WHAT NOW?

Posted March 2nd, 2010 in Animation, Comedy, sports, books, art, TV, Disney, Culture, entertainment, writing, Gullible and Twitchy, Smallville, Adventure, Reading, Blink Kitty Love, Chinese New Year, Shakespeare, #merven, Chuck

Well, the Olympics are over, The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe has closed, we’re caught up on Chuck, Blink Kitty Love did not get a Streamy nomination(thanks to everyone and anyone who voted!) and the snow might be melting. So what now? Well, do you want the To-Do list or the quick reviews. Let’s do reviews.

Chuck — loved Season 2. And considering how well they did with guest stars in Season 2, why oh why did they INFLICT Brandon Routh on us (it can’t be only me)? Oy. Yvonne Strahovski continues excellently expressing quiet discomfort over Chuck’s evolution but the whole two people moving in separate directions with two other people plot angle is VERY forced and seems like just an excuse to shoehorn in “GUEST STARS” and rushed choices. Always nice to see Kristin Kreuk, if only they’d put her in the guest part that lasted more than four episodes.

Smallville is back and I’m remembering it’s on Fridays. Watched the morning show episode and enjoyed it, although I really wish they’d stop dressing Tom Welling all in the smooth, stylish black. I don’t like the dark color palette but the characters seem to having a little more fun.

Wizards of Waverly Place — slumping. Alex as go go over the top cheerleader? no no. Good luck Charlie is looking like fun. The actor playing the Dad (

Eric Allan Kramer) was the highlight of American Wedding aka American Pie 3.

Have yet to hit the movies, maybe sometime this week. Trying to find some new reading material plus the usual stack of FT’s to get through, as always happens when there’s a lot going on. I did create a new website, gathering most of my projects in one central location (it’s currently hosting my near final “Year of The Tiger (Metal), The Snow Remix” animation/meditation.

To Do:

Write blog post about improv.
Write blog post about #merven
See a movie
Read a book a week
Clean my desk off

Work on a new Blink Kitty Love — a great title hit me yesterday
Keep writing “The Lady Lost” or “Maybe Turning That Corner Wasn’t The Brightest Idea I Ever Had”
And have some fun, darn it.

Good night.

No Comments

CURLING ROCKS

Posted February 20th, 2010 in Animation, Comedy, sports, books, TV, music, robots, Culture, entertainment, Lonely Pond Productions, Inc., Smallville, Financial Times reference, Adventure, movie, insomnia, Blink Kitty Love, Chinese New Year, holiday, theatre, Twitter, Shakespeare, Current Events, web

Ha…that amused me. Enjoying the Olympics, although the curling tournament seems to take as long as the entire Winter Games (did you know a good set of curling rocks costs $1500 (acc. to Wikipedia) and there’s Curling for the Wii). But it’s fun to watch. Little Brother #2 only watches curling and hockey. The last Olympics he claims to have developed a crush on the Japanese curling team; I have yet to inquire about this year’s favorite.

Quick summary of stuff:

Really want to see Judy Dench as Titania in Midsummer. Once again, Sarah Hemming envy strikes. Midsummer is one of my favorite of Shakespeare’s plays and I’m developing a movie related project (or two).

There’s a new Stirfry Neon chapter. Current adventure: The Lady Lost or What Was I Thinking When I Turned That Corner.

Blink Kitty Love has been dormant for a month while I steep and work on tigers — Happy Year of the Tiger. Almost done with my tiger meditation period, including an excellent animation. Look for it here or the Twitter announcement (aka follow me @lonelypond).

I am considering some Blink Kitty Love changes, taking things a bit more experimental and exploring the world around the band…or just exploring the world and having fun with my unique animation style and humor. I’m much better at contained stories than an ongoing soap opera kind of thing and the best Blink Kitty Loves are when I’m inspired to comment/riff on something happening now. So I’m going to take that thought and see where it goes. I had a lot of fun putting in some hard work on my Year of The Tiger animation and I think it’s the best I’ve done yet. So I’ve been considering what I could do if I put the work into a longer story. The Olympics has me thinking: what’s my gold medal event.

