Monday, 31 August 2009

Cars (2006 animated movie)

Cars (2006) - Disney Pixar - IMDB 7.5/10
Finally watched Disney/Pixar's Cars. Brilliant animation (as expected) around Nascar race cars and an unusual kids' story directed by John Lasseter (Toy Story, A Bug's Life, Monsters, Inc, The Incredibles, Ratatouille, Wall-E - genius). Not one human is drawn in the film. The star car, Lightning McQueen, is beautifully voiced by Owen Wilson (Meet the Fockers, Marley & Me). Paul Newman voiced the character of Doc Hudson, the wise old racer who's been there and it done it all before; it was his last film before he died of lung cancer in 2008. 

Good soundtrack, with James Taylor (Our Town), John Mayer and Chuck Berry versions of Route 66, The Chords (Sh-boom), Sheryl Crow and Russell Flatts (who he?)

* Trivia 1: the profession of Lightning McQueen's love interest, Sally the Porsche (a 2002 911 Carrera), is an attorney - a reference to Portia, a nickname for female lawyers, named after the character in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice
* Trivia 2: Guido is an Italian name (for Guy) used for one of the characters in the film, but it also means 'I drive'.

Sunday, 30 August 2009

51 Japanese Characters


51 Japanese Characters
Great site interactivity, clever imagery. Love it.


(left) Jukensai - He would like to be accepted to the best university in Japan. He knows that the exam will be extremely difficuly, but he is sure that if he works hard enough, he will succeed. He studies every day and night - he gives his best and he will not give up. He wants his parents to be proud of him. 'Hisshou' ('you certainly will and have to win') is his slogan.

Victoria & Albert Museum














...to the Vee'n'A Museum in South Kensington, London yesterday, seeking out iconic images of the 60s for my daughter's GCSE art course. The museum has a vast, eclectic selection but there are some dark and badly-lit corners. Our last museum visit, to the Kelvingrove in Glasgow, proved more satisfying. Nevertheless, we found three truly iconic images.

(above) detail from a Mary Quant designer dress, modelled by Jean Shrimpton, photographed by John French - three icons of 60s' fashion.

'The first chair to be conceived entirely as a single piece, but the materials and techniques took several years to develop. These early examples are made of fibreglass-reinforced polyseter, which was strong but also brittle and heavy. Polyurethane, polystyrene and polypropylene have all been used at different times since then.' Designed by Werner Panton (Danish 1926-98), manufactured by Herman Miller Furniture Company, Michigan, USA in 1967 out of moulded fibreglass and reinforced polyester. 

Exploring Photography at the V&A


Two more defining photographs from the 60s: (left) Twiggy, shot by Cecil Beaton and (right) Christine Keeler, shot by Lewis Morley in 1963 and taken at the height of the revelations regarding her affair with the government minister John Profumo.

Saturday, 29 August 2009

Two Lovers
















Two Lovers (2008) 7.4/10 IMDB


Gwyneth Paltrow, Joaquin Phoenix and Vinessa Shaw chase each other around (at a very gentle pace) and confuse one another in this on/off relationship movie. Quite engaging, really, but she doesn't know whether she's coming or going - so, in the end, neither does he. You know it comes to an end when the fat man sings.

Paul Bocuse - chef with wisdom
















Legendary French chef Paul Bocuse (b 1926):
*  "Everybody knows that God exists, but the preacher still rings the bell."
“Life is too short for cuisine minceur and for diets. Dietetic meals are like an opera without the orchestra.”
* “The so-called nouvelle cuisine (ed - c1972) usually means not enough on your plate and too much on your bill.”
"Without butter, without eggs, there is no reason to come to France."



Friday, 28 August 2009

The future of news is scarcity?



Interesting article in PaidContent on the future of news(papers), offline and online:

"...Making a trip to the corner shop and buying a paper to find out what is happening in the world has shifted from being the only option to being the least good of a thousand options....

...Companies that follow the blueprint above are emerging already, most notably TechCrunch for technology news, Talking Points Memo, FiveThirtyEight and The Huffington Post for politics, PerezHilton for celebrity, and Pitchfork for music. These niche sites all write compelling content, spend time building up their sources, check their facts, encourage writers to find the real facts behind stories and are trusted by their readers. And, they all generate solid advertising revenues and benefit from relatively low cost bases. Note that none of them charge for news. They do, however, have the option of leveraging their standing in the community to generate other revenues...

