So long, Mickey

Filed under: Nuages — olivander July 18, 2006 @ 3:05 pm


Kiss Me Deadly
Originally uploaded by olivander.

Detective novelist Spillane dies

Obituary: Pem Farnsworth, 1908-2006

Filed under: Musings, Nuages — olivander June 1, 2006 @ 12:22 pm

Muchos gracias to Socar Myles for use of her photo, The Suck.

This blog entry is long overdue. Several weeks ago, on April 27, the world lost a cultural pioneer. Odds are that you’ve never heard of her, nor seen her photograph, but Emma “Pem” Farnsworth was a key figure in the shaping of modern world culture.

You see, she and her brother Cliff Gardner were the first human images ever transmitted over television. On October 19, 1929, in a small upstairs “studio” at the corner of Green and Sansome in San Francisco, her husband Philo Farnsworth sent an image of Pem and Cliff to a 3.5″ screen in the next room. And with that, the greatest modern influence next to the computer was born.

Despite revolutionizing the way people spend their leisure time, Philo Farnsworth never received much recognition for his invention. After his death in 1971, Pem made that her mission, writing an autobiography called “Distant Vision” and doing interviews to give her husband the credit he deserved.

Pem was 98 at the time of her death.

One has to wonder how she and Philo privately felt about how TV has evolved over its 76-year lifespan. Would they look upon today’s spate of public-humiliation “reality” shows with a touch of horror, or feel disgust over the way their invention converted politics into a soundbite-driven publicity mill? Even early on, when the broadcast window was limited to one hour a day, television was about entertainment, not information. One of the earliest BBC broadcasts was a dance routine by the swimsuit-clad Paramount Astoria Girls. From there, we went to Milton Berle in drag, “I Love Lucy”, “The Love Boat”, “Dallas”, “Knight Rider”, “USA Up All Night”, “Baywatch”, (skipping a few years) “Survivor”, “America’s Next Top Model”, “American Idol”, “Desperate Housewives”, until, finally, we arrived at the bottom of the entertainment gulch: “CSI: Miami”. (In the interest of full disclosure, it should be pointed out that as a youth I watched many of those shows religiously. I still hum the “A-Team” theme unconsciously.)

Mind you, not all was dreck and bilge water. We had some excellent journalism until Edward R. Murrow smoked too many cigarettes and Walter Cronkite wore out his sweaters. CNN gave us the ability to breathlessly watch no new developments at all–live!–24 hours a day from around the globe. “M*A*S*H” made people think as well as laugh. Um…I’m sure there were others that did not rely on bribing viewers with a glimpse of bare bum, but they escape me at the moment.

The point is that televion has done good things, but those moments are heavily outweighed by the hours of brain-sucking vacuum TV.

Does the consumer even shape the landscape of its viewing habits anymore, or have we become slaves to the electron gun, obediently watching whatever is put before us? How many times have you sat on the sofa flipping channels and complained to your mate (or pet), “There’s nothing on,” yet continued to flip channels anyway, finally settling on the least boring program you can find? Could this possibly be the future Philo and Pem envisioned, where instead of more enlightened beings expanding the horizons of our experience we are zombies stripped of the will to turn off the set?

In other words, are we the consumers, or the consumed?

The great irony of Pem Farnsworth’s death–her last great joke upon the planet–was that she died during TV Turn-off Week.

Mitch, Mitch, Mitch…

Filed under: Nuages, Rants — olivander December 28, 2005 @ 12:15 pm

You were doing so well. We could hardly believe it when you died, and it was all the sadder because you had (we thought) cleaned yourself up. What happened, man?

Comedian Mitch Hedberg died accidentally in March of “multiple drug toxicity,” including cocaine and heroin, Spin magazine reports, citing reports filed by the New Jersey medical examiner’s office.

Imagine

Filed under: Nuages — olivander December 8, 2005 @ 7:19 am


Oct.9.1940 — Dec.8.1980
Originally uploaded by Rick II.

Nuage: Robert Wise 1914-2005

Filed under: Nuages — olivander September 15, 2005 @ 9:48 am

Legendary director Robert Wise died Wednesday from heart failure. He was 91. Wise’s long career as a director ran the gamut of genres and gave us some of its greatest classics: The Day the Earth Stood StillRun Silent Run DeepWest Side StoryThe Haunting (a personal favorite of yours truly), The Sound of Music, The Andromeda Strain, and (debatable as a classic, but a landmark nonetheless) Star Trek: The Motion Picture.It’s telling that perhaps his most minor contribution to cinema was as an editor, splicing together such greats as The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Citizen Kane, and The Magnificent Ambersons.

Robert, we tip the fedora to your remarkable versatility and talent, and we can’t wait to visit with you in the big screening room in the sky.

Nuage: Tonino Delli Colli, 1923-2005

Filed under: Nuages — olivander August 19, 2005 @ 4:45 pm

Cinematographer Tonino Delli Colli has died at the age of 81. A master painter who happened to work with film, Delli Colli was the man responsible for the look of some of cinema’s most popular and noteworthy films, including The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, Once Upon a Time in the West, Once Upon a Time in America, The Name of the Rose, and–his last film–Life is Beautiful. His talent will be sorely missed.

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