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Cranky 2nd Man on Moon Blames Movies for Kids' Space Boredom
from Cinematical July 12, 2008
Filed under: Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Celebrities and Controversy, Fandom What is it about ice cream that makes distinguished former astronauts get so cranky? Buzz Aldrin, the second man to step foot on the Moon, says that "fantastic and unbelievable" science fiction movies and television shows are partly to blame for the boredom young people have with the modern space program. During an ice cream party this week, Aldrin told Sci-Fi Wire: "All the shows where they beam people around and things like that have made young people think that that is what the space program should be doing. It's not realistic ... you can't possibly live up to the expectations you have created in young people. Why do they get bored with the space program? That's why." Aldrin doesn't hate all science fiction films and TV shows -- just the ones that deal with "fantasy and ... traveling seven times the speed of light." He spoke favorably about Ron Howard's Apollo 13 and Tom Hanks' From the Earth to the Moon series: "They were fascinating, because it was reality history, and reality fiction can be good if you stick to reality." Got that? While not mentioning Star Trek or Star Wars, I'd guess those were some of the culprits he had in mind. When he's not busy slagging science fiction and fantasy, Aldrin hosts Unseen Moon, a National Geographic Channel show. Hmm, I wonder if his show is "reality history" or "reality fiction"? [ Via Classic Horror Film Board ] Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
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Apollo 13: Houston, We've Got A Problem
from recent posts - blip.tv (beta) June 05, 2008
NASA documentary of the near-fatal Apollo 13 mission in 1972. Includes the onboard explosion and efforts by the ground crew and flight crew to troubleshoot the malfuction and design and implement contingency procedures to bring the crippled spacecraft home. NASA Film HQ-200 This video is in the Public Domain, for more informations please visit: http://www.archive.org/details/HoustonWeveGotAProblem
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SomaCow 144: Palpable Palpatine
from SomaCow March 21, 2008
SomaCow Media, Inc. is proud to present SomaCow, brought to you this week by Specialty Pizza Express. It s damned fine pie. Seriously. I recommend the Super Cheese, cause it doesn t plate off the cheese into a gooey death mess on your neck on the first bite. Just mouthful after mouthful of steamy hot wet moo. I guess there is a reason I do not write ad copy for a living So, this is the final episode of audio weirdness. You may have noticed the last three episodes suffered a certain tinny warblyness, and I am happy to report that that issue is resolved, and we here at SomaCow Media, Inc. are ready to screw up in all new ways! In this hour, we discussed my toe, which is looking better now, thank you for asking. I still have no nail, and I am terrified of its tendency to turn ghostly white, but the pain is gone and the swelling is reduced. It s a lot like lovemaking that way. If you ever need a podiatrist, I highly recommend Dr. Pearl. His bedside manner is second only to his hot nurse assistance. Just make sure you exfoliate your heels before you go, as no one wants to hit on a cute girl when she is holding a scabrous hoof. For us, it begged the question, why would ANYBODY be a podiatrist, or a proctologist, or an otolaryngologist? I mean, you sat through god knows how many science and math courses, you staved off sleep through internships galore, and now, you stand, your shingle in hand, ready to get hippocritical on some mo fo s, and you choose leaky swollen nasty bits? Weird. Sound off if you know why, Heard. The Pope has been quite active lately, making assorted commentary on the Iraq war, the middle east in general, and how Muslims should act. I can only attribute it to the fact that his man-boylust is peaking, and I hope somebody can get him some kidtouchbane or wormwood or whatever normally makes him go back to his dark lair. I would like to take a moment to address our younger listeners, specifically, our Catholic younger listeners. We at SomaCow know that the Pope is deadly serious in his desire to ram some youth butt, and so we offer these handy tips to stave off potential papal/priestly buggery: 1. Smoke heavily. Nothing turns off a horny holy man faster than proffering the wafer of Christ only to see a furry green and yellow tongue staring back at him. At the very least, eat lots of sour apple candy, and try to get braces. Make your mouth into a threatening sewer of steel and sticky rotten putrid bits of nasty, and Father O Faggy may just read scripture instead of undressing you with his rheumy eyes. 2. Bean up, boy! Every Saturday night, carb load like a dervish, and ask for seconds. The more gas you expel, the more you will stink, especially in your rectory , as it were, so load up on Kidney Beans, Lentils, Mushrooms, Pinto Beans, Cheese, Refried Beans, Pad Thai (extra hot!), Broccoli and whatever else is good for your heart. The more you eat em, the less you have to worry about some creepy old guy slipping his hand up your frock. 