Friday, October 19, 2012

The 10 best films of the 1890s

Film: Best of: The 10 best films of the 1890s



Last week, The A.V. Club took a look at the best films of the 1990s (a look that proved unexpectedly controversial). As a lark, we started talking about a companion list covering the best films of the 1890s. But the more we talked about it, the more it seemed like a good idea to turn back the clock to the very beginnings of film. We selected 10 films we found artistically compelling and historically significant. And because they’re all in the public domain, available on YouTube, and short, you can easily watch them in their entirety as you read along.

1. “Workers Leaving The Lumière Factory In Lyon” (1895)Moving pictures of various sorts predate the efforts of Auguste and Louis Lumìere, but what we call movies—motion pictures that could be projected before an audience—effectively begins with their Cinématographe Lumière. The Lum ...

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Thursday, October 18, 2012

West Coast trip pt 2

West Coast trip pt 2

Continued from West Coast trip pt 1...

After puttering around the Bay Area for a week, my older brother and I started our road trip from San Francisco to LA to Arizona. When we were kids, our parents drove us down the coast a number of times but it never gets old.  I mean, just look at these colors! JUST LOOK AT THEM!!! it’s so beautiful that it makes me feel insane.

We pulled over to pee in Campbell, the town where Lars Frederiksen of Rancid grew up. We didn’t pick that town on purpose but it reminded me of when, on purpose, we went to 560 State Street from that Jay-Z song and it was a real estate office or something. Woof. Don’t tell anyone that we did that.

Then we made a snack stop at a vegetable farm stand where I did this with a brussel sprout stock and no one was happy about it.

We briefly stopped by Mt. Herman, the Christian family camp we went to every year as kids. We arrived during the 11am prayer circles and it totally gave me the deja vu douchechills. My brother said all his memories of camp involved crushes on girls and all mine were about hiking in the creek, singing songs about Jesus and forming friendships that were going to last FOREVER. Or until the end of camp.

Back along highway 1, we snapped this photo and then got the creeps real bad about how related we look.

Next we hit up Big Sur and saw McWay Falls, the most poorly titled waterfall ever but goddamn if it wasn’t the prettiest.

I spotted this lil’ guy by the sea. He had a lot of feelings.

Josh said if he ever saw a guy making this face, he’d push him into the ocean.

We stopped at the Madonna Inn because we always used to stop there so the boys could pee into the waterfall in the bathroom. The Madonna Inn is by far the most splendidly tacky hotel I’ve ever had the misfortune of laying my eyeballs upon.


I never got to see the bathroom waterfall as a kid because of rules about not going in the men’s bathroom or whatever but now I’m a grown up so I can do whatever the hell I want!

Look at these idiots doin’ stuff on the beach


In San Luis Obispo we only had time to make one stop, so we made the grossest stop possible: Bubblegum Alley.

Barf a million, you guys.

As kids we never stayed in hotels because we had an amazing old motor home, but there was one exception, which was Apple Farm. I used to eat these candy sticks all the time but now they just tasted like a stomachache and dental work. Being a grown up is the worst.

Being that we were in a car this time, we stayed at a hotel where I terrified Josh by doing the puppet dance, a jig that Laura Park accuses me of plotting to do on her grave someday.

oh look, here’s some goddamn fucking sea lions

The next day we stopped at Venice Beach where the first thing we saw was a teenager hit a pigeon with a bat and then break its neck with his bare hands.  We were horrified but later agreed that it was kind of awesome in a depraved, Dickensian sort of way.


If I ever see a guy making this face, I’m going to punch it off

We spent too long at the skate park because watching skaters is actually pretty fascinating. The Venice skate park is famous for being the place where kids get scouted, go pro for awhile until they get old or blow out their knee and then they come back to Venice Beach to be a bum.



On the way out of Venice Beach, I saw this horrible, living nightmare and I haven’t been the same ever since.

We spent a few days in LA, which I thought I would hate, having disliked it as a kid, but turns out I really like it. The whole city looks like it hasn’t been touched since the 70’s, save a few Starbucks here and there. It’s really decrepit and bleak, two things I’m pretty fond of for short periods of time.

Here’s the Marilyn Monroe without her wig at the Chinese Theater, the only photo I allowed myself to take of costumed performers because I find them incredibly disconcerting.

We went to the movies and saw End of Watch, which was really good despite its highly improbable and loose plot lines. I’d highly recommend it, especially if you want some good, desolate LA neighborhoods/architecture porn.

At night we found a hole in the fence leading up into the Hollywood Hills so naturally we snuck through it and hiked on up a steep hill, where this view awaited us at the top.

There was a lot of rustling in the bushes behind us, which was making me way more nervous than when I do this kind of trespassing. Then we found this and almost lost our minds.

I’m pretty sure the fright of the night before is what led to this impressive bed head.

On the way out of LA, we drove through Skid Row, which had recently been somewhat cleaned up but is still a solid few blocks of tent city. This is the shelter area from the documentary. The photo I took was really dark so I lightened it in instagram, prompting my brother to shame me by saying “I can’t believe your instagraming Skid Row. That’s actually a thing you’ re doing. That is what is happening right now.”

The rest of the drive was pretty grim as the highway between LA and Arizona is mostly desert and rest stops.

