robertogreco + tv 225
Right versus pragmatic – Marco.org
february 2012 by robertogreco
"They never tried that. They just kept posting more signs, because they were convinced that they were right.
This pattern is common. We often try to fight problems by yelling at them instead of accepting the reality of what people do, from controversial national legislation to passive-aggressive office signs. Such efforts usually fail, often with a lot of collateral damage, much like Prohibition and the ongoing “war” on “drugs”.
And, more recently (and with much less human damage), media piracy.
Big media publishers think they’re right to keep fighting piracy at any cost because they think it’s costing them a lot of potential sales.
It is, but not as many as they think, and not for the reasons they think…
Relying solely on yelling about what’s right isn’t a pragmatic approach for the media industry to take. And it’s not working."
tv
television
embargo
prohibition
rightandwrong
beingright
pragmatism
behavior
2012
marcoarment
oatmeal
gameofthrones
psychology
piracy
from delicious
This pattern is common. We often try to fight problems by yelling at them instead of accepting the reality of what people do, from controversial national legislation to passive-aggressive office signs. Such efforts usually fail, often with a lot of collateral damage, much like Prohibition and the ongoing “war” on “drugs”.
And, more recently (and with much less human damage), media piracy.
Big media publishers think they’re right to keep fighting piracy at any cost because they think it’s costing them a lot of potential sales.
It is, but not as many as they think, and not for the reasons they think…
Relying solely on yelling about what’s right isn’t a pragmatic approach for the media industry to take. And it’s not working."
february 2012 by robertogreco
Can I Stream...
february 2012 by robertogreco
"Can I Stream is a simple search engine to find what Movies and TV shows are available for legal streaming on the web. Instead of slogging through several sites trying to find the movie you want to watch online, you can search Can I Stream and find out immediately.
To search for a Movie or TV Show, just click the dotted line above and enter your search. Expert users can skip right to the results straight from the URL by typing in their title split by dashes - for example, http://canistre.am/back-to-the-future.
Can I Stream is a side project from Chris Dary, a developer at Arc90."
canistream
onlinetoolkit
chrisdary
video
film
movies
tv
streaming
from delicious
To search for a Movie or TV Show, just click the dotted line above and enter your search. Expert users can skip right to the results straight from the URL by typing in their title split by dashes - for example, http://canistre.am/back-to-the-future.
Can I Stream is a side project from Chris Dary, a developer at Arc90."
february 2012 by robertogreco
Ask Chris #81: Scooby-Doo and Secular Humanism - ComicsAlliance | Comic book culture, news, humor, commentary, and reviews
december 2011 by robertogreco
"Scooby-Doo is a cartoon about kids looking for truth.
Michael Ryan recently wrote a really interesting article that suggested the decision to keep real monsters off of Scooby-Doo was originally done in order to appease parents who wanted something that was just scary enough to keep a kid's attention without being so scary that they wouldn't actually get "excited." They wanted to have the fun of monsters without the consequences of having to deal with nightmares…the televised equivalent of a Nerf Dracula, taking something that was supposed to be scary and blunting it down until the the big reveal at the end of every episode, which would show kids that the monsters they were scared of were just normal dudes.
…whether or not it was the intent of the creators, what they ended up with was something that went far beyond that idea.
Because that's the thing about Scooby-Doo: The bad guys in every episode aren't monsters, they're liars."
scooby-do
secularhumanism
humanism
skepticism
askingquestions
reason
curiosity
thinking
fear
tv
television
parenting
children
criticalthinking
belief
truth
cartoons
rationality
2011
glvo
from delicious
Michael Ryan recently wrote a really interesting article that suggested the decision to keep real monsters off of Scooby-Doo was originally done in order to appease parents who wanted something that was just scary enough to keep a kid's attention without being so scary that they wouldn't actually get "excited." They wanted to have the fun of monsters without the consequences of having to deal with nightmares…the televised equivalent of a Nerf Dracula, taking something that was supposed to be scary and blunting it down until the the big reveal at the end of every episode, which would show kids that the monsters they were scared of were just normal dudes.
…whether or not it was the intent of the creators, what they ended up with was something that went far beyond that idea.
Because that's the thing about Scooby-Doo: The bad guys in every episode aren't monsters, they're liars."
december 2011 by robertogreco
Non-places: introduction to an ... - Marc Augé - Google Books
november 2011 by robertogreco
"As an increasing proportion of our lives is spent in supermarkets, airports, hotels, on motor-ways, or in front of TV and computer screens, Auge investigates the profound alteration that has resulted from this invasion of non-places."
non-places
nonplaces
marcaugé
books
supermarkets
hotels
airports
toread
anthropology
motorways
tv
television
screens
ageofscreens
1995
november 2011 by robertogreco
Archive of Our Own
october 2011 by robertogreco
"The Organization for Transformative Works (OTW) is a nonprofit organization established by fans to serve the interests of fans by providing access to and preserving the history of fanworks and fan culture in its myriad forms. We believe that fanworks are transformative and that transformative works are legitimate. The OTW represents a practice of transformative fanwork historically rooted in a primarily female culture. The OTW will preserve the record of that history as we pursue our mission while encouraging new and non-mainstream expressions of cultural identity within fandom."
fanfiction
fandom
multifandom
archive
writing
otw
tv
from delicious
october 2011 by robertogreco
The Mavenist: Augmented Identity
september 2011 by robertogreco
Another great back and forth from Frank and Rob. This line sums it up for me: <br />
<br />
"Where does the identifiable part of an identity reside?"
identity
2011
frankchimero
robgiampietro
jeanarp
art
artists
sherryturkle
stewartbrand
donaldbrown
universals
humans
human
humanuniversals
collectivism
manet
muppets
danielbejar
googlegängers
google
search
internet
northbynorthwest
carygrant
film
tv
television
omarlittle
michaelkwilliams
thewire
jacknicholson
theshining
simpsons
marcelduchamp
jimhenson
from delicious
<br />
"Where does the identifiable part of an identity reside?"
september 2011 by robertogreco
Why I quit my job: « Kai Nagata ["Until Thursday, I was CTV’s Quebec City Bureau Chief, based at the National Assembly, mostly covering politics."]
august 2011 by robertogreco
"I’m trying to think of the reporters I know who would do their job as volunteers…people who feel so strongly about importance & social value of the evening news that, were they were offered somewhere to sleep, three meals a day, & free dry-cleaning – they would do that for the rest of their days…such zeal is scarce. <br />
<br />
Aside from feeling sexually attracted to the people on screen, the target viewer, according to consultants, is also supposed to like easy stories that reinforce beliefs they already hold…<br />
<br />
I have serious problems w/ direction taken by Canadian policy & politics in last 5 years. But as a reporter, I feel like I’ve been holding my breath…<br />
<br />
“I thought if I paid my dues & worked my way up through ranks, I could maybe reach a position of enough influence & credibility that I could say what I truly feel. I’ve realized there’s no time to wait…<br />
<br />
I’m broke, & yet I know I’m rich in love. I’m unemployed & homeless, but I’ve never been more free.<br />
<br />
Everything is possible.”
politics
media
journalism
tv
ctv
cbc
canada
policy
kainagata
2011
neo-nomads
nomadism
meaning
purpose
meaningfulness
via:jeeves
truth
viewers
junktv
news
reporting
environment
superficiality
junknews
distraction
integrity
credibility
influence
yearoff
bias
from delicious
<br />
Aside from feeling sexually attracted to the people on screen, the target viewer, according to consultants, is also supposed to like easy stories that reinforce beliefs they already hold…<br />
<br />
I have serious problems w/ direction taken by Canadian policy & politics in last 5 years. But as a reporter, I feel like I’ve been holding my breath…<br />
<br />
“I thought if I paid my dues & worked my way up through ranks, I could maybe reach a position of enough influence & credibility that I could say what I truly feel. I’ve realized there’s no time to wait…<br />
<br />
I’m broke, & yet I know I’m rich in love. I’m unemployed & homeless, but I’ve never been more free.<br />
<br />
Everything is possible.”
august 2011 by robertogreco
Very Deep in America by Lorrie Moore | The New York Review of Books
august 2011 by robertogreco
"“Rooting is in our blood,” Janet Malcolm has written, and when traveling around this country one would be hard-pressed not to notice that sports stadiums have become to the United States what opera houses are to Germany. Every community has one, even ones without much money. Friday Night Lights, whose final season has just come to a close, is a weekly hour-long dramatic series (forty-three minutes without commercials) whose focus is a high school football team and its place in a particular Texas town by the fictional name of Dillon—inspired by the real-life town of Odessa."
tv
fridaynightlights
lorriemore
television
2011
books
film
texas
sports
americanfootball
football
us
culture
from delicious
august 2011 by robertogreco
SpeEdChange: Hulu in the Classroom: Building Literacy
august 2011 by robertogreco
""I've never understood our classroom commitment to "the book," but, I've really never understood our classroom commitment to "the chapter book."
