In need of a blog post, Who to turn to?

I have several posts in draft form, but they haven’t come together yet. Besides being busy with real-life stuff, I’ve had my mind on things other than this site; although I did update WordPress to the current version, and for the first time I was able to take advantage of the automated update script, so it took all of five seconds, with no ill effects, as far as I’ve noticed. Amazing.

The Doctor Who spin-off, Torchwood, is available on Netflix HD streaming. I’ve watched half a dozen installments from the first season, and it looks and sounds great, but so far I’ve been slow to warm up to the series. I’m doing better getting used to Matt Smith as the new Doctor, and Karen Gillan as the new companion, Amy Pond, is definitely a major asset to the series. So, stuck as I am for a blog post, I’ll embed these webisode videos that Bismo pointed out to me.

Season 5 of Doctor Who isn’t available for free on Netflix yet, but Amazon has it. Paying $12.87 to buy — not just rent! — all thirteen episodes is a bargain, but with a $10 credit from a previous purchase, I procured it in HD for only $2.87. A measly 22-cents per episode! And as Bismo has seen, played with the Roku HD-XR on my Panasonic 720p projector, the picture quality is stunning. Who needs Blu-ray? Who doesn’t.

Deus ex machina for Keith Olbermann

The crisis of Keith Olbermann’s punishment for flagrantly defying MSNBC’s rule against political donations without prior notice to management is over. There was concern that management was looking for a way to take Olbermann down a couple of pegs, if not squeeze him out all together, in favor of a less expensive alternative. An online petition appeared, demanding Keith’s return, and it was signed by upwards of 250,000 people, including me — approximately the same number that attended the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear. Suddenly, the suspicion surrounding his suspension is ended, because he will be back anchoring Countdown on Tuesday. Good.

Jon Stewart rightly took Olbermann to task for mis-characterizing Massachusetts junior senator Scott Brown, but Stewart was wrong at the Rally to Restore Sanity when he lumped Olbermann in with the cable TV personalities on Fox News. Olbermann took Stewart’s chiding in January to heart and admitted he was wrong, yet at the rally Stewart played a portion of the original clip anyway. Similarly, Olbermann agreed with Stewart about his “Worst Persons in the World” segment, so he discontinued it.

Olbermann is highly partisan, and he sometimes goes over the top, but he relies on facts, and although he may sometimes jump to conclusions, he doesn’t outright lie and mislead. Keith is a strong voice against the lies and distortions promulgated by Fox News. He’s made it clear to Jon Stewart that they’re on the same side, and I think The Daily Show host needs to acknowledge he doesn’t have a monopoly on righteous indignation, and Olbermann’s firebrand approach is just as valid and valuable as his own jocular, yet no less insistent, variety.

Pratt extracts bat

Over four years ago I put up a bat house in our back yard…

… but did any bats move in? Nope. I thought it might be due to the disease that’s decimating the bat population around here, but then, while cleaning out the gutters, I found a bat.

A dead one. Not due to the disease, but trapped as it tried to escape from behind a bedroom window shutter. I loosened the shutter, pulled out the unfortunate winged mammal, and tossed it into the woods.

The sounds of the Silents

Discussions of the various IPTV streaming video players that are available (go Roku!) all revolve around the prospect of consumers having the option of dropping cable TV. But as long as that’s where Turner Classic Movies is found, there’s no letting go of cable for me.

Monday, TCM began its new 7-part series, Moguls & Movie Stars. The first installment is The Films of Thomas Edison, and it reminds me in no small way of Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film.

At least once each week, either as a comment at the link above, or by mail, I hear from somebody requesting (sometimes pleading) that I post the complete series or make DVD copies. Silent aficionados are anything but silent! The one thing I won’t do is make DVD copies. That’s crossing a line too far.

The acclaimed Hollywood series was produced 30 years ago in England, by Kevin Brownlow and David Gill (now deceased). Brownlow is being awarded an honorary Oscar™ this month, so this week and next, New York’s Documentary Festival will be honoring Brownlow.

The TCM documentary is a survey of the entire history of Hollywood, so there’s no way it can even begin to scratch the surface of silent films, compared to Brownlow and Gill’s in-depth, 13-part series. Yet I won’t be surprised if it kindles some more interest in the Silent era.

I know that Brownlow would love to see a DVD set released of Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film. While we’re waiting, I would certainly love to post it, but even if Brownlow were to contact me he couldn’t grant permission, due to the copyright hassles that have been holding back the set’s release. What I would like to see is TCM step in and help get things moving legally. Ideally, TCM would show the series the same way it presents everything — complete and unedited — and promote a DVD box set with some never-seen extras.