My brother wouldn’t stop “car dancing” and I was going to text a photo of him to a friend and then I made this joke while pretending to be my friend looking at the text message: “Oh, your brother can’t stop car dancing? Well I can’t stop not giving a shit.” And then I laughed at my own joke and repeated it here on the internet, much to my disgrace.

Our trip ended in Prescott, where my brother lives. Here’s Josh and Charlie outside the ice cream place, which a strategically and unfortunately placed hand. This place sells Thrifty’s ice cream, which I thought was extinct sometime in the 80′s when the Thrifty’s drug stores disappeared but turns out the ice cream is still around and jesus no one cares about this but me but I just care SO MUCH.

And to wrap it up, here’s a photo that looks like a shitty Bret Easton Ellis book jacket:

And here’s where I want to live when I grow up:

so that’s it! Next I’m going to post about the Greystone insane asylum and it’s going to blow your tiny minds.

Oct. 18, 1985: Nintendo Entertainment System Launches

Oct. 18, 1985: Nintendo Entertainment System Launches

Nintendo releases a limited batch of Nintendo Entertainment Systems in New York City, quietly launching the most influential videogame platform of all time.


Daddy Long, Long Legs: Giant Arachnid Discovered in Cave

Daddy Long, Long Legs: Giant Arachnid Discovered in Cave

A species of harvestman, known colloquially as a daddy longlegs, with a leg-span of over 12 inches has been discovered living in the caves of Laos.



Lessons from the L.A. Podcast Festival

Comedy: Podmass: “A drum circle with a CB radio”: 19 lessons from the L.A. Podcast Festival



It was only a matter of time. Everything else has a convention/festival, so why not podcasts? The medium is a decade old at this point—enough time to show some staying power but also for the novelty to have worn off. For some (especially media companies), podcasts have proven too expensive and labor-intensive, but for others, particularly comedians, podcasting has been a revelation. So it makes sense that comedians would organize the first podcasting festival: Dave Anthony (of the Walking The Room podcast), Graham Elwood, and Chris Mancini (both of the Comedy Film Nerds podcast) started the Los Angeles Podcast Festival last winter with a Kickstarter campaign to cover facility costs at the Sheraton Delfina in Santa Monica. Once that succeeded, the rest fell into place, and the event grew to include a couple dozen live podcasts, a handful of panels, and a stand-up show (held across the street ...

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Time-Lapse Video Shows Endeavour's 3-Day Journey on L.A. Streets

Beautiful Time-Lapse Video Shows Endeavour's 3-Day Journey on L.A. Streets In Under 3 Minutes

Beautiful Time-Lapse Video Shows Endeavour's 3-Day Journey on L.A. Streets In Under 3 Minutes

It took the space shuttle Endeavour nearly three days to make the "drive" from Los Angeles International Airport to its new home at the California Science Center October 12 to 14, but thanks to this beautiful time-lapse video, you can see the journey in under three minutes.

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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Book-by-book Sandman discussion begins here Tuesday morning

Hmmmm.....


Books: Newswire: Reminder: Book-by-book Sandman discussion begins here Tuesday morning



As we pointed out a couple of weeks back, when we asked what comics series we should take on next in our Back Issues discussion feature, Neil Gaiman’s Sandman handily won our readers’ poll. Discussion of the first book of the series, Preludes & Nocturnes, begins here tomorrow at 11 a.m., with a crosstalk that covers topics from what the book title means to the way Gaiman, like fellow Brit Alan Moore, drew on the image of an iconic rock star to give a character a particular weight. Those who own the book might want to glance through it again to be fresh for the discussion; those who don’t, well hey, there are probably still bookstores open somewhere, right? Come join us tomorrow as we kick off our latest staff-and-readers discussion project.

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Ian McKellen Almost Didn't Return as Gandalf in 'The Hobbit'

Ian McKellen Almost Didn't Return as Gandalf in 'The Hobbit'



The actor tells THR that the familiar role "wasn't particularly challenging," but he realized: "How many millions of people are waiting for it?"

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'Binders Full of Women': Romney's Debate Comment the Viral Meme Du Jour

'Binders Full of Women': Romney's Debate Comment the Viral Meme Du Jour



An anecdote the GOP nominee made in defense of his tenure as governor of Massachusetts became an instant target for web parody.

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'Bob's Burgers' Renewed for Fourth Season at Fox

'Bob's Burgers' Renewed for Fourth Season at Fox



The 20th TV-produced animated series will be back for another season of 22 episodes.

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Video: Watch Elliott's 1980s Role-Winning 'E.T.' Audition

Video: Watch Elliott's 1980s Role-Winning 'E.T.' Audition

Video: Watch Elliott's 1980s Role-Winning 'E.T.' Audition

In case you haven't been keeping abreast of your Spielberg trivia, October 3 marked the 30th anniversary of 1982's beloved "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial." To celebrate the classic adventure, we bring you the adorable video of Henry Thomas' audition for the role of Elliott (to only be said in E.T. voice), which he obviously nailed.

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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Adam Scott and Wife Launch Production Co., Option Chuck Klosterman Novel, Add Adult Swim Specials (Exclusive)

Cool, cool and cool...


Adam Scott and Wife Launch Production Co., Option Chuck Klosterman Novel, Add Adult Swim Specials (Exclusive)



Scott reveals the backstory of "The Greatest Event in Television History," along with his plan to do at least three more specials in a similar vein with wife Naomi.

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