Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Links for the Voracious



Source:creativegrowth.org

A fascinating article about the artists and the mission of the Creative Growth Art Center in Oakland. All of the artists are developmentally disabled adults and some of them have become highly collectible artists.

Celebrate the new additions to the periodic table with Tom Lehrer's performance of "The Elements."


Lydia Stuckey remembers traveling with and making dresses for Maya Angelou.

This Leslie Jones profile is a portrait of the artist as a comic heroine.

The rediscovery of master abstract painter Sam Gilliam.

Source:georgetowner.com

"And every one of us has the right to tell our story." Tyler Perry's response to the criticism of his work in New York magazine.

Eva Longoria on returning to prime time TV and living a full life away from celebrity culture.

Ashley C. Ford talks about family, the role of mentors in her professional development and making the choice to be a writer.
Source:huffingtonpost.com











Friday, July 10, 2015

Links for the voracious


A skosh of the tantalizing tidbits online.

Ruby Dee and Nat King Cole
Source: LA Times



Shernold Edwards ("Sleepy Hollow," "Haven"), Courtney Kemp Agboh ("Power," "The Good Wife") and Robin Thede ("The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore") on their careers in television.

Practical life advice from Tracee Ellis Ross.

Adventures in pizza delivery.

The Dissolve has closed up shop. 

Marie Curie's home and its contents will be radioactive for at least 1,500 years.

 
Marie Curie, Source: mentalfloss.com

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Loving Cookie

Empire is over for the season, but the return of Cookie Lyon cannot come too soon. She is an iconoclast adored by millions of people. Cookie is unapologetically herself. She sacrificed her freedom to ensure her husband's success. In return, he divorced her and did not allow her children to visit her in prison. Cookie's return to her family and the business built on her drug dealing is that of a triumphant hero. The people in her life may not view her return in such glorious terms, but Cookie is not bothered by their lack of vision.

Source: Mic.com

She is not ashamed of her past. Those intimidated by her gravitas attempt to use the fact of her incarceration to demean her, but Cookie will not be cowed. Cookie is beloved because she is honest and righteous. Her truth telling is bracing in its depth and hilarious in its application. There is no room for shame when one is on a mission to avenge herself. Propriety only serves to diminish women like Cookie who fight for their place in the world. As the lion is not concerned with the opinion of sheep, Cookie does not require praise from small minds. She is Cookie. Take a bite at your peril.

Source: Mic.com
To survive a summer without Cookie, enjoy some sartorial playtime with Cookie paper dolls from Vulture.com.

 
 

Friday, March 27, 2015

Who doesn't love a good story?








Storytelling is universal. It is an essential aspect of the human experience. Right now, television is the medium of storytelling that captures the most attention in the public consciousness. There is a lot of discussion and debate about who gets to tell the stories we see on all the various platforms that encompass the term 'TV.'

The writer, director, and actress Issa Rae could not catch a break in Hollywood. She created her own web series Awkward Black Girl and found an audience hungry for her funny take on life as a young woman in Los Angeles. In conversation with Marc Lamont Hill of The Huffington Post, Rae expressed skepticism about the entertainment industry's sudden interest in showcasing people of color on TV. "Until you have people in positions of power that have varied experiences, nothing will change. Honestly, we're not on their radar. They don't know. They're not really thinking about us. If you have people in positions of power that don't have very many black friends, that don't understand the black experience, they're not thinking about it and there are not enough people concerned with it."

Television veterans and relative newcomers have recently had many opportunities to talk about telling stories from different perspectives.

Norman Lear on Good Times
"Just imagine this: There are no African-American families on television. Suddenly, you- Esther Rolle and John Amos- represent the first African-American couple with children on American television. You are the TV role  models of your community's people. That's heavy responsibility. I'm not sure at the time I understood this as well as I understood it some years later. But I kind of understood the heaviness- the weight on them."

Regina King of American Crime:
"[American Crime director] John Ridley uses the word 'reflective,' often, and Shonda, with 'normalizing,' I think those two words are so much better than using the word 'diverse.' I think when you look at American and what America is made up of, it's not what we see on TV. So as the stories start to get more broad, as they start to be told from different perspectives, then TV starts to become more normal. You start to have art imitating life more, and I am so excited that I get to be fully present during a time when this is happening."

Gina Rodriguez of Jane the Virgin:
"One: you need to write for human beings- that goes for any underrepresented ethnicity. We're human, we all want the same things, we all want love and success, we're afraid of failure, we want people to like us... You write for a human being, that's cracking the code, for any ethnicity..."

