Thursday, July 31, 2008

3.17 Debasement Tapes - vmtranscripts.com/season_3/... :
excellent. v thorough, w stills & descriptns action
I like th guys in Chinese class trying translate char: -So, this represents..What's th word? It's like a pleasing quality, you kn? -Right, right. -Like..charming. -Or-or-or more. It's a spiritual quality...

ANCHOR PERSON: "After 10yrs in th 'where are they now?' file, DesmondFellows appears tomorrow..": onscreen clip MyPrettyPony longhaired Desmond & JohnnyScopes (played by uncreditd RobThomas)/awesome


KEITH: "Hey, Jude," "Yesterday," "Get Back."
DESMOND:
Catchy tunes, yes. Rock 'n' roll, no.
KEITH:
What kind of musician doesn't recognize the Beatles as the greatest rock band of all time?
DESMOND:
I don't recognize them as a rock band at all.

Veronica and Piz arrive and watch the debate quietly.

DESMOND:
They were...tunesmiths.
He grins. Keith is fit to bust.

DESMOND: Hey, man, I didn't get all pissy when you denied my claim that Marshal Dillon was the greatest sheriff of all time.
KEITH: Marshal Dillon was a marshal and, more importantly, is fictional.
DESMOND: That's what the Beatles are to me. Fictional.

KEITH: "Revolution," "Hey, Jude," these were real songs, man. "Norwegian Wood."

PIZ: Uh, Mr. Mars, I think Desmond is just winding you up. Most critics reference the Beatles influence in Desmond's material.
DESMOND: Oh, you mean those Beatles. I'm sorry. I thought you meant the other ones with the two e's from the lower East Side. No, they're totally fictional.
John, Paul, George, and the drummer? Oh, those guys are awesome.

KEITH:
Veronica, could you have Sacks bring me the leg irons?
VERONICA: Come on, Dad. [soothingly] Let it be.


I'm enjoying Paul Rudd in this. never really have before. scruffy and unhappy here, I always like that better.
VERONICA: It's a start. Was there anything in the bag? DESMOND: Just medications, pills.
VERONICA: What are you taking pills for? DESMOND: Ah, you know. Life. nice delivery on that.


wkp: "Debasement Tapes"
writer: John Enborn
Piz is put in charge of escorting his idol, Desmond Fellows, a singer-musician from a 1990s so, why long hair? the news clip looked like from 70s band who arrives on the Hearst campus to perform at a benefit concert for the radio station. When tapes of Fellows' back-up vocals and tracks go missing, Piz recruits Veronica to help locate them.
Keith believes he will be running unopposed in the race for Sheriff, until an unlikely candidate throws his hat into the ring.

-An exhausted Mac exclaims "...the next time and last time i run will be to chase down and kill the inventor of Ultimate Frisbee." Ultimate Frisbee was invented and named by Joel Silver, the executive producer of the show. huh.



VERONICA: When I was on dance team, I tried to convince them to do a routine to "Why You Shot Me Down," but changed the words to "We Threw a Touchdown."
PIZ: Wait, you were, uh...you were on a dance team?
VERONICA: I was a dance-teamer with a deep soul.
PIZ: Hmm.
VERONICA: Plus, I thought Desmond was cute. Who knew he'd turn out to be such a wastoid lech?
PIZ: I don't think he's always been like that. Still, it's gonna be a good show. I'm glad we saved it. Good thing I got the nerve to call you.
VERONICA: Why wouldn't you have called?
PIZ: You know. I thought it might be awkward. Me and you... After, uh...that.
VERONICA: Yeah.

VERONICA: I'm glad it's not. Awkward.
PIZ: Oh, it is. No, I'm very uncomfortable.

They listen to the music (which is Paul Rudd singing Cotton Mather's "My Before and After").

She picked me out of the millions
Thumbing an O.E.D.
Dressed me down to civilian
Cracks the code on the Rosetta Stone
Says the word for alone is "alone"


Tuesday, July 29, 2008

GAZPACHOT: Achieving a sustainable madness...:
“The only performance that makes it, that really makes it, that makes it all the way, is the one that achieves madness.” says Mick Jagger in Performance.
There's truthiness in that statement. I mean a large part of all that madness in the 60s was just people saying: hey, life is precious, why are we wasting it on corporate servitude and fearfulness? Let's unglue this system and see what this species (i.e. humanity) can really do. The madness was a way of shaking off the shackles of mundane, repetitious conventionality. Unfortunately, drugs entered the picture, and in my opinion that's where it all went down the shitter. I think drugs clouded the issue of exploration and gave plenty of really truly adventurous souls permission to act like idiots and over indulge their "trips" into so-called alternative living. They got lost in the non-plot - albeit somewhat ecstatically - much the way the film Performance does.
The Internet has unleashed enormous waves of innovation and personal expression, it's just that there's really not much of a way for the cream to rise to the top. Creative chaos is the flavor of the day - in some ways it's a very Utopian state for a society to achieve, however, it necessarily implodes under the magnificent weight of its unsupported output. What is the infrastructure of a dream, man?

dlcs/my: Mick Jagger re performance>madness. truthiness in th. I mean large p all th madness th 60s pple saying: hey, life is precious, why wasting it corporate servitude & fearfulness? Let's unglue this system /y. pls./ & see wh can really do. /me at Stanfrd
glibness I dislike. seems specific to me, a common glibness. it is the mode of speech of the characters (&writers, on their blog) of greys anatomy. does 'glib' identify it? common bcs it's all over, people around, tv, blogs, a lot in blogs. writing for an audience very susceptible to conventions? well writing letters too, think of adolescent notes to friends and boyfriends, dramatic in a way given, or prescribed, aor s if agreed upon. conventional. by convention.
the rhythms are catching, I don't want in my mind.
so is that why: write in sketch, not composed sentences, to avoid it.
the author of Memory Room came to ebbco and said she wrote on index cards then bundled them up in different colors of ribbon by mood,tone,association - she said something about not wanting to write across a page, seemed too confident (of coherence -? that is what I want her to have meant, not: too bold for little me, but too coherent, and too susceptible to false rhythms of a conventional coherence, well worn coins - don't think she meant that so much - she was talking about 9-11, an after, how seemed could not dare to cohere)

right now since just encountering it in blogs online (that's the occasion of this) so it is too much there in my mind. the rhythm of presentation.
jaime- just don't like any pretension? any: not-meaning-what-say.


I like wry. has honesty in it, not literally but in the stance, in the mood conveyed.