What skills are learned from reading a book which are not learned from watching a film? I'm not saying books are "bad," just asking, "why are they 'better'?"
And why is longer 'better'?
[Short stories discussion]
But then I thought, why do we start with text on a page. I thought back to discovering books of those Twilight Zonestories after years of watching the show, and how much I loved "reading" them (or really, listening to them via audiobook, but I think that's the same).
And I thought that, as part of our effort to make kids want to read, want to write, we must first get them interested in stories, in wanting to know stories, and in how stories are told, and why.
And one great way to do that is to use short fiction in another medium - the short fiction of Hulu and other free sources of video - film and television."
irasocol
classideas
shortstories
reading
writing
hulu
youtube
film
learning
stories
storytelling
narrative
dialogue
2011
lists
video
tv
television
twiliightzone
huma8
literature
from delicious
What skills are learned from reading a book which are not learned from watching a film? I'm not saying books are "bad," just asking, "why are they 'better'?"
And why is longer 'better'?
[Short stories discussion]
But then I thought, why do we start with text on a page. I thought back to discovering books of those Twilight Zonestories after years of watching the show, and how much I loved "reading" them (or really, listening to them via audiobook, but I think that's the same).
And I thought that, as part of our effort to make kids want to read, want to write, we must first get them interested in stories, in wanting to know stories, and in how stories are told, and why.
And one great way to do that is to use short fiction in another medium - the short fiction of Hulu and other free sources of video - film and television."
august 2011 by robertogreco
You’ve got the sickness, I’ve got the medicine « Snarkmarket
july 2011 by robertogreco
"These two blockquotes, curated by Andrew Simone and Alan Jacobs respectively, arrived in my RSS reader within moments of each other. I liked Jacobs’s adjective, which applies to Simone’s selection, too: “Kierkegaardian.”"
boredom
jimrossignol
timcarmody
alanjacobs
andrewsimone
walkerpercy
tv
television
2010
kierkegaard
idleness
from delicious
july 2011 by robertogreco
TV Forecast for iPhone and iPod Touch
july 2011 by robertogreco
"TV Forecast keeps all of your favorite TV shows together in one place: on your iPhone or iPod Touch.
FEATURES:
Detailed previous and upcoming episode information.
Full episode listing.
Notifications to remind you when a TV show is about to air.
Count down the seconds: rotate to landscape to reveal an upcoming episode countdown.
Email an upcoming episode reminder to yourself or to a friend.
Adjust an episode's air time to your time zone.
[iPad: http://bigbucketsoftware.com/tvforecast/ipad/ ]
[via: http://mrgan.tumblr.com/post/7504978939/tv-forecast-hd ]
iphone
ios
applications
ipad
tv
television
calendar
from delicious
FEATURES:
Detailed previous and upcoming episode information.
Full episode listing.
Notifications to remind you when a TV show is about to air.
Count down the seconds: rotate to landscape to reveal an upcoming episode countdown.
Email an upcoming episode reminder to yourself or to a friend.
Adjust an episode's air time to your time zone.
[iPad: http://bigbucketsoftware.com/tvforecast/ipad/ ]
[via: http://mrgan.tumblr.com/post/7504978939/tv-forecast-hd ]
july 2011 by robertogreco
The Case of The Traveling Text Message - Michele Tepper - Interactions Everywhere
july 2011 by robertogreco
"Last year, the BBC and Masterpiece Mystery aired a new adaptation of the Sherlock Holmes stories called Sherlock. It’s available now on Netflix Watch Instantly, so if you haven’t seen it yet, go check it out.<br />
<br />
But I’m not here to talk about how fantastic the concept and the writing are, or how much I love the performances, or even how anxiously I’m awaiting the next series. I want to argue that the thing that makes this series really groundbreaking is something very subtle: the way director Paul McGuigan handles titles…<br />
<br />
…instead of cutting to the character’s screen, Sherlock takes over the viewer’s screen.<br />
<br />
But none of that takes away from the achievement, which screenwriter John August calls “the one to beat.” I fully expect the text messaging style McGuigan brought us in Sherlock to become part of the visual narrative vernacular, coming soon to a screen near you."
design
writing
television
ui
text
userinterface
narrative
film
tv
2011
sherlock
timcarmody
screens
computers
mobile
phones
storytelling
perspective
filmmaking
classideas
from delicious
<br />
But I’m not here to talk about how fantastic the concept and the writing are, or how much I love the performances, or even how anxiously I’m awaiting the next series. I want to argue that the thing that makes this series really groundbreaking is something very subtle: the way director Paul McGuigan handles titles…<br />
<br />
…instead of cutting to the character’s screen, Sherlock takes over the viewer’s screen.<br />
<br />
But none of that takes away from the achievement, which screenwriter John August calls “the one to beat.” I fully expect the text messaging style McGuigan brought us in Sherlock to become part of the visual narrative vernacular, coming soon to a screen near you."
july 2011 by robertogreco
Kevin Slavin – Reality Is Plenty, Thanks. « Mobile Monday Amsterdam
june 2011 by robertogreco
"Kevin Slavin closes the final Mobile Monday Amsterdam with an improvised talk about why reality is plenty. And closing the row of bare feet speakers at the event."
culture
history
games
psychology
mobile
kevinslavin
ar
augmentedreality
reality
2011
momoamsterdam
tv
television
jeanpiaget
extramission
immersion
mimesis
replication
uncannyvalley
information
tamagotchi
perception
senses
from delicious
june 2011 by robertogreco
Test card - Wikipedia
june 2011 by robertogreco
"A test card, also known as a test pattern in North America, is a television test signal, typically broadcast at times when the transmitter is active but no program is being broadcast (often at startup and closedown). Used since the earliest TV broadcasts, test cards were originally physical cards at which a television camera was pointed, and such cards are still often used for calibration, alignment, and matching of cameras and camcorders. Test patterns used for calibrating or troubleshooting the downstream signal path are these days generated by test signal generators, which do not depend on the correct configuration (and presence) of a camera. Digitally generated cards allow vendors, viewers and television stations to adjust their equipment for optimal functionality."
technology
history
television
images
tv
testcards
testpatterns
color
patterns
glvo
from delicious
june 2011 by robertogreco
Guernica / The Straight Dope — Bill Moyers interviews David Simon, April 2011
april 2011 by robertogreco
"David Simon would be happy to find out that The Wire was hyperbolic and ridiculous, and that the “American Century” is still to come. But he's not betting on it. An excerpt from Bill Moyers Journal: The Conversation Continues, forthcoming from The New Press."<br />
<br />
"I am very cynical about institutions and their willingness to address themselves to reform. I am not cynical when it comes to individuals and people. And I think the reason The Wire is watchable, even tolerable, to viewers is that it has great affection for individuals. It’s not misanthropic in any way. It has great affection for those people, particularly when they stand up on their hind legs and say, “I will not lie anymore. I am actually going to fight for what I perceive to be some shard of truth.”"