The Lonely Pond annual meeting surprised me — it always does, but this year it wasn’t in the good way. I’ve been mulling over what happened for a couple of months now. We stalled right at the beginning with a restructuring discussion and didn’t get to my grand plans. The rest of Team Lonely Pond wants to be involved and doesn’t want to give up the company or the name, but they don’t want to commit the energy to take us to the level I wanted to go for reinventing Shakespeare on the web. So we’ve put the company on hold and I have consultants available. So I’m scaling back to one project at a time and dealing with the realization that I can do what I want, but I have to be certain that I have the enthusiasm to carry it through by myself. Which means I’m revisiting some earlier ideas that I once loved and are sitting on a shelf for no real reason at all.

Pop Culture Reviews + News:

I like Lady GaGa — I’ve been wandering around singing Paparazzi. It’s Little Brother #2’s fault; his taste in music sometimes surprises me. Caught Justin Bieber’s cover “Love Me” of The Cardigan’s LoveFool and it’s simply ludicrous. I hate when there’s an American Idol style remake of song that rolls on Radio FlashCatFlash (yes, I mean you Adam Lambert’s Mad World. Alison Iraheta’s Someone To Watch Over Me seems to be the only one that doesn’t cause me to twitch but that’s a song with multiple covers already and might be my weakness for brunettes showing.)

The Web Files is branching out with their new Buzz edition, covering events + news around the wonderful world of web series. Host Kristyn Burtt has great energy always, but especially when she’s prowling an event with a microphone, capturing the spark of the moment.

Smallville: took a break from the Olympics to catch the Wonder Twins episode. Not bad. I think we might be back on Team Smallville, although their color and emotional palette remains a bit dark for me.

My robot loving buddy @spacehospital is showing episodes from their first season on KoldCast TV. It’s insane fun with puppets, models and special effects.

Starstruck — bah, slow, boring, a really poorly paced + badly written version of It Happened One Night where Sterling Knight plays the spoiled heiress part. Well acted but characters not believable. And let’s be honest: Brandon Mychal Smith should have played the lead in a better written movie. He had one musical number and he brought enough energy to it for the whole movie. Disney once again loses points for their lack of showcasing multiracial actors.

Haven’t seen The Lightning Thief because Gayle wants to finish the book first. Oy. Love the How To Train Your Dragon Olympic themed commercials.

OK, curling calls. Enjoy the rest of your weekend. Thanks for stopping by.

No Comments

HAPPY CHINESE NEW YEAR

Posted February 14th, 2010 in Comics, Comedy, art, TV, music, Culture, entertainment, writing, Adventure, insomnia, mulling, Blink Kitty Love, Chinese New Year, holiday, Chuck

Wishing you health, happiness and prosperity in this Year of The Metal Tiger.

Aside from that, in an Olympic mood — waiting for curling + snowboarding while watching women’s hockey. Blink Kitty Love has a new post up about their favorite Canadian musicians + Winter Olympic sports.

Getting through Chuck, Season 2 in between sports and LOVING IT. GuestStar-A-Palooza — so far, I think my favorite is Dominic Monaghan in Chuck vs. The Third Dimension — I have never seen Lost so this is just a straight forward nod to good comedy. Gayle was surprised to be reminded that he was one of the hobbits.

Missing working on my new Twitter fiction, The Lady Lost or Turning That Corner Wasn’t The Brightest Idea I Ever Had, but too many other things going on and I really want to get back to it when I can get into a good writing zone.

Loved Phonogram: The Singles Club #7 (5 page preview or review) and am mulling over some art, interpretation and communication thoughts which might steep into something worth sharing. I am currently at the fulcrum of art is an individual understanding/effort/experience but communication makes us a community. And sometimes, you just howl. There will be a Phonogram: Singles Club book with all seven issues collected; it’s worth the read.

