What I’m Doing

What I’m Watching:

  1. The IBW, new episode premiering tomorrow! The old episodes are still available, so there is time to catch up!
  2. District 9

I hadn’t heard hardly anything about this movie at all. Occasionally I would hear somebody say, “That movie is really, really good” but that was about it. Then, it was nominated for a Best Picture Academy award and I was like, “Say what now?” But everybody I had ever heard talk about it universally liked it. I have to say, this movie totally lived up to the hype! It was really good.

Even when I started watching it, I had no idea what it was about. Based on the logo (above) I had the vague idea it was a cartoon or something, which it is not. In fact, on the contrary, it has really good special effects. This movie had that rare quality of really good sci-fi, where it can be both entertaining as an action movie, and simultaneously be a commentary on our culture. Also, I would say that it is pretty much universally appealing, even to non-sci-fi fans.

I think my comment at the end of the movie was, “Wow, I have a lot to think about now.” Highly recommended.

What I’m Listening To:

Satellite by Lena (Germany)

I love it. (Told you I liked it Meg!) This song was this year’s winner of the Eurovision awards. The Eurovision awards are kind of hard to explain. It’s like combining the craziness of American Idol with the fanatical patriotism of the Olympics. Basically, different European countries pitch their best (?) musical acts against each other, and the results are voted on.

Sometimes Europe is a strange place to us Americans, and Eurovision really highlights this. You can see some examples here. All the bad European stereotypes seem to come out of the woodwork. To an extent, I think this is somewhat intentional, because countries want to highlight something unique about their culture, such as a particular folk music sound or costume.

Anyway, the cream does tend to rise to the top and I think Satellite proves this. I probably listen to it several times a week.

What I’m Reading:

The Selected Stories of Philip K. Dick, Vol. 1

I have mentioned before being pleasantly surprised with the stories of Philip K. Dick, so I thought I’d give him another go around (actually two more, since I also have volume 2). Sure enough, the stories are pretty good.

However, when reading these sort of “golden age” sci-fi stories, you always have to look at them through the lens of time a little bit. I don’t know when these particular stories were written, but they have a very 1950’s feel to them. I’m not just picking on Dick here either, the same is true of a lot of older sci-fi, specifically from people like Heinlein. It’s probably true of literature as a whole, but I think sci-fi really highlights it, because of the advanced technology.

For example, in these particular Dick stories, you have people living on the moon and Mars, living in totalitarian futures, fighting robots, time traveling, etc. and yet, there is no such thing as a cell phone. In one story, we have the technology to time travel, and yet the guy has to pull over into a gas station and use a pay phone. Almost inevitably, the foe or competitor is the Soviet Union. It’s like they could imagine some things in the future, but everything else is still locked into the time period in which they were writing.

My personal favorite is when something is set in the far off future, which is already in the past to us. One story was set in the far off future of 1992, where robots could pass as humans, but still bragged about getting 22 stations on their cathode tube televisions. Did I mention that these amazing robots ran on punch tape, not hard drives?

It’s not just technology either, it’s social aspects as well. Like a character describing how amazing it is to have a woman driving a car, how it makes him feel like a king. Or a building in the future being described as, “full of well-to-do Negroes”. Well, there’s a phrase you don’t hear every day! Many of the sci-fi stories from this era feature the traditional strong male. Anything done by a woman is greeted with this sort of attitude like, “Well, look at that! From a woman! Amazing! Isn’t the future just grand folks?”

The scary part about all of that, is that I think these people were really trying. But, because of the culture of the time, they simply could not imagine some of these things. But they were trying, and that was more than a lot of people were doing at the time. Certainly, the literature of today is probably going to look just as bad to people reading it 50 years from now.

And, despite all of that, I’m glad they didn’t update the stories. I’d rather see where we’ve been and why we got where we are now, then sweep it all under the rug and forget. I’m glad we’ve gotten to the point that well-to-do Negroes and women drivers are too common to be worth mentioning. And if you can get past all of these funny little extra pieces, there are some pretty fine stories underneath too.

What I’m Doing

What I’m Reading:

I picked up a short story collection by Philip K. Dick.

It is not uncommon to repackage a short story collection after a movie is made out of one of the stories therein to try to capitalize on the success of the movie, even though the story is often quite different. I didn’t even know Philip K. Dick had written Minority Report. I knew he had written Blade Runner, which is awesome, and also A Scanner Darkly which I have not seen, but that was it. So after I finished the titular story of this, I was amazed to discover the second story, We Can Remember It For You Wholesale, was actually Total Recall, a movie that I have seen more times than I can count. Double my amazement when the next story was Paycheck! So, there were three sci-fi blockbusters in a row that I didn’t know he had written. That was a nice surprise. I was excited to see what huge movie might be next on the list, but neither of the remaining stories were movies, at least of the blockbuster variety. I will say that I thought one of those stories, Second Variety, was the best one in the book, even if the “twist ending” was painfully obvious. Looking up info on Philip K. Dick, I discovered that the movie Next is (very loosely) based on a story of his. So he’s got movies with Tom Cruise, Harrison Ford, Keanu Reeves, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Ben Afleck and Nicholas Cage. That my friends is what I call not too shabby!

What I’m Watching:

Nora Robert’s Midnight Bayou, and on Lifetime to boot.

Oh yeah, just look at that cover baby. You may recognize Jerry O’Connel from such things as Sliders and as being the fat kid from Stand by Me:

Lauren Stamile took me a little longer to place, but she plays nurse Rose, Derek’s other woman on Grey’s Anatomy. Now why was I watching this piece of cinematic masterpiece you ask? Because it is filmed at Oak Alley Plantation in New Orleans, which I have toured.

I know after you saw that promo picture, you probably thought this was an awesome movie. It was not. After watching it, I am certainly not in a hurry to read a Nora Roberts’ book. Ever. However, I think this movie was to romance movies what Ice Spiders is to sci-fi movies and was enjoyable in much the same way. What can I say, there is something about the very poorly done, cheesy nature of these movies that appeals to me. But please don’t take that as a recommendation to watch the movie!

What I’m Listening To:

Better than Ezra is one of my all time favorite bands, and I think they don’t get nearly as much credit as they deserve. I remember one time they were playing at Purdue and we were pretty excited about it, but a lot of people were like, “Who are they? I’ve never heard of them.” Of course, once BTE took the stage and started reeling off the hits, those same people were like, “Oh yeah, I know that song. And that song. And that song…” Side note about that concert, BTE pulled a fan out of the crowd up on stage with them and gave him a guitar and actually let him play along with them…that was really awesome. I will also say that seeing BTE in New Orleans was one of the best concerts I have ever been to.

So lets go to the tape and check their record. Their first album, Deluxe, was released in 1993. Many would say this is the definitive BTE album, containing their biggest hit Good as well as Sara’s favorite, Rosealia. In ’97 they released Friction, Baby which contained some awesome songs like King of New Orleans and Desperately Wanting. Only a year later they released How does your garden grow? which has One More Murder and my personal favorite At the Stars. In 2001 they released Closer which contained the underrated Extra Ordinary as well as the original version of A Lifetime (later re-done on their next album). So that brings us to 2005, when they released Before the Robots, which is actually my favorite of their albums. 

That is a decade long career of consistently good albums and I don’t think they get enough credit for it. They’ve just released a new album Paper Empire, which I haven’t heard yet and can’t comment on, but with that track record, I’m willing to bet it is good. So, without further ado: