Author: ssw15

  • Super Bowl! NY Giants!

    OMG.  NY Giants win!  (against New England Patriots; again!!). Yay, Giants!

    I had actually called the score, days ago, when I put in my picks.  Man, I should have put money on this.

    Still: the Giants win!

    Regarding the commercials: the Coke polar bears commercials were sweet, as was the MetLife  commercial that brought Peanuts characters with other cartoons (even Voltron!).  The NFL commercial (supposedly about safety in the sport, but really about the history of football) was moving, as was the one where they thanked fans (after all, this season had a lockout).  Other commercials – ugh.

    Also, I didn’t hate the Matthew Broderick as not-Ferris Bueller commercial, but you had to wonder why he had to do it for Honda.

    Otherwise, way too much end-of-world commercials (really?  Chevy trucks and Twinkies will survive alien invasions?  in addition to trailers for movies that I’ll pass on, thanks).   I think one of us at triscribe will post links to the commercials or articles about the commercials.

    What a Super Bowl, ultimately…

  • Lunar New Year 2012 Events

    Happy Year of the Dragon…  May it be auspicious for all of us!

    In the NY Daily News:

    an article on the question of why NYC Chinatown still doesn’t have its own arch.   I posit that inertia, money, and lack of actual analysis (of where to put it and how to drive the tourists to it) are factors. Disclaimer: it’s not like I actually know why this hasn’t happened already, but I kind of wonder if having an arch is like admitting your Chinatown is a tourist thing and no longer a living community. That’s just based on my familiarity of the Montreal Chinatown arches and seeing the one in San Francisco.

    a slideshow of where to eat (a couple of 8th Avenue Brooklyn places – like Pacificana – are included in the photos).

    Daily News also profiles a couple of Chinese/Taiwanese foodie bloggers and their recipes for the Lunar New Year.

    Check these items out in the city:

    In case you’re looking for Lunar New Year events/highlights from Brooklyn, here are some items from the Brooklyn Public Library.

    In case you’re looking for Lunar New Year events/highlights from Queens, here are some items from the Queens Library.

    Over at World Financial Center, New York Chinese Cultural Center is bringing some arts and crafts for the kids and performances next weekend.

    And, of course, last but never least, a whole bunch of stuff in Chinatown in Manhattan.

    In case you want a whole list, check out Time Out NY. Time Out NY is good that way, even talking to the cast of “Chinglish” about Chinese food for the  Chinese New Year (“Chinglish” is ending Jan. 29, 2012 – check it out while you can).

     

  • Happy birthday, Alexander Hamilton, Wherever You Are

    Happy birthday, Alexander Hamilton, Wherever You Are!

    Lin-Manuel Miranda Performs at the White House Poetry Jam: (8 of 8) (by whitehouse)

    I’m sharing this video, in honor of Alexander Hamilton’s birthday.  I remembered watching this on PBS awhile ago; this was so awesome…

    Lin-Manuel Miranda is ridiculously amazing for the extent of his creativity and his New York-ness. An Alexander Hamilton rap?! Amazing… (see also: this article in the NY Times about Miranda, and his creativity, including “The Hamilton Mixtape”).

  • Happy New Year!

    OMG, it’s 2012!  Have a Happy and Healthy New Year to all!

  • Reading/Literary Highlights of 2011

    I posted my Year in Reading of 2011 highlights over at tumblr.  Feel free to check it out.  May reading in 2012 be fruitful, entertaining, enriching, and enlightening!

  • TV Highlights of 2011

    Like I noted last year (see here if you’re so inclined to see my 2010 list), my notable tv highlights of 2011 are likely much different than others since, for various reasons, I again drastically cut back on tv viewing and much like other people, my tv viewing seems to be more online these days (which is how I view and otherwise caught up on “Community”).

    If you really want serious Best and Worst TV of 2011 lists, I’ll refer you to check out the lists from:

    a. Time’s James Poniewozik (the best tv lines of 2011; the top 10 tv series of 2011 and the rest; the top 10 tv episodes of 2011 and the rest);

    b. Alan Sepinwall (the best 10 or so shows; the best returning shows; the best new shows; the best 10 episodes  of 2011; the ones deserving coal in their stockings);

    c. Entertainment Weekly’s Ken Tucker (here, here, and the 11 to 20 things – lots of lists); and last but not least,

    d. David Bianculli (his discussion with Terry Gross on the best and worst of tv 2011 on NPR’s “Fresh Air” – with his observations on the segment on his site and here, and his other lists of tv 2011).

