Torchwood Series Four gets the green light

This spin-off from the recent Doctor Who reboot has been more enjoyable than I expected. I was already hooked when it starred Captain Jack, a short-lived but memorable Companion. The easiest way to describe it would be to just call it a British version of The X-Files that sucks less. All too often I felt the American counterpart pulled punches albeit a common complaint of my nation’s television and movies. Plus there’s a ton of legal mumbo preventing cross-pollination.

For example:

UK with Doctor Who and Torchwood: They both fight the Cybermen, Daleks and Sontarans. Join forces with UNIT.

US with say Star Trek‘s DS9 and Voyager: Borg seem to only exist and/or threaten the latter show, in the former, it’s as if they never existed. Plus these shows gradually fell into the lazy trap of becoming Matlock in Space.

Torchwood‘s first season was really good and I liked how its finale dovetailed into the last three episodes of Doctor Who‘s third season (I’m not sure what the real number would be because it had a gap in the Eighties before being cancelled indefinitely through the Nineties). I’m in the thick of the second, then on to the third which is the Children of Earth thing. Netflix streaming rocks for having all this on hand in a moment’s notice. Glad to know the BBC appears more willing to roll with the changes than America’s networks who keep demanding a way to insert ads.

The “scoop” is here courtesy of The Guardian. With the US-based Starz helping, the remaining characters will have a budget to travel to locales outside of Wales. I’m very grateful there will be no American version. Knowing my luck it would be on Fox. The BBC should know to never trust Murdoch with their property. Fox’s movie starring Paul McGann as the Doctor, Eric Roberts as the Master and Vancouver (the common background for X-Files) as San Francisco…P-U!

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Half way to Vegas!

Seven more weeks to go! I do not know if I will make it because I could use a vacation now with the recent three-day weekend shot down the toilet courtesy of my back…which is feeling much better, let’s hear it for Western medicine especially when it’s affordable. I also have an appointment with a physical therapist this upcoming Thursday morning, ugh.

As we get closer to the Monday night in which we’ll be up all evening packing, preparing and running on adrenaline, I want to get everyone’s gambling requests started. One bet I’m irked about is my futures wager on Philly winning the Stanley Cup. I figure they’ll win because I didn’t lay my $10 on the line and the odds may have been as impressive as my 2004 attempt, 14-1 against.

We’re still trying to find a fourth thing to do. My friend-contact who could help me with tickets to a Cirque du Soleil show is pre-occupied; his wife gave birth to a baby girl; a rather good reason not to bother him. Those suggestions can go here. I may be cool with sticking to three though.

Meanwhile, how about those Flyers and Stars!

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I’m back and so is my back, mostly

Since early May my back has been acting up in the pain department, alternating between the shoulder blades to the lower regions around my waist.  Some of the pain was kept in check with over-the-counter pain killers and yoga. It came to the unbearable point during what should’ve been an awesome three-day weekend. I spent Sunday afternoon passed out after Somara rubbed a pain-relieving cream into the troubled areas. Eventually it wasn’t enough by evening. I spent most of the next several days pretty bed ridden.

I got to the doctor, the usual questions, symptoms, blah blah. Had to sit through a few x-rays in a gown that left little to the imagination! I knew in advance the x-ray wouldn’t find anything because the pain moves about so it would be in the “soft tissue” areas. Correct. For the interim, he gave me a couple prescriptions for drugs, the answer to most things in Western medicine. I will have to see Dr. Custer to find out if anything interferes with what I already take for anxiety.

Are the drugs working? More or less. The pain I’m feeling remains but at a muted level I can function through. Next week I have an initial PT session which I hope I will not have to continue with. I would rather carry on via the Wii Fit.

The bigger matter is catching up on the weekly/monthly chores I had to let slide. Work wasn’t too bad which is great. I hate having to sift through several hundred pieces of e-mail; it’s certainly a major incentive to stay healthy.