...This is, I think, the real business model for news companies in the future - build a community around news and stories and maybe make a little in advertising, but the real money will come from leveraging the position in the community to offer services no one else can."

* Chris Anderson: Free, The Future Of A Radical Price - The Economics of Abundance and Why Zero Pricing Is Changing the Face of Business

Wednesday, 26 August 2009

Sony Reader - Daily Edition 3G wireless



Interesting launch from Sony's eReader business division: the Reader 'Daily Edition' (mooted @ $399, US only) - a wirelessly updatable, 3G portable reader. A spoiler for Apple's 'Tablet' and competition for Amazon's Kindle? Sony's still playing catch-up and the majority of the reading, mobile public probably want a colour version - oh, and Europe wants what America is getting, as well, please. Apparently, Europe will get the new Pocket and Touch editions of Sony's Reader, though.

What about Google’s 'one million digitized books'? Are we stuck with just Sony's eReader store content?

Source: PaidContent.org, Brand Republic, Sony product data

Monday, 24 August 2009

The Ashes - England Win



Well, in the end we won The Ashes 5th Test fair and square. The teams were well matched and, frankly, the Aussies played better than us for much of the series. However, there can be only one winner and, when Fearless Freddie threw down Ponting's stumps to run him out, the writing was on the wall.

Cheerio, Freddie, you've been awesome - we will miss you and those boots will be hard to fill. Respect to the green-baggy-capped blokes from Down Under, but even bigger respect to Strauss, Broad, Swann, Trott (where was he hiding?) and the rest of the England team.

Sunday, 23 August 2009

Dear Fatty


Books recently read (titles have direct links to Amazon.co.uk):

Graham Greene - The Quiet American - a carefully crafted, vintage classic, circular novel that starts with the dénouement and works back round to it:
Into the intrigue and violence of 1950s' colonial Indo-China comes a young, idealistic, quiet American (Pyle) sent to promote democracy through a mysterious 'Third Force'. As his naive optimism starts to cause bloodshed, his friend Thomas Fowler (the narrator), a cynical foreign correspondent, finds it hard to stand aside and watch. But even as he intervenes he wonders why: for the sake of politics, or for love?

Michael Ochs - 1000 Record Covers - 1000 classic LP album covers: 60s-90s musical history as art.

Stuart Maconie - Adventures on the High Teas: In Search of Middle England - a time capsule of England as it is now; in its quirky, offbeat way, a celebration of this country's extraordinary capacity to accommodate change while remaining essentially the same. Also a few good titters along the way. "The English Bill Bryson"? He writes well, for a Northerner.
A celebration of the workaday pleasures of living in Britain and the characters along the way, from trainspotters to tea-room ladies and hoodies to binge-drinkers. Stuart Maconie is perhaps best known as a radio presenter, co-hosting the Radcliffe and Maconie Show on BBC Radio 2 every Mon-Thu evening.

Andrew Rimas and Evan D.G. Fraser - Beef (How Milk, Meat and Muscle Shaped the World) -
Not exactly a riveting read (it's patchy and somewhat random in content), but well-research and the more interesting for it, nonetheless. More for food historians than meat-eaters.
Cattle have always been central to our human existence, not only as a source of food and labour but also as an inspiration for art, warfare and religion. This panoramic view of the cow's rich history covers breeding to braising, hunting to worshipping, from ancient Mediterranean bullfighting rings to the rugged pastures of 18th-century England. Seasoned with anecdotes and recipes from around the world, it's also an indictment of the perilous state of beef production in Europe and the US - a situation possibly closer to a health and economic emergency than most might believe.

Dawn French - Dear Fatty - a lovely autobiography, written in the style of individual letters to people who have meant most to actress and comedienne Dawn French across her 50-odd years.
She's a national treasure, of course, and naturally funny, which comes out clearly in her writing. But there's more than the odd stream of emotion for the loss of her father (who committed suicide) and the love of her life, comedian Lenny Henry. There's little real detail of her showbiz life (Comedy Club - Fabulous Five, Vicar of Dibley et al), but it raises a few laughs along the way.