    So, in no particular order, my highlights:

    1. “Community” – I’m caught up, more or less.

    a. The foosball episode was funny and heartbreaking (at least on the Jeff and Shirley storyline).

    b. The multiverse episode was memorable; I think we’re not in the Evil Abed and Evil Troy universe.  Also, do not let Jeff play with dice, thereby creating a multiverse.

    c. And, how weird and funny is it that Luis Guzman, the real actor, made a guest star appearance as actor Luis Guzman, the most famous alumnus of (fictitious) Greendale Community College?  And, he loves Greendale, if only because it was where he – uh – met lots of girls back in the day.

    From what I can tell, I think the arc of season 2 – from Jan. to May 2011 was the arc on Pierce (he is a very, very strange man), but the arc of season 3 – from Sept. 2011 to date – has been, even if it’s in the background, about Jeff’s evolution.

    Jeff has been too-cool-for-school, but he takes a lot of effort to get there, and so far this season, his issues definitely kept popping up.  He matures somewhat, but his line between sanity and insanity looks like a thin one.

    I hope that NBC will keep the show on, if only to let the gang graduate (or, in Pierce’s case, probably not graduate, since I’m not clear if he’s really there for any degree, or whether Senor Chang or Dean Pelton can escape their looniness…).

    2. “Fringe” – well, it’s been a crazy trip this year with “Fringe” (time traveling, many universes, and who’s evil and who’s not, and what is evil?).  I still miss the blue universe, but we’ll see what will happen to Olivia and the gang – especially with Peter Bishop being the odd man out this time, striding between universes that make it apparent that he is the one who doesn’t belong.

    3. I finally got to watch “Parks and Recreation,” by watching the episode “The Trial of Leslie Knope” (do check out the recap from tv critic Alan Sepinwall’s blog post), wherein Leslie and Ben’s relationship put them in hot water with a disciplinary hearing against Leslie. (because they’re co-workers and actor Rob Lowe as the boss had said that there was a no fraternization policy; really, Rob Lowe?).  Aww.  So sweet. I really have to get on the bandwagon of this show, but I am so behind…

    4. Nova’s “The Fabric of the Cosmos” with Brian Greene was fascinating viewing.

    5. Masterpiece Mystery! was pretty entertaining this year, with Rufus Sewell as the Italian detective Aurelio Zen, more Inspector Lewis (well, I fell behind, unintentionally), and even Jason Isaacs as Jackson Brodie (mmm, Jason Isaacs!).

    6. I got around to watching some “Melissa and Joey” this year… (well, I mention it because nostalgia tv is quite a trend, for better or worse, and seeing some homages to 1980s/1990’s style of tv was strangely amusing).

    7. The Royal Wedding! (of course I’m a sucker for the pageantry).

    8. The marathon of Republican primary debates was the wacky reality tv of 2011, I must say.  We’ll see what will be the  results in Iowa next week.

    9. I still think that the NHL Winter Classic is quite a tv thing to view, if only for the amazing visuals of an outdoor hockey game.  I mention it because it’s coming again soon… (I hope it’s cold enough for it, though).

    10. I was horribly inconsistent about watching “Doctor Who” and “Law and Order: UK,” which I can now watch thanks to finally having BBC America, but still: I now have BBC America!

    Some major misses on my part in tv viewing: I completely didn’t get to watch “Downton Abbey” on Masterpiece (PBS) and “Justified” on FX.  And as I don’t have HBO,  I didn’t get to watch “Games of Thrones.”  And, since I don’t have Showtime, I didn’t get to see Damian Lewis on “Homeland.”  I also fell behind on “Archer” and missed the final episode of Michael Scott on “The Office.”  I’m not on the “Breaking Bad” or other trendy bandwagons, so I’ll leave it to the lists of others to go into them.

    Addendum: oh, yeah, 2011 was the year of Watson on Jeopardy on tv (see Ken Jennings on Slate about the experience).  I somehow managed to watch the next-to-last episode of “American Horror Story” on FX, with the harrowing birth of the (likely) Anti-Christ and with more ghosts.  Riiight (weird show, that one).

    Notable tv news things of 2011, which I’ll just mention below, for the sake of a relatively comprehensive “list”:

    The media tried hard to convey the calamity of Japan’s earthquake/tsunami/nuclear disaster; the scenes on tv were just hard to watch and unavoidable.

    A major 2011 announcement, with the death Osama bin Laden, in the post 9/11/01 era.

    The passing of many, including Steve Jobs.  The other natural calamities that were locally-occurring: snow, tremor,  and hurricane; (ridiculous; not eager for the locusts or the Mayan Apocalypse of 12/22/12).

    I am probably completely forgetting many other tv highlights of 2011.  May 2012 be enriching, enlightening, and so forth.

  • Merry Christmas 2011!