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Kick-Ass

Another Summer filled with Comic Book-based characters is upon us: Iron Man 2, Jonah Hex and Scott Pilgrim readily come to mind. Seems Hollywood will stay fixated on the obscure franchises because nothing seems certain regarding the more accessible characters: Batman is unknown, Spider-Man is getting rebooted/revamped, no idea about the rest and at times I have a hard time caring, I think DC’s line of direct-to-DVD movies are superior, namely New Frontier and the recent Crisis on Two Earths, both of which I failed to get off my butt to write about. Meanwhile, we had a Sunday afternoon free to see this attempt by Marvel to do an R-rated superhero movie.

You’ve seen the trailers and commercials, Dave wants to be a superhero but he lives in the real world, powers don’t exits, blah blah blah. He makes a costume out of a SCUBA wet-suit, calls himself Kick-Ass, tries to take on gangs, runs into a real dangerous duo: Big Daddy and Hit Girl, gets tangled up with The Outfit, so on and so forth.

The whole difference between this dreck and say Hero at Large (starring John Ritter, Bert Convy and Anne Archer) or the funnier Mystery Men from 11 years ago, would be the gore. Everything is predictable, telegraphed and contrived. Slathering this in blood, CG-generated amputations performed by an adolescent murder machine and Nicolas Cage doing his best Adam West imitation, doesn’t suddenly make this edgy or original. These additions only make it more appealing to tweeners and teens who enjoy violence for the sake of violence, like when I was kid and thought seeing Rollerball unedited on HBO rocked. It’s hard to believe there’s a sequel in the works.

Now in the film’s defense, I readily admit to not ever reading the original comic book but I am dead certain that I have even less interest to check out the source material. Kick-Ass does illustrate an even more vivid argument I once heard from a comic-book store owner back in the Nineties about how Marvel tries to imitate DC’s more cerebral titles yet falls flat. Twenty years ago, Sandman was a big success with a more literate crowd, especially in the Goth-pre-Hot Topic circles. It was one of the titles DC used to launch its more adult-oriented Vertigo line (still around today oddly) to widen the audience. Marvel didn’t ignore this and countered with Sleepwalker thereby missing the mark entirely. Hence the cliche in comics I’ve heard for years, “You start out with Marvel and you grow up or graduate to DC.” How does this relate to Kick-Ass? It’s Marvel’s sad attempt to have their movie equivalent of Watchmen, another R-rated superhero franchise Hollywood was iffy on making.

Worth Seeing? Only if you’re a fan of the original Millar & Romita comic…I guess. I’m sure there are many modifications for time and to simplify it for general audiences which will get nitpicked. Everybody else, I would recommend not bothering. It isn’t very funny, it isn’t very entertaining and it doesn’t really put a new perspective on the genre as Watchmen did. I would give Mystery Men another shot or find the good superhero flicks of the last 40 years, the director’s cut of Superman II is my top recommendation yet you need to watch Superman first to get the best results.

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Maintenance this weekend

There will be a brief outage, probably a couple hours, either tomorrow or Monday while I take Picayune‘s server offline to back it up in its entirety. As cool as Time Machine is for backing up what would be all the music (for the stream) and this site (via WordPress), it unfortunately cannot back up the network directory correctly; this is the part which makes iCal more useful.

It should go at a faster clip with all the FireWire-based hardware which thankful remains on Apple’s Pro line of hardware.

Those of you watching my site via RSS Feed, you’ll get the heads up. The rest using the traditional means through a browser probably took the long weekend off. Good for you.

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Stars win the Western Conference!

What an inaugural year for hockey in Austin! They’ve exceeded everybody’s expectations, probably the AHL too. I figured as long as they were better than the San Antonio Rampage, I would be happy. Qualifying for the playoffs was a nice ending to the regular season but landing the number two spot was impressive. Then they swept the Rockford Icehogs which got me to thinking…these guys have a chance to unseat the Hershey Bears, the team I correctly predicted to be the guys everyone will be sweating. Too bad there’s no money to be made betting and handicapping the AHL since I am 50 percent (at best) on the NHL.