davidsimon
billmoyers
toread
interviews
thewire
tv
television
politics
drugs
cities
baltimore
2011
government
policy
society
economics
journalism
statistics
progress
crime
lawenforcement
criminology
urban
urbanism
laissezfaire
markets
marketfundamentalism
decriminalization
underclass
class
race
incarceration
institutions
cynicism
reform
change
individualism
people
human
humancondition
humans
democracy
control
corruption
mexico
us
ideology
from delicious
<br />
"I am very cynical about institutions and their willingness to address themselves to reform. I am not cynical when it comes to individuals and people. And I think the reason The Wire is watchable, even tolerable, to viewers is that it has great affection for individuals. It’s not misanthropic in any way. It has great affection for those people, particularly when they stand up on their hind legs and say, “I will not lie anymore. I am actually going to fight for what I perceive to be some shard of truth.”"
april 2011 by robertogreco
Our full interview with William Gibson | Reading | Independent Weekly [via: via: http://twitter.com/ballardian/status/60530562850492416 ]
april 2011 by robertogreco
"MySpace & Facebook just looked overstructured & Disneylanded…<br />
When a friend of mine joined Twitter, I thought, "Oh, this sounds dreadful,"…join[ed] it for a laugh, so I could make fun of it later. To my great surprise, I found it nicely understructured. & very fast…<br />
I also find it effortless—that may be because the way I use it is largely content-free, but it's actually been a very nice experience. I would miss it if it disappeared; I would miss the company of people I've gotten used to having around in a virtual way.<br />
What I'd miss most about Twitter is its astonishing power as an aggregator of novelty. It does in a few hours what one hundred professionally produced magazines could scarcely do in a month, skimming the world's weirdest, most wonderful things & depositing it on your desktop to be snacked on.<br />
<br />
Having boasted for years at watching less television than any NA male my age, I may unfortunately have found my television."
twitter
williamgibson
interviews
2010
zerohistory
sciencefiction
scifi
facebook
myspace
aggregator
television
tv
unstructured
novelty
from delicious
When a friend of mine joined Twitter, I thought, "Oh, this sounds dreadful,"…join[ed] it for a laugh, so I could make fun of it later. To my great surprise, I found it nicely understructured. & very fast…<br />
I also find it effortless—that may be because the way I use it is largely content-free, but it's actually been a very nice experience. I would miss it if it disappeared; I would miss the company of people I've gotten used to having around in a virtual way.<br />
What I'd miss most about Twitter is its astonishing power as an aggregator of novelty. It does in a few hours what one hundred professionally produced magazines could scarcely do in a month, skimming the world's weirdest, most wonderful things & depositing it on your desktop to be snacked on.<br />
<br />
Having boasted for years at watching less television than any NA male my age, I may unfortunately have found my television."
april 2011 by robertogreco
The Sad, Beautiful Fact That We're All Going To Miss Almost Everything : Monkey See : NPR
april 2011 by robertogreco
"Culling is easy; it implies a huge amount of control & mastery. Surrender, on the other hand, is a little sad. That's the moment you realize you're separated from so much. That's your moment of understanding that you'll miss most of the music, dancing, books & films that there have ever been & ever will be, & right now, there's something being performed somewhere in the world that you're not seeing that you would love.
It's sad, but it's also ... great, really. Imagine if you'd seen everything good, or if you knew about everything good. Imagine if you really got to all the recordings & books and movies you're "supposed to see."…That would imply that all the cultural value the world has managed to produce since a glob of primordial ooze…can [be] gobble[d up]…in one lifetime…
If "well-read" means "not missing anything," then nobody has a chance. If "well-read" means "making a genuine effort to explore thoughtfully," then yes, we can all be well-read…"
culture
books
history
future
npr
music
films
cantkeepup
needfrequentremindersofthis
content
flow
control
culling
curation
curating
lindaholmes
rogerebert
humans
life
lifetime
reading
listening
watching
hearing
literature
science
fiction
nonfiction
beingwell-read
takethatedhirsch
culturalliteracy
beauty
insignificance
love
happiness
wisdom
thesumofhumanproduction
numbers
tv
television
art
cv
from delicious
It's sad, but it's also ... great, really. Imagine if you'd seen everything good, or if you knew about everything good. Imagine if you really got to all the recordings & books and movies you're "supposed to see."…That would imply that all the cultural value the world has managed to produce since a glob of primordial ooze…can [be] gobble[d up]…in one lifetime…
If "well-read" means "not missing anything," then nobody has a chance. If "well-read" means "making a genuine effort to explore thoughtfully," then yes, we can all be well-read…"
april 2011 by robertogreco
Deb Roy: The birth of a word | Video on TED.com
march 2011 by robertogreco
"MIT researcher Deb Roy wanted to understand how his infant son learned language -- so he wired up his house with videocameras to catch every moment (with exceptions) of his son's life, then parsed 90,000 hours of home video to watch "gaaaa" slowly turn into "water." Astonishing, data-rich research with deep implications for how we learn."
debroy
language
science
ted
languageacquisition
learning
infants
children
childhood
environment
visualization
video
mit
neuroscience
social
spacetimeworms
naturenurture
speech
words
memorymachines
memory
lifelogging
tracking
audio
recording
classideas
patternrecognition
patterns
vocabulary
media
television
tv
socialmedia
eventstucture
conversation
semanticanalysis
wordscapes
communication
communicationdynamics
engagement
data
socialgraph
contentgraph
coviewing
behavior
socialstructures
from delicious
march 2011 by robertogreco
Television Tropes & Idioms [TVtropes]
march 2011 by robertogreco
What is this about? This wiki is a catalog of the tricks of the trade for writing fiction.<br />
<br />
Tropes are devices and conventions that a writer can reasonably rely on as being present in the audience members' minds and expectations. On the whole, tropes are not clichés. The word clichéd means "stereotyped and trite." In other words, dull and uninteresting. We are not looking for dull and uninteresting entries. We are here to recognize tropes and play with them, not to make fun of them.<br />
<br />
The wiki is called "TV Tropes" because TV is where we started. Over the course of a few years, our scope has crept out to include other media. Tropes transcend television. They reflect life. Since a lot of art, especially the popular arts, does its best to reflect life, tropes are likely to show up everywhere…<br />
<br />
Click on "Troperville" in the menu on the upper left of any page to find the places where the troper community gather to talk about things."
writing
tv
culture
wiki
reference
tvstropes
via:frankchimero
television
intertextuality
clichés
tropes
media
film
fiction
literature
idioms
classideas
from delicious
<br />
Tropes are devices and conventions that a writer can reasonably rely on as being present in the audience members' minds and expectations. On the whole, tropes are not clichés. The word clichéd means "stereotyped and trite." In other words, dull and uninteresting. We are not looking for dull and uninteresting entries. We are here to recognize tropes and play with them, not to make fun of them.<br />
<br />
The wiki is called "TV Tropes" because TV is where we started. Over the course of a few years, our scope has crept out to include other media. Tropes transcend television. They reflect life. Since a lot of art, especially the popular arts, does its best to reflect life, tropes are likely to show up everywhere…<br />
<br />
Click on "Troperville" in the menu on the upper left of any page to find the places where the troper community gather to talk about things."
march 2011 by robertogreco
How Modern Life Is Like a Zombie Onslaught - NYTimes.com
march 2011 by robertogreco
"Every zombie war is a war of attrition. It’s always a numbers game. And it’s more repetitive than complex. In other words, zombie killing is philosophically similar to reading and deleting 400 work e-mails on a Monday morning or filling out paperwork that only generates more paperwork, or following Twitter gossip out of obligation, or performing tedious tasks in which the only true risk is being consumed by the avalanche. The principal downside to any zombie attack is that the zombies will never stop coming; the principal downside to life is that you will be never be finished with whatever it is you do.<br />
<br />
The Internet reminds of us this every day."
