAT! Kat Kat Kat! Yep, I still love her to death. In fact, she almost sounded better than she did two years ago; partially due to her over-straining her voice so badly near the end of her season, though. Anyway, she’s working on a new album apparently, and my fingers are crossed that it won’t be quite so hip-hop/dance-centric and overproduced as the first one. Please? For me?

I won’t be liveblogging American Idol this week due to being on Spring Break at a friend’s house off South Padre Island where there is no internet. We’re all at the library now doing some much-needed e-mail catch-up, but I’ve been surprised by how little I’ve missed being online, especially since I’m normally online something like ten hours a day. Ah well. We’ve had other things to keep us busy. Even though it’s been a little chilly to do much beach stuff. We’re going to try to go today, but we’re all wearing sweatshirts. :) Anyway, just wanted to give y’all a heads up so you didn’t think I was dead when I missed American Idol tonight.

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