Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Review: 'American Masters: Joan Baez: How Sweet the Sound' on PBS



He legend is fascinating, the person even more so.

By ROBERT LLOYD, Television Critic

Her future boyfriend and sometime musical partner Bob Dylan was still in high school in Minnesota when Joan Baez first played Club 47 in Cambridge, Mass., in 1958 at age 17. We see her there, and then, in “Joan Joan Baez: How Sweet the Sound,” airing tonight on PBS as part of the series "American Masters" -- a teenager with long, dark hair; a Spanish guitar; and a mature mezzo-soprano voice. The next year, she appeared at the Newport Folk Festival and became famous. She made records that went gold. She was on the cover of Time.

Her early stage fright made Baez seem doubly serious, and she was pretty serious to begin with, besotted with ancient songs of love and death but also with Mohandas K. Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. In high school in Palo Alto, she refused to participate in an air-raid drill, denying "the whole possibility that this made any sense at all," and made the local papers. Thus was set the pattern for a lifetime.

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If you were a Dylan fan who preferred the swinging Symbolist to the Prince of Protest who preceded him -- if you were, like, more "Desolation Row" than "Blowin' in the Wind" -- you might have regarded Baez as being overly political and insufficiently cool. It is true, as she says herself, that she wanted him to more enthusiastically share her enthusiasms. But differing interests split many young couples, not only those whose camera-ready love would follow them in pictures and recordings all the days of their lives, and right into this documentary.

As with most attempts to fit a life into the space of a television show -- especially a life that includes performance clips -- "How Sweet the Sound" is a blur that comes into focus intermittently. But if it doesn't fully give her context, it does give her her due and shows a spikier, rougher, funnier and sexier character than her reputation as a folk priestess ("a pristine little Virgin Mary" is how she puts it) would suggest. Baez, who is 68 now (and ever on tour), is not precious about herself or coy about her professional ambition or her personal shortcomings, which at times amounted to the same thing.

Still, like most episodes of "American Masters," it is fundamentally a testimonial. There are not a lot of commentators here, but they do include Dylan, who has only admiring things to say about Baez's voice, guitar playing and song selection. He likes the way their voices work together, but you wouldn't know from his comments that they ever were, as Baez says, "an item." Former Byrds Roger McGuinn and David Crosby praise her, as well, as do the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who knows her from the civil rights movement, and Steve Earle, who produced her most recent album.

Baez's life has unrolled along parallel tracks of music and politics -- "If you're committed to singing meaningful songs, you also have to be committed to leading a life that backs that up," she says, and we see her working for social justice in America and around the world.

But the film's best moments reveal the plain person between the activist and the singer, as in home movies of Baez romping with late sister Mimi Farina, or when she and ex-husband David Harris -- a movement leader who spent much of their marriage in prison as a draft resister -- discuss their failed relationship. A legend is never as interesting as the life it contains

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JOAN BAEZ STILL THE SWEETEST SOUND

Filed under: AUDIO FILES/CONTENT, BREAKING NEWS, CELEBRITY INTERVIEWS, TELEVISION NEWS

Tonight on PBS is the premiere of AMERICAN MASTERS JOAN BAEZ: HOW SWEET THE SOUND. It’s an overview of a music career that’s lasted for almost fifty years and features interviews and musical performances. BAEZ spoke at a press conference in July and talked about the art and science of putting together a great set list. Listen in below:

AMERICAN MASTERS JOAN BAEZ: HOW SWEET THE SOUND airs tonight on PBS
Tags: AMERICAN MASTERS, AMERICAN MASTERS JOAN BAEZ: HOW SWEET THE SOUND, BIOGRAPHY, DOCUMENTARY, JOAN BAEZ, JOAN BAEZ INTERVIEW, PBS, Television, TV, WOODSTOCK

Ghost Hunters: “FORT HENRY”

Fort Henry – Kingston, Ontario
 TAPS heads north to explore the most haunted place in Canada. Fort Henry served as a prison and execution site for hundreds of dangerous convicts. Over the years, employees and visitors have witnessed a number of strange, frightening events.