Anyway, I didn’t go to the watching party at the CPC because Jeremy had another engagement and I wanted to write on my site (surprise!). I did listen to the game on the radio via the Internet. Boy oh boy did my Stars keep me on the edge, especially when they were down by two goals at the half-way point. All wasn’t lost yet in my opinion. OK, things were looking ugly. The Hamilton Bulldogs were outshooting the Stars by a ratio of 3-1. However, in hockey, all your team needs is a lucky break to shift the momentum in your favor and it was exactly what my Stars received. Eventually, they tied the game, took the lead, nailed a GAG (Go-Ahead Goal) and ran out the clock.

Now it’s on to face the Hershey Bears next week! What are our chances? If they’re as lucky as they’ve been against Chicago and Hamilton, both number one teams in their respective divisions, I think we got a shot at winning this thing. Stars in six games. The series doesn’t come to Austin for a while longer. I will have stocked up on Hershey candy bars by then to help intimidate the opposition.

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The Onion gets some Scientific assistance

Before you roll your eyes and remind me they’re just movies I will still point the finger of shame at Hollywood for their low marks in Science (and History). Next to Fox News, American movies are notorious for purporting unsound myths as facts everybody believes much to the annoyance of intelligent people. Case in point, explosive decompression from the movie Outland; people or other living creatures do not blow up in the vacuum of outer space. If your morbid curiosity needs to be satisfied, see what would really happen by watching Sunshine or Event Horizon (the latter also gets fire in zero gravity correct).

The smartasses from The Onion‘s AV Club did a section today about the (in)validity of 15 different Apocalypses shown in movies over the last 30 years. To be fair, some of their choices are documentaries: An Inconvenient Truth, Flow and Food, Inc.; or wannabe documentaries (Left Behind). What was more amusing was the writers getting debunking/clarifying assistance from actual scientists, namely my favorite astronomer, Dr. Phil Plait loaned his expertise regarding the issues with asteroids. If you’re going to ridicule 1998’s Armageddon, you can’t leave Plait out of the fray! The bigger shock was to discover that one of the regular contributors has a PhD in Theology.

Check it out. Some of the answers were re-assuring because I’m not very knowledgeable about epidemics.

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Flyers will defeat the Blackhawks in six

I took a couple days off to recuperate from all the hockey excitement on Monday evening. While we were watching the Stars take it to the Bulldogs at the CPC (Cedar Park Center) via ahl.com streaming on all the HD TVs, my Flyers ended their 13-year drought to the Cup. What a relief! I remember all the heartbreak I felt with game 7 in 2004 against the Lightning for the Eastern Conference, course that game was over after the first 10 minutes from what I witnessed. Then there was all the excitement of them making it to Eastern Conference again in 2008, only to lose to the Penguins. The 2008 experience didn’t bother me so much. The previous season was just awful and they made it this far during a rebuilding year so anything after the playoffs was gravy.

Unlike a NeoCon, I do remember my prediction for the Flyers two months ago and I’m glad to be wrong. I had seen this lineup play off and on all season, they didn’t give me too much hope, especially when they fired the coach (poor John Stevenson) over the losing skid earlier. Beating the Devils was cool yet not impossible, they’re rivals. Overcoming the really skilled Bruins after being in an 0-3 deficit, amazing! Eliminating the Canadiens was a lock after they jumped out with a 2-0 lead. Will this team hoist the Cup now? Definitely. The Blackhawks are good but they’re not good enough courtesy of their weaker Conference and residing in a division with only one consistently difficult team, the Red Wings; Predators and Blue Jackets are practically a bye. My Flyers may also be inconsistent yet they have more grit than the ‘Hawks. Or to put into terms Southsiders would understand, Pronger will probably put his fist through some people’s faces.

This is a very fitting Stanley Cup Championship too. Both teams have so much in common:

  • Their fans are notorious for being poor sports: Philly is known for boo’ing Santa Claus, Chicago…the Cubs incident is the one the world recalls immediately.
  • Both host cities are infamous for some of the unhealthiest cuisine in America: Chicago has White Castle, Italian beef sandwiches, deep-dish pizza and Polish sausage; Philly has cheesesteaks, cheesecake and hoagies.
  • Both lost their Winter Classics.
  • Both were swept by their opponents during their last Cup appearances. Oddly, their vanquishers were last year’s participants too: the Red Wings and Penguins.
  • Both have rather inexperienced goalies because their starters are injured or were disappointing.
  • Jeremy Roenick was a star player for both. He was a younger, scoring machine with the ‘Hawks but his time with the Flyers was pretty good too.