But right now, Olympics….I’ll catch up with FT links sometime. Snow delayed mail delivery so there’s a pile to go through. Which is always kind of fun.

Good night, happy New Year and thanks for stopping by.

No Comments

BAZINGA AND OTHER ADDICTIONS

Posted February 1st, 2010 in Comedy, TV, entertainment, Smallville, Big Bang Theory, Chuck

The Big Bang Theory seems to be losing the group cohesiveness that has powered their comedy for two seasons of nerdalicious comedy. Insert two girls, let Sheldon out on his own and leave Raj by the side of the road and you have a Big Bang Theory that tilts dangerously to one side or the other and needs rebalancing.

Sheldon is in danger of merely existing as a collection of tics. The more he does things, the less funny they are becoming which is a criminal misuse of Jim Parsons’ comic genius. Tonight’s episode, The Einstein Approximation, badly misfired on the Sheldon front — the blogosphere seems to be trending this way as evidenced by another review — although there were a few funny moments. My brother and I were having a discussion about The Big Bang Theory this weekend and he was saying that just focusing on Sheldon’s oddities doesn’t make for the best humor. Gayle has been saying (prompted by the four writers on Wizards vs. Werewolves; The Einstein Approximation listed 3) that the more writers listed, the less successful an episode is. Opinions?

The universe, well parts of it anyway, can’t seem to get enough of the Jonas Brothers so it will be interesting to see how Nick Jonas and The Administration album sells. He’s put all the tunes on MySpace and thanks to overplay of the video on the Disney Channel, I find myself singing “Who I Am” (better than “Starstruck” though). VMan the magazine had a Nick interview with lots o’ arty photos (they seem to specialize).

I am currently working my way, one red Netflix envelope at a time, through the first season of Chuck, which I love. The third season also entertains, but the music seems to have gotten much more intrusive over time. But it’s nice to have something in the action zone that I can watch.

Caught part of Castle tonight. Now I understand why some writers have gone on the record as saying they want to be Castle, but I still do not understand the appeal of Nathan Fillion. So I’ll just stick with Chuck.

Gayle (?!?!?!?) came back into town and informed me that Lois has gone brunette on Smallville. I was already planning to watch the two hour Justice Society Absolute Justice Smallville movie event this Friday; maybe now I’ll remember. Beau (aforementioned little brother) has started watching Smallville again after 2 years of not so maybe some of the spark is back. Stay tuned.

No Comments

TV, THEMES, ETC.

Posted January 25th, 2010 in Animation, Comedy, family, TV, Disney, cats, robots, entertainment, Big Bang Theory, Blink Kitty Love, Nick

New Blink Kitty Love blog post where the band links to their favorite TV themes.

Continuing the TV theme, still loving Chuck, although it gets bumped on Monday nights by Top Gear, one of Gayle’s top 3 shows.

Wizards vs. Werewolves — nope, fail, not really any fun at all. Solve our problems by making the bad boyfriend and the actress we’ve put on another show go away. More substantive criticism? Ok. Well, exactly in the middle, I thought I’ve seen this dramatic pose around a fountain exactly in a soap opera (yes, there was soap opera watching at some point in my past; my mom was a General Hospital/One Life To Live fanatic and so were half the GUYS in my freshman dorm) and near the end, I thought straight steal from Buffy (the why can’t we date normal people moment). Flash was so bored she slept through it — which is good, no seizure from overexcitement. I find it really annoying that Alex so changes her personality for the boy of the moment, unless this is supposed to be an example of the standard girl experience, although they’ve spent a lot of time setting up Alex as a not so standard girl. And yes, Mason was a bad boyfriend but not enough time was spent on that either. They solved too many problems too easily and had too many plots in the air for one episode, even an hour long one. And I would have liked to have seen Juliet’s parents make an appearance again; they were fun. The we pay attention to plot and character pendulum swings back toward iCarly (after the successful iSaved Your Life). Nick’s doing a Secret Crush weekend…have been catching the odd True Jackson, and although it’s nice to see more of the school (and Mikey J), there’s a moderate sized hole where the manic fun that is the Mad Style staff used to fit. Caught another episode of Big Time Crush and didn’t enjoy it. Too much loud; too little character based humor. The guys are interchangeable and the having to shoehorn in the little sister plot really drags it down.

