Showing posts with label General. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General. Show all posts

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Updates


- I have improved the saturation on the second photo under "Cathedral Forest", and reposted the newest version. The actual (printed) photos have a much more golden glow, and the leaves in both photographs are almost moving with the glistening light. But the blog/digital versions are close enough.

- I have added the current links to my blog posts "Evolutions of Design" on the side bar. So far, there are six links (and six evolutions).

- I have added my most recent articles (albeit the last one was published in June 2010) both on the side bar, and in my "Articles" section. Burqa Prejudice looks at the women from Sex and the City, and their clueless adventures in Arabia.

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Monday, September 28, 2009

Updates

And apologies

I've been quite busy these past few days preparing for a project (numerous, actually), so I apologize for my sparse posts. In fact, this won't change much over the next few days.

In the meantime, here are some posts I'm working on:

- Who was the real Annie Le?

- Review of a delightful documentary The Boys: The Sherman Brothers' Story about the prolific duo who gave us so many musicals such as Mary Poppins, Winnie the Pooh, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, and the list goes on.

- My recent attendance of my former professor's presentation on how (and why) he made his latest experimental/art film. At Q&A I was the only one to pose a question, but I will be discussing that further, and why I find the answer Mr. Elder gave me inadequate.

- And please take a look at The Thinking Housewife's demure explanation of the "O-Movement." Of course, the original O-Movement was formed by our very own Ms. Oprah Winfrey, who tries very hard never to be lewd, and whose pleasures seem to lean towards the sensual. I'm beginning to realize that our Original O is quite prudish - but that is for another post and another discussion.

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

Well Done!

Americans won't let their country run away from them

When Americans insist on being American, it is an example to the rest of the world.

This weekend's march in Washington was one of the most exhilarating things I have ever watched. Finally, a people that won't let its country run away from its principles. Americans refuse to behave like the suicidal Europeans, and the passive Canadians. And they should be an example to all.

Meanwhile, here in Canada, universal health care was snuck up on the people. Actually, the doctors put up a fight initially, but ultimately the people's psyche wasn't able to overcome this socialist intrusion. Some say that the cold winters and huge landscape require a particular type of cooperation amongst people, which set the stage for government interventions to enforce this cooperation. But, rugged individualism is not thwarted by the weather, or the sparseness or breadth of the landscape. I think it is something more fundamental, some inability to grow up, something in the psyche that is still clinging on to bigger authority, that induces one socialist scheme after another in Canada. After all, Canada is still part of the British Commonwealth.

I cannot ever see such a popular movement coming out of Canada as the one we saw (barely - news coverage here was at a minimum) in Washington this weekend. Canadians are partly too self-conscious to go out on such a march. But, they also inherently believe in the system, however much they may talk about changing it. It has become a kind of addiction - like any welfare system. That, and fear of the unknown (how will we pay the bills?) keeps Universal Health Care a bastion of Canadian identity.

Still,  some are hopeful that with bursts of private systems here and there, this behemoth will slowly be eroded. But, I wouldn’t count on it. The Conservative Party, the party most likely to turn things around (somewhat), is forced by popular demand to abandon many conservative principles, and is slowly becoming a centrist government. I don’t think Canada even has a right-oriented party anymore. And unless some outrageous incident provokes the anger of ordinary Canadians (it has happened before!), such a turnaround is but a dream.

So, universal health care, with its constant horror stories, is here to stay. And huge marches, demanding that big government remove itself from people's decisions, will never happen.

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Friday, August 01, 2008

The Week in Review

Sometimes I think I should post more often

Once a week (or thereabouts) is a little long for so many things that caught my attention this week. So here is a compilation of short posts .

Left: Castle Howard and Estate
Right: JMW Turner's
Phryne Going to the Public Baths as Venus: Demosthenes Taunted by Aeschines
, 1838

[Click pictures to view larger versions]

Removals from the Blog list : I'm removing a couple of Canadian blogs from my list since neither has contributed for more than two months, and they are always sporadic anyway.

I emailed The Ambler, who stopped about four months ago, about this hoping that he is well (he mentioned that he had been sick about a year ago), and asking him to continue his duty - yes it is a strong word, but I hate it when really good bloggers decide to close shop - to provide us with non MSM news and views on Canada. The Ambler got my respect at his incisive and clear-headed commentary on the Conrad Black case.

Dispatches from the Hogtown Front is an immigration blog by a Torontonian. The blogger did a great job of providing information from regular media - usually the infamously liberal Toronto Star - on incriminating facts on the immigration debacle here in Canada.