Now to work out a friendly wager with my ex-roommate Paul regarding the outcome.

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Weird Al Yankovic & UHF at the Paramount

Weird Al Yankovic taking questions from the audience after the movie. Picture courtesy of this nice Austinite.

The Alamo Drafthouse is the gold-standard for going to the movies, not this overpriced Yuppie upstart. Last night they continued to prove it with a special screening of UHF. Normally, I wouldn’t really bother to spend the money and time to go downtown for this film. It has its funny, charming moments but I can see this via cable pretty easily. However, the Drafthouse’s MCs for the Quote-a-Long series pulled the ultimate coup. They got a new print (it only had noticeable scratches when the reels changed, I used to be a part-time projectionist) to show, they held the screening at the larger Paramount Theater (one of those older places built during the early Twentieth Century), fired up the crowd with a sing-a-long to Weird Al’s five most requested parodies:

  1. “Eat It”
  2. “Like a Surgeon”
  3. “Fat”
  4. “Amish Paradise”
  5. “White & Nerdy”

I was very thankful the MCs told the crowd to be quiet afterwards; just watch the movie and let everybody else enjoy it the way it was shown originally in 1989. Pretty tough request to make of this audience yet they honored it.

UHF is certainly a very dated flick, even by the Summer it debuted you can tell these jokes were written between 1985-1988: a parody of Dire Straits’ hit “Money for Nothing,” a talk show host being hit with a chair in the face and a fantasy sequence of Al rescuing Michael Richards (yes, Kramer) as Rambo. Victoria Jackson’s clothes gave me a few chuckles too: dresses with puffy shoulders. Certainly better than her current gig with the Teabaggers. The cast has always been UHF‘s legacy for me. Besides being a minor launchpad for Michael Richards (I had heard of him through Fridays with Rich Hall), it also had Gedde Watanabe, Fran Drescher, Billy Barty, Emo Phillips, David Proval (frequent heavy in gangster films) and Dr. Demento.

When the closing credits finished, the highlight of the night appeared…Weird Al himself with the director/co-writer Jay Levey (he has also been Al’s manager since the early Eighties). They proceeded to take questions from the audience. I didn’t have anything worthwhile to ask so I endured some rather inane ones he and Jay fielded pretty successfully. I think he was genuinely thrilled about the turnout to see him. When UHF hit theaters in 1989 it was a dud and he was seriously considering retirement, thankfully Nirvana inspired him to carry on. For this screening, the MCs said it sold out in three minutes. Good thing my co-worker/friend Jeff helped me get through navigating Alamo’s poor redirection on the site because we managed to scored fifth-row seats.

What does Weird Al have planned for the future? An upcoming tour with an album planned later this year (he’s about due, I was hoping he’d have something out for his 50th birthday). He jokingly inquired Jay about why he isn’t on Rock Band and doesn’t have a video game. There was also supposed to be a movie for Cartoon Network but they scrapped all original productions of that nature so the duo are free to offer it to other cable channels.

Posted in Austintatious, In Theaters, Movies, Music | Leave a comment

My Year of Hank Hill?

When I turned 38, I called it my Year of Homer since that’s his permanent age and we locked ourselves out of the house two days after my birthday.

Hank Hill is a tad older, early forties but the connection I’m having to him is derived from my current back pains which are being temporarily relieved with ibuprofen and yoga. At least I didn’t injure it by trying to lift up two filled propane tanks.

Yoga? I’ve been doing this off and on since 2004. It’s much easier to do with the Wii Fit because the balance board lets me know if I’m not on target with my weight distribution. The virtual instructor is more tolerable than the yogi portrayed by Johnny Depp too.

You may return to your snickering over me intermittently practicing some new-agey silliness, I think it’s just a harder workout due to the patience and balance elements.