infooverload
flow
internet
web
online
modernlife
cv
tv
television
twitter
email
paperwork
feeds
2010
chuckklosterman
from delicious
<br />
The Internet reminds of us this every day."
march 2011 by robertogreco
Kevin Slavin on Lift 11: Geneva - live streaming video powered by Livestream
february 2011 by robertogreco
Quotes transcribed by David Smith: "things we write but can no longer read"; "three problems … opacity, inscrutability … The third one is darker and a little bit harder to describe — I don't even know what to call it yet"; flash crash; dark pools; 60% of all movies rented on Netflix are rented because Netflix recommended them; 70% of current Wall St trades are algorithms trying to be invisible or other algorithms trying to find the invisible algorithms"
kevinslavin
technology
algorithms
evolution
wallstreet
cities
darkpools
netflix
trading
finance
invisibilealgorithms
financialservices
realestate
nyc
manhattan
songs
film
television
tv
opacity
inscrutability
elevators
lift11
roomba
robots
from delicious
february 2011 by robertogreco
Paris Review – My Rayannes, Emma Straub
january 2011 by robertogreco
"All teenage girls are at least half-lesbian, always admiring their friends’ still-shifting bodies, their superior wardrobes, their make-up application expertise, their better luck with the opposite sex. Teenage girls curl up together like newborn puppies, painting one another’s toes as if they were licking one another’s ears. If you sit long enough in any Starbucks, or loiter outside any high school, you will see girls climbing onto one another’s laps, kissing on the lips. They aren’t hitting on each other, not precisely, though they are in a constant state of arousal that borders on the insane. No other love is like the love of a teenage girl, all passion and fire and endless devotion—at least for a week."
television
angelachase
mysocalledlife
girls
adolescence
tv
from delicious
january 2011 by robertogreco
Closing Keynote: Vernacular Video on Vimeo
brucesterling media mediaenvironment vimeo video vernacularvideo future futurism andreaallen online vimeofestival saffo'slaw paulsaffo futureofvideo marytylermoore dickvandykeshow onlinevideo expressivematurity tv television history audience internet webvideo berg berglondon levmanovich caseyreas reas from delicious
january 2011 by robertogreco
brucesterling media mediaenvironment vimeo video vernacularvideo future futurism andreaallen online vimeofestival saffo'slaw paulsaffo futureofvideo marytylermoore dickvandykeshow onlinevideo expressivematurity tv television history audience internet webvideo berg berglondon levmanovich caseyreas reas from delicious
january 2011 by robertogreco
IFC's "Portlandia": Regional Comedy at Its Best - Newsweek
january 2011 by robertogreco
"The Pacific Northwest: the most tragically idealistic place on earth, where everything must have a greater good, even if it makes your life hell. It’s with a bit of that mentality—and a lot of love—that Fred Armisen (of SNL) and Carrie Brownstein (of now-defunct Portland rock band Sleater-Kinney) introduce America to the absurdity of Portland, Ore.: one of the most educated, environmentally-friendly and, of course, whitest cities around, where flannel will always be in fashion, and guerrilla knitting is the sport of choice. With impeccable accuracy, their new comedy series, Portlandia—which premieres on IFC this week —makes humor out of all the quirks that make Portland, well, Portland: a ragingly-feminist independent bookstore, an organic farm where “free love” is harvested, a fair-trade restaurant where each animal on the menu has a name and bio. “I like to describe Portland as a city with a lot of self-esteem, filled with people with a lot of self-doubt,” says Brownstein…"
portland
humor
tv
television
cascadia
from delicious
january 2011 by robertogreco
Los 80
december 2010 by robertogreco
"Los 80 es una serie de televisión chilena, producida por Canal 13 con motivo del proyecto para la celebración del Bicentenario del país.<br />
La serie, protagonizada por Daniel Muñoz y Tamara Acosta, narra la historia de la familia Herrera, una familia de clase media que vive en Santiago de Chile. La trama se sitúa entre los años 1982 y 1984, en pleno régimen militar, y gira en torno a los diversos eventos históricos de los años 80, principalmente la gran crisis económica de ese año.<br />
Dentro de sus principales méritos está la representación de la época, apelando a la nostalgia de los televidentes. La participación de la selección chilena en la copa mundial de fútbol de 1982 es recordada, al igual que las grandes inundaciones que provocaron el desborde del río Mapocho. Lugares, objetos, alimentos, vestimentas, diálogos y hasta automóviles han sido recreados para ambientar la historia, mezclada con videos históricos…"
chile
tv
television
2010
2009
2008
2011
from delicious
La serie, protagonizada por Daniel Muñoz y Tamara Acosta, narra la historia de la familia Herrera, una familia de clase media que vive en Santiago de Chile. La trama se sitúa entre los años 1982 y 1984, en pleno régimen militar, y gira en torno a los diversos eventos históricos de los años 80, principalmente la gran crisis económica de ese año.<br />
Dentro de sus principales méritos está la representación de la época, apelando a la nostalgia de los televidentes. La participación de la selección chilena en la copa mundial de fútbol de 1982 es recordada, al igual que las grandes inundaciones que provocaron el desborde del río Mapocho. Lugares, objetos, alimentos, vestimentas, diálogos y hasta automóviles han sido recreados para ambientar la historia, mezclada con videos históricos…"
december 2010 by robertogreco
Crisis Of The Public Intellectual - Ta-Nehisi Coates - National - The Atlantic
december 2010 by robertogreco
"Much of what we're discussing is how academia has, to some extent by its own actions, been cleaved away from public life. I hesitate to speak on television about the Civil War, because there are people who've made this the work of their life--actual experts--who should be speaking. But I also recoil at the notion of a host looking at me and saying, "John Brown--good guy or bad, guy? Go." I imagine those experts feel the same way.<br />
<br />
As in all things, I don't write this to offer a definitive answer. My sense is that the reluctance among people like me--and people smarter than me--to engage, is as problematic as the form itself."
academia
ta-nehisicoates
intellectualism
intellectualpursuit
elitism
snobbery
ivorytower
public
media
conversation
2010
television
tv
from delicious
<br />
As in all things, I don't write this to offer a definitive answer. My sense is that the reluctance among people like me--and people smarter than me--to engage, is as problematic as the form itself."
december 2010 by robertogreco
I Want My Twitter TV! | Fast Company
november 2010 by robertogreco
""Turns out, not everyone wants to use Twitter on television the same way," Sladden says. "Revenge of the liberal-arts majors" might be the best way to describe the method that the media team uses to help partners figure out how best to use Twitter. "Robin will lead a design-oriented brainstorm session to try to tease out in their own words what that relationship will be and what that creative potential is," Sladden says. "It's anthropology, learning their tribal language. It's better when it's native to you, but you can crack the code if you listen, ask good questions, and care enough to understand.""
cloesladden
robinsloan
rosshoffman
twitter
media
tv
television
2010
fastcompany
socialmedia
entertainment
convergence
newliberalarts
liberalarts
anthropology
listening
from delicious
november 2010 by robertogreco
"TV Channels, Self-Control and Happiness" by Christine Benesch, Bruno S. Frey et al.
november 2010 by robertogreco
"Standard economic theory suggests that more choice is usually better. We address this claim and investigate whether people can cope with the increasing number of television programs and watch the amount of TV they find optimal for themselves or whether they are prone to over-consumption. We find that heavy TV viewers do not benefit but instead report lower life satisfaction with access to more TV channels. This finding suggests that an identifiable group of individuals experiences a self-control problem when it comes to TV viewing." [Is this because we are innately less happy with choice or because we have become conditioned to have little choice in some areas and then when faced with choice we become unhappy?]
