Archive for the 'tv' Category

Busy time; no running yet; lots of art

Swimming fish sticksJust a quick update. Kelly and I checked out the Banksy show this weekend (photoset on flickr), and also hit the Guggenheim. The Catharine Opie photographs were pretty spectacular, but the museum seemed mostly empty otherwise. I returned from Austin exhausted and relieved, and will take my oral exams by video conference before thanksgiving. We’re looking forward to lots of visitors: my folks this week, Libby and J next week, Bob and Sabia the following week, then down to Charlotte for Thanksgiving. It’s a whirlwind until Christmas.

I’m planning to get back to running this week, at least on the treadmill… the weather is getting perfect for long runs in the park though.

It may only be the recent trip to Texas, but Kelly and I are now addicted to Friday Night Lights.

We are all Quincy Punks

So, now that we’ve moved closer to downtown, we end up walking to the Drafthouse almost every week. I apologize for constantly raving about it, but there seems to be no end in sight, especially since they’re opening a new location on Lamar.

Last night we went to Quincy Punk night ($1 Monday!), to see another homemade documentary entitled I was a Teenage Quincy Punk, comprised of the punk rock Quincy episode ("Next Stop, Nowhere") in its entirety, the punk rock episode of "CHiPs" (starring activitystory favorite William Forsythe as Trasher, the lead singer of Pain), a clip from the episode of Square Pegs where DEVO played Muffy’s bat-mitzvah (in which M. Mothersbaugh plays my current obsession, the Suzuki Omnichord), and an episode of some awesome-looking 1978 Don Rickles sitcom called CPO Sharkey co-starring the Dictators.

It was all very funny, and the crowd was lively, yelling at the screen and making jokes.  Everyone was hysterically astonished by how much the man misunderstood punk rock.

The weird thing was, and this might be blasphemy, but I thought the depictions were pretty accurate.  I mean, they were clearly characatures, but no more so than Quincy is a characature of a medical examiner or Ponch a cop.  It was more a vibe of, "oh, like a punk would really have their hair that long in the back," or "Look at that ridiculous eye-makeup. A real punk would never have eye-makeup like that." But otherwise: nihilism? check. clothes? check. boredom, absurdism, and vandalism? check check check. The music even sounded pretty accurate and there were  suggestions of political activism and veganism which I thought were very generous (of course, I might have just misinterpreted the brief glimpses at diet and squalor we got).  On top of that, the fattish bit-part CHiPs cop even offered a thoughtful, fair description of punk culture and demonstrated slam dancing in a positive light.

But, of course, I was a young punk in the late 80s/early 90s and most of my early visual conception of punk came from Valley Girl, Suburbia, Urrgh! A Music War (lots of mixed messages there), the FEAR performance on Saturday Night Live, and (I think) one of the Police Academy movies. Do any of you remember seeing any of that stuff? Did you think that the TV depictions of punk went against what you thought it was all about, or did you just feel like a badass because the vile subculture you chose to identify yourself was being legitimized?

I think it was the latter for me for sure.  I wish I could watch a Doogie Howser or a Full House with concurrent punk me thinking I’m shaking up the squares.  Even just some plain old footage of me and my friends going to shows at Common Ground and the Easy St Theatre in Dallas. I’d love to put a laugh-track on that.

I think that I’d have the same reaction to that as I did to the Quincy Punk Episode, but who knows.  I just wonder if I’m capable of taking myself that seriously anymore (though, posts like this where I ruminate on my identity my be evidence that I am). Sorry. 

Goodbye, Show with No Name

Kelly, Miranda, Kim, and & I went to the live Show with No Name event at the Alamo on Saturday night, and I was sad to hear it was their last show ever.  Mostly it was a very satisfying retrospective that included several montages of favorite clips from the show interspersed with the funnier charlie/cinco interchanges and bits.  Most notable, however, a 12-yr old came on stage and did a few minutes’ worth of filthy Bill Hicks jokes.

Since the show is no longer being aired, I decided I should track down as many of the boilerplate clips as I could online.  Sadly, after more than an hour of searching, I’ve only found a few, and none of them are my favorites.  It’s really making me aware of how valuable it was to have Charlie & Cinco on tv every week. 

Here’s what I’ve found so far (please point me to any you can find [especially the Corey Feldman lipsync on An Evening at the Improv]). Mostly it’s just the played-out ones:

Just linking to those makes the show seem pretty lame. Hopefully, somone who taped every episode is working on getting all of the clips online for our enjoyment.  Mostly I just want to see the local Austin news clips, like the one of the reporter stomping grapes at a winery. 

Real World Sighting #2: Dillo Dorado, Guadalupe & 17th


  Real World dude, pair of feet 
  Originally uploaded by activitystory.

Two Real World Austin castmembers and two camerapeople were taking up most of the back of the Dillo Dorado I took home from school today.  I pushed past the sound guy to sit as close as I could without getting in the shot.  I captured the Real World Dude, and the feet of his female costar with my phonecam.

Overheard quote: "Did you get paged? Dude, I was gonna be like, I’ve never ever gotten paged." Then the dude put his head in the girls lap.

When they got off the bus I realized that there were like four other Real World crewmembers in our midst.  As the pair moved toward the bus door, the covert crew members all shared a creepy, knowing glance and followed them off.

Local 6 News: now even more newsless!

Is it just me, or is this slideshow of a local tv news story on "garage jumping" in Orlando strangely fascinating?  Incidentally, this phenomenon seems relatively undocumented online, but it may be that the hardcore jumpers call it something else. Thanks to Local 6 for bringing such a potentially devastating new fad to our attention.

Anyway, that slideshow is at least as entertaining as a google video search for "Cagney & Lacey".   I’m starting to want all of my tv in thumbnail form.

Oscar Orchestra Miscue

Did anyone else notice that the orchestra at the Oscars accidently played the theme to Designing Women when Jamie Foxx won his oscar?  They must have been totally embarrased.

It’s a shame, though, that the ladies got snubbed again this year.