Did I mention Chuck is great. And The Big Bang Theory continues fun, although I am getting TIRED of Howard. Bring back Leslie Winkel, put him between her and the current girlfriend, have a little frank enough for television sex talk and let’s watch his brain shrivel (that’s as low as I’m looking).

Cool glass robots (thanks to Geek Dad for the link.)

No Comments

SCREENS, BIG AND SMALL

Posted January 19th, 2010 in Comedy, family, TV, Disney, Culture, entertainment, movie, acting, performance, Shakespeare, Nick, meandering, Current Events

Howdy…

Leap Year — I really enjoyed it, although there were some beautiful moments with long shots that got wrecked by the need to close in at the end. But I think it was one of those rare movies for those of us who figure things out kinetically (give me a musical or martial arts flick any day, or an actor with those skills. Full body tells you so much more than full on face). In Leap Year, the actors walk, fume and fall through falling in love and we follow along. It’s how I fell in love, walking, and it’s a good way, especially if you can look at gorgeously green Ireland as you go. Amy Adams is still one of my favorite actresses to watch and Matthew Goode’s performance is making another strong vote for seeing the heartbreak that will be A Single Man.

iCaved…yes, I have been off iCarly but I did watch iSaved Your Life…hit all the good iCarly points and none of the bad, plus, I really do find myself rooting for (pause for dramatic emphasis) Sam and Freddy…yes, I know, but I do. Spencer vs. Sam Assassin subplot funny and Freddy’s Mom is comic gold.

Chuck…watched an episode of the new upgraded Chuck two Sundays ago and loved it. So the first disc of the first season is in the current red Netflix envelope on top of the TV.

Wizards vs. Werewolves…looking spookier…was surprised by the first episode with Mason, not what I expected but in a good way. Alex continues lazy about everything except making things easier with magic.

Figured out part of why Jackie Chan’s doing The Spy Next Door — to set him up for the younger crowd so people will bring their kids to The Karate Kid starring him and Jaden Smith. Dwight Johnson’s Tooth Fairy doesn’t look funny. It’s making me miss Vin Diesel’s The Pacifier, which was actually pretty good and the kids weren’t just comic relief toss offs. I’m also getting the urge to watch The Forbidden Kingdom again (Gayle claims we own it), targeted to a slightly older crowd and with some great Jackie Chan fight moments. Jet Li also shows a sly sense of humor, which is nice.

The two movies I really want to see on the big screen have passed through York during my busy week (Nine) or probably won’t come at all (The Last Station).

Have started storyboarding a Shakespeare themed animation…here’s a quick peek

Can you guess the character?

Haiti: such a terrible week. Fortunately, most of the world is acting in a compassionate fashion. We donated through Episcopal Relief and Development, which has a strong ground presence through the Diocese of Haiti, and will continue to do so after the immediate crisis is over. I hope you will consider donating if you haven’t yet.

No Comments

HELLO + GATHER ROUND

Posted January 2nd, 2010 in Animation, Comedy, family, art, TV, design, rant, Disney, robots, Culture, entertainment, Lonely Pond Productions, Inc., Arts Commentary, Financial Times reference, Adventure, movie, insomnia, Cary Grant, gay, mulling, Blink Kitty Love, holiday, theatre, Twitter, Shakespeare, Nick, Current Events, Warehouse 13, #merven

Greetings, o most loyal and amazing blog visitors. Happy 2010. I’m going to give you a fairly thorough round up as I would really like to be taking a couple of weeks for some R + R while it’s cold and all my baser instincts are saying, “Stay under the covers, it’s warm.” I am not particularly good at the R + R things so I may be forced to resort to things like read all the Harry Potter books, read all the Sarah Caudwell books, read all the Terry Pratchett Watch themed books, read my MFK Fisher + Elizabeth David, dig out my Raymond Chandler and Peter Cheyney, read through the pile of newspapers, watch all the movies I’ve borrowed from friends (Tristram Shandy, Bubba Ho-Tep, Steam Boy), watch the movies I watch every year and skipped in ‘09 (the original 3 American Pies, Tomb Raider, Bring It On, The Bandwagon, Strictly Ballroom, etc.)