Built in 1812, Fort Henry served as a prisoner-of-war camp for captured Nazis during World War II. Today, the fort is a National Heritage Site and a memorial to Canada’s military history. Historical eyewitness accounts suggest that paranormal entities have long been haunting the fort.

Strange apparitions, mysterious sounds of shattering glass and other ghostly activities have been recorded in this great maze of a military complex. Could the restless spirits of dead prisoners be stirring trouble? TAPS investigates.

Pictured: (front) Grant Wilson, (behind) Jason Hawes — Syfy Photo: Gavin Bond

PopThatZit.com, Zit Expert on Tyra Banks Today!


 Everyone has their 15 minutes of fame and today the owner of PopThatZit.com had his! Chris Azzari, creator of the PopThatZit.com appeared on Tyra Banks show. I think I’ve heard it all now! An entire website devoted to popping zits! Eww!

Zit popping expert Chris Azzari chatted with Tyra and showed clips for the grossed out audience from some of the over videos on the website. Azzari said appearing on the Tyra Banks show was a blast:

I was even approached by a few people who were familiar with the site, and they loved that I was on the show!

PopThatZit.com features videos in 47 different categories as well as a “Zit Manifesto” that explains the zit fascination philosophy, by outlining the differences between casual zit poppers and obsessed zit poppers.

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Cool temps a change of pace for Chicago Marathon

Cool temps a change of pace for Chicago Marathon

Mary Frances Bragiel Reporting
CHICAGO (WBBM)  -- The streets of Chicago will be a sea of people Sunday morning as tens of thousands of runners participate in the annual Bank of America Chicago Marathon.

It was just two years ago when marathon officials were forced to cancel the 26.2 mile race due to extreme heat. The outcome is expected to be much different Sunday according to race director Carey Pinkowski thanks in part to what he calls ideal running weather.

"One of the things I'm excited about is that for the last two years we haven't seen the traditional cascade of people throwing clothes off and we capture all of those garments and they go to a local charity so that's a great piece of our event," Pinkowski said.

Nearly 36,000 runners, from all 50 state and 100 countries are participating in the event, which begins at 7:30 in Grant Park.

No parking zones will be enforced beginning at 1 a.m. Sunday.



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Thursday, October 1, 2009

The second-generation iPod Touch adds speaker and volume controls--and delivers one of the most polished media players available at a lower price

With its latest iteration of the iPod Touch, Apple has added two highly coveted features--external volume controls and a speaker--and lowered prices, too. However, the Touch's physical changes are incremental, and they don't bring the device up to the level of its sibling, the iPhone 3G.
To be sure, the lower prices make the Touch a more attractive purchase than before, coming in at $229 for 8GB (previously $299), $299 for 16GB, and $399 for 32GB (down from $499). The prices are more in line with what Apple and AT&T charge for the iPhone 3G: $199 for 8GB, and $299 for 16GB. (You don't have to pay a monthly fee to use the Touch, though.) While the amount is still more than what you might pay for competing media players, you get more with the Touch, too.

Let's begin with what stays the same. This version of the Touch continues to share many characteristics with the first-generation Touch and with the iPhone 3G. All have a bright, gorgeous, 3.5-inch, wide-screen multitouch display with 480-by-320-pixel resolution at 163 pixels per inch. All have 802.11b/g wireless support. And all sport the same operating system software that allows for easy navigation, a host of useful apps (Safari Web browser, calendar, e-mail, contacts, Google Maps, YouTube, weather, clock with multiple alarms and stopwatch, ordinary and scientific calculators, and notepad), and the ability to expand your device through Apple's App Store.

Playing music remains a breeze. Press the home button below the display to activate the screen, and then select Music from the dedicated buttons along the bottom of the screen. In vertical view, the music's cover art dominates the display; orient the player horizontally, and it switches to Cover Flow view, which lets you page through the cover art as if you were viewing a flip book.

