January 30, 2006

The DVD gods giveth, and lo, also do they taketh away.

It was almost a year ago that I demanded the release of The Flash and the Dark Shadows revival series on DVD, and just five months later I discovered that DVD executives everywhere had cowered and capitulated to my every order.

Unfortunately it seems the knaves, in their haste to quell my insatiable wrath, slipped up. Their Dark Shadows DVDs are inexplicably widescreen, even though the shows were originally shot and aired and intended for full screen. (Apparently DVD execs confuse our preference for intended aspect ratios with an irrational love of wide things.) The Flash, meanwhile, actually has some kind of production error that crashes your DVD player during the pilot episode.

Hey, look, I wasn't even disappointed that there were no special features. As I've addressed, these are DVD sets that only I could possibly want. But come on, DVD execs. You can do better than this.

In other, more pressing news, I'm selling my homemade 12-DVD set of Twin Peaks season 2. So, if you want to see David Duchovny in drag, this may be your last chance for a while.

Andrew - 8:07 AM [link]

January 27, 2006

Today's phrase that pays

"A deadly game of cat and mouse."

James - 12:45 PM [link]

January 26, 2006

Where are you coming from, Spider-Man?

Nobody knows who you arrrrrrrrre.

In your new costume:

Yeah, I don't know. Apparently this is Joe Quesada's doing.

Spider-Man's not Spider-Man unless he's wearing red and blue. Or black and white. Or piloting a giant robot.

Wait, what?

James - 10:57 AM [link]

January 24, 2006

UPN has been assimilated

Incredible news today. Smallish TV networks UPN and The WB will merge to form one gigantic, mediocre network.

This is heartbreaking, because it means the end of UPN.

If there is a God of Unintentional Comedy, surely His gift to the world was UPN. I'm talking about back in the day, before it reached moderate levels of respectability with Veronica Mars and Everybody Hates Chris. I'm talking about the original, keepin'-it-real UPN, which debuted in January 1995.

This was about the time I first attached speakers to my computer in my freshman dorm room, and, as my old roomate Vikram could attest, the UPN network ident was my startup sound for nearly two years (until it was replaced by the CNN Headline News opening theme). The announcer guy earnestly announcing "This... is UPN!", as if you're about to watch something great, always cheered me up.

From the beginning, UPN was hilariously awful; the boring Star Trek: Voyager was a hit based on name recognition, but the other shows failed to attract an audience. First, they jumped on the "let's give every stand-up comedian in the world his own sitcom because Seinfeld is a hit" train, with Platypus Man starring Richard Jeni. I didn't watch this show, probably due to the title, which disappointingly has nothing to do with a man being bitten by a radioactive platypus; apparently, it's actually a reference to Jeni's sex life resembling that of a platypus, which was a joke taken from his stand-up act. I don't know about you, but I'm LOLing all over the place right now.

(NOTE: All UPN comedy promo photos required the actors to have that look on their face that says, "Whooooa, things are about to get GOOOOFY!")

On the show, Jeni's character hosts a low-rated cooking show for guys; marvel at this fan page written by someone who felt it necessary to document what dish was cooked by Jeni's character in each episode of Platypus Man.

(As an aside, that page is why I love the Internet; not only does it show off the author's fabulous HTML 1.0 skills circa 1995, but it's a great example of how people will spend their free time putting everything nobody needs to know on the Internet. Once all humans have been eradicated by monkeypox and only the computers are left, and aliens discover the remains of our civilization, this web page will the first thing they discover, and they'll realize they shouldn't have bothered looking. I guarantee this will happen.)

The other running joke in my Turman East dorm room was The Watcher, which had nothing to do with either Buffy, Keanu, or the Fantastic Four, and everything to do with... Sir Mix-A-Lot. Because, as the promos said, Sir Mix-A-Lot IS the Watcher.

Of course he is.

This was an anthology show in which the only constant was our hero, Sir Mix-A-Lot. He's a security man in a casino; he likes to watch and he cannot lie. Despite many industry accolades, the show failed to take off. (By "many industry accolades", I mean the show was nominated for an Emmy in, naturally, the Sound Mixing category. Then again, that may have just been a cruel industry in-joke.) Again, I didn't watch the actual show, but judging from this review on IMdB written by user "hoagiemike", it totally would have ROCKED MY FOOL FACE OFF.