choice
happiness
self-control
satisfaction
tv
television
economics
from delicious
november 2010 by robertogreco
Edward Copeland on Film: When a Cartoon Aimed to Be Art
november 2010 by robertogreco
"In honor of the 70th anniversary of Walt Disney’s Fantasia, film critic Matt Zoller Seitz watched and discussed the film with his daughter, Hannah, age 13. The format was somewhat less than ideal — an old VHS cassette that hadn’t been touched in more than a decade — but it was enough to jog dad’s memory. However, the authors did not expect that peculiarities of the format would complicate the project; more on that in a moment."
film
waltdisney
fantasia
conversation
art
edwardcopeland
mattzollerseitzhistory
tv
television
disney
culture
miyazaki
parenting
from delicious
november 2010 by robertogreco
The Economics of Seinfeld
november 2010 by robertogreco
"Seinfeld ran for nine seasons on NBC and became famous as a “show about nothing.” Basically, the show allows viewers to follow the antics of Jerry, George, Elaine, and Kramer as they move through their daily lives, often encountering interesting people or dealing with special circumstances. It is the simplicity of Seinfeld that makes it so appropriate for use in economics courses. Using these clips (as well as clips from other television shows or movies) makes economic concepts come alive, making them more real for students. Ultimately, students will start seeing economics everywhere – in other TV shows, in popular music, and most importantly, in their own lives."
economics
humor
seinfeld
business
education
teaching
reference
lessons
television
tv
classideas
via:lukeneff
from delicious
november 2010 by robertogreco
MASH TV on Vimeo
october 2010 by robertogreco
"This channel will be a way for all street based fixed riders to showcase their videos worldwide."
bikes
culture
biking
vimeo
video
media
tv
from delicious
october 2010 by robertogreco
Four things about Mr. Snuffleupagus
october 2010 by robertogreco
"1. full name is Aloysius Snuffleupagus; 2. For > 14 years, Big Bird was only character on Sesame Street who could see Snuffy…he was BB's imaginary friend; 3. Some of the grownups on show came to believe Big Bird about existence of Snuffleupagus & he was revealed to them in Nov 1985 [video]; 4. Snuffy's reveal came about because of some high-profile sexual abuse cases: "In an interview on a Canadian telethon hosted by Bob McGrath, Snuffy's performer, Martin P. Robinson, revealed Snuffy was finally introduced to the main human cast mainly due to a string of high profile & sometimes graphic stories of pedophilia & sexual abuse of children that had been aired on shows such as 60 Minutes & 20/20. The writers felt that by having the adults refuse to believe Big Bird despite the fact that he was telling the truth, they were scaring children into thinking that their parents would not believe them if they had been sexually abused & they would just be better off remaining silent.""
snuffleupagus
sesamestreet
pedophilia
sexualabuse
children
television
tv
imaginaryfriends
trust
belief
kottke
from delicious
october 2010 by robertogreco
Downtime | The New Republic [via: http://ayjay.tumblr.com/post/1198551446/half-a-dozen-or-so-seven-year-old-boys-crammed]
september 2010 by robertogreco
"…half a dozen or so seven-year-old boys crammed into my apartment, and discovered, to my dismay, not that they couldn’t all get along—that was to be expected—but that they had no stomach for their own fighting. Every time an argument would break out about the choice of game or the distribution of lightsabers, a boy would run up to me. At first I thought I was being asked to adjudicate, but before I could figure out how to get out of doing so, I discovered that wasn’t what the boys wanted. They wanted me to turn on the television. If I turned on the television, they wouldn’t have to play anymore, and then they wouldn’t fight. I imagined legions of exhausted babysitters and mothers settling disputes in this way, and my son and his friends drawing the obvious conclusion: that group play is dangerous because conflict is intolerable, and that electronic entertainment is a good way to avoid both."
conflict
play
television
tv
children
parenting
groups
groupplay
disputes
avoidance
conflictaversion
compromise
tcsnmy
from delicious
september 2010 by robertogreco
The Evolution of Classroom Technology - Interactive Feature - NYTimes.com
september 2010 by robertogreco
"A graphic history of classroom technology, from the writing slate to the electronic tablet."
history
classroom
evolution
timeline
interactive
visual
technology
ict
edtech
teaching
learning
education
ipad
olpc
xo
interactivewhiteboard
pencils
calculators
cd-rom
scantrons
iclickers
filmstrips
liquidpaper
tv
television
mimeograph
overheadprojectors
projectors
radio
radios
stereoscopes
chalkboards
slates
ferule
horn-books
magiclanterns
languagelabs
readingaccellerators
reading
writing
smartboards
from delicious
september 2010 by robertogreco
alien california - a gallery on Flickr
august 2010 by robertogreco
"i have some vague ideas about how a lot of science fiction tv shows are based in southern california, so location shooting for "alien" planets often features california landscapes.<br />
<br />
maybe eventually i'll elaborate on this."
classideas
california
brittagustafson
photography
fiction
space
sciencefiction
scifi
galleries
landscape
socal
tv
television
tcsnmy
from delicious
<br />
maybe eventually i'll elaborate on this."
august 2010 by robertogreco
Max Headroom predicted my job, 20 years before it existed
august 2010 by robertogreco
"The entire 80s cyberpunk Max Headroom TV series is available today on DVD, and one of the pleasures of rewatching the series is discovering how many things it got right about the future."
1980s
cyberpunk
future
futurism
io9
maxheadroom
television
tv
predictions
technology
journalism
sciencefiction
media
scifi
punk
1988
1987
annaleenewitz
ratings
instant-ratings
4chan
piratevideo
mediahacking
security
2010
from delicious
august 2010 by robertogreco
"Mad Men": Stillbirth of the American dream - Heather Havrilesky - Salon.com
august 2010 by robertogreco
"Americans are constantly in search of an upgrade...sickness infused into our blood, dissatisfaction w/ ordinary instilled in us from childhood. Instead of staying connected to divine beauty & grace of everyday existence—glimmer of sunshine on grass, blessing of cool breeze on a summer day—we're instructed to hope for much more. Having been told repeated stories about fairest in land, most powerful, richest, most heroic (Snow White, Pokémon, Ronald McDonald, Lady Gaga), eventually we buy into these creation myths & concede their overwhelming importance in universe. Slowly we come to view our own lives as inconsequential, grubby, even intolerable.
via:lukeneff
madmen
americandream
satisfaction
well-being
us
empathy
socialmedia
sociology
mythology
psychology
culture
society
economics
desire
capitalism
tv
lifestyle
reality
glvo
tcsnmy
success
consumerism
work
fulfillment
travel
parenting
happiness
materialism
august 2010 by robertogreco
Stowe Boyd - Creativity Increased By Multitasking
july 2010 by robertogreco
"I love stories that debunk conventional wisdom, especially cobwebby corporate wish fulfillment. In this case, a wholesale frontal assault on creativity training: Po Bronson & Ashley Merryman, Forget Brainstorming ...[long quote]... Bronson & Merryman do go on to make some concrete recommendations & observations:
stoweboyd
multitasking
creativity
howwework
process
tv
television
suggestions
suggestionboxes
markrunco
july 2010 by robertogreco
The Sopranos, “Bust Out” | TV | A Very Special Episode | The A.V. Club [via: http://twitter.com/tcarmody/status/18604653636]
july 2010 by robertogreco
Just one of the many great bits: "The Sopranos was a significant achievement in television history on a number of fronts: It helped establish HBO as a cultural force; it made the literary qualities of symbolism and thematic development more acceptable in television dramas; and perhaps most influentially, The Sopranos showed that Americans would cheer an anti-hero more readily on TV than they would in the movies, where “unsympathetic” protagonists are usually the box-office kiss of death. Why? Because on television, writers have the luxury of time. Episode by episode and hour by hour, we get to know TV characters more intimately, so that we come to understand and even embrace their contradictions. One of the main reasons The Sopranos became such a phenomenon was that no matter how awful Tony Soprano could be—and how ferocious James Gandolfini’s performance—viewers genuinely enjoyed spending time in his company."