3. Worship Satan! Yes, its a well known fact that the Devil wants to eat your soul, and destroy all that is good in the world, but he is also a hermaphrodite, and thus suffers from what your Dad calls ED . Just make sure you get back on the good foot after you grow facial hair (Think Goatee-Gotta Go!) and you will be right as rain. Priests don t want to fuck adults, if they did, they would have gotten a real job, and a car, and maybe a really sweet jacket. Only perverts spend that much time on their knees. Hopefully those will help you out in your efforts to get thee from behind me , kids. Now quit listening to our show and go outside. Your parents would kill us if they knew you were here. Well, probably not. I mean, they take you to church, so they obviously hate you. Yeah Anyway, we played some great music in this episode, featuring these angelic bands: Frenzel Rhomb - I Went Out With a Hippy highly unfashionable western spiral arm of Nowheresville. Momma Earth is a good egg, but we will need to hatch one day soon, and the more we understand about off-terrestrial living, the more equipped we will be to handle the sudden poach. See you on Sunday in the Ustream! Happy Easter!
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David Sington 001, "In the Shadow of the Moon" director: Mr. Media Interview, Pt. 1
from Mr. Media October 02, 2007
In the Shadow of the Moon, the new documentary directed by David Sington, captures all the emotion and enthusiasm about space travel that once transfixed the American public and seems strangely absent from today’s world of technology. I was eight years old when the Eagle landed on the Moon in July 1969. I haven’t been the same since. I anticipated a lifetime ahead of flying around the neighborhood with jet packs, manned missions to Mars, and all kinds of things that, before that July day, were science fiction and after, well, they seemed just around the corner. Now I’m approaching my 47th birthday, and none of my expectations of a space age came to pass. None. Zero. Zip. Watching In the Shadow of the Moon, I remembered that lost feeling. It’s a wonderful experience, which is why I looked forward to talking with director David Sington. DOWNLOAD THE MP3; LISTEN HERE. ALSO AVAILABLE AS A PODCAST ON iTUNES. Subscribe to Mr. Media's RSS Feed. BOB ANDELMAN: I loved the movie. It really did take me back to a point where I thought anything was possible and that all these things were going to happen. What do you think went wrong? DAVID SINGTON: Well, I think, if you want to sum it up in one word, I think it might be Vietnam, for a couple of reasons. One was that Vietnam was a huge financial drain on the U.S. government, and I think that when the decisions were being made around about the time of the Eagle landing, actually, in ’69-’70, NASA was making plans for what to do next after the Apollo landings. They drew up plans that would’ve taken American astronauts to Mars, certainly by the early ‘90s if not the late ‘80s. But, I think that those plans partly fell victim to just the issues, of course, which were exacerbated by the Vietnam War. And the other reason, of course, is that if you can feel a sort of counter-factual, a what-if argument, if America hadn’t got tangled up in Vietnam, if perhaps President Johnson had sort of kept things scaled down rather than escalating, he might very well have gone on to do another term in ’68 to run again. And he was a great supporter of the manned space program in a way that President Nixon really wasn’t. And I think if there had been more money available and if Johnson had been in the White House, I think the plans to go to Mars might well have been laid down. Whether they would’ve been followed through in the ‘70s with the oil shortage and so forth, I’m not quite so sure. But I think Vietnam actually has a lot to do with it. In the Shadow of the Moon Trailer ANDELMAN: In the film, you have President Kennedy’s challenge to America to land a man on the moon by the end of the decade of the ‘60s, and you have some other films of him that I loved was him at what