This show didn't last long, but at least Cheap Trick was on it. Rick, Robin, Tom and Bun E. from the legendary rock band Cheap Trick star as "Pandemonium" in an episode where they play a down n' out rock band with a dim wit manager, who wants to book them as a novelty act. Robin Zander plays lead singer Jack Stone who says "families to feed? We should bangin' showgirls and tearing down the walls" This is great stuff,funny, and the band are actually decent actors. Plus they play the rare Cheap Trick song "born to raise hell" which totally Rocks! Check this out, it's hard to find, but many cheap trick collectors have this...

In contrast, UPN's other freshmen shows struggled to attract the Cheap Trick fanbase. They were Pigsty (a kind of Friends clone, complete with a songwriter character who sings quirky/goofy original songs), Marker (starring Richard Greico!), and Legend, which took the awesome idea of putting MacGyver and Star Trek's Q in the same show, but then botched it by sending them back in time and taking away their respective omnipotent powers.

Of UPN's first-season shows, only Voyager survived; the rest were sacked.

It got slightly better from there, but only slightly less unintentionally hilarious. UPN's ratings success among African-Americans in urban areas led it to develop more shows targeting that demographic; this is how the world was blessed with the controversial, had-to-be-seen-to-be-believed The Secret Diary of Desmond Pfeiffer, and, even more importantly, the seminal sci-fi classic, Homeboys from Outer Space.

(See? "Whoooa, GOOOOOFY!" Can you imagine having to write the ad copy for that show? No, you can't? Well, thanks to the magic of furdell.com, now you CAN.)

Shasta McNasty, Love Boat: The Next Wave, and even the XFL; I'll miss all of them, but they will live forever in my heart.

OK... so I didn't really watch these shows. But just the fact that they existed brightened my day.

Anyway! There you go, aliens. Let it be known that our society was founded on the principles and guidance of UPN, and in the year 2006, we abandoned that guidance in the name of "ratings". This... shall be our epitaph.

(Come to think of it, I may have just regurgitated one of the plots from Star Trek: Voyager. I apologize to everyone.)

James - 6:53 PM [link] [2 comments]

January 23, 2006

Temporary space filler

Discuss.

James - 6:15 PM [link] [6 comments]

January 12, 2006

The perils of Seattle

Yes, it's a sea lion on top of a Prius. I have a feeling that this is Seattle in a nutshell.

I can't wait. The move is 17 days away. Watch out for JAMES, SEA LIONS!

James - 5:41 PM [link] [1 comment]

January 8, 2006

When will George Lucas die already?

...so we can see his movies the way they were originally intended to be seen.

Pardon my bitterness. I just watched Georgie's first feature-length film, THX 1138, courtesy Netflix. Unfortunately only the...ugh..."director's cut" is available on DVD, and in true Lucas fashion, it adds all kinds of anachronistic CGI.

I don't mean it looks anachronistic for the futuristic setting of THX 1138, but rather it just looks wrong for a movie released in 1971. The unexplained creatures who attack THX in the end look, well, like bad CGI -- like the troll in the first Harry Potter movie, for example. Kinda cartoony and not real. So, why do that? Why add something to a movie that people respect just fine already?

There's also some explosions, and some more subtle effects, but they still take you out of the story and make you think "How'd he do that thirty years ago?" Turns out he didn't. Bah!

Andrew - 11:15 PM [link]

January 7, 2006

Julia's new laptop: awesome.

Now that Julia has a new laptop, I can use it to share my most inane and ephemeral thoughts, even more than before!

Example: we're watching Celebrity Fit Club 3, and watching famous fat people reminds me that Star Jones lost like 150 pounds, which is enough to make a whole new person! And if you did make a person out of Star Jones's excess weight, I think it would look something like...The Glop!

Andrew - 3:56 PM [link] [1 comment]

January 1, 2006

Dick Vermeil is retiring

If there was some way I could wager my soul on there being some crying during his farewell press conference, I would do it.

James - 11:43 AM [link] [1 comment]