I like idiom. - in book I read 1998ish ~The University ~John N - end of first chapter - re preference for someone w irony in speech, sense that what they say has been anticipated, said before. I like knowing turn of a phrase, inhabiting a speech pattern or idiom. 'snowclones.'
I like unknowing talk. caught up. earnest.

what I dislike: exaggerative. flippant. said to be humorous. (but this does not identify it, does it? bcs I can think of some funny to me people who exaggerate and flip ~ maybe ~ maybe not. I like Chelsea Handler, she's wry though. is this about any humor that is not wry not dry not eeyore?)

Eeyore from Winnie the Pooh:
"It's snowing still," said Eeyore gloomily.
"So it is." - "And freezing." - "Is it?" -
"Yes," said Eeyore. "However," he said, brightening up a little, "we haven't had an earthquake lately."
I put that with its picture of Eeyore in the small box on the Rice Univ application (supplement to the common application) and a cut out of lines from Szymborska as encountered first in Nyr 'Reality Demands.' which lines? I think: 'on tragic mtn passes the winds whips hats from heads and we can't help laughing at that.' the application said to put in the box sth you like.
so I put wry? tragedy with comedy a theme, I'm 17, my big hs paper is Passing The Open Windows: John Irving's comic tragic vision. vision eh. World according to Garp, Owen Meany, Hotel New Hampshire. saying, look this is very sad and it is funny. that's all the paper said I think. look, in this passage also.


of course, have noted re this before. keep wanting to name it. articulate. what I dislike.
this stood out in what just read, whole thing was in this style, this works as a representative example:
-because __ is one thing but __? that's just inexcusable.

shows up a lot as disavowing or jesting about emotion, involvement:
-this is just sad. -this is kind of appalling. -someone had a lot of time on their hands.
maybe that's the whole deal, the disavowal of emotion. not part of the fray. makes me angry. the woman on the today show watches the video of Christian the lion reuniting with the two guys who raised him and she cries and says I'm crying and the guy says I know, it's kind of disturbing. I hate him saying that. what a jerk. not bcs mean to her bcs it's mean about being moved, feeling something. mean. small.
it's not really disturbing, he's not really disturbed, why say that. supposed to be funny. people do laugh I guess. they do suppose it is funny. what's funny about it.


-not that these kinds of happenings are rare. in fact this kind of thing happens with an alarming frequency.
I recognize this way of talking, I did it a lot esp in early teenage years, 12-13-14 maybe, you think it's humorous to say something is alarming? to take the stance of the bystander who remarks on things as strange. but does not seem affected by it. above it, I guess. oh the amusingly strange ways of the people. not moved to thought or feeling. not Charlie on Life who I like, saying Is that right? Is that right.)
I recall a story I wrote for Mr Johnson's english class
-also I remember his stories, two I think, that he showed me and I read, one may have been about an english teacher and a student who was cool, the title had 'cool' in it, something about a finger, did the student give the finger to his teacher when seeing him out of class? there was some irony, some intended hauntish resonance ~ we real cool we play pool ~ that poem I probably was introduced to in that class, so good for Mr Johnson, he was an influence on me, I was fairly normal and able to be influenced, and Iwas I remember
How to write a poem - first remember everything - the grey wallpaper, the stench of the _ - ...which is not to say it is not a fact - ... in the light of _ when your father lies dying - take notes - the line you find does not have to be worth the dying -
and he liked my story, I remember as if got praise, got laughs, maybe he had me read it aloud? it was the voice of a kid a brat yes superior tone: I'm the normal one in a family of weirdos. the story describing mom and dad
and sis in their alien laughable behaviors eg
My dad, now, you wouldn't want to try to get my dad to get up after 7pm. I've never seen my dad after 7pm *not* in his lazyboy. the idea of it makes my head spin.
ok I hope it was not that blah, it was funnier, but it was in that tone "now, you wouldn't' - subjunctive, intimacy with reader, derision of the oddball family that is my accursed lot.


-among other things what is it about this. didn't mind it in book title: among other things I've taken up smoking but that's bcs sounds to me like someone being wry about themselves, wryly unapologetic: this is what I do. it's not good for me, I would be better off not doing it, and it is what I do. --- the reader bernard schlink: there are my thoughts, there are my decisions, and there are my actions. ....

-among other things, my neighbor has the irritating habit of moving furniture, routinely, in the middle of the night. when I say routinely, I mean: every night. and when I say in the middle of the night, I mean: at 3am. so I'm a forgiving guy right? just because the thudding and even crashing sounds of bookshelves and heavy desks being pushed across floors keeps me from ever getting more than three hours of sleeps doesn't mean I can't be neighborly right? I'm a go along to get along person. just, does all the furniture have to go along too? every night?
that was going to be a composite but just went with it. part of what I dislike, easy to string these words, don't have to consider anything to know what to say? what is this passage doing? appealing to common point of view 'right?' author & reader against the neighbor, how author will deal with the crazies of the world, the crazies in your neighborhood. us against them. and a kind of ~understatement. is that it is, to say 'just, does it have to be __ ?' but it's in the same service as the overstatement, the exaggeration. which is what. in service of what.

making a list feels like participating, same rhythm, observing & commenting: 'things I d n like'.
a list of things thrown five minutes ago. well that I like an aspect of, what? the relationship to five minutes ago. ago. ago ness.
McSweeneys lists and their whole website 'internet tendency' has this feel doesn't it. that's why makes me feel bad and I mostly do not read it.
am going to list anyway, seems helpful to collect examples, see if someone can tell me what they hear. 'mmmm that's what I hear in your sounds' dar - which goes to, why this matters to me, bcs it is in me a critiscm of people I used to know when I was 20 and civilized, among peers. am angry disappointed people I thought I liked talk like this. and angry it seems to me the voice of normality. of normal (american?) ~writerly sensibility. writerly. bunk. anyway is that right, is it normality's way of talking? the way the well-adjusted write their blogs?


-people, ___ -seriously, don't. just don't. -yes I am weird.
-But I digress. -__, nay, ___. - ______, no?
-turned to me and -suddenly -realized -not so much.
-that can't be good. --No, no I do not.

-favorite human on the planet. - ... in all creation.
dislike v much. why. again, bcs do not mean it. ? not thinking especially of all creation. and planets makes me picture black space, white astronaut.

-I ____ (eg repeat myself. laugh loudly. love coffee.). I know this. I am known for this.
the short sentences. full stop. or single words. so again it's about emphasis. most of this is exaggeration? "that's just inexcusable" well the 'inexcusable' is an exaggeration and the 'that's just' is the speaker being knowing ~ in relation to unknowing people, masses? a kind of superiority all through? maybe. or just color? emphasis, overstating. is that so bad.

Saturday, July 19, 2008

first liked GilmoreGirls bcs I like Lorelai.
& BostonLegal bcs liked AlanShore.