was then Cape Canaveral. SINGTON: It was Rice University, out of Houston, in fact. ANDELMAN: Oh, it was Houston? For some reason, I thought it was Cape Canaveral. How did you kind of walk the line between politics and space in the movie? There’s not a lot of politics, but there was some. SINGTON: I set out to make a film which was really about the human experience of leaving the earth and going to the moon. These guys had this completely unique experience in human history. They’re the first people to really see where we are in the scheme of things, to really, in a sense, understand what a human being is in some way. So my aim was to focus on that. The film then also, as it started to come together, all these things changed for us so it became about what you were talking about earlier, how that experience was shared all around the world. So it sort of became a film about America and partly about America in the world and how America is seen by the rest of the world. Inevitably, it starts to pick up some contemporary echoes actually, and it sort of became a movie that seems, somehow, strangely timely even though it’s, in some sense, a fairly historical story. It’s not much about now explicitly in there, but I think there’s implicitly something about now. And in a way, it became a movie about America, but I don’t think it’s a political movie. It’s not, in any sense, by design left or right. It’s really about what makes America great, what’s wonderful about America and, as it were, what America could be, should be, sometimes is, sometimes isn’t, its aspiration as a nation to represent the best of humanity and to represent the future of humanity. ANDELMAN: David, Americans always seem to think of the moon pursuit to be distinctly theirs, something of which they can claim ownership. I think one of the Apollo 8 astronauts says in the movie, “It was a time when we made bold moves.” And I wondered, not being American, how you viewed the space program and all of this as a British citizen. SINGTON: I think that because I’m not American, I saw in Apollo something about America, not just something that America did but also something that expresses what America is, certainly what America is when it’s at its best. And I think that sort of had its influence in the way that we do the music. The music is a very sort of American feel to it. It’s quite deliberate. I’m saying, in a sense, that the continuity between, it’s not a terribly reasonable observation perhaps, but there is a continuity between the pioneering spirit of the American settlers and what was happening with Apollo. It’s interesting that the astronauts are all kind of small town American boys. They’re all from that kind of stock. And so in a way, that forms a sort of nostalgic hymn of praise to America. I think there’s something very generous about Apollo. It was an American enterprise. It was spurred by competition with the Soviet Union and all those things. But in the end, it was, I think, a step forward in the development of human understanding of who we are and where we are. That was a gift from this country to the rest of the world. And in a way, the film’s almost a sort of, I almost think of it as a thank-you note. I think America did something wonderful with Apollo, and I think Americans should be proud of it. I think it’s also quite interesting to see the way that in Britain, for example, the people are saying, “It’s great to see a film which makes us feel good about America.” It’s not just here. ANDELMAN: Let me ask you from that same British perspective, how do you view the Russian -- at the time the Soviet -- space program? Does it have a different feel to it than the American? SINGTON: Definitely. Yeah, I remember, I’m just about the same age as you are, and I remember it as a small boy, and I guess I was taken up with the rocketry and the adventure of it, but my political awareness was just beginning. I was just beginning to understand the way the world works, and I remember being very struck by the difference between the Americans and the Russians. When the Russians sent something up into space, they announced it when it was safely up there and achieved something extraordinary, whereas the Americans invited you to the launch. As (one of the astronauts) says, “It’s just rather worrisome for the astronauts because if I make a mistake, it’s gonna be immediately apparent to 3 billion people.” And it was just obvious that there was something different about the two, which had nothing to do with the technology but to do with the attitude toward openness. The NASA program was a civilian program. That the plans were not state secrets. You could go and look at the plans for certain