Constance Wu of Fresh Off the Boat:
"I don't think identity is purely determined by race and if a story wants to focus on other things that are important to the narrative, that's great. But it's not harmful to say that ethnicity plays an important part in identity and that that part of the story matters. It's not fodder for humor, it's just another unique element of humanity. Hopefully, we celebrate that. And we're also a comedy!"

Does anyone lose when television looks and sounds and feels a little more like America?


Thursday, February 19, 2015

"The Great British Bake Off" is your friend


The U.S. desperately needs its own version of “The Great British Bake Off”. Desperately! Yes, that is hyperbole, but this show is good. There are twelve amateur baker contestants, two judges with irreproachable technical knowledge, and a hosting duo specializing in cheeky double entendres. The bakers are culturally and regionally diverse, and range in age from seventeen to over 60. They are passionate people who spend a lot of time thinking about sponge cake fillings. The show has established a specific menu of desserts- classic British and some continental European- that each baker must master and bake in timed competitions. There are desserts for birthday parties and holidays, and the kinds of treats one assumes royalty or billionaires consume in intimate gatherings. The show is successful for many reasons, but the affecting nature of desserts is the linchpin. Whatever the season or occasion, enjoying sweet morsels with family and friends has a lasting emotional resonance.

An American version of the show could provide a view into the evolving American experience. Is there a repertoire of desserts that can accurately represent the American tapestry? Would regional recipes still have a place at the table? And could Americans finally come to some consensus on the best kind of chocolate chip cookie?

PBS is showing “The Great British Bake Off’ as “The Great British Baking Show.”



 

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Can Sleepy Hollow get back on track?


The mid-season finale summed up a middling first half of the season by killing off Captain Frank Irving. To the consternation of self-proclaimed 'Sleepyheads' and casual fans alike, the death of Irving was another betrayal. Katrina, the world's most boring witch was still alive spreading corseted Goth malaise. Jenny Mills, treasure hunter and mercenary was reduced to waiting for the phone to ring. And Hawley of the majestic white teeth and golden mane. Good gravy. He and Katrina were allowed to sidetrack the entire show. Our witnesses, the pulchritudinous, raven-haired, and honor-bound Abigail Mills and Ichabod Crane were left in a state of flux.

In the 2015 mid-season premiere, Sleepy Hollow may have redeemed itself by returning to its core narrative: the battle to save humanity from unquenchable evil. Thanks to Henry, the Horseman of War and Peter Pan of the apocalypse, Moloch has been defeated. As a result, purgatory has been torn open freeing those trapped inside. This event will henceforth be known as “Purgatory Blowout 2015.” What a relief for Ichabod. He was just telling Abigail that he would rather "fight the threat of the apocalypse," than get a job and sign up for health insurance at healthcare.gov. Purgatory's first escapees seem to be the angel Orion and an assortment of lesser demons looking for a Moloch replacement. Orion is God's most judgmental angel. His biggest turn-ons are hastening epidemics and natural disasters. His turn-offs are indifference and Goth witches. Orion lays out the stakes for Abigail and the viewer: Headless is now the top demon, there are countless evil souls on the loose thanks to Purgatory Blowout 2015, and FYI: angels are crazy. This is great news since Katrina just set Headless free from captivity while she works on a spell to make him human again. He won't be lonely. Purgatory Blowout 2015 has provided him with his own gang of useless minions. Headless, minions and souls on the loose? That is a lot to work with. How many episodes until the season finale? In other news, Jenny and Hawley have teamed up to recreate scenes from the highly anticipated, but never released 1986 romance-adventure, "Is This Love or Treasure?" starring Rae Dawn Chong and Gary Busey.

All of these developments could become satisfying story lines. A touch of Type A romance between Abby and Orion could also provide real sexual tension and another layer of comic relief. One of the greatest indicators of the show’s potential redemption is the return of Captain Irving. What are the effects of selling his soul to Henry and hanging out in purgatory? Who has he become? Will he play his return a la Denzel in Training Day with a "purgatory aint got nothin’ on me" aplomb or will he be cool like Isiah Whitlock, Jr. as Maryland State Senator Clay Davis on The Wire: "Purgatory, shiiiiiiiit."
I am excited to find out.

 

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Music and Television: My Favorite Band is a Work of Fiction

The band I want to listen to everyday only exists in the fictional New Orleans of the HBO show ‘Treme.’ Antoine Batiste and His Soul Apostles bring the funk to every soul who craves it. When Ms. Wanda Rouzan, a goddess of New Orleans R&B joins the band, they cannot be touched by any band, even one in the real world.

Anotine Batiste and His Soul Apostles, Slip Away