Nip/Tuck Season 1. moved by sadness of Christian (but later episodes dimished my sympathy, diluted it) still those first 13 episodes were one moving watch for me. & Escobar: I love this song! Don't you miss the 80s man?! (gary numan 'cars')

Veronica Mars. *

Lost. *

Life. *

did not expect to but v much enjoyed constant suspense of 24.
the * shows my favorites. life after the end. in each case. 24 too so maybe that's why.
and I watch for the company of characters I like. Logan, Veronica, her dad, her dog.
with Lost I like Locke & Hurley & Sawyer but here it is more about the situation, the in-this-together, island stranded, after the crash. Charlie Crews I like a lot, and Ted and the two of them, talking about the coyotes. and in 24, it was Tony I most liked, after his end: Don't you think you've made me miss enough tv today, Jack?


I am liking Swingtown bcs more or less like all the chars. but not MadMen bcs more or less do not. ~

and I like HS settings, 90210 bcs it is of my HS years, bcs I remember what I did not know I knew.
DawsonsCreek I d n think I like but in practice recently did enjoy watching, esp Pacey. & comparing to 90210, that always interests me.

in practice feel bad when watching The Wire. and also it seems when watching Mad Men. and when think of watching West Wing. people in their daily social roles? not becoming (like kids in high school) or breaking down, but keeping on. not after the end. Hurley: yeah there's a monster and now & then someone blows up right in front of you, but it's not so bad. get to sleep in every day.


Deadwood seems gorgeous, like it would top all, but still do not get past the setting, the browns. dust? can't see. but John from Cincinnati: run down motel, beach, family and strangers. maybe it'll be it for me.
in hopes:
John from Cincinnati. *

Friday, July 18, 2008

Emmy invites "Mad," "Dexter" & "Damages," snubs "Grey's" & "Ugly"

AMC's "Mad Men" and FX's "Damages" made Emmy history this morning, becoming the first basic cable series to gain nominations for best series. They join "Boston Legal," "Dexter" and "House." In the best drama actress category, Glenn Close will battle it out with last year's winner Sally Field. If James Spader or Hugh Laurie doesn't win, the best drama category could be a four-way cable race between Bryan Cranston, Gabriel Byrne, Michael C. Hall and Jon Hamm of "Mad Men." Meanwhile, previous Emmy winners "Desperate Housewives" and "Grey's Anatomy" were completely snubbed this year, as was "Ugly Betty." (Read the entire list of nominations) Other notes:
"30 Rock" earns 17 noms, "Mad Men" scores 16, "Pushing Daisies" 12
Amy Poehler (supp. actress) is the 1st "SNL"-er nominated for comedy series
HBO was shut out of the best drama category for the first time since 1998 --JamesP: It's not TV, it's HBO
The No. 1 nomination-getter was "John Adams" with 23

"30 Rock" & "John Adams" broke records for most noms in their category
Who got snubbed: "The Wire," "Friday Night," "Conchords," Sarah Silverman

Best reality host: Probst, Seacrest, Bergeron, Mandel, Klum but no Keoghan!
The Emmy system finally works! // Emmys wimp out! --nymag:The biggest stories, of course, are the presence of Mad Men — the first basic-cable series ever to get a Best Drama nomination (along with Damages) — and the absence of The Wire, by universal acclaim the best TV show ever. ever. it is striking, their neglecting it so thoroughly.
Is anyone surprised that of these two long-shot shows, the big winner today was the one set safely in the past, in New York, with nary a black person to be seen? is it really the case that the Academy would avoid rewarding a show bcs does not want to encourage interest in real societal problems? (why would the academy -not the govt- be out to keep the masses ignorant?)
"Damages" and "Dexter" don't deserve to be nominated --guardian uk* I probably agree
TV critics approve: Bryan Cranston's nomination called "absolutely stunning" --of BreakingBad
Just 1 nod for "The Wire"!? Also getting 1 nod: "Kid Nation," "According to Jim" -- &
"Ice Road Truckers" cmmt on nymag, above: -In all fairness, ICE ROAD TRUCKERS is pretty wack.
It would usually take 3 years for Emmy to notice "Mad Men" --sfgate Tim Goodman
"Dexter" and "Breaking Bad" don't fit the usual Emmy mold --nj Sepinwall


"The Wire" had a grand total of 2 nominations over 5 seasons
"It's like them never giving a Nobel Prize to Tolstoy," says Slate's Jacob Weisberg, whose site lavised praise on the HBO drama. "It doesn't make Tolstoy look bad, it makes the Nobel Prize look bad."


... ... [ TV t a t t l e . c o m ] ... ...

* 2008 TV Emmy nominations: did they get them right? | Organgrinder | guardian.co.uk:
Every year Kelley's Boston Legal makes it onto the shortlist for best drama, despite the fact that it's a good two or three seasons since this legal show was anything approaching must-see.
yes.
And Kelley's not the only one with an apparent lock on the nominations. Two and A Half Men, The US version of The Office and even Ricky Gervais all seem to turn up with mind-numbing regularity. ...
The outstanding Mad Men made it to the drama shortlist and picked up directing & writing nominations,
plus Jon Hamm - the secretive Don Draper - and John Slattery - suave ad boss Roger Sterling - were nominated for best actor and best supporting actor respectively.
Of the rest Lost, which had a great return to form last year, deserved its nod
yes and House remains entertaining television I dunno maybe. I personally could have done without either the hysterical, poorly plotted Damages - which I feel coasted by largely on big name recognition. yes yes yes, poorly plotted, very. weird to me the praise it gets. didn't make any sense. Or Dexter, which, again in my opinion, declined sharply in its second season, not coincidentally once they moved away from adapting the books.
The elephant in the room here is, as ever, The Wire.
... and the perennially overlooked Friday Night Lights, fast becoming to network television what The Wire was to cable: a strong interesting drama with an excellent ensemble cast that for some reason receives no love.
At the very least Friday Night Lights' Connie Britton deserved a nod for her nuanced performance as the tough, tender Tami Taylor.
yes Instead she was nudged out by a series of histrionic movie star "performances" yes - Glenn Close in Damages, Holly Hunter in the execrable Saving Grace, Sally Field in Brothers and Sisters - plus the dependable Kyra Sedgwick and Law & Order: SVU's Mariska Hargitay.
Of all the shortlists, the lead actor in a drama category was probably the most interesting with nominations also going to Gabriel Byrne, the quiet, controlled centre of In Treatment; Michael C Hall, whose performance as Dexter remains fascinating even when the show doesn't; and the ever dependable Hugh Laurie.
Of course when the ceremony comes round we all know the award will still go to James Spader in Boston Legal.
who is v good (as is Hugh Laurie) but has already been recognized (was that last year, yes, that they said James- and people expected Gandolfini, in recognition of his work as TonySoprano in the year of final season but no, and even Spader joked about it, didn't he? and Spader was great as Alan Shore the first year, no new achievement specially. who do I like of these? well Michael C Hall is outstanding, in general. hmm I pick the guy in Life, Charlie Crews. he's my favorite for the year. and I hope that Terry Quinn has been awarded for performance as John Locke on Lost, excellent. but yes this year Damian Lewis ...