So to tide you over, there’s the new Blink Kitty Love, all the old Blink Kitty Love, the band website and this:

Lunch With Tristram Stuart who feeds people from discarded food to highlight wastage.

Article about really cool jazz pianists CD collections I can’t afford.

The FT’s this year in culture quiz

Stefan Stern’s suggestions for movies to watch and pick up business tips from this season (for the rest of you who don’t do R + R).

Very cool story about a native Gypsy theatre experiment/troupe in Spain. I am always amazed by the effect theatre can have on both audience and performers.

Umberto Eco’s latest looks to land on a list of fun reads.

Hoping to catch Nine at the local cinema…doesn’t look like Orson Welles and Me or The Station will make an appearance here; bumped Moon to the top of the Netflix queue and may soon give in to the buy Star Trek and/or Wizards of Waverly Place The Movie DVD urge…also on that list, the Cary Grant double feature — The Bachelor and The Bobby Soxer and Walk, Don’t Run, which I just saw on TCM and laughed at the frequently priceless moments.

TV: Zeke and Luther’s I, Skatebot episode looks cool, a bit worried about Wizards vs. Werewolves (Wizards of Waverly Place) — perhaps too soon after Wizards vs. Vampires and what will be left for Max, Wizards vs. really grumpy mythological creatures left out of the Twilight series — not really watching much on Nick at the moment except for late night What I Like About You, Top Gear kicks off a new season soon (Gayle very excited), I still miss Warehouse 13 and I really need to spend more time reading.

Merchant of Venice (#merven) planning not kicking into gear — but it’s early yet. Trying to get an artist for the logo, Gayle’s scheduling shows, I’ve decided to have people audition with their cool electronic gear (cell phones, laptops, etc.) Need to read through the play again; concerned about the Bassiano/Antonio axis –and no, I don’t mean in the gay way, just in the everybody’s always so concerned about Portia and Shylock, but hey without these two, I’ve got two right side wheels on a vehicle that needs two on the left as well.

The Lonely Pond Productions, Inc. annual meeting went in unexpected directions. But Google Wave worked well when the snow prevented travel. I need to put together scripts for a short live action adaptation and a few animations. And mull over movie related issues some more.

And Sarah Hemming’s “Twelfth Night” review left me grumping about people who weight down comedies with misery so I have been considering exactly how tragic the characters of Malvolvio, Sir Andrew, Wile E. Coyote, Elmer Fudd, et al are. And her Rope review makes the show sound like an excellent experience to have in a theatre.

Speaking of Hitchcock, there was a Vanity Fair photospread (thanks @njtam, a fellow Hitchcock fan) of modern stars in classic Hitchcock scenes…the women do better than the men, who seem to suffer from not being Cary Grant or Jimmy Stewart.

My current favorite breakfast is oatmeal with hot apple cider for a drink, my current most likely to be worn shirt is this one (it amuses Gayle) and I heard this amazingly goofy song at one of our favorite restaurants that Google has been no help with finding the title of…the lyrics as we can remember go something like this: “you’re good cause you don’t do things like (or that) you should…you’re cool cause (cuz?) you don’t do things by the book.” Sounded like a guy singing, it was a Spanish-Peruvian restaurant where music usually has spanish lyrics, it was chanty, and if you drop the title/artist in the comments, there will be a reward.

And I think that gets you up to date — and should tide you over for awhile. Wishing you the best of 2010’s. Stay warm.