journey
jamesgandolfini
thesopranos
tv
television
writing
july 2010 by robertogreco
SPENCER'S SCRATCH PAD: the most dangerous show on television
july 2010 by robertogreco
"If you want to lose weight, find someone who will pay you to eat junk food. Start with ten bucks per Klondike Bar and fifteen dollars for a box of Thin Mints. The next week drop it to eight dollars and twelve dollars. Eventually, take the financial incentive away and you’ll decide that it’s just not worth it. Why eat crap if no one pays you for it?
motivation
rules
meritpay
johnspencer
tv
society
schools
teaching
rewards
weight
health
happiness
well-being
education
learning
tcsnmy
july 2010 by robertogreco
US-Slovenia draws most ESPN households for soccer - World Soccer - Yahoo! Sports
june 2010 by robertogreco
"The U.S.-Slovenia game drew a high rating of 8.5 in San Diego, where it began at 7 a.m. San Diego had the largest rating at 11.5 for the U.S.’s 1-1 draw against England on June 12 on ABC. Washington, D.C., was second for the U.S.-Slovenia match at 6.4, followed by Miami (6.2), West Palm Beach (5.9) and San Francisco (5.7). The match also set a record for unique viewers for any event on ESPN3.com at 798,911 for live and on-demand."
sports
tv
television
soccer
football
us
sandiego
markets
june 2010 by robertogreco
MAGIC MOLLY - Unrealistic shit
june 2010 by robertogreco
"Aspiring artists talk the way tenth graders compose Facebook profiles. “I’m really into lilies right now. And hermaphrodites.”
art
bravo
tv
television
realitytv
june 2010 by robertogreco
The Pleasures of Imagination - The Chronicle Review - The Chronicle of Higher Education
june 2010 by robertogreco
"So while reality has its special allure, the imaginative techniques of books, plays, movies, and television have their own power. The good thing is that we do not have to choose. We can get the best of both worlds by taking an event that people know is real and using the techniques of the imagination to transform it into an experience that is more interesting and powerful than the normal perception of reality could ever be. The best example of this is an art form that has been invented in my lifetime, one that is addictively powerful, as shown by the success of shows such as The Real World, Survivor, The Amazing Race, and Fear Factor. What could be better than reality television?"
psychology
culture
imagination
creativity
games
fun
fiction
fantasy
consciousness
brain
art
entertainment
emotion
play
empathy
escape
videogames
narrative
via:lukeneff
film
tv
television
reality
realitytv
storytelling
leisure
english
mind
writing
pleasure
behavior
science
paulbloom
humans
june 2010 by robertogreco
Change the Conversation on Teaching - Bridging Differences - Education Week
may 2010 by robertogreco
"Reading NYT Mag pieces on medicine is always intriguing. Education & medicine are often compared—in ways that remind me how little our frame for considering teaching is realistic. The other night I heard several very good "educators" on C-SPAN answering questions from the Labor & Education Committee of Senate. Both the AFT's Randi Weingarten & Michigan State's Deborah Ball were sharp, clear, & convincing. But...
deborahmeier
teaching
complexity
howwework
multitasking
time
doctors
lawyers
professions
tcsnmy
classsize
reflection
looping
cv
education
schools
unschooling
deschooling
lcproject
policy
administration
management
media
tv
television
politics
2010
may 2010 by robertogreco
Lost and Heroes: In Defense of Arrogance - Tuned In - TIME.com
may 2010 by robertogreco
"its original sin was in trying to objection-proof itself, & thereby setting a ceiling on how great it could ever be. Heroes was its own thing, but by starting from position of satisfying fans better & quicker than its serial competition, it started from a position of timidity.
storytelling
risk
possibility
tcsnmy
tv
heroes
lost
quality
timidity
risktaking
success
failure
television
may 2010 by robertogreco
090820_wallace_asp.mov (video/quicktime Object)
april 2010 by robertogreco
Interview with David Foster Wallace from 2003
[via: http://twitter.com/ddmeyer/status/12414500316 ]
[See also: http://www.zdf.de/ZDFmediathek/beitrag/video/823228/ ]
writing
humor
suicide
davidfosterwallace
us
irony
interviews
infinitejest
depression
religion
worship
hopelessness
life
ideology
america
television
tv
humility
sincerity
happiness
self-advancement
worry
selflessness
complexity
paradox
cv
stereotypes
generalizations
2003
politics
genx
generationx
resentment
pop-psychology
reading
boredom
society
filetype:mov
media:video
[via: http://twitter.com/ddmeyer/status/12414500316 ]
[See also: http://www.zdf.de/ZDFmediathek/beitrag/video/823228/ ]
april 2010 by robertogreco
David Mamet's Master Class Memo to the Writers of The Unit | Movieline
march 2010 by robertogreco
"THE JOB OF THE DRAMATIST IS TO MAKE THE AUDIENCE WONDER WHAT HAPPENS NEXT. NOT TO EXPLAIN TO THEM WHAT JUST HAPPENED, OR TO*SUGGEST* TO THEM WHAT HAPPENS NEXT.
advice
writing
tv
television
screenwriting
storytelling
filmmaking
film
fiction
drama
creativity
davidmamet
howto
teaching
information
leading
leadership
tcsnmy
march 2010 by robertogreco
YouTube - Treme Trailer #2
march 2010 by robertogreco
"Trailer for HBO's "Treme", a post-Hurricane Katrina-themed drama that chronicles the rebuilding of New Orleans through the eyes of local musicians."
hbo
tv
davidsimon
treme
television
march 2010 by robertogreco
Daring Fireball Linked List: Hulu May Come to iPad as Paid Subscription Service
february 2010 by robertogreco
"This sort of nonsense gets to the bottom of what’s wrong with these entertainment executives’ outlook on the world. They want to define everything by arbitrary device types — this is a “TV”, that is a “computer”, this other thing is a “mobile device” — and then sell/distribute the same content to different device types separately and with no spillage. But it’s all bullshit in the digital world. It’s all just ones and zeroes and pixels. To these TV executives it makes sense to block Boxee from supporting Hulu because Boxee is for “TVs” and Hulu is only intended for “computers”. Now they’re stuck trying to figure out which arbitrary slot the iPad fits into."
hulu
boxee
ipad
computers
daringfireball
johngruber
tv
television
content
entertainment
2010
mobiledevices
february 2010 by robertogreco
Subtraction.com: Pulling Over and Asking for Directions
february 2010 by robertogreco
"“Lost” brings to mind at least a few television series that also followed ambitious narrative arcs, like “The X-Files,” “Heroes,” “Battlestar Galactica” and even “The Sopranos.” One thing I learned from these kinds of shows, to my disappointment, is that they never really deliver on what they repeatedly promise."
tv
television
lost
2010
khoivinh
criticism
february 2010 by robertogreco
hello typepad: Real Fans Watch
february 2010 by robertogreco
"Sippey put to rest forever the debate about spoilers sometime in 2008 with the simple declaration "Real fans watch."
davidjacobs
realtime
twitter
criticism
tv
television
spoilers
blogging
february 2010 by robertogreco
collision detection: TV watching and education "almost perfectly inversely correlated", says Hunch
january 2010 by robertogreco
"How much TV do you watch? What’s the highest level of educational level you’ve attained?
tv
hunch
education
television
data
statistics
correlation
january 2010 by robertogreco
David Galbraith’s Blog » Blog Archive » The top 10 things that defined ‘the noughties’, by category.