In addition to easily setting playlists on the fly, you can now use the new Genius autoplaylist creation feature directly from the Touch. First you must enable this feature on iTunes 8; but once enabled, it makes creating a playlist from songs in your music library a snap. Genius won't work for every song--for example, if the song is not on iTunes' radar, or it lacks complete ID3 tags--but the feature is certainly a convenient, almost category-focused addition to the iPod Touch's repertoire.

Audio sounds adequate through the included earbuds, but you may want to consider upgrading, either to Apple's forthcoming, step-up $80 earphones or to a high-quality pair from a third-party vendor. The earphone jack remains at the bottom of the Touch, just as on the first-gen model; that's in contrast, oddly enough, to the iPhone 3G, which places the jack at the upper left of the unit.

You have good reason to upgrade your headphones: According to our tests, the second-generation iPod Touch improves its audio output dramatically, jumping up a notch to receive a rating of Superior on the PC World Test Center's suite of audio tests. The Touch, together with its new Nano sibling, are our new leaders in our audio output results.

According to Apple, the new Touch's battery life is significantly better for music playback: 36 hours, as compared with 22 hours for the first-generation model. Video playback is only a bit improved over the previous model, rated for 6 hours versus 5.

The Touch's physical design is slightly altered. The original model measured 4.3 inches tall by 2.4 inches wide and 0.33 inches deep; the new edition retains the height and width but shrinks the depth by a barely perceptible 0.03 of an inch (or half a millimeter). The new Touch is a smidgen lighter than the old, coming in at 4.05 ounces versus the first gen's weight of 4.2 ounces.

Leading the new hardware features for the Touch are the external volume controls. The rocker-like buttons are positioned along the upper-left side of the Touch, just as they are on the iPhone 3G. On this device, however, the buttons are made of a sharp, inexpensive-feeling black plastic. Though they're a welcome addition, I wish they better matched the overall feel of the metallic Touch. (Another button gripe: The home button feels chintzy when pressed, as it makes a clicking noise. The iPhone 3G's button operates far more smoothly, with no noise.)

The second-generation Touch also adds a speaker to the base of the unit, much like the iPhone 3G. But, again, the Touch is subpar in comparison: The sound is tinny and thin next to the audio emanating from the iPhone 3G; whether that is due to the iPhone 3G's differing construction (the iPhone has a plastic back, and is slightly deeper than the Touch) or owing to the speaker itself is unknown.

The third new hardware feature sees the integration of the Nike + iPod software and receiver (for capturing your movement data) into the Touch itself. Simply add the extra-cost Nike + iPod Sensor for your shoe, and the Touch becomes an appealing workout companion.

Still missing from the Touch are an integrated camera and GPS--both features found on the iPhone 3G. Also, it still lacks a voice recorder (a feature added back to the new iPod Nano) and--like all iPods--an FM tuner, although you can download apps (some at extra cost) to fill the voice-recording void and to gain Internet radio support (when you're connected over Wi-Fi).

Arguably, beyond the price drop, the big news about the Touch has nothing to do with the hardware and everything to do with the continuing evolution of the App Store, which offers plenty of games (700 and counting) among its arsenal. With the addition of games, the Touch widens its position as an entertainment platform.

The Touch remains a tremendous and innovative device, with enticing features, unparalleled ease of use, and plenty of expandability through the App Store. As attractive as it is, though, I still believe it has room to improve. New features coupled with lower prices increase the second-generation model's appeal, but this version of the Touch doesn't supply enough incentive for existing owners to upgrade.

Kimbo Slice foe Roy Nelson talks "Ultimate Fighter"

In a video interview I did in July with cast members of Spike TV's reality mixed martial arts fighting series, "The Ultimate Fighter: The Heavyweights," Roy Nelson discussed living in the same house with other fighters and how Kimbo Slice behaved.


Tonight, Nelson, also known as "Big Country" because of his inflatable belly, will fight Slice with the loser going home and the winner advancing toward December's live finale.

Filming of the Slice-Nelson fight had been completed by the time Nelson talked in this segment.

Although the mystery of how Slice fared remains, Ultimate Fighting Championship President Dana White told The Times earlier this month that Slice will remain in the UFC whether or not he wins the six-figure contract that comes with being "The Ultimate Fighter" champion.
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