flights whereas the Russian rockets were all top-secret. I thought that was a very telling distinction. ANDELMAN: The open versus closed society. SINGTON: Exactly, and I think if you think back to 1961 when Kennedy makes his speech to Congress saying, “We cannot leave space travel to the Russians, we must do it.” This represents, in some sense, the direction humanity’s going to go in, and we must take the lead in that. I don’t think it was obvious to people then, necessarily, what was going to happen with the Cold War, which wasn’t just a struggle for, if you like, geo-political supremacy. It wasn’t just about whose tanks are parked where. It was about which system represents the future of mankind. And there were lots of reasons for thinking, perhaps, that the planned collectivist societies of the East might have an advantage over what was called the wasteful competition of the West. Why have 18 brands of toothpaste when one will do? Wouldn’t it be much better to just have one and put that money in something else? A lot of people were so persuaded by those kinds of arguments. But I think that the way in which the space program developed really started to show that open, democratic societies, when they decide to do things, when they come to a collective decision about what they want to do, that an open and dynamic society actually is able to out-compete these sort of planned economies. And I think that when Neil Armstrong took a step on the moon, that was a big nail in the coffin of the Communist system. ANDELMAN: One of the attractions, I think, of your film is previously unseen NASA footage, and I wondered if you had a favorite sequence or shot from that. SINGTON: Well, there is some astonishing, there’s lots of wonderful stuff, but I remember, I’m sure it was the same for you, but there were two things in the late ‘60s, that I remember as a kid. One was the Apollo flight and the other was going to see 2001 by Stanley Kubrick. It had a huge impact on me, and I think it was the thing that started my thinking and becoming interested in film. But we have a sort of 2001-type film, more than one actually, but there’s one shot in particular which is a shot of the final stage set by firing which is the stage which took them up into earth orbit and then took them out of earth orbit on the way to the moon, and there’s an extraordinary shot from earth with an automatic camera mounted in the housing. This rocket fires and it’s leaving, it’s going off into space, and then the housing slowly rotates, and then you see earth coming into the shot, and then the camera ejects and starts its descent. This is the beginning of its descent back to the earth. And to my mind, this is the best shot in history, because it looks absolutely beautiful. It’s stunning in the way it looks. It represents the most astonishing thing. It represents human beings leaving the planet Earth for the very first time in our history. I think it’s probably the most expensive shot ever you could see if you think about what goes into it. So that’s my vote for best shot in the history of cinema. ANDELMAN: I think that shot is in the trailer, too, isn’t it for people who haven’t seen the film yet. SINGTON: Yeah. It’s a little bit in the trailer, yeah. Click Here to Keep Reading! © 2007 by Bob Andelman. All rights reserved.
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Roger Corman
from Sci-Fi Talk April 02, 2007
A true legend, Roger Corman has been writing, directing and producing great B movies, that we know and love since the 1950's. I chatted with him at Icon 26 with Dr. Howard Margolin of Destinies: The Voice Of Science Fiction. Roger entertained us with stories of the making of some of his classic films like Attack Of The Crab Monsters, Battle Beyond The Stars, Death Race 2000 and more. Additionally he told us of some of the countless filmmakers whose career he helped launch.Closing music by Brobdingnagian Bards performing The Hobbit. Roger Cornan photo by Tony Tellado.
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Possibili-tea with Seabiscuit Author Laura Hillenbrand
from Let's Get Metaphysical? May 16, 2006
Laura Hillenbrand, a miracle in her own right, has inspired millions with her best-selling book about "the little horse that could." This week Alice Marie and Jo share excerpts of a conversation with the author, who co-founded an organization to benefit Iraqi children. Jo's song "Tonite" is also featured. Listening with headphones is strongly encouraged for this episode. Please visit www.OperationIraqiChildren.org and www.SeabiscuitOnline.com Visit Jo and Alice Marie at www.LetsGetMetaphysical.net
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