P.S. Cool toasters…I need one.

No Comments

PLANET ORSON

Posted December 4th, 2009 in Animation, TV, entertainment, Financial Times reference, movie, Nick

Me and Orson Welles (yes, the Zac Efron movie) is being lauded for Christian Mackay’s breakout performance as Orson Welles. Nigel Andrews’ review also includes a vote for the powers of live actors over digitized versions.

Snuck out to see Planet 51 (Gayle voted for that over Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs). Cute, nice retro feel, although I think there should have been a diner. Seems like it’s not the 50’s without a diner. The two main characters, voiced by Dwayne Johnson and Justin Long had a nice rapport. Pretty solid story, not much unnecessary humor thrown in just for extra sauce and a little too long spent on the anti-government/police/British scientists beats. Enjoyable…I was amazed at how much expression you get out of noses (aliens did not move their antennas enough to substitute) and how much I like it when things go “VROOOM” in an animated fashion.

Caught the new Nick teen show Big Time Rush last week. Liked the guys in the band and the talent scout, some good physical humor, didn’t like the grafted on hints of non teen stories for the sake of giving pre teens some connection. Gayle really hated the producer. So we’re leaving it at has potential.

No Comments

ANIMATION, SHAKESPEARE…

Posted November 26th, 2009 in Animation, TV, Disney, entertainment, Lonely Pond Productions, Inc., Adventure, movie, holiday, Shakespeare, Nick, Current Events

What else do you need?

ToonBoom is having a Black Friday sale starting at 9 a.m., with some software up to 60% off.

Read an article in the latest Animation Magazine (link not yet available) that gave me a better Prep and Landing vibe. The guys mostly responsible are the guys who did the Goofy “How To Hook Up Your Home Theatre” short. And that was funny, as is Dave Foley, who’s voicing one of the main characters. So, we’ll tune in on Dec. 1st. Gayle’s a Charlie Brown fan anyway, and Prep and Landing has the after the beloved Charlie Brown Christmas slot, setting P and L up for launch as a holiday classic.

Shakespeare has popped into Nick for a visit, with the Little Shakespeare rapper character on True Jackson’s latest hour long event. Enjoyed it, funny, loved Jimmy and Ryan nonsensically running all over Galaxy Airlines…More Jimmy works; Robbie Amell does a good job.

On a business and personal note, we’ve been getting prepped aka trying to schedule the Lonely Pond annual meeting. I’m excited. I want to take the company in a new and more productive direction and really start combining my love for animation and Shakespeare in ways you can watch. So stayed tuned.

No Comments

MOOD HOLIDAY

Posted November 24th, 2009 in Animation, Comedy, TV, Disney, entertainment, holiday

The holiday ads have started and there are at least two new holiday specials in the universe: Prep and Landing from Team John Lasseter, the Pixar mastermind, and Phineas and Ferb On Christmas Vacation from the Phineas and Ferb crew. And I have to admit, I’m looking forward to the Phineas and Ferb one; Team PF is in the zone. Lasseter and co. will have to do a little more convincing. Sure, the animation’s always pristine, perfect and all that, but I’m usually allergic to the mood that comes with it.

Now Phineas and Ferb I was prepared to hate at its launch; yes, it was partly envy, there they are with a show on the Disney Channel and I still think there’s no real reason for Perry and Doofenshmirtz, but if you don’t support comedy being about creating your own 5 jokes and pounding them ’til they’re funny, then you just don’t support comedy. And Phineas and Ferb is doing a great job with the comic palette they’ve set themselves up with, adding in the more than occasional darn catchy tune (Busted’s my favorite). So, we’ll take that vacation.

What else is on the holiday watch list. Well, there’s always Desk Set, which has the best office Christmas party, the original Bishop’s Wife, the animated Grinch Who Stole Christmas, Love Actually, the Kim Possible Christmas episode, and I’ll get back to you on the rest, once I figure them out.

Meanwhile, have a great Thanksgiving.

No Comments

Recent comments