    A Bensonhurst Christmas, in Brooklyn, NY, brought to you by a reindeer and Frosty.  Merry Christmas to you all!

     

     

     

    (cross-posted over at sswslitinmotion.tumblr.com)

  • Countdown to Christmas (2011)

    It’s not quite feeling like winter the past couple of days.  Oh well.

    From Time.com: “8 Ways to Better Enjoy the Nutcracker” – good tips, actually.

    Funny thing about this time of year: people can get a little crazy about the religion thing; yes, it is a Christmas tree, not a “holiday tree” and, sure, secular Christmas would probably bother those who want to make it solely about the religious aspect.  And, sometimes, I find the rabid atheists, who seem to want us to be atheist, get a little crazy in wanting to avoid all overt religious demonstration.  And, it doesn’t help that, regardless of the holiday spirit or timing, prejudices become real obstacles anyway.   So, I had to admire this post over at Time.com, by Tim Padgett:

    Before [author Christopher] Hitchens died at 62 from esophageal cancer, he made a point of declaring he was certain no heaven awaited him. But that swipe at the faithful always misses the point. Most of us don’t believe in God because we think it’s a ticket to heaven. Rather, our belief in God — our belief in the living ideal of ourselves, which is something even atheists ponder — instills in us a faith that in the end, light always defeats darkness (which is how people get through the wars and natural disasters I cover). That does make us open to the possibility of the hereafter — but more important, it gives us purposeful inspiration to make the here and now better.

    With all due respect to the memory of Christopher Hitchens, making the here and now better would be difficult without religion. But it’s also hard enough without the un-Christian antics of people like David Caton [the head of the Florida Family Association whose ridiculous campaign encouraged companies like Lowe’s to pull their ads from the reality show, “All-American Muslim” on TLC]. As Christmas ought to remind us.

  • It’s Beginning to Look A Lot Like Christmas (2011)

    This cold spell is making it feel a lot like Christmas in the city.

    I am also in incredible denial that 2011 is about to end.

    Jimmy Fallon hosted “Saturday Night Live” last night. His appearance was (a) kind of funny, but there were a couple of pointless and not good sketches, and I didn’t watch the whole thing.

    But: (b) the Weekend Update Joke-Off was great – Tina Fey and Jimmy Fallon vs. Seth Myers and Amy Poehler!

    Check out this post over at “Entertainment Weekly”: a photo of Jinx, in the G.I. movie sequel, “G.I. Joe: Retaliation,” along with an embedded video of Jinx’s appearance in the cartoon movie. I have a weird feeling about this, I must say, because that cartoon movie was hilariously ridiculous and dramatic all at once and so the idea of Jinx in the live-action one partly intrigues me (not that I ever got around to watching the original G.I. live-action movie, so watching a sequel doesn’t quite have an appeal for me).

    Jinx is an Asian American serving with the Joes, but I had no idea that her comic book version is a little different from her cartoon movie version. Nonetheless:

    (1) seeing GI Joe reruns from the 1980’s on the HUB on cable is strangely entertaining – 1980’s redux!;

    (2) they’re really making a sequel to that live action GI Joe movie? Really?; and

    (3) for the sequel, they’re really taking a character from the cartoon movie, and made her sexier than she was in the cartoon. (for box office purposes, of course; not like we really want more camp for the Joes).

    Seeing the trailer for the “G.I. Joe: Retaliation” movie was odd, because it seems to be a plot taken out of the A-Team (and a plot that “Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol” is also doing; and yes, I do want to see the latest Mission Impossible movie): the Joes have been accused of a crime that they did not commit. Aww. The level of camp in this trailer is escalating with every moment or scene; it such such eye-rolling camp that I can’t tell if that’s supposed to be good. I’ll keep my ridiculous 1980’s stuff, thanks…

    But, really: Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson is in this movie?

    Also, it’s not really Christmas until I’ve seen a “Nutcracker” somewhere on tv. Always a weird fun…

    An early wish for 2012 (besides avoiding the Mayan prediction of the endtimes and continuing the perpetual wish for world peace, which ain’t happening anyway): please don’t let “The Dark Knight Rises” suck.

  • Pearl Harbor Day

    Don’t forget: Pearl Harbor Day, a day that has lived in infamy.

    I thought that the NY Times’ editorial about the need to remember Pearl Harbor expressed notable thoughts.

    Remembering it will be harder, when the first generation that was there is passing away.

    The passing of Harry Morgan, actor who was on “Dragnet,” and is especially memorable as Col. Potter of “M.A.S.H.”  An observance of Morgan by tv critic Alan Sepinwall and observance from tv critic James Poniewozik at Time.