Archive for December, 2006
I played Guitar Hero 2 a little over the holiday weekend at a cousin’s house. And it was awesome.
I read around on the net that Guitar Hero is headed for the Wii.
Yes. The awesomeness potential abounds.
Guitar Hero 2 and the tilt functions of the Wii controllers. Lift your Wii-Axe above your head and the character on the screen follows suit.
That would be…
Riptastic!
“So what are you going to call her?” asked the ultrasound technician.
“Amelia Grace.” said Jess.
“Oh that is my middle name.”
“Really?”
“I was named after my Grandmother… she was named during the whole Amelia Earhart thing.”
“Oh. I didn’t think about Amelia Earhart.” said my wife.
…
I don’t know what that means. But ok.
Its a girl! Healthy, tall for her size, and amazingly human even in the womb at 22 weeks. She was even moving her jaw up and down during the ultrasound. Like she was sucking on her thumb already. She even gave us a nice dance of legs and arms while we were watching.
She is going to be a swimmer like her mom and dad. Tall and fast. Well, if Tiger’s dad can raise a champion golfer, I can raise a champion swimmer. Right?
The Amelia Torpedo.
Now just watch… because I said it, she will hate swimming.
Ha.
And not all that delightful
And when they so just let it go
I say “please someone stop the snow!”
26 inches at my place over the last 24 hours.
I have a six foot fence in the back and it is buried to the halfway point.
And that is not a drift.
For those that are not in “the know”, lensing is a term that can be used in place of filming. But it also carries some connotation of the art of film making. One does not film an artsy fartsy movie, one lenses a timeless and distinguished art film. The latter is defined by that extra series of steps that uses environment, emotion, atmosphere properly in order to reinforce or amplify the reaction of the audience to the material itself.
I was thinking about lensing (don’t ask how I got there) and how we as human beings do it constantly in our daily lives. Using our emotions, our past experiences, external influences and even subliminal things like weather and what we had for breakfast, to gauge the events that occur every moment and how we should react to them. Wake up on the wrong side of the bed and suddenly a simple mistake turns into a migraine.
But it also has another affect, which I think is far more entertaining. When we are exposed to media, a specific type of media, for a longer amount of time than usual, we start to reflect that media in our daily lives. I don’t know if this happens to everyone, but it definitely happens to me. For instance, when I watch an entertaining show, or read a good book or even catch a snippet of information on the interwebs, that information influences decisions, behaviors, and actions that I may take in the near future. After the information has had time to dissipate or be replaced by another, my behavior returns to the good ol’ Seen baseline.
Watch a comedy, you feel emotionally lighter. You tend to be more interactive with people and make jokes. Read a story about a triple homicide and two of them were little kids, you tend to be more introspective and reserved. Pay attention the next time you “consume” some media, and notice how your immediate behaviors change. Notice how you frame and lens your reactions to external stimuli.
And when you dump a ton of similar media in your brain, the effects can be even more noticeable. I watched the first two seasons of Scrubs on dvd (netflix is my friend), and the next week I noticed that Scrubs was kind of dictating my reactions to things. I would notice relationships in the office and compare them to relationships in the show, I would see people and compare them to caricatures of the actors on Scrubs. It turns out that the office is not to different from the world of Scrubs… maybe that is why it is so appealing and funny to fans of the show.
For instance… some days I am easily Dr. Cox. Seasoned in the field, bitter ans sarcastic at times, abrasive to those that are just plain idiots, and supporting those that have a chance at doing something for the greater good. Then you have our new guy out in Omaha, totally a newbie, kind of like Nervous Guy, he hasn’t found his place yet. Relationship-wise, one of the guys I work with and I have a friendship outside of work and it’s juvenile aspects is very similar to JD’s and Turk’s friendship.
But that is what comedy is… A warped mirror for everyday life.
I was sitting on the bus this morning, eyes glazed like donuts, watching the cold urban sprawl unwind past, thinking about the things that I want to share with to my kid as he/she grows up. I didn’t really have a dad around when I was growing up in the legalized white bread suburban hell that is called the public school system, so I missed a lot of the experiences that most kids have.
Ironically, the memories that I cherish the most from childhood are the fond memories I have of small moments with my dad. Silly things really, but things that I want to share with my kids in addition to the all the things that I get to share with them since I will be around when my dad was not around for me. I get to go to swim meets and band practices and karate lessons, and I am kind of excited about it. I get to show my kid how to hack things to make them better, cooler and unique. How to take apart a nerf gun to make it shoot farther and more accurately. How to fix a bike up. How to lift weights properly (not that my form is perfect or anything, but a guide is a guide). But like my dad did with me, I am also excited to share sharp cheddar cheese and crackers with my son in front of the weekend’s football game on the boob tube, to share my love of egg sandwiches (with mayo on toasted bread of course) and the love of legos and platform video games.
But, I am scared to death of the other things. My dogs are bad enough, but a child takes that fear to a whole new level. My little girl has bronchitis and pneumonia and I constantly worry if she is getting better and making sure that I am doing the right things as a dog dad. With a baby, though, that fear kicks up +20. I better keep rolling the twenties as a dad, cause I am going to need the combos.
+Luck would help too. My wife thinks I will be a good dad. I felt the kiddo kick last night for the first time. I hope that I will be. At least I have some time to grow into it. Not like I have to be superdad on day one or anything.
At least not yet.
According to sources on the net, the latest release from Studio Ghibli, “EarthSea” won’t be hitting the US for another 2 years. Yep, that’s 2008 until a film released earlier this year in Japan will even hit the shores of our country. A film that has already grossed $67 or so mil across a number of smaller markets. (That is a significant positive sign of the film’s potential.)
But no, oh no, thanks to Hallmark and SciFi, the current owners of the film rights, the picture is effectively banned until December of 2008. The kick in the pants is that they granted rights to Studio Ghibli to make the film in the first place, but made the Dec. 2008 date as a caution to anything that was developed in the meantime.
Do they have any plans to develop Ursula K Leguin’s novels into semi-palatable mini series anytime soon? Aside from the one that was made years ago? Hmmmmm?
Nope. Probably not. Since the first one was mediocre at best.
So EarthSea fans have to wait and sit on our thumbs and watch Howl’s Moving Castle, Spirited Away and the other great films from Ghibli until the DVD is released in Japan. Then imports and downloads will flood the “grey market” until an english release is viable, say 2009, probably.
Its amazing that stupid little tort provisions and entertainment law hurts us consumers over and over and over and over. And Hollywood wonders why revenues are down.
Geez. I can’t imagine.
Here’s an thought:
Stop screwing your customers!