Saturday, 22 August 2009

Efes Dark Brown beer - world's worst beer



Surely the world's worst beer? Coffee-flavoured ('kahve aromali'), Dark Brown Efes - from Turkey. Avoid at all costs. Probably the only beer I've never been able to finish. Sad, but true.

In contrast, here is the world's finest bar pump, seen at Dalaman Airport, Turkey, dispensing the real thing (Efes Pilsen), albeit at outrageous prices (probably to pay for the pump).

Saturday, 1 August 2009

Spencer Tunick - photographer


Spencer Tunick (b 1967) is an American artist best known for his installations featuring large numbers of nude people posed in artistic formations: "A body is a living entity. It represents life, freedom, sensuality, and it is a mechanism to carry out our thoughts. A body is always beautiful to me. It depends on the individual work and what I do with it and what kind of idea lies behind it — if age matters or not. But in my group works, the only difference is how far people can go if it rains, snows etc.” Fascinating and, of course, provocative.

Rubicon Project offices - set of 24


Check out Jack Bauer's office (from the TV show 24) at 40 secs
into the video.

YouTwitFace

Coming Soon: www.youtwitface.com

Bitter on twitter?



More witty cricket writing from Times Online, this time from Patrick Kidd: How cricketing history could have been recorded differently if social-networking sites had been invented earlier:

@Aussies - We are so not happy with ur bodyline thing, innit. Plz stoppit or els our Don will nut yer.

@MCC - We're gutted by ur tweet on bodyline. It's well out of order. Who you calling an effing cheat? Ur boyz just well scared of our Harry L.

@Don - 300 runs in a day. Not bad. Missed a couple, though. Must concentrate harder. Would hate to end career averaging under 100.

@Gazza - 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6. Hahaha. I luv Swansea. Sorry Nasher.

@Beefy - 500-1? I like those odds. Let's give it sum umpty. Mind the confectionery stall. Everyone back to mine afterwards for big piss-up

@DickieB - Looks like rain again.

@Gower - Went 4 flite in old plane with Mozza while boyz were playing. Big laughs. Goochie well not impressed. My bad.

@Gatt - **** Shane Warne. Lucky ball. He'll never amount to much. Just wait until Suchie bowls on this turner.

And lastly, in anticipation of another celebration at the end of this 'summer' (if you can call it that):

@Freddie - Last 48 hours been a blur after Oval game. Can't remember where I put my car keys. Fortunately this bus keeps following me everywhere.

Nice one, cobber: fair play


Sometimes it is about grander
things than winning

from Times Online, 31 Jul 2009 by Matthew Syed

Is it just me or do you have a warm and tingly feeling? England v Australia, mortal enemies battling it out for the ultimate urn in Test cricket, and yet a sense of fair play has descended upon Edgbaston.

Justice, humanity and chivalry are in the air: things that many of us feared had departed cricket, what with the sledging, baiting and all-round nastiness that so often disfigure the global game.

Andrew Strauss did not have to allow the Aussies to replace their stricken wicketkeeper when he injured himself during the warm-up. Australia had already announced their line-up, signed on the dotted line and made the whole thing public. It was irrevocable, on a point of law.

Straussy could have said: “Sorry, mate, would love to help and all that, but rules is rules.” But he didn’t. He thought about it for a couple of minutes, discussed it with the team manager, waved his moral compass about and decided that he couldn’t, in all conscience, force Australia to play without a specialist keeper.

He took a moral view. Not a win-at-all-costs view. Not the kind of view that you might imagine emerging from an England cricket captain — or his counterpart, come to that.

It is sometimes thought that sport is red in tooth and claw, no better than the bear pit, a moral-free vacuum for unconscionable sorts to give each other a really hard time. An arena for cheats and bullies to try to get away with as much as possible while the ref is looking the other way.

And, truth be told, it sometimes seems that way to me, too.

But on occasions it is possible to glimpse something different, something grander: individuals who would rather lose than breach, not just the rules, but the spirit of the game; individuals who never lose sight of the wider dimension. Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Adam Gilchrist: all men who made it to the pinnacle without compromising their values.

These are people who understand that there are things in life, things in sport, that elevate the whole damn thing beyond the merry-go-round of victory and defeat; things that make the thing worth caring about.

Strauss, with his decision, in the midst of the most important series of his career, proved that he understands that too.

* Spoof Strauss v Ponting blog