MISCmedia.com: News from the edge of America.


MISCMEDIA.COM. A daily report on popular culture by Clark Humphrey.
Seattle's Belltown
SEATTLE'S
BELLTOWN

Our newest fab photo history book, on the fall and rise of a great urban neighborhood.
Learn about it now.
Get it now.

Vanishing Seattle
VANISHING
SEATTLE

A fabulous picture book on long-gone local landmarks.
Learn about it now.
Get it now.

Take Control of Digital TV
TAKE CONTROL
OF DIGITAL TV

All the info you need to join the high-definition video age, in handy electronic form.
Get it now.

The Myrtle of Venus
THE MYRTLE
OF VENUS

A contemporary comic novel about sex, art, and real estate.
Read it now.

City Light, City Dark

City Light, City Dark

CITY LIGHT,
CITY DARK

A personal view of Seattle's split personality; contrasting the tourists' town of sunny smiles with the "other" city of low clouds and long nights.
See the pictures; buy the prints.

The MISC Boutique
THE MISC BOUTIQUE
Bags, mugs, shirts, caps, and more lovely logo merchandise. Show your MISC loyalty to the world today.

LOSER: The Real Seattle Music Story
LOSER
THE REAL SEATTLE MUSIC STORY

The most complete account of the early-'90s Seattle music scene.
Get your copy of the updated second edition.

The Big Book of MISC. Get it now!
THE BIG BOOK OF MISC.
The best Misc. items ever, now in one handy collection.
Read more about it here.
Get it here.

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?
Saturday, November 30, 2002
COULD A VIOLENT SUPERHERO have a fish head and derive his powers from Kikkoman soy sauce? Watch this flash movie and see for yourself. (Found by Memepool.)


posted by clark 11:30 AM

Thursday, November 28, 2002
LET US NOW PRAISE the best show on TV this year, indeed the best show on TV thus far in this decade.

The CBC's Zed (named, of course, after the Great White North's pronounciation of the alphabet's last letter) is a magazine show of experimental video, animation, and performance art. That capsule description could apply to a dozen or more past shows on PBS and other Stateside channels. But the Vancouver-produced Zed is far different, and far better, than those. Some reasons:

  • It's on its country's premier network, in a premier time slot: 11:25 p.m.-12:25 a.m. every weeknight, commercial-free. It's cutting-edge, but it's not "fringe."

  • It's carefully curated and sequenced, despite the enormous amount of material it requires. Canada has vast short-film and animation scenes (due partly to arts grants and to the world-renowned National Film Board of Canada), and Zed could consume all its output in a grab-baggy way. Instead, each episode carfully curates a mix of dramatic-narrative shorts, outre comedies, odd cartoons, mini-documentaries, modern-dance clips, spoken-word snippets, avant-garde musical performances, and items too odd to classify.

  • Elegant, erudite emcee Sharon Lewis deftly weaves common threads around each night's selections, without resorting either to support-the-arts hype nor to PBS-style smugness. She knows these are engrossing, captivating films, and she knows she doesn't have to hard-sell them to you.

  • Under the slogan "Open Source Television," the show solicits viewer contributions. One of my favorites in this category was a tape of a 10-year-old boy trying hard to stay awake to watch the show.

  • The show welcomes viewers of all ages, but doesn't pander or clean things up for them. In keeping with the Film Board's heritage, the films on Zed can include quite heavy subject matter (abortion, poverty, bereavement, loneliness). The cartoons can range from the gross-out to the incomprehensibly symbolic. Nudity and cuss words are left intact. One clip featured the writhing of a nude male modern dancer; its soundtrack consisted of the dancer discussing the kind of man with whom he'd most want to fall in love.

  • The show's segments have MTV-like credit screens at the beginning and end. These titles include "Web ID" numbers for each short. Anything you see and like (or want to decipher), you can see again online. And if you live where CBC isn't on cable (i.e., the United States south of Tacoma), you can see and hear the show's component parts online, though one piece at a time and without Lewis's introductions.

  • But the most important aspects of Zed are its confident attitude and Lewis's honest rapport with her viewers. The show presumes a universe in which the sorts of ideas and expressions it presents are fully-accepted and respected features of a sophisticated urban society. Zed is neither elitist nor pandering. It fully respects its viewers' intelligence. It doesn't divide the populace into "cultured" and "uncultured" castes. It fully expects you to "get" whatever it shows; and if you don't, or if you don't like it, something else will be along in less than six minutes.

Zed's site doesn't mention how many episodes are in its current first season. CBC series often have short production seasons. But Zed mostly consists of pre-existing (i.e., relatively cheap to acquire) material, so theoretically go on year-round (albeit with rerun weeks here and there).

My advice: If you're capable of tuning in to it, watch as many Zed episodes as you can now. See what highbrow-arts TV can really become.


posted by clark 12:46 AM

Wednesday, November 27, 2002
WEDNESDAY'S EDITION of the new Pyramid was a Seattle special. It was still taped in LA, but had KOMO-TV's Kathi Goertzen and Steve Pool as the "celebrities," and locals found at a recent audition as the civilian contestants. One category was "Things Associated With Grunge." They were: "T-Shirt," "Jeans," "Flannel," and "Tattoo." Nothing about music was among the items on the list, at least not among those Pool and his partner could get to within the alloted time.


posted by clark 11:25 PM

Tuesday, November 26, 2002
SOMEBODY AT SLATE thinks Harry Potter's just another lazy rich kid.


posted by clark 12:34 PM

ARCHIVES:

SUPPORT MISCmedia
with a voluntary donation

Make payments with PayPal - it's fast, free and secure!

Search Now:
In Association with Amazon.com
(Help keep MISCmedia improbable; make your Amazon.com purchases thru this link.)

MISCMEDIA.COM UPDATES
To learn about future changes, join the Misc.-l mailing list. Email to Majordomo@lists.speakeasy.org. Leave the "subject" line blank, and in the body of the message write:

SUBSCRIBE MISC-L (your email address)

Questions? Suggested topics? Email to clark@speakeasy.org.

Joe Newton drew the caricature atop this page.

We've got a privacy statement.

   Search this site              powered by FreeFind