Life's Charlie Crews has Me Baffled - Film.com: Lewis is a frighteningly talented British actor, who, as a tall redhead with a pointy face, has so far stumbled in scoring meaningful Hollywood roles. Lewis's best success was a lead in Steven Spielberg's Band of Brothers and a small but crucial role in the quickly forgotten Stephen King thriller Dreamcatcher.
In Charlie Crews, Lewis has crafted a dark character, rich with quirks and passion. Prison turned Crews into a Zen-fully loopy philosopher, who, much to the annoyance of his partner, regularly loses himself in simple musings on fruit and butterflies and the mysteries of life. Yet, as silly and lofty as his ethereal ramblings are, they amazingly don't seem to contradict his violent reflexes.
Look at the Law & Order dynasty, the CSI family: for both, the writers downplay the detectives' characters and choose the crimes themselves, the sheer depravity of human nature, to command center stage. Sure, SVU's Olivia and Elliot wrestle with their inner demons. Gary Sinise and Jerry Orbach could be animatronic for all I care, as long as they're still out there piecing together the stories ripped from the headlines.
Yet, you get an actor like Damian Lewis, and the character captures you.


...elsewhere:
TUNED IN Lost Discussion Group: You Are the Emmys /You all everybody!/ : I realized after posting my Emmy reactions this morning that I mentioned not a word about Lost being nominated for best drama nor Michael Emerson for best supporting actor. ...

The Watcher - Emmys award historic nods to 'Mad Men' and 'Damages': Emmy reactions and analysis (and I'll be adding to this roster all day)
admires James Poniewozik's headline ("It's not HBO, it's TV"); he also had some thoughts on "The Wire" snub ("[M]aybe it's more fitting that The Wire can go out with its purity of outrage and injustice intact") and also opined on "Conchords," "Damages," "Big Love" (sorry, I don't agree with him there) and "30 Rock"

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Gone Baby Gone (2007) -imdb/quotes:
[first lines]
Patrick Kenzie: I always believed it was the things you don't choose that makes you who you are. Your city, your neighborhood, your family. People here take pride in these things, like it was something they'd accomplished. The bodies around their souls, the cities wrapped around those. I lived on this block my whole life; most of these people have. When your job is to find people who are missing, it helps to know where they started. I find the people who started in the cracks and then fell through.

Patrick Kenzie: She use drugs?
Lionel McCready: I think she does a little coke.
Patrick Kenzie: How much is a little?
Lionel McCready: I don't know. Few times a week, maybe. I mean how much is a lot?
Patrick Kenzie: Few times a week's a lot.
Lionel McCready: Then she does a lot.

Patrick Kenzie: So what kind of name is Bressant?
Detective Remy Bressant [Ed Harris]: It's the kind they give you in Lousiana.
Patrick Kenzie: Oh yeah? Thought you were from here.
Detective Remy Bressant: Well, it all depends on how you look at it. I mean, you might think that you're more from here than me, for example. But I've been living here longer than you been alive. So who's right?
Patrick Kenzie: I'll mull it over.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Beverly Hills 90210: S4 A Dog is Pig is a Man: Donna is heartbroken when Rocky dies. Brandon & Lucinda break up and Kelly tells Dylan about her ...
Kelly to Donna: I read that the loss of a pet can be harder than the loss of a human being. With a person our feelings are so complicated. With a cat or a dog, it's just about love.
yes.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

early 1980s still the 70s (Swingtown, Freaks & Geeks) ... 1990 still the 80s (90210) ... and early 1960s were still the 50s (Mad Men).

A Second Look At: Swingtown - Tuned In - TV Blog - Television Reviews - James Poniewozik - TIME
The credits sequence it debuted in its first episode after the pilot was a sign of trouble, with quick flashes of every imaginable mid-'70s touchstone from disco balls to Carter buttons to Farrah Fawcett posters.
The look and art direction of the show, on the other hand, shows more thought: the sets look like the Midwest in 1976, which is to say, there are elements of the last decade or so before 1976 all through it. You see this too in the excellent sets for Freaks and Geeks, which I've been re-watching, and I remember that the key to that show's period sensibility lay in something Paul Feig told me when I did a feature on the show: "We have to remember that the early '80s in Michigan were basically the 1970s." (Having lived in small-town Michigan at the time, I can vouch for that.)

looking for this comment (satisfying to find it! via dlcs srch: swingtown - I tht it was a tv critic, maybe AlanS - but tsemmed to recall the reference being to That 70s Show not Frks&Gks - maybe there is another comment somewhere re that show, or re 1980s should look like 70s ~ nah that's exactly this Paul Feig quote, I must have just pictured the basement of That 70s show as what 80s shld look like, yup, that's it)
after watching Beverly Hills 90210 which is early 1990s but looks to me very "80s" - pink, neon, leggings. shoulder pads, I guess those were 80s too?

DVD Verdict Review - Beverly Hills 90210: The Second Season:
Even though Beverly Hills 90210: The Second Season was shot and aired in the 1990s, it makes your living room feel like the '80s. The first few episodes are a blur for me because I was too busy ogling the horrendous outfits and hairdos.
Once I blocked out the midriff tops and fluorescent colors...


DVD Verdict Review - Beverly Hills, 90210: The Complete First Season:
The Charge: Fame is where you find it. hm?
Quick! Name someone who starred in Beverly Hills, 90210. Chances are, it didn't take you long to cough up the name Shannen Doherty, Luke Perry, Tori Spelling, Jason Priestley, Jennie Garth, or the name of another ensemble cast member from the show's ten-year run. Beverly Hills, 90210 was so huge that you couldn't escape its hype in any corner of the globe.
Given its overwhelming popularity and recent clamoring from legions of fans, it's surprising that Beverly Hills, 90210 arrives on DVD only now, sixteen years after its debut on Fox. The timing isn't particularly good, because shows like The O.C. (or any CW show for that matter) have eclipsed Beverly Hills, 90210 in almost every relevant category. From incisive writing to catty characters, the new wave of teen soaps kicks 90210's designer denim-clad butt down the stairs. But no current teen soap has the worldwide star appeal that powered 90210. The release of Beverly Hills, 90210: The Complete First Season is a nice way to acknowledge the trend set by the show.

Yeah, I watched it back then. You did too, or you wouldn't be here right now. But frankly, the filter of experience and the perspective of time do not flatter this show.
The pilot struck me with two realizations. The first is that Beverly Hills, 90210 was birthed fully formed, with most of its major characters, plot arcs, and themes in place. Knowing how it turns out later, you can see the seeds planted from day one. like what like what?? This shows remarkable foresight and stubborn commitment down the line by the writing team. Which brings me to realization two: the writing is atrocious. y. The pilot is padded with filler at every turn. The dialogue is somehow bland and cringe-inducing at the same time. Beverly Hills, 90210 relies heavily on the tradition of high school drama, which gives the characters and situations a stagy, melodramatic feel. good, good, this is wh I tht too.
None of this erases 90210's bright spot: a vivacious cast. huh y ok.* Yes, they are sometimes hammy. Their delivery is often stilted. Their median age probably hovers around 25. But each of them is watchable, and there is real chemistry among them. Even when reciting clunkers, the cast seems to be having a great time. This upbeat attitude (combined with considerable marketing power) launched them into teen superstardom. Though some of the cast has moved on to other strong work, they'll always be affiliated with their characters from 90210.
Part of the late DVD arrival probably stems from music rights issues. The box proclaims, in 6-point font buried in a picture of Jennie Garth's cleavage, that "Music has been changed for this home entertainment version." I'd love to rail against destroying the purity of the original show, but I have no idea what music has been left out or altered. The catchy theme song is intact, in several incarnations to boot. The soundtrack is not particularly dynamic, but is passable.
Fans of the show will not care about any of this. 90210 is out on DVD! Finally, your long wait is over. This show was a mainstay of the 1990s, and has strong nostalgia value for millions of people.
Though my predominant reaction was "boy, I don't remember how lame this was," there were moments that made me smile. Dillon
Dylan McKay is almost indescribable; James Dean with a David Hasselhoff vibe mixed in. Somehow, this is a good thing. Shannen is so deliciously bitchy I could hardly take my eyes off her. And Jennie Garth is hot.
The Verdict: You already knew that it's guilty.


Beverly Hills 90210 remake: how can it possibly top the original? | Organgrinder | Guardian Unlimited : Rob Thomas is an intell writer w clear undstanding high school politics, VMars was one of wittiest teen shows recent years [but] 90210 was the teen show to end all teen shows, the original, the most stupid and, yes, the best.

The New ‘90210’ Commits the Ultimate Sin: Bad Fashion | The Cut: New York Magazine's Fashion Blog | Isn’t a cooler, sexier, more provocative 90210 essentially…Gossip Girl? Why not just spin off that show? Dawson’s Creek, The OC, even Buffy turned th teen-drama genre into something racier & less PSA-friendly (remember, Donna actually waited 8 *seasons* to have sex). It's an uphill task to modernize something so genuinely earnest. 90210 was earnest!? was it?

*vivacious cast... and earnest
List of Beverly Hills, 90210 episodes - Wkp - #Specials # The Best Moments of 90210 # Our Favorite Moments # The Final Goodbye # 10-Year High School Reunion. each is on youtube (posted in multi-parts)
the 10 year reunion in 2003, so only three years after the show stopped running, but 10 years after the end of the HS years: the original cast graduated in 1993.
IMDb :: Boards :: "90210" (2008) :: Sophomores twice? (they were said to be juniors the first year: Brenda admitting her age to the older guy she dated, Brandon being teased by the senior he dated, who had a baby. but I gather that the second year they kept them as juniors with the retrocon is that the only word for it? of saying they had been sophomores).
The reunion show gathered Shannen Doherty, Jennie Garth, Luke Perry, Jason Priestley, Gabrielle Carteris, Ian Ziering in a room that either was or resembled the set of the Walsh house living room. at a late point in the conversation the actors who played Jim & Cindy Walsh were brought on and greeted with hugs.
I thought it was really nice. they said they felt like family. Luke Perry said that if something important happened to him, the people he would call were those in that room. it seemed innocent, too - oddly like they had lived out their parts in enacting them, the way I might imagine before understanding that the mechanics of filming means scenes may be acted in an order diff from the storyline and without the whole cast. not organically. they may it sound organic, like they had the experiences of their characters while playing them. maybe tv was shot much more simply then than now? and the set, they said, was in a warehouse, isolated from most everything else, so they were around only each other for lots of time. anyway it was nice and did not seem fabricated so yes maybe there was something vivacious - living - about this cast.

and on the subject of clothes and hairstyles, Jason Priestley was teased and joking about the mullet Brandon had at the beginning of show, and he said "It was the 80s! I mean, it was 1990, but it was the 80s."


and 29July08 again about decades in definition:
What's Alan Watching?: Mad Men, "For Those Who Think Young": Get off my lawn!:
I love the use of "Let's Twist Again" for the opening montage, not just because it evokes Peggy dancing for Pete to the original "Let's Do the Twist" in season one's "The Hobo Code," or because the "like we did last summer" is a meta comment about how much we all enjoyed season one, but because it's a reminder that 1962 is still just as much a part of the '50s as it is the '60s.
Issue Number 986 | Adam Levine | Advocate.com:
-Your old band, Kara’s Flowers, performed once on Beverly Hills, 90210.
-We were 17, yeah, and I had been obsessed with that show. Any young boy knew that in order to start talking to girls, you needed to be into 90210. So we went on the show, and Tiffani-Amber Thiessen thought we were all on blow. We were just excited! She said, “You guys are partying, right?” We’re like, “We’re 17, Tiffani-Amber Thiessen. What are you talking about?” that's funny. she's this full name to them, she's a famous person. Tori Spelling hung out with us backstage and gave us the lowdown. Brian Austin Green kept telling us about his music."

What Is the Best Teen TV Drama of All Time? | Buzz Poll buzzsugar.com
90210 ~my FMS experience, made up (actual make up & self-invented, disconnected fr childhood). what imagine teens will be like, looking up.
Dawsons ~for me what my childhood friends seemed like? when came back to in Md. kids riding bikes, continuous selves.
& VM just real. what life is like. what being a person is like. ~now.



