Hello & Welcome. Disclaimer: ( aka: WARNING!) This site was originally designed as / for an required assignment in a Comm One class several years back. Moving forward since then - this blog has been maintained, modified and updated "whenever" I felt the need or urge to do so. ( In other words - on a Whim ) I Hope you enjoy - Thank you. LL&P.
Monday, June 25, 2012
Carlin best sums it all up.
My uncle emailed me this quote from the late George Carlin. In the wake of the economic meltdown and $800 Billion dollar bailout that followed, I feel that these words have never sounded more true, and so I thought I'd take a moment to share his words .................
"Forget the politicians. The politicians are put there to give you the
idea that you have freedom of choice . . . you don’t. You have no
choice. You have owners. They own you. They own everything. They own all
the important land. They own, and control the corporations. They’ve
long since bought, and paid for the Senate, the Congress, the state
houses, the city halls, they got the judges in their back pockets and
they own all the big media companies, so they control just about all of
the news and information you get to hear. They got you by the balls.
They spend billions of dollars every year lobbying . . . lobbying, to
get what they want . . . Well, we know what they want. They want more
for themselves and less for everybody else, but I’ll tell you what they
don’t want . . . they don’t want a population of citizens capable of
critical thinking. They don’t want well informed, well educated people
capable of critical thinking. They’re not interested in that . . . that
doesn’t help them. That’s against their interests. That’s right. They
don’t want people who are smart enough to sit around a kitchen table and
think about how badly they’re getting fucked by a system that threw
them overboard 30 fuckin' years ago. They don’t want that. You know what
they want? They want obedient workers . . . Obedient workers, people
who are just smart enough to run the machines and do the paperwork. And
just dumb enough to passively accept all these increasingly shittier
jobs with the lower pay, the longer hours, the reduced benefits, the end
of overtime and vanishing pension that disappears the minute you go to
collect it, and now they’re coming for your Social Security money. They
want your fuckin' retirement money. They want it back so they can give
it to their criminal friends on Wall Street, and you know something?
They’ll get it . . . they’ll get it all from you sooner or later cause
they own this fuckin' place. It’s a big club and you ain't in it. You
and I are not in The big club. By the way, it’s the same big club they
use to beat you over the head with all day long when they tell you what
to believe. All day long beating you over the head with their media
telling you what to believe, what to think and what to buy. The table
has tilted folks. The game is rigged and nobody seems to notice. Nobody
seems to care. Good honest hard-working people . . . white collar, blue
collar it doesn’t matter what color shirt you have on. Good honest
hard-working people continue, these are people of modest means . . .
continue to elect these rich cocksuckers who don’t give a fuck about
you. They don’t give a fuck about you . . . they don’t give a fuck about
you. They don’t care about you at all . . . at all . . . at all, and
nobody seems to notice. Nobody seems to care. That’s what the owners
count on. The fact that Americans will probably remain willfully
ignorant of the big red, white and blue dick that’s being jammed up
their assholes everyday, because the owners of this country know the
truth. It’s called the American Dream because you have to be asleep to
believe in it . . .”
Thursday, June 14, 2012
My responce to IL Magazine's feature story by Simon O'Hagan
Spotify is Fly, but not HIFI
Let me 1st say, that even though I'm
an American, one of my favorite publications is Britain's own
"WHAT-HIFI? Sound & Vision Magazine", because I'm so into this
A/V "hobby". I have over ten years of experience selling A/V gear,
and I really enjoyed this article, and just wanted to chime in here.
During the 1980's & 90's, no Stereo Rack System would ever be considered complete
if it didn't have a Turntable, double cassette deck and a CD (or later, a
5,6,25, or 100 disc) player, so I'm a fan of each format, with all their pro's
and con's. As far as cassette playing "second fiddle", while I'll
agree that the prerecorded material certainly was, for sure, and therefore took
a back seat to the LP and CD, for those of us who had higher end tape decks,
however, and bought the right blank cassettes (like the Maxell XLII-S, or Sony
HX-Pro, or Metal SR) the recordings we could make from those sources still
sounded
better
than the vast majority of today's MP3 downloads and streaming services.
I, of course, grew up "on" and with records, and always enjoyed
listening to my parents collection of older 60's and 70's albums, ( still have
an Technics SL-7 turntable) as well as the thrill of going to the record store
( something my children, ages 12 and 16, will never know or experience, even
though they will more than likely look back on GameStop with the same
fondness) to buy that new album and get home after working at the local
drive-in movie theatre and taking that LP for a spin, and listening to those
big tower speakers sing away through out the night. (Both my Father's 1980 MCS
Series (Technics) speakers and Scott’s vintage Radio Shack Realistic Optimus T-120's come to
mind.) As far as The Brennan is concerned, Microsoft developed this thing
over 10 years ago that had most of those features, and you could just plug it
in with an Optical cable to the back of your surround receiver. It was called
an XBOX. "Party on Wayne." "Party on Garth."