december 2009 by robertogreco
"The next decade is going to suck, but it might produce some great art.
davidgalbraith
lists
culture
2000s
art
society
architecture
design
tv
television
film
music
food
cupcakes
celebrity
books
reading
stevejobs
flickr
vimeo
internet
web
thewire
errolmorris
thefogofwar
damienhirst
globalwarming
collapse
finance
sustainability
growth
via:blackbeltjones
december 2009 by robertogreco
The Gervais Principle II: Posturetalk, Powertalk, Babytalk and Gametalk
november 2009 by robertogreco
"We began this analysis of corporate life by exploring a theoretical construct (the Gervais Principle) through the character arcs of Michael and Ryan in The Office. The construct and examples provide a broad-strokes treatment of the why of the power dynamics among sociopaths, the clueless and losers. This helps us understand how the world works, but not how to work it. So let me introduce you to the main skill required here, mastery over the four major languages spoken in organizations, among sociopaths, losers and the clueless. I’ll call the four languages Posturetalk, Powertalk, Babytalk and Gametalk. Here’s a picture of who speaks what to whom. Let’s use it to figure out how to make friends and influence people, Office style."
theoffice
politics
culture
economics
psychology
capitalism
humor
management
satire
work
business
sociology
people
dilbert
television
tv
life
society
language
communication
power
cv
leadership
administration
november 2009 by robertogreco
The Gervais Principle, Or The Office According to “The Office”
november 2009 by robertogreco
"Hugh MacLeod’s cartoon is a pitch-perfect symbol of an unorthodox school of management based on the axiom that organizations don’t suffer pathologies; they are intrinsically pathological constructs. Idealized organizations are not perfect. They are perfectly pathological. So while most most management literature is about striving relentlessly towards an ideal by executing organization theories completely, this school, which I’ll call the Whyte school, would recommend that you do the bare minimum organizing to prevent chaos, and then stop. Let a natural, if declawed, individualist Darwinism operate beyond that point. The result is the MacLeod hierarchy. It may be horrible, but like democracy, it is the best you can do. The “sociopath” layer comprises the Darwinian/Protestant Ethic will-to-power types who drive an organization to function despite itself..."
theoffice
politics
culture
economics
psychology
capitalism
humor
management
satire
work
business
sociology
people
dilbert
television
tv
life
power
society
cv
leadership
administration
november 2009 by robertogreco
Love in the time of Twitter « Snarkmarket
november 2009 by robertogreco
"there’s a reason why he called it the “Happy Days” era: the past he’s describing isn’t really the past, but a 70s-era TV version of the past. Not even the past’s representation of itself! For that, you’d have to see On the Waterfront...It’s memory as ideology, created...to surreptitiously win arguments about the present, especially about social morés & generational change. & the Happy Days era — the real one...reflected in the TV show like a funhouse mirror — was driven by technological & social change, too!"
change
generations
davidbrooks
tv
television
memory
revolution
technology
society
timcarmody
snarkmarket
teens
youth
facebooks
twitter
socialnetworking
november 2009 by robertogreco
Game Based Learning .:: Video Games, Social Media & Learning ::. - Public Pedagogy through Video Games:
october 2009 by robertogreco
"So our argument so far: today’s complex popular culture involves a characteristic form of teaching and constitutes a public pedagogy. That form of teaching involves good design (which makes meaning situated and language lucidly functional), resources, and affinity spaces. In fact, we see much popular culture today as a form of competition for schools and schooling. Much popular culture teaches 21st-century skills, like collaboration, producing and not just consuming knowledge, technology skills, innovation, design and system thinking, and so forth, while school often does not. And, further, we see no reason (other than institutional forces) why teaching in school ought not to be primarily about good design, resourcing learners, and creating efficacious affinity spaces."
education
learning
informallearning
jamespaulgee
simulations
videogames
games
gaming
schools
schooling
formal
stevenjohnson
television
tv
criticalthinking
yu-gi-oh
ageofmythology
thesims
unschooling
deschooling
collaboration
tcsnmy
edg
srg
glvo
consumption
production
content
technology
21stcenturyskills
popculture
innovation
design
systemsthinking
complexity
pedagogy
october 2009 by robertogreco
Streaming Soon on Netflix Instant Watch
september 2009 by robertogreco
"In 2009, Netflix began providing thorough data for upcoming Instant Watch releases. On the Roku Forums (Creators of the Roku Digital Video Player - originally a Netflix-only player), forum member Matthew (aka MCWHAMMER) began tracking this data with help from other members of the Roku community.
netflix
glvo
streaming
streams
directory
reference
comingsoon
tv
media
film
movies
entertainment
video
online
internet
september 2009 by robertogreco
Katie and Diane: The Wrong Questions : CJR
september 2009 by robertogreco
"While doing some recent research on the news business, I came upon this remarkable fact: Katie Couric’s annual salary is more than the entire annual budgets of NPR’s Morning Edition and All Things Considered combined. Couric’s salary comes to an estimated $15 million a year; NPR spends $6 million a year on its morning show and $5 million on its afternoon one. NPR has seventeen foreign bureaus (which costs it another $9.4 million a year); CBS has twelve. Few figures, I think, better capture the absurd financial structure of the network news."
business
media
news
npr
reporting
cbs
journalism
television
tv
radio
september 2009 by robertogreco
Apple Storms Hollywood «The TNL.net weblog
september 2009 by robertogreco
"The components all seem to be there and it seems to me that it won’t be long before Apple starts pushing the idea that we are all content producers (an old idea at Apple, which was at the source of their creating the iLife suite) and we can all make some money at producing that content. Having done so, Apple would not only have control of the music industry but could also assert itself in the TV and movie space."
contentcreation
itunes
apple
video
music
business
tv
television
future
iphone
applications
september 2009 by robertogreco
The Smart Set: Town Crier - July 22, 2009
july 2009 by robertogreco
"Pop culture seems to have 2 general depictions of small towns...naive, sleepy, hamlet where nothing ever happens, populated w/ lovable eccentrics & warm-hearted folk...setup sees the return of the prodigal son or arrival of an outsider, almost always from the "big city," of which townies speak w/ disdain...protagonist will eventually fall in love w/ more wholesome type of woman & realize what he's needed all along is simpler kind of life...shows like Northern Exposure & Ed...other stereotype involves placid calm that masks swirling tempest of murder (Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt), violence, racism (Pudd'nhead Wilson), small mindedness & cowfucking (that would be Faulkner)...most accurate depiction of life in small town...Friday Night Lights...constantly in danger of being canceled...Americans love myth of small town, while reality is a little harder to come by. Small town culture is actually in decline, which maybe explains the renewed nostalgia. We are an increasingly urban species"
society
us
urbanism
sociology
smalltowns
simplicity
literature
myth
stereotypes
tv
television
fridaynightlights
northernexposure
change
nostalgia
july 2009 by robertogreco
The decline of cooking and the rise of watching people cook
july 2009 by robertogreco
"One of the things that food/cooking shows do -- particularly the dump-and-stir programs like Rachael Ray -- is to give the viewer the impression that by watching, they have cooked a meal. (Mirror neurons, anyone?) Perhaps that's a small factor contributing to cooking's decline in the American home."
cooking
us
culture
society
tv
television
mirrornuerons
psychology
food
time
july 2009 by robertogreco
notes.husk.org. Movies, even those that run nearly 3 hours long,....
july 2009 by robertogreco
“Movies, even those that run nearly 3 hours long, are more like short stories than novels, and TV shows, with the space for digression and intricate plots twists, are more like novels. But in a perverse irony, movies and TV shows have the reverse prestige of short stories and novels, and so the temptation is to take higher prestige novels and turn them into movies.”