... del.icio.us search for "90210" pagecount set at 50. finds 58 pagemarks among mcass bkmrks.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Pseudopodium Loglist ~ Logpane
listed by date & hour. ? updates as visits recorded in browser? but no site is listed twice, though list goes back to 2002. earlier listing deletes when more recent visit occurs?
will the listed site disappear when a more recent listing occurs?
current snapshot of top of loglist:

July 8, 2008
17:00
Looka!
15:00
linkmachinego.com
lime tree
Visible Darkness
Pussycat
Kugelmass
Even Unto
Crooked Timber
Boing Boing
A White Bear
Synthetic Zero
alicubi
Copyfight
Open Access
Tenser said the Tensor
14:00
Long story; short pier
Culture Industry
13:00
dervala
pocketa-pocketa
Unreligious Experience
BibliOdyssey
ionarts
12:00
Ramage
ResourceShelf
Valve
Cahiers de Corey
Stochastic B.
Limited Inc.
11:00
AKMA
Neurocritic
I like
Bemsha Swing
pas au-dela
Dial M for Musicology
10:00
Easily Distracted
09:00
wood s lot
Mark Evanier
Acephalous
08:00
Second Balcony - unreachable
Auteur's Notebook
07:00
Woodring
06:00
georgiasam
Pipeline
Loom
commonplaces
Waggish
Silliman
05:00
Isola di Rifiuti
Amnesiac
Mumpsimus
04:00
Narrow Shore
02:00
Greenbriar Picture Shows
01:00
Pole to Pole
July 7, 2008
23:00
eudaimonía
22:00
Making Light
Adam Kotsko
21:00
gmtPlus9
19:00
Early Modern Whale
18:00
Witold Riedel
Three-Toed Sloth
Pantaloons
La Vache Qui Lit
16:00
Mixing Memory
13:00
language hat
Eddie Campbell
11:00
Clews
Chase me
07:00
Languor Mgmt
06:00
Spurious
Scrubbles
Reading Experience
OnePotMeal
Crowley
05:00
Snark Hunt
03:00
Follow Me Here
01:00
Ezra

Monday, July 7, 2008

read: pynchon. vollman.
pynchon more than vollman, I liked the cadences of the essay just read 'Nearer, My _, to Thee' so trust won. vollman more of a traveller, a sociologist than my. but int what he has to say. re violence... Rising Up, Rising Down. like Alphonso Lingis ~ no other comparisons turned up by pairing names ggl.

watchfree: SecretDiary (Belle de Jour). Law & Order S18 (w J Sisto). BevH90210 all of seasons 1-5 on veoh, cool.

browse: elevator story inNYer. LinkMachineGo. best British blogs (Guardian - yearly?)
aldaily, tmn. pseudopodium loglist.

"Nearer, My Couch, to Thee"

"Nearer, My Couch, to Thee":
The New York Times Book Review, 6 June 1993, pp. 3, 57.
[Pynchon's essay was the first entry in a summer series devoted to the seven deadly sins]

IN his classical discussion of the subject in the "Summa Theologica," Aquinas termed Sloth, or acedia, one of the seven capital sins. He said he was using "capital" to mean "primary" or "at the head of" because such sins gave rise to others, but there was an additional and darker sense resonating luridly just beneath and not hurting the power of his argument, for the word also meant "deserving of capital punishment." Hence the equivalent term "mortal," as well as the punchier mmm English "deadly."

"Acedia" in Latin means sorrow, deliberately self-directed, turned away from God, a loss of spiritual determination that then feeds back on in to the process, soon enough producing what are currently known as guilt and depression, eventually pushing us to where we will do anything, in the way of venial sin and bad judgment, to avoid the discomfort.

Unless the state of our souls becomes once more a subject of serious concern, there is little question that Sloth will continue to evolve away from its origins in the long-ago age of faith and miracle, when daily life really was the Holy Ghost visibly at work and time was a story, with a beginning, middle and end. Belief was intense, engagement deep and fatal. The Christian God was near. Felt. Sloth -- defiant sorrow in the face of God's good intentions -- was a deadly sin."

..............................................................................................................................

As a topic for fiction, Sloth over the next few centuries after Aquinas had a few big successes, notably "Hamlet," but not until arriving on the shores of America did it take the next important step in its evolution. Between Franklin's hectic aphorist, Poor Richard, and Melville's doomed scrivener, Bartleby, lies about a century of early America, consolidating itself as a Christian capitalist state, even as acedia was in the last stages of its shift over from a spiritual to a secular condition.

Philadelphia, by Franklin's time, answered less and less to the religious vision that William Penn had started off with. The city was becoming a kind of high-output machine, materials and labor going in, goods and services coming out, traffic inside flowing briskly about a grid of regular city blocks. The urban mazework of London, leading into ambiguities and indeed evils, was here all rectified, orthogonal. (Dickens,; visiting in 1842, remarked, "After walking about in it for an hour or two, I felt that I would have given the world for a crooked street.") Spiritual matters were not quite as immediate as material ones, like productivity! Sloth was no longer so much a Sin against God or spiritual good as against a particular sort of time, uniform, one-way, in general not reversible -- that is, against clock time, which got everybody early to bed and early to rise.
Poor Richard was not shy in expressing his distaste for Sloth. When he was not merely repeating well-known British proverbs on the subject, he was contributing Great Awakening- style outbursts of his own:"O Lazy-bones ! Dost think God would have given thee arms and legs if he had not designed thou shouldst use them?" Beneath the rubato of the day abided a stern pulse beating on, ineluctable, unforgiving, whereby whatever was evaded or put off now had to be made up for later, and at a higher level of intensity. "You may delay, but time will not." And Sloth, being continual evasion, just kept piling up like a budget deficit, while the dimensions of the inevitable payback grew ever less merciful.
In the idea of time that had begun to rule city life in Poor Richard's day, where every second was of equal length and irrevocable, not much in the course of its flow could have been called nonlinear, unless you counted the ungovernable warp of dreams, for which Poor Richard had scant use. In Frances M. Barbour's 1974 concordance of the sayings, there is nothing to be found under "Dreams," dreams being as unwelcome in Philly back then as their frequent companion, sleep, which was considered time away from accumulating wealth, time that had to be tithed back into the order of things to purchase 20 hours of productive waking. During the Poor Richard years, Franklin, according to the "Autobiography," was allowing himself from l A.M. to 5 A.M. for sleep. The other major nonwork block of time was four hours, 9 P.M. to 1 A.M., devoted to the Evening Question, "What good have I done this day?" well but that is interesting. as much time to ask this question as for sleep. This must have been the schedule's only occasion for drifting into reverie -- there would seem to have been no other room for speculations, dreams, fantasies, fiction. Life in that orthogonal machine was supposed to be nonfiction.

BY the time of "Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street" (1853), acedia had lost the last of its religious reverberations and was now an offense against the economy. Right in the heart of robberbaron capitalism, the title character develops what proves to be terminal acedia. It is like one of those western tales where the desperado keeps making choices that only herd him closer to the one disagreeable finale. Bartleby just sits there in an office on Wall Street repeating, "I would prefer not to." While his options go rapidly narrowing, his employer, a man of affairs and substance, is actually brought to question the assumptions of his own life by this miserable scrivener -- this writer! -- who, though among the lowest of the low in the bilges of capitalism, nevertheless refuses to go on interacting anymore with the daily order, thus bringing up the interesting ok so he is sincere, it's a real qstn question: who is more guilty of Sloth, a person who collaborates with the root of all evil, accepting things-as-they-are in return for a paycheck and a hassle-free life, or one who does nothing, finally, but persist in sorrow? "Bartleby" is the first great epic of modern Sloth, presently to be followed by work from the likes of Kafka, Hemingway, Proust, Sartre, Musil and others, take your own favorite list of writers after Melville and you're bound sooner or later to run into a character bearing a sorrow recognizable as peculiarly of our own time.


