Criterion Edition of “Broadcast News”

Ratings

4 of 5 stars
What’s this?

This 1987 James L. Brooks comedy is one of my favorite films of all time, and certainly one of the best movies about the news business ever made. It has a pitch perfect script loaded with hilarious, smart and memorable lines, not to mention three exceedingly fine performances from Holly Hunter, Albert Brooks and William Hurt. Criterion’s new, extras-laded, director-supervised restoration arrives on Blu-Ray and DVD in January (it would’ve surely been on my holiday list this year if it had been released this fall).

Find out more about the movie and pre-order it over at Criterion.com.

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Booki.sh

Ratings

3 of 5 stars
What’s this?

Australians and friends-of-the-blog Inventive Labs have just launched this awesome project: an HTML5 e-book reader that works on pretty much everything: iPhones, iPads, Kindle3s, even that antiquated technological mechanism known as a desktop Web browser.

Book.ish is based on the Monocle open source e-reader platform, meaning it requires no installation of any kind. Just point your browser there and start reading. You can even continue later whether you’re online or offline.

It’s pretty neat and will only get neater as more titles become available. Inventive Labs also have plans to build a publishing platform on top of Book.ish that will connect publishers and booksellers, so the potential is there for it to be more than just a reader but also a new distribution method for digital books. Read more and sample a handful of free books at Book.ish.

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The Origin of A-Ha’s “Take on Me” Video

Ratings

3 of 5 stars
What’s this?

In 1981 animator Mike Patterson made this remarkable short student film in which thousands of hand-drawn cells were combined to create a distinctive animation style. Warner Brothers records hooked up the Norwegian pop trio A-Ha with Patterson, and together they created one of the earliest and most influential gems of the music video form. If you’re not familiar with the video I’m talking about, don’t worry. It was a long, long time ago. John Nack has the short film and a link to a BBC article here.

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My Little Funny

Ratings

2 of 5 stars
What’s this?

Along with Ruben Bolling’s Tom the Dancing Bug, I think my favorite running comic strip is Kaz’s Underworld, a sublimely disturbing series of riffs on classic cartoon tropes (strangely humanoid rodents, diminutive and bizarre sidekicks, and tough guys with balloon-like forearms, all engaged in short, almost banal slapstick gags) that makes you want to cry a little even while you’re laughing. Now Kaz has teamed up with The Comic Book Factory to produce a series of animated versions of his strips. There are eight of them so far and they’re entertaining enough to be worth a viewing (they’re each very brief). I have to admit though, as special as I think Underworld is, the effect of these is still a little like seeing most any other comic strip in animated form — it looks like the original, but it’s somehow less funny.

Watch all eight cartoons at mylittlefunny.com.

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Printing Facebook

Ratings

2 of 5 stars
What’s this?

Artist Benjamin Lotan is offering a service where he can print a 20 x 40 in. poster of your Facebook friends’ avatars in a tidy grid on archival photo paper.

“The size of your friends’ photos are optimized to fill out the full space, so their dimensions will depend on the total number of friends you have. There are about 620 friends printed on the poster you see [below], but the code is optimized such that your poster will look fantastic whether you have 200 friends, or up to 2,200 friends.”

I’m not really much of a Facebook user but I think this is pretty neat in that it suggests that there will be interesting things that we can do within a social context where everyone is represented by a little photographic icon.

Find out more and buy one for yourself at PrintingFacebook.com.

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iPhones for the Under-Two Set

My fourteen month-old daughter Thuy (who is completely adorable, by the way) adores few material objects in this world more than she does my iPhone. Among all of the toys that we’ve given her, and even among all of the things that she’s turned into toys, the iPhone is the one that consistently grabs her attention in almost any situation.

She’s at an age though where she doesn’t really use the phone so much as she just randomly handles it, pushing buttons on the screen here and there, turning it around, even holding it up to her ear (often backwards or upside down) to babble a conversation to some imaginary friend on the other end of the line. Mostly she’s just imitating what she sees her mother and me do when we use our iPhones, but it doesn’t change the fact that it can command her attention for ten or twenty minutes at a time — and for a parent of a young child, that’s gold.

Continue Reading

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OkCupid: Gay Sex vs. Straight Sex

Ratings

5 of 5 stars
What’s this?

I try hard not to just re-blog whatever John Gruber links to, but this one really deserves to be broadcast far and loud. Dating site OkCupid dug into their statistics (garnered from over 3 million users both straight and gay) to try and see if there are any truths to the stereotypes about gay sexual behavior. What results is highly readable and a remarkably calm and effective counter-argument to a raft of commonly held misconceptions. Also, it reaffirms for me the truth that politicians who use anti-gay rhetoric or who continue to oppose gay rights are on the wrong side of history.

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The Job: a Michael Mann Film Festival

Ratings

3 of 5 stars
What’s this?

Design student Joe Golike created this hypothetical festival of films by director Michael Mann for an assignment at the Academy of Art. The choice of Mann as the subject for this end-to-end identity design project was inspired in part by a blog post I wrote in 2009 about the director’s two most recent movies. Golike’s designed a whole slew of collateral including a poster, a catalog, schedules, DVD packaging, even a soundtrack. Be sure to see the process journal he created that describes the entirety of the project. Very nicely done.

See the project overview here.

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Macworld: We Need a Server Version of iTunes

Ratings

1 of 5 stars
What’s this?

I don’t know anyone who doesn’t agree that Apple’s workhorse media application iTunes doesn’t need to be fixed. It’s slow, clunky and suffers by embodying a vision of how people manage and interact with their media that’s becoming more and more painfully antiquated every day. Over at Macworld Kirk McElhearn argues that what’s needed is a server version of the software, something that can centrally manage all of a household’s media. He sketches a picture of how such a device would work that’s logical but probably never going to happen — mostly because it’s disk-based. I’m pretty sure Apple has no further interest in helping people manage their media through the use of hard disks located in the home. The next truly significant revision of iTunes, whether in server form or not, will surely be in the cloud. Read the article here.

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