film
tv
novels
movies
writing
literature
via:preoccupations
july 2009 by robertogreco
Saffo: journal - Save that old TV - there's a message in the 'snow" [see audio version here: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=105339922]
june 2009 by robertogreco
"A TV antenna is a sponge for radio energy, collecting lots more than just the desired signal. Snow is the result of the TV attempting to turn stray signals into an image, signals from radio stations, emissions from power lines, transformers or appliances, or even from the electrical noise of the circuits in the TV itself...result is the strangely-calming ant-dance of black on white that we call snow. But snow has another source, a source far from this planet in both time & space. Mixed in with the noise of Earthling civilization are radio echoes of the Big Bang, the moment of the Universe's creation 13 Billion years ago...universe started out very small & very hot & has been expanding and cooling ever since. As it cools, the Big Bang's fossil radiation sheds radio energy in the same way a cake on a cooling rack gives up heat. & when those indescribably ancient radio waves run down the rabbit ears and into your analog TV, the TV's circuitry interprets it as an image & voila! - Snow."
paulsaffo
analog
tv
television
noise
whitenoise
snow
obsolescence
june 2009 by robertogreco
As TV Changes To Digital, White Noise Fades Away : NPR [transcript is here: http://www.saffo.com/journal/entry.php?id=1052]
june 2009 by robertogreco
"A familiar sight and sound is disappearing as digital TV takes over from analog: television snow and the "white noise" that accompanies it."
analog
tv
television
noise
whitenoise
snow
obsolescence
june 2009 by robertogreco
:: SURREAL, Películas de la Realidad ::
may 2009 by robertogreco
"En sus siete años de vida, Surreal ha tenido como objetivo fundamental la creación de un espacio de talentos asociados en cada uno de sus proyectos.
chile
tv
television
documentary
reality
cristiánleighton
may 2009 by robertogreco
Hulu - Labs: Hulu Desktop
may 2009 by robertogreco
"Hulu Desktop is a lean-back viewing experience for your personal computer. It features a sleek new look that's optimized for use with standard Windows Media Center remote controls or Apple remote controls, allowing you to navigate Hulu's entire library with just six buttons. For users without remotes, the application is keyboard and mouse-enabled. Hulu Desktop is a downloadable application and will work on PCs and Macs. It will initially launch as a beta product during which we plan to gather and incorporate user feedback to improve the service."
hulu
software
mac
osx
windows
streaming
entertainment
applications
freeware
desktop
video
television
tv
frontrow
may 2009 by robertogreco
Why TV Lost
march 2009 by robertogreco
"[1] the Internet is an open platform... [2] Moore's Law, which has worked its usual magic on Internet bandwidth... [3] piracy. Users prefer it not just because it's free, but because it's more convenient." ... "After decades of running an IV drip right into their audience, people in the entertainment business had understandably come to think of them as rather passive. They thought they'd be able to dictate the way shows reached audiences. But they underestimated the force of their desire to connect with one another."
internet
web
online
paulgraham
broadcast
tv
television
technology
convergence
bittorrent
distribution
piracy
kindle
facebook
media
information
future
march 2009 by robertogreco
This rarely kills That outright « Adam Greenfield’s Speedbird
february 2009 by robertogreco
"The important thing is this: the grandeur always lives at the top of the stack. Right now, it’s vested in “social media,” just as it was in blogging ten (!) years ago, in television forty years ago and in newspapers sixty years before that. What each new media technology does do is knock away one or more of the social and economic props on which the success (and ultimately, the viability) of other channels in its layer depend. With the introduction and mass adoption of anything new, those channels move further down the stack. They become less central to the production of consensus culture, more a niche proposition, almost certainly less glamorous. But if a given way of doing things offers something that no other mediating technology can - whether for reasons of exceedingly low cost, low barriers to entry, or robust simplicity - it will never disappear entirely."
adamgreenfield
print
newspapers
victorhugo
technology
media
writing
death
evolution
change
television
tv
radio
socialmedia
future
knowledge
transformation
february 2009 by robertogreco
Handheld Learning 2008 - Steven Johnson, Author
january 2009 by robertogreco
Steven Johnson talks about Everything Bad Is Good for You adding references to technologies, games, and media that have appeared since publication of the book.
via:preoccupations
videogames
stevenjohnson
gaming
learning
culture
society
tv
television
systems
patterns
simulations
simcity
games
2008
lost
thewire
entertainment
tcsnmy
spore
attention
patience
schools
schooling
brianeno
january 2009 by robertogreco
Television and Brain Health - Prevention.com
january 2009 by robertogreco
"Reach for the remote and hone your concentration skills: Lowering the TV volume a little more each day can teach you to filter out background noise and improve focus, says University of California, San Francisco neuroscientist Michael Merzenich, PhD. Your training at home could even pay off at work by helping you block out the loudmouth in the next cubicle or fully concentrate on a meeting while ignoring noisy distractions outside."
focus
concentration
brain
noise
productivity
neuroscience
tv
television
january 2009 by robertogreco
boxee: the open, connected, social media center for mac os x and linux
december 2008 by robertogreco
"on a laptop or connected to an HDTV, boxee gives you a true entertainment experience to enjoy your movies, TV shows, music and photos, as well as streaming content from websites like Hulu, Netflix, CBS, Comedy Central, Last.fm, and flickr." via: http://blog.wired.com/geekdad/2008/12/boxee-saves-the.html
mac
windows
linux
osx
opensource
appletv
video
tv
television
streaming
multimedia
freeware
onlinetoolkit
software
entertainment
media
december 2008 by robertogreco
Avatar Episodes | Veoh Video Network
december 2008 by robertogreco
"With the Fire Nation on the brink of global domination, a young girl and her brother living on the South Pole make an amazing discovery: Enclosed within an iceberg for 100 years, a 12-year old Airbender has miraculously survived. Hungry for and adventure, the boy reveals himself as the Avatar."
glvo
srg
edg
avatar
comics
manga
animation
tv
television
anime
december 2008 by robertogreco
The prolific John Munch
december 2008 by robertogreco
"According to IMDB and Wikipedia (here too), Richard Belzer has appeared as Detective John Munch on ten different television shows, more than any other character on television." ... "The Munch character was inspired by real-life Baltimore homicide detective Jay Landsman...who both inspired another character on The Wire (named Jay Landsman) and appears in The Wire as a police lieutenant. All three -- Munch, the fake Landsman, and the real Landsman -- appeared in a fifth season episode called Took. Oh, and Munch, like many other television characters, is a figment of an autistic kid's fertile imagination."
tv
television
fiction
thewire
homicide
kottke
december 2008 by robertogreco
Roo Reynolds - Social Telly - a roundup of social viewing stuff
november 2008 by robertogreco
"I’ve been building this list for ages, but it’s finally time for a roundup of social viewing tools. Here are some examples of how the web is being used to make different sorts of conversations possible around television"
tv
television
social
newmedia
socialmedia
society
via:russelldavies
rooreynolds
november 2008 by robertogreco
What Happy People Don’t Do - NYTimes.com
november 2008 by robertogreco
"We looked at 8 to 10 activities that happy people engage in, and for each one, the people who did the activities more — visiting others, going to church, all those things — were more happy,” Dr. [John] Robinson said. “TV was the one activity that showed a negative relationship. Unhappy people did it more, and happy people did it less.”
happiness
social
television
tv
church
religion
relationships
families
community
psychology
science
anthropology
research
behavior
november 2008 by robertogreco
Six free Apple iPhone downloads you don't want to miss | iPhone Central | Macworld
november 2008 by robertogreco
"This week, my recommendations include both a mobile news and sports aggregator, an on-device TV guide, a satellite mapping program, a voice over IP (VoIP) calling app and an Internet radio service. My personal favorite: the sports app, SportsTap."
iphone
applications
sports
radio
pandora
fring
googleearth
tv
television
csiap
november 2008 by robertogreco
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