In this century we have come to think of Sloth as primarily political, a failure of public will allowing the introduction of evil policies and the rise of evil regimes, the worldwide fascist ascendancy of the 1920's and 30's being perhaps Sloth's finest hour, though the Vietnam era and the Reagan-Bush years are not far behind. Fiction and nonfiction alike are full of characters who fail to do what they should because of the effort involved. How can we not recognize our world? Occasions for choosing good present themselves in public and private for us every day, and we pass them by.
Acedia is the vernacular as opposed to the standard, the elite of everyday moral life.
Though it has never lost its deepest notes of mortal anxiety, it never gets as painful as outright despair, or as real, for it is despair bought at a discount price, a deliberate turning against faith in anything because of the inconvenience faith presents to the pursuit of quotidian lusts, angers and the rest. I don't know. at lst sometimes 'acedia' is said refrring to outright despair. sorrow, turned-away-fr-God. but okay you Pynchon are talking about despair at a discount, cheap despair, sloth....
The compulsive pessimist's last defense -- stay still enough and the blade of the scythe, somehow, will pass by -- Sloth is our background radiation hmm?, our easy-listening station -- it is everywhere, and no longer noticed.

Any discussion of Sloth in the present day is of course incomplete without considering television, with its gifts of paralysis, along with its creature nice and symbiont, the notorious Couch Potato. [An organism in a symbiotic relationship. In cases in which a distinction is made between two interacting organisms, the symbiont is the smaller of the two and is always a beneficiary in the relationship, while the larger organism is the host and may or may not derive a benefit.]
Tales spun in idleness find us Tubeside, supine, chiropractic fodder, sucking it all in, re-enacting in reverse the transaction between dream and revenue that brought these colored shadows here to begin with so that we might feed, uncritically, committing the six other deadly sins in parallel: eating too much, envying the celebrated, coveting merchandise, lusting after images, angry at the news, perversely proud of whatever distance we may enjoy between our couches and what appears on the screen. ah well done, indeed.

Yet, chiefly owing to the timely invention -- not a minute too soon ! -- of the remote control and the VCR, maybe there is hope after all. Television time is no longer the linear and uniform commodity it once was. Not when you have instant channel selection, fast-forward, rewind and so forth. Video time can be reshaped at will. What may have seemed under the old dispensation like time wasted and unrecoverable is now perhaps not quite as simply structured. If Sloth can be defined as the pretense, in the tradition of American settlement and spoliation, that time is one more nonfinite resource, there to be exploited forever, then we may for now at least have found the illusion, the effect, of controlling, reversing, slowing, speeding and repeating time -- even imagining that we can escape it. Sins against video time will have to be radically redefined.
Is some kind of change already in the offing? A recent issue of The National Enquirer announced the winner of their contest for the King of Spuds, or top Couch Potato in the United States, culled from about a thousand entries. "'All l do is watch television and work,' admits the 35-year-old bachelor, who keeps three TV sets blaring 24 hours a day at his Fridley, Minn., home and watches a fourth set on the job. what's his job?
Sure, but is it Sloth? The fourth television set at work, the fact that twice, the Tuber in question mentions sitting and not reclining, suggest something different here. good. Channel-surfing and VCR-jockeying may require a more nonlinear awareness than may be entirely compatible with the venerable sin of Sloth -- some inner alertness or tension, as of someone sitting in a yoga posture, or in Zen meditation. Is Sloth once more about to be, somehow, transcended? Another possibility of course is that we have not passed beyond acedia at all, but that it has only retreated from its long-familiar venue, television, and is seeking other, more shadowy environments -- who knows? computer games, cult religions, obscure trading floors in faraway cities -- ready to pop up again in some new form to offer us cosmic despair on the cheap.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Kathleen Norris, Acedia & me
Chp.xv Acedia: A Commonplace Book

Thomas Pynchon (b 1937), Nearer, My Couch, to Thee
By the time of Bartleby the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street (1835), acedia had lost the last of its religious reverberations and was now an offense against the economy. Who is more guilty of sloth, a person who collaborates with the root of evil, accepting things-as-they-are in return for a paycheck and a hassle-free life, or one who does nothing, finally, but persist in sorrow? does he imply that the first is more slothful? or

Robert Nisbet (1913-1996), Prejudices
There is a history of boredom. It must have been first felt where man made the transition from a hunting or pastoral existence to village life and the tyrannies of soil and season. The word paradise comes from the Persian, where it originally meant 'wilderness', and there is no doubt a lesson there.

Samuel Beckett (1906-1989), The Unnamable
Can it be that one day.. I simply stayed in.. Perhaps that is how it began. You think you are simply resting, the better to act when the time comes, or for no reason, and you soon find yourself powerless ever to do anything again.

Henry Fairlie (1924-1990)
it is the face of those who seem never to have known any springtime, in whom the sap seems never to have risen.

Dorothee Soelle (1929-2003), Suffering
That which gave life its meaning has become empty and void: it turned out to be an error, an illusion that is shattered, a guilt that cannot be rectified, a void. The paths that lead t this experience of nothingness are diverse, but the experience of annihilation that occurs in unremitting suffering is the same.



Karl Rahner (1904-1984), The Need and the Blessing of Prayer
Suddenly you will know that the petrifying visage of hopelessness is only God's rising in your soul, that the darkness of the world is nothing but God's radiance, which has no shadow, that the apparent waylessness is only the immensity of God, who does not need any ways because he is already there.
All the way to Heaven is Heaven, because He said, I am the Way. -St.Therese
The word paradise comes from the Persian, where it originally meant 'wilderness', and there is no doubt a lesson there.
and there is no doubt a lesson there. - cadence -
...and the conclusion drawn that, since all is well in the work of art, all is well in history. But all is not well there.
no, elsewhere -

What moral flows from this? Probably none. / Only the blood flows, drying quickly, / and, as always, a few rivers, a few clouds.
On tragic mountain passes / the wind rips hats from unwitting heads / and we can't help / laughing at that.


REALITY DEMANDS
Wislawa Szymborska

Reality demands
that we also mention this:
Life goes on.
It continues at Cannae and Borodino,
at Kosovo Polje and Guernica.