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OK Go performing “What To Do”

One big highlight was this hand-bell accompanied performance of “What To Do.” OK Go demonstrating their innovating abilities beyond dancing and Rube Goldberg devices. I didn’t know Somara was going to record this until she was half way through. Then I sought permission from the band before sharing/posting this because I felt it would be rude not to; live performances are big income source with bands today as the Record Industry’s grasp weakens. Sure there are other posts on YouTube but this one is more personal because we were there (similar to wearing a SQUID device) so it’s like replaying a real-life memory. Enjoy.

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1980: The Empire Strikes Back debut

*Technically, the movie was released on May 21, 1980 which would’ve been a Wednesday but I lived in Springfield, IL then so it probably didn’t appear until May 23 or that’s when I went, my parents wouldn’t allow us to attend on a school night. Therefore, splitting the difference works out.*

This was the only (good) Star Wars movie I saw on opening night as a kid. It was quite a big deal when I was 11. My family would occasionally see a film during its opening weekend but never on a Friday evening; the small victories which always seem bigger when you’re a kid.

I recently received an e-mail from my brother and I was surprised he commented about how excited he was to see this too. Obviously it was the last Star Wars flick he ever cared to watch because he isn’t keen on such stuff; he pretty much despised it through his teens and college years. I need to get him to retell his Star Trek story from his time with Apple in Cupertino.

Anyway, thanks to the usual problem of life getting in the way, I completely missed the deadline for blathering on about the week we spent in Washington, DC while Dad was attending some computer training. Seeing all those monuments, museums and other delights took a backseat to getting out of school for a week. Maybe I’ll cover it next year should I be stumped for material.

What does DC have to do with the episode many consider the best of the six? A lot.

Before we returned to Springfield, Mom bought me something from the Air & Space Museum, the novelization of the movie. I didn’t really see it as spoiling all the surprises because I had been jonsin’ for a sequel for three years; the Marvel comics weren’t cutting it despite cribbing some of Empire‘s key plot elements while the heroes were trapped on The Wheel. How I poured through the book all the way home. For some reason I thought the Walkers (AT-ATs) were bionic horses General Veers and his snowtroopers rode into battle. I blame my grade-school reading skills more than the author for this. My perceptions were quickly corrected by a sneak preview on The Ray Rayner Show weeks later. I also kept the secret to myself about Darth Vader being Luke’s father so others could enjoy the revelation. The explanation that Lucas had in the works before Jedi was better too: originally, Vader was supposed to Anakin’s clone which would substantiate Obi-Wan Kenobi’s story instead of the copout he went with.

The movie was a great kickoff to the Summer of 1980 since the rest of it went rather downhill by June. Meaning, it was rather boring, filled with tension (for reasons I don’t want to discuss) and best forgotten.

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Happy belated 15th Anniversary to Brian & Linda

I forgot to cover this yesterday as I was all absorbed in the other two stories plus a third I just didn’t have the energy to bother with.

My brother’s wedding in Chicago was a great time, especially in light of having the income to attend!

According to the Internet, the gift options are Crystal and Watches. Not very enticing. Hopefully they’ll have a good time over the weekend to celebrate their accomplishment.

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Last Stand against the Texas SBOE

Hmmm, contrary to one critic I know, I don't see any Greek-esque rioting or professional French striking.

Texas just keeps on giving to America. As if eight years of Bush and the unsavory things LBJ did weren’t enough to damage the country, my adopted home’s statewide Board of Education will go through with some partisan, slanted revisions for upcoming History and Social Studies books. It matters on a National level because textbook publishers cater toward the larger states (California, Texas, maybe New York) for economic reasons; nobody is going to write, edit and print 50-plus editions. So what passes as acceptable in Texas will be the only options for states with smaller populations. The other options are equally undesirable: spend more to get editions they can accept (not in this economy) or stick with the older, probably outdated books they do have. The latter makes me laugh because when I was in sixth or seventh grade (1979-1981), I remember my US History book having the chutzpah to project the US having a permanent Moon base in 1986. Even as a kid I thought, “What kind of moron wrote this? We haven’t been to the Moon since Nixon, it’ll take a miracle to make anything resembling the base in Kubrick’s 2001!”

