Sunday, May 25, 2014

A Crazy Little Thing..

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Mercurial rhapsodist ... - Pic courtesy of Wikipedia


by Trebor Snillor
When I was in my teens, it was the wild and wacky decade of the 1970’s. The “Me” decade was characterized by silly excess, particularly in the arena of Rock ‘n Roll. We saw Elton in giant platform heels, David Bowie with blue thunderbolts on his face and Ozzie Ozborn biting the heads off of bats. Edgar Winter creeped us out with his “only coming out at night” album and KISS requested that someone lick it up. It would be hard to stand out in this era of glam-rock showmanship and yet Freddie Mercury of Queen did just that.

Mercury was born Farrokh Bulsara and spent much of his youth growing up in India. He attended elite English boarding schools, learning to play piano at age 7. His family fled to Middlesex, England when it looked like the Zanzibar Revolution would threaten their safety. Mercury completed an Art degree at a Polytechnic school, but music was his passion. He sang for two groups, Ibex and Smile, before forming his own band -- a little group called Queen. He changed his name to Freddie Mercury about this time; he claims no intended second meanings of the group’s name, Queen. He just thought it was dramatic.

Dramatic is the word for Mercury. If I had to categorize his music I would say: rock, rockabilly, classical, opera and then Spanish soap opera. He delivered his music in 4 octaves and crossed every conceivable genre imaginable. In one interview he said he liked to keep inventing new sounds. I remember hearing the lyrics:

Mama, I just killed a man -- put a gun up to his head…pulled the trigger now he's dead.

I was shocked, a little bit outraged and then busted out laughing. This was pretty much a universal reaction. His songs were campy and outrageous across the board. It’s interesting that a gay man in tights scripted the lyrics, "We will rock you" and “We are the champions”, still today sung by macho sports enthusiasts around the world.

Mercury died from AIDS in 1991 at age 45. He had been in a 6 year relationship with an HIV positive man named Jim Hutton at the time. For such a flamboyant man fronting a group called Queen, Mercury was coy about his sexuality when talking to reporters or biographers. He claimed Mary Austin, a woman he lived with early on, was the love of his life. He described sex between men (early on in his life) as “schoolboy pranks”. The reticence surrounding that might be understandable given the judgmental nastiness that was still being heaped on AIDS victims in 1991.

Regardless of HIV, sex preference or genre-defying music, Freddie Mercury was a musical force of nature. Rolling Stone rated him the 18th greatest singer of all time, and BBC placed him in their top 100. His music plays constantly now around the world. Even in death, he brings energy to the planet -- and smiles everywhere. Mercury was indeed a champion and we’re enriched by his outrageous sense of fun.

© 2014 Snillor Productions

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Sunday, May 11, 2014

Our Cups Runneth Over

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Hulu Plus gives us choices - Pic courtesy of Wikipedia

by Trebor Snillor
This has been a weird weekend.. my job is unusually busy and I spent part of my TimeOn Friday running computer scripts for work. I put the RAV4 in the shop to find out why the engine light was on. The code scan indicated “bad air/fuel ratio”. The car shop couldn’t see a problem and we just reset the indicator. The events of this weekend are leaving some loose ends and issues to resolve.. Outside, the sun keeps emerging and then running back behind the clouds. I think it’s a bit like my own mind-set right now. Think I’ll commence with today’s topic and see if I can dispel the clouds.

I wrote about Hulu I think maybe in 2007. At the time, it was a free service letting you watch recently aired network shows and a smattering of vintage TV shows. It seemed too good to be true and it turns out that it was. The network oligarchs at ABC, NBC and CBS concluded that they were giving away the store. There was money to be made by morphing it into a paid service called “Hulu Plus”. Hulu.com, the free service, was kept -- but with seriously clipped wings. The offerings were reduced; you can now see mostly just clips and you can only watch it on a PC.

I normally recoil from monthly fees, but I recently decided the $8.99 fee for Hulu Plus would barely be noticed in my budget. I can spend $9 on a single Pei Wei dinner so I went for it. Here are my observations thus far.

The major networks on Hulu Plus give you:
o recently canceled shows (i.e., Dads, Sean Saves the World).
o quirky shows that have been off for more than a season (The New Normal).
o month-old re-airings of select popular shows (Hot In Cleveland).
o vintage shows like I Love Lucy -- quality is a bit grainy, not re-mastered.
o Most shows have short embedded ads that run @ 1 minute -- not too intrusive.
o @ 25 hulu-exclusive shows that can’t be seen anywhere else

I figure with the above, I can finagle 9 bucks worth of viewing material pretty easily. My caveat to people considering this service -- it will appeal much more to a Cinema Arts major than to a mainstream person looking to catch the latest Big Bang episode. If you’re the kind of person who can sing the theme song of Green Acres, you’ve found your niche! :-)

Hulu Plus appears to have over 25+ exclusive shows -- enough that I lost count scrolling through it. In selecting these, I will flash by titles and trailers -- making value judgements based on thin descriptions and 30 second previews. If it has vampires, car chases or police detectives I’ll probably say “next”. Even on shows where I opt to watch the pilot -- something in the first 3 minutes needs to grab me. Something has to rise above cliche, or same-old-same-old. There are so many choices we really could use a professional TV critic to pre-screen these for us. There aren’t enough hours in life to watch all the pilot episodes much less a full season of each show.

I’ll clarify -- I do like having the TV choices. I’d rather have it and not need it than need it and not have it. I’ll just have to develop that Simon Cowell rapid-fire decisiveness that gives a thumbs up or thumbs down in a few critical seconds. My time is too valuable -- I have good shows to watch!

I'll close by noting that we've hit rerun season.. This would be the perfect time to check out Netflix or Hulu if you haven't yet.

© 2014 Snillor Productions

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