There's a gas station
on a little square in Jericho,
and wet paint
on park benches in Bila Hora.
Letters fly back and forth
between Pearl Harbor and Hastings,
a moving van passes
beneath the eye of the lion at Cheronea,
and the blooming orchards near Verdun
cannot escape
the approaching atmosphere front.

There is so much Everything
that Nothing is hidden quite nicely.
Music pours
from the yachts moored at Actium
and couples dance on their sunlit decks.

So much is always going on,
that it must be going on all over.
Where not a stone still stands
you see the Ice Cream Man
besieged by children.
Where Hiroshima had been
Hiroshima is again,
producing many products
for everyday use.

This terrifying world is not devoid of charms,
of the mornings
that make waking up worthwhile.
The grass is green
on Maciejowice's fields,
and it is studded with dew,
as is normal with grass.

Perhaps all fields are battlefields,
all grounds are battlegrounds,
those we remember
and those that are forgotten:
the birch, cedar, and fir forests, the white snow,
the yellow sands, gray gravel, the iridescent swamps,
the canyons of black defeat,
where, in times of crisis,
you can cower under a bush.

What moral flows from this? Probably none.
Only the blood flows, drying quickly,
and, as always, a few rivers, a few clouds.

On tragic mountain passes
the wind rips hats from unwitting heads
and we can't help
laughing at that.

-

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Where did "Swingtown" go wrong? - [ TV t a t t l e . c o m ]
"After four weeks it has become, almost irrevocably, a bad TV show," says Peter Ames Carlin. "Swingtown's" badness, he says, "indicates that it probably used to be a lot better. That maybe its creators came to the table with a story whose characters did embody the larger issues (cultural upheaval, social change, personal malaise, etc.) that the extant show flails at so incompetently. But -- here's my educated guess -- somewhere along the line the TV process gutted that show. The characters became caricatures. The thorny sexual/spiritual questions got smoothed down, simplified, played for laughs and titillation." **
Still hooked on "Swingtown": It's "almost really good" after 4 weeks ...The drama is almost really good, or, said differently, good enough to reveal how really good it could be. I've written on how the show, which is about the fallout of the 1960s sexual revolution, truly belongs on a cable channel, where it wouldn't have to be so coy about sexuality. But I have to add, four episodes in, that the writers have admirably avoided knee-jerk network moralizing. They have consistently resisted turning a show about love and marriage into a narrow cautionary tale about adultery. The heart of "Swingtown" is Susan, played with such sweet openness by Molly Parker, who was so memorable as Alma on "Deadwood."
Susan is at her most graceful dealing with the triangular tensions between her, her old friend Janet, and her new friend Trina. Alas, Susan is less savvy when it comes to Roger, Janet's husband, who seems to be developing a crush on her.
The subplots involving the children aren't very engaging, and some of the characters are as flat as the rampant 1970s kitsch. I've read elsewhere this disinterest in the children's plotlines, or at lst that they are not integrated and so feel like interruption. but compare below, PAC & cmmtr there re children as best part of the show.

"Swingtown" producer: CBS paid $10,000 to digitally amputate a woman's leg ...The threat of FCC fines makes the network extra vigilant in order to prevent crossing those ill-defined lines into indecency. "They're spending more than the fine would ever be to fight it in court. It's a point of honour," Poul explained, decrying the hypocrisy of a system that seems unconcerned with brutal violence but that keeps close watch on indecency like "the sound of a zipper opening" or "how long a character's head dips out of the frame." Two weeks before the Swingtown pilot aired, the network suddenly got cold feet over a scene where Grant Show's character was having sex with a flight attendant in the background while his wife walked out of the room to get a Tab. "I guess they were distracted by the Tab or something," is Poul's explanation for why the network hadn't previously objected to the fact that the stewardess's legs were wrapped around his body. It was too late in the process to cut the scene, so they performed a digital amputation of the woman's right leg. It cost the network $10,000, which they happily paid.

** As It Turns Out, "Swingtown" Is a Terrible Show - Idiot Box - A Smart Look at TV by by Peter Ames Carlin - The Oregonian : Another mitigating factor, which is more interesting the more I think of it: The scenes about the kids tend to be way more thoughtful and insightful than the ones with the adults. Samantha is a compelling character, largely because she keeps so much just beneath the surface. The layers of heartbreak, yearning, anger and need. The tentative friendship she creates with B.J. Her wounded love (contempt, sympathy, more) for her damaged mother. It's all very compelling and way more interesting than what's going on with any of the adults around. Here's what I'm betting. The guys who wrote 'Swingtown' are actually those kids.
And therein lies the problem with the show. The adults swooped in and took over. And they wrecked it. well - the problem wld be that this is those kids imagining the lives of their parents. more insightful re own experience remembered.
Posted by Dback1221 on 07/01/08 at 8:40PM: I think folks are being a tad hard on this show. It's still finding its footing, true. And the repetitious face-offs between the 3 sets of couples is becoming rote. (The housewarming party episode was great; why repeat the themes at the cabin a week later?)
However, there are lots of moments that I really like. I didn't feel Roger's initial excitement/interest in Tom and Trina's party/lifestyle necessarily conflicted with his later remoteness and chilliness--there's a big difference between being at a really cool cutting-edge gathering for the first time, vs. knowing folks are having an orgy downstairs--especially if your "friends" (or at least people you've hung out with for a decade) are getting involved with it. Of all the characters, I'd say Bruce is at this point the most underdeveloped--he's just a little too much the affable goof, like the Bridges brothers before they developed gravitas in the 70's. I think PAC is right on when he discussed the glimmers of dissatisfaction Trina evidences--they're very subtle and feel true, as does Tom's vague implication that he knows the good time train he's on is eventually going to come to an end, and then what? (The job transfer is a good starting point for his realizing this.) Miriam Shor's character is problematic, only in that the writers aren't giving the actress enough layers to play in her scenes, and she comes across as shrill. But why has no one mentioned Molly Parker? For my money, she's giving one of the great performances on TV right now, right behind Mary Louise Parker in "Weeds" (which, in a way, this show is a distant cousin of). Emotions play over her face with such delicacy, she can make a very simple scene seem like something almost Chekhovian. (I personally thought her interplay with Roger at the cabin felt just right; it felt like people who've interacted socially for a long time as "friends," yet really don't know each other very well.) I also think the pop culture details feel right (I was 10 in '76)--not just the Tab, but the fact that Trina was using baby oil to tan at the lake, and that these kids seem like precursors to the latchkey kids of the 80's who would populate Spielberg's movies. I think the younger kids are all terrific (and I'm curious to see if one of the boys has a platonic crush on his best friend, or something more), but the notes that strike me as false involve the older daughter and her teacher--she seems way too mature and wise for seventeen.

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