Yesterday, I had the day off to kick back, do some chores I’ve put off and rest up before the OK Go concert. Then I saw the invitation from the Texas Freedom Network. I decided to go, why not, History is a subject which concerns me because one of the key points I’ve always remembered from James Loewen’s Lies My Teacher Told Me is the flawed approach most educators take with the subject; read his book to find out, I want to stay on target here. I also wanted to see the opposition which claimed it was going to show up to support SBOE, they never appeared unless you count the two RonPaulumpas who may have been there in agreement, sometimes they’re unpredictable but they’re never trustworthy with the Paul Cult of Personality stench they emit.

The turnout was okay. Austin’s excuse for a newspaper said there were over 200 people. Sounds possible, I didn’t take the time to count. There were speakers from TFN, NAACP, a War Vet (based upon his appearance and estimated age, I would guess Korean or Vietnam, there aren’t many WWII ones remaining), professional educators and a member of the state legislature. My favorite posters had pictures of Sen. Joe McCarthy with Roy Cohn saying “Still Evil” and “Not Vindicated.” The soon-to-be ousted member Don McLeroy (he was defeated in his own party’s primary this Spring) is pushing to have the infamous Wisconsin bully’s actions whitewashed which is why there’s some emphasis about the alcoholic senator. The sound system was pretty weak. I couldn’t hear much of what the speakers were saying.

This went on for about an hour. Afterwards, the crowd dispersed. I did speak to Ray McMurrey, the President of the AFT in Texas (American Federation of Teachers, part of the AFL-CIO) and he gave me some words of solace over SBOE’s idiocy. Firstly, the State Legislature can refuse funding for the purchase of the revised books (this was something a speaker said but I couldn’t hear it). This may happen because the State Senate removed McLeroy as Chairman recently and they can step in again if the embarrassment levels rise again. (Name a high-tech company willing to set up an operation in a state full of dunces…unless they import the talent which is what they do already. Poor schools will only exacerbate it.) The Texas House and Senate may be in the Republican camp (this will probably change in the next 10-20 years as the demographics shift per Ruy Teixeira), but Money trumps Jesus with them; same for the Bluedog Democrats; they act about as pious as Buck Strickland. Secondly, the teachers don’t have to follow the textbooks to the letter. I asked about reprimands. McMurrey said the it wouldn’t matter due to the obsession over getting children to pass the crappy TAKS test, the current goalpost set up by the last governor’s drive-by consultants.

Tomorrow, the SBOE will vote and they will probably carry on with their whitewash but this doesn’t mean the fight is completely over, unless the First Amendment has been suspended. McLeroy’s actions are just his intellectual vandalism because he’s gone next year (should be sooner). Another factor which can change the tide is technology. The Kindle and iPad may be in their infancy yet publishing a book through them is much cheaper despite their upfront costs. Maybe SBOE’s naked aggression will create the so-called tipping point to finally make electronic books more common in academia.

In closing, I know some will accuse me of a Liberal bias. Sure, guilty. However, I believe in complete disclosure of all historical figures and facts. (I want accuracy not warm feelings.) MLK cheated on his wife yet this doesn’t negate his contribution to the Civil Rights movement. FDR, one of my favorite presidents, once said to staff members that America is a Protestant nation, therefore Catholics and Jews are merely indefinite guests. He still proved to be the best man for the job over those who tried beat him in four elections. The list could go on forever…these inconvenient facts are best brought out, discussed and thought about instead of sweeping them under the rug which then leads to elevating certain figures to godhood, especially with the movement to rename everything after Reagan. History is about studying the past to help us understand where we are now and/or why things are a certain way, not about memorizing dates, places and people with the expectation it will turn young people into model citizens.

Update May 22, 2010: I thank the two comments even if the first one is puzzling but I let it stand in the tradition/example of The Nation‘s web site. The SBOE went through along partisan lines as predicted with their claims about balance (more like petty revenge and entertaining their paranoid fantasies), political success (their faction’s ongoing belief they create their own reality) and the biggest lie of all, how Christianity exclusively shaped the nation’s blueprint with the Founders. Never mind the writings from Ancient Greece, the Roman Empire, the Magna Carta, the Mayflower Compact, Locke, Rousseau, Hobbes, other European nations, various American Indian tribes/nations and other non-Western sources.