Fortunately, Hogtown now has his own community blog, and another blogger has started an immigration watch blog which he calls Canadian Immigration Reform Blog, and which I've added to my blog list.

Long discussion on "what can we do?" about Islam over at Gates of Vienna: But it unfortunately got hijacked by a few posters who were intent on being the loudest; to defame others and to present ill-though out, childish proposals. And Baron Bodissey simply posts another thread, equally childish and unproductive: "You are a bunch of complete cranks." As one commentator puts it: "Don't they know there's a war on?"

Vision TV hosts Islamic program on Sundays: I was shocked to find that Vision TV, "Canada's Multi-faith and Multicultural broadcaster", hosts Sunday Islamic programs. Given its description of its services, this should come as no surprise. But, it is still a shock to hear Koranic verses read and discussed on the holy day of the week.

The Louvre's new Islamic section is funded by the Saudis: and one of the architects, Rudy Ricciotti, made an ambiguous statement that "here we're in a much more intimate approach, less symbolic, less monumental." Ricciotti goes on to describe the roof of the new addition by saying: "The veil-like structure, which plays with the metaphor of the Islamic veil, even if it is rather a 'liberated' veil, blown and lulled by the wind, or rather a cloud, or a flying carpet, is light, modern, transparent..."So much for lack of symbols.

How British producers are ruining American culture: and the main culprit is Simon Cowell, judge of "American Idol." I am convinced that Cowell knows nothing about music, and pressures the singers to sing in his favorite sound - blasting and bombastic black style. So all the singers sound the same. "Canadian Idol" on the other hand is much more varied, with great individual interpretations, based on the vocal strengths of the singers rather than a formula they all have to follow. I've always said that these aggressive British reality TV promoters are actually helping in the decline of American culture.

Here's a short and sweet song by a talented young Albertan contestant. Just forward to about the 40 second spot for the song.

The Big Country vs. No Country for Old Men: are both about the coming of age of younger men, when older men no longer can, or want to, set the standards. What a difference a mere half a century makes (in the long course of art history). No Country for Old Men gives us a bizarre character, touting an even more bizarre weapon on a nihilistic killing spree - a fine example for the younger generation of the 21st century. In The Big Country, Gregory Peck actually does make the world a better place.

Brideshead Revisited, the movie version: I haven't read the book (which I will start today), but I have watched the mini-series. Watching the beautiful country estate, and all those gorgeous period costumes on the big screen in full color is really a pleasure.

But, only in our multi-culti brave new world do we see an actor who looks Indian (I think Ben Whishaw is mixed white and Indian) take on the role of a British aristocrat. The homosexual Catholic character in the Brideshead Revisited TV series - who ends up in a monastery in Morocco - is sharp, sardonic, yes hopelessly romantic, but never self-pitying.The movie's Ben Whishaw plays Sebastian Flyte like a victim. He absolutely misunderstands the pride (snobbery?) and staunch individuality of the British aristocrats, and acts like the perennial supplicant for sympathy with his pathetic eyes and flimsy acting. Can an Indian really channel the soul of an English aristocrat? I think it is actually possible, although by a long stretch. But, he has to overcome his insecurities - yes, he has to deal with that giant of the British Empire, and he has to surmount whatever second-classness he might feel. If he cannot, he has no business acting that role.

I think, though, that Matthew Goode's distant and slightly undecipherable film version of Charles Ryder is much more credible than Jeremy Irons' in the TV series. Jeremy Irons was the Ben Whishaw of the TV series. They even look alike. The TV Julia Flyte was too beautiful, considering Julia says that she was "the family shadow," but the movie version found the perfect actress in Hayley Atwell. Surprise! Atwell is actually part Native American (Indian), although she grew up with her mother in England. So channeling is what actors are supposed to do!

I've already written too much on this. I will explore one theme further later - why couldn't a semi-English looking Indian actor channel the spirit of an English aristocrat?

Here is The Ambler's article on Evelyn Waugh.

Turner's Estates:
Brideshead was filmed on one of the many English country estates. The actual estate in the film and TV series was Castle Howard. Along with spectacular buildings, these estates also designed elaborate landscapes of gardens, lakes, hills (yes, artificial ones) forests and dotted them with statues, mausoleums and other architecture and sculptures. Turner painted many country estates and used some of them to paint his mythological and antiquity masterpieces. In fact, the many mythological and classical themes of these estates would certainly have been a creative force in his works.


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