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
A Reference list of links attached to the LaserDisc Forever Facebook Page Conversations
http://www.whathifi.com/video/panasonic-tx-p42x10b-video-review
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1B8agn5XRg
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/star-wars-camera-fetches-record-269780
http://www.jedi1.net/default.aspx
http://www.cinemaequipmentsales.com/thx1.html
http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/ll310/shaorin-chan/TOSHIBA/DX-9002-1.jpg
http://i291.photobucket.com/albums/ll310/shaorin-chan/JVC%20HR-S8000U/HR-S8000UJOHN5-4-111.jpg
http://support.jvc.com/consumer/product.jsp?modelId=MODL022120&pathId=49&page=1&archive=true
http://thegamersbox.com/blog2/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Xbox.jpg
http://www.starwars.com/play/online-games/trench-run/
My Star Wars Radio Drama Story ....
There have been some nice reviews written of late about NPR's 13- part adaptation of "Star Wars" for radio that was produced during the early 1980's by their Earplay series and released on compact cassette and CD in 1993, 1996, and again in 2013 by the Highbridge Audio Company under the title
"George Lucas's Star Wars:
The Original Radio Drama"
The latest release -
The Topps Trading Card Limited Edition MP3Version finds
the entire program on an single disc, for $29 or less.
I believe it was, and still to this day, very well may be, one of the best versions of "Star Wars" ever produced.
But this isn't another review of the Radio Drama itself.
A Great Podcast by TheExpandedFandomverse that
does just that can be found here: http://radiodramaretrospective.blogspot.com
This story is,
shall I say, a trip down memory lane,
to my youth, and is my response to all the other post about this series on the web. For anyone who has ever enjoyed this landmark audio production of "Star Wars", this is for you.
During the summer of 1983,
when I was a mere 13-years old,
I had the pleasure of recording NPR's production of "The Empire Strikes Back" Radio Drama off the air using one of those old Radioshack Boom Boxes of that era
(a Realistic SCR-2, I believe? )
while listening to it in the dark of night in my closet in order that I could actually hear it.
Why did I have to do that?
Because at the time my old man would blast
the volume on our old 25" RCA Console TV
( that's only gotten worse ) and the sound would
travel ( all to well - I might add )
down the hallway,
so I had to block that noise out.
Note: no, I simply was not able to shut the main
bedroom door because our house didn't have
central air and our old 3-ton, 36,000 BTU Window AC ( that's a huge window unit !) was, get this - in our room ( I shared a room w/ my younger brother), directly in front of the door, blowing the cold air down the main hall. It's giant compressor and built-in fans produced quite of bit of noise which had to be overcome as well. Hence: The closet!
I had never actually heard "Star Wars" when it originally when out "over the air".
However, the parents of one of my best childhood friends at the time,
Andrew Kelly Beckett, (who is now an
Assistant Dean @ University of Iowa) who lived 2 doors down, had bought
(at $5 bucks a cassette tape!!! which, was like $$$$$$ when you are a kid in the early 80's)
for some extremely good, shall we say?, "bootleg" recordings from an employee who worked @ our local NPR radio station, who had managed to reproduced the series on, of all things, Scotch Brand audio cassettes (the very same brand of tape that Lucasfilm Sound Designer, Ben Burtt, had used to record the movie's sound effects on open reel to reel).
I would later use my 1986 Radio Shack
(13-1219) Realistic-Clarinette's 115 double tape deck to dub them (again using, in this case, some rather cheap Scotch brand cassettes - the ones with the translucent see-through blue shells - remember them?
You know- I was a kid, ok?
This was my 1st stereo system that I had bought with my own cash - and while this deck may not have looked like much, and yes - while she didn't have a built in CD player because that was a new Technology at the time -
RS's 1st CD player :CD-1200 Retail cost: $299.95 |
and a standalone CD player cost more than this entire system - she never the less had it where it really counted, mainly because of a little button labeled:
"Hi-Filter". This feature was normally only found on high-end single cassette decks of the day.
I remember not even seeing it
on their ( Radio Shack's) other stand-alone double cassette decks when I purchased this shelf system - which even featured manual recording level control, normally a function not found in ANY "all-in-one" system. While lacking "auto-reverse", for a product at this price point,
which, "on sale", sold for a mere $200 bucks, she made beautiful copies.