Posted in Austintatious, History, Science & Technology | 2 Comments

OK Go 2010

After four long years, I finally got to see OK Go in Austin again. It was a spectacular sold-out show at the Parish (a venue I haven’t been to in five years; Stereophonics with Augustana) filled with numerous surprises. I think everybody in the Austin area was equally excited because the tickets were all gobbled up two months ago; OK Go tends to have a strong turnout here so I was shocked they didn’t book a second show but they’re due in the LA region for this weekend’s Maker Faire courtesy of their Rube Goldberg video (I’m not linking to it, it’s old news).

Andy juggling his multi-instrumental duties.

Most of the show featured tracks from their new album Of the Colour of the Blue Sky which I am growing to like more as I listen to it again and again. Unlike OK Go and Oh No, Colour is a departure from their past sound of short Power Pop songs with snippets of wit. This record is slower, more introspective and heavily orchestrated as “This Too Shall Pass” demonstrates. Therefore it didn’t grab my attention right away yet it can often be a good thing. Woodface is my all-time favorite album Crowded House ever did (unless the June release is amazing) and I always remember how it disappointed me the first couple times I listened through it expected a repeat of the 1986 debut.

Back to OK Go.

Tim on backing vocals and bass.

Last night they were in top form playing hits from all three albums. Damian let the audience vote on them doing either the Pixies’ “Debaser” or the oldie “You’re So Hot.” The latter won. When he mentioned the Pixies, I assumed it would be “Gigantic” which is what they did on the tribute. The set was devoid of any other covers sadly; they do Toto’s “Hold the Line” and ELO’s “Don’t Bring me Down” really well. As the picture above shows, there were frequent bursts from the band’s confetti cannon so I have a big handful as a souvenir to go with their piece de resistance from the show…a USB thumb drive containing a recording of that show with videos and the current record! For years I’ve read about such concerts but never had any luck seeing such an opportunity. Leave it to OK Go to finally come through on a personal wish! I can only hope numerous other bands wise up to offer such things (Duran Duran I’m looking in your direction), they’re the ultimate souvenirs or swag in my opinion. Until the SQUID recording device from Strange Days gets invented.

Dan giving someone a souvenir after the encore.

There were two big highlights and Somara caught one in its entirety on camera (I’m pursuing permission from the band before distributing it). The first was them performing “What To Do” with a series of bells. Funny and amazing due to the precision required. The second was saved for the encore when they darkened the stage and returned wearing jackets with LEDs embedded on the backs. The lights displayed characters which “rolled” like a slot machine until the word “go” or “ok” appeared (I forgot which). Then the quartet jumped into “WTF?” utilizing white fur-lined guitars (all Gibsons) with colored laser lights nested under the headstocks (I looked up guitar anatomy to get this right). Now I recall a third which impressed a music nerd such as myself. During “A Good Idea at the Time,” Damian’s guitar needed to be tuned up after the first chorus so Tim, Andy and Dan kept going with a little lead guitar improvisation from Andy until it was all fixed. Then they smoothly moved on to the second verse. I am excited to hear this again when my USB drive arrives (via the website). Damian even thanked Andy for his quick thinking.

Damian, the evening's MC and storyteller.

I know I’ve blathered on about OK Go’s live show for years but last night they demonstrated how there’s more to them than being “that band with the treadmill video.” Sadly, this North American tour is winding down as Austin is near the end of it. Their site shows OK Go doing a few more shows in the States and then they’re off to primarily Europe the remainder of the year. Hopefully they’ll plan a second blitz in late 2010/early 2011. Meanwhile, I’ll let you check out my USB drive to get a sample.

Lead guitarist/vocalist for Earl Greyhound.

Two acts opened for OK Go this time. The first was Robert Francis. He was alright, nothing really grabbed my attention but I wasn’t driven to boredom or checking my iPhone to catch the ongoing Bulldogs v. Stars game (my Stars won in OT). The second I liked more, Earl Greyhound, a power trio from Brooklyn which had similarities to Skunk Anansie and the Noisettes through the bassist’s vocals. This opinion may change once I listen to their CD I scored for 10 bucks.

The bassist/vocalist of Earl Greyhound.

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