I would later go on to purchase way more expensive and far better decks ( from 3 head units, w/ DBX, & even Dolby S, to a deck w/ Digital NR) - but I'll always have a special place in my heart for what this deck was capable of.
I know that must sound shocking,
but I swear it's true.
The unit even contained an aux input that would allow for the matching CD player to be connected.
( The Ultra cheap speaker's that it came with were low end,
so I quickly replaced them w/ some Pioneer 2-way bookshelf units. )
I have absolutely no idea how his parents managed to come across this person selling these cassettes
(pictured at top and bottom of this article), however, the impression I was given @ the time was this individual might have been going around selling them door-to-door,
( but, in all fairness, that might? just be that way I'm remembering it) but man, I'm sure glad they found this guy.
At one point in my youth, I had them ( all 13 episodes ) so well committed to memory that during the sixth grade I would recite them at recess for another one of my friends .
Cassette one (Episodes 1 & 2 - A Wind to Shake the Stars & Points of Origin ) was one of my favorites, mainly because most of that material came from the "missing" 1st
( and as of yet, unfinished) 20 minute reel of film - in which they reveal glimpses of Luke's life on Tatooine - working on his Uncle Owen's moisture farm, dreaming of entering the Imperial Space Academy, and racing his skyhopper in the dangerous stretches of Beggar's Canyon - and in Episode 2, we get Princess Leia's first involvement in the Rebellion/
Although, I must admit, having just finished listening to this series again when I was traveling cross country this last past summer with my friend Matt, and I believe Episode 4 of Empire - which is titled "Fire and Ice" - is easily the best produced episode of the entire series, in terms of production value.
Speaking of which, the audio in this series is better than in the films. Rest assure this simply isn't just some "book-on-tape" with added background music to accompany the narration and dialog. No, no, no.
Using Lucasfilm's sound effects library , sound mixer Tom Voegeli built this series "from scratch". This is truly "theatre of the mind's eye" with an audio landscape so rich in detail the scenes allow the listener to build / visualize great images .
Keep in mind this program was produced not that long after former President Ronald Reagan just took office, and the VCR was just starting to sell. It be a couple years yet til Star Wars was available on VHS for retail sale ( 1984) - and oh yeah, Blockbuster Video wasn't on every corner. Oh - another thing.
The reason why everyone rented the titled was cause do you know what these VHS tapes cost back in the day?
I have a sales list for Disney VHS tapes from the time, & they were more expensive than their Laserdisc counterparts!
I mean these tapes are like $49 - $79 bucks a piece- and that's in early 80's dollars. Besides, I don't remember Laserdisc until the late 80's, even though they were being manufactured by the time the Radio Drama aired. Not to mention, other that the film's soundtrack, the only other way to get any "Star Wars" was to
listen to the famous "Story of Star Wars", which indeed was taken from the film's audio track, but timed out @ just under 50 minutes. Also, the original soundtrack itself only contained about half the music used in the film @ the time.
Anyhow, after High School, in 1989, I left home, joined the Army and afterwards moved to Florida. I was never able to find those any of those old cassettes again. Ironically, the last birthday gift my mother ever bought for me before she died was the"Jedi" Radio adaptation on cassette in 1996. I was not there when my family cleaned out the house I grew up in before they sold it, and those old bootleg tapes might have been thrown away then?
I remember Waiting 10 long years ( seemed like forever ) for the Program to finally be officially produced and released in 1993. I'll never forget that day I laid eyes on the Highbridge ( cassette and CD) version of it in the book store.
I had no idea that it was even being released.
Seeing it was a shock. Finally! There IT was !
I was expecting this thing to cost $100 bucks.
Even though I was still attending school and just beginning to land real work - no matter how much this thing cost -
I was willing and going to deal with the pain.
Only $35 dollars on Cassette ! OH Hell yes! Hello ear candy. It was mine !
I'd later get The Empire Strikes Back version, and then the CD version of Star Wars. To this day, I still have that receipt !
The only thing I didn't like about the packaging was that fact that pictures of the characters from the film were placed inside the program booklet. I always felt that one of the key advantages of The Radio Drama was that you, the listener, could make up both what the character's and the scenes looked like yourself. So my version of the story "looked" different in my head than the film. Also, this release is missing the original "an adaption for radio in 13-parts" opening tagline.
Truth be told, these store bought CD's will never replace the fond childhood memories of those old home-recorded cassette tapes - of that great adventure that once took place in my head, a long time ago, in a galaxy, far, far, away. Today we have produced a Facebook Fan Page dedicated to this product.
You can find it here at : The Star Wars Radio Series.
Hope you enjoy. Thank You.
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