Sep 30

Season 2 of Chuck aired last night and I have to say it was better than I expected!

One of the main reasons I think I'll enjoy this season is that Chuck has evolved into something more than the stereotypical "computer nerd". He seems to have a lot more confidence and is more of a take action kinda guy as opposed to the season 1 Chuck that couldn't tie his shoes without tripping over them. Chuck's attempts at wooing Sarah continue, paying off in this season opener when he manages to get her out on a real date -- high five Chuck, score one for the nerds!

A cameo appearance by Michael Clarke Duncan was a great choice for a bad guy. I always like Duncan as a bad guy (yeah that's right - even Daredevil - Ben Affleck really screwed that one up for everyone). Although when he uttered the words "Heebie Jeebies," it kinda threw me off for a second, making me wonder how many bad guys would actually say something like that. As for the storyline…just another day in the life of Chuck (the government harddrive for all their secrets) -- a couple of fight scenes with the gorgeous Sarah and Chuck being dangled over the railing by the bad guys. Other than the bad guy getting the "Heebie Jeebies" from his bosses, I thoroughly enjoyed this episode and hope that the rest are as good if not better.

Sep 30

If it is one thing a geek needs, it is electricity.  I can pretty much turn any computer at my disposal into a workstation -- but only if I can power it on first.  When the wind storms hit our area this month, I  first noticed at home.  No video games, no TV to watch, no video games(!!) -- what was a computer geek to do?

Well, first things first, I broke out my iPhone and checked on our client sites that are hosted at Peak10 in Louisville (we have others in Dallas).  They were up and responsive, and an email from Peak10 confirmed that though they were without power, the facility was running on their massive generators.  With clients safe, I next found out that our HQ at Bakery Square was down.  So, my home was out and my work was out and we were sitting at the beginning of one of the busiest weeks of the year for us because of The Cup Experience which had a website that needed a ton of updates as events unfolded.

But we actually didn't skip a beat.  Code can be written and even tested offline, so even without an internet connection I was still producing.  And when there was a connection, I could securely access any and all of my servers for day-to-day maintenance, backups, fixes and website changes with no problem.  In fact, my department was probably even more productive than normal simply because we didn't have the distractions we normally do during the course of the day.  No walk-ins to throw us off our game so to speak.

All in all, the CurrentMarketing Geeks had no problems with setting up mobile work spaces.  Sure, not having power at home was the biggest pain, but with my trusty Linux laptop, some ethernet cables and a switch I was able to set up shop first at my parents' house and another time at the apartment of one of the other programmers.  We just sat back and worked as normal -- the field changed, but the game stayed the same.

4 work days with no power later, I'm the first to know our offices have power.  Peak10 gives me a call to let me know they see my internet connections (dual-T1s) come back up at Bakery Square.  I drive down to confirm and then I send out a mass text message to all the employees to let them know to show up Friday morning.

Even without power, we're all still wired in somehow.

Sep 30

Since it's inception in 2005, Grey's Anatomy has been a big hit.  Also since 2005, the staff of Seattle Grace has been plagued with the same issues that just never seem to resolve themselves.  Dr. Derek Shepard and Dr. Meredith Grey can't seem to get it together, and almost every episode expresses this.  Why should this season be any different?

Now don't get me wrong.  I love this show!  And even though the plot never really seems to change, I'm glued to the TV every Thursday and probably will never stray.  Like most dramas, the characters have become friends of mine and I look forward to our time together.  But just like friends, I get annoyed with them, too.  Meredith has got to calm down.  Medication anyone?  When the icicle fell on Christina, I secretly wished it had fallen on Meredith to shut her up.  She has got to find something else to talk about.

The other original characters need a bit freshening up, too.  Just like in seasons before, Izzy is falling for Alex again, George is still the nervous and naive intern Christina is the most cynical person ever (although I really enjoy it). And just when you think Alex has turned into a nice person, he turns back into the jerk he truly is in the same episode.

The newer characters, however, have mixed it up a little.  Callie and Erica seem to be heading into a relationship together.  Callie also made an attempt at a new freezing procedure to bump Seattle Grace from number 12 in the rankings, but failed when the patient passed on the table.

I can't wait to see what the new season brings, and hopefully new life will be added to all that serve Seattle Grace.
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Sep 30

The opening episode was sure packed with heat, but left me with many questions.

To start, season five opened five years later. I guess the present was getting a little too predictable?

Brie is up to her old tricks. Susan is as emotionally tangled as ever. Lynette is trying to tame her family as she raises her teenagers and her teenager-at-heart husband. Edie is back and has found the perfect mate...a psycho husband. Gabi is battling self-esteem  issues and working through the same problem with her overweight daughter.

I cannot help but try and predict what the season will bring. So here is my desperate attempt to figure what will happen in the lives of these desperate housewives.

Brie is working hard on her new business, the only thing she has left to "baby." The business will fail (primarily because of her partner), but her relationship with her daughter will blossom. Her son will manage to get into some kind of trouble with the law and his secret lover and will somehow find a way to lay blame at his mother's feet for his mistakes.
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Sep 29

So a group of writers sit around thinking it'll be fun to make light of infidelity, compulsive sexual behavior, abortion, atheism, vehicular homicide.  That's how The Family Guy kicked off its 7th season last night.  Wait. Come to think of it, that's just about every episode of The Family Guy.

Oh yeah, then there's the episode's main story line about Brian the family dog avoiding sex with his new girlfriend (human, of course) who he met over the bookstore's last copy of The God Delusion. Hold on, Brian's always obsessing about some human on a sexual level.

Wrong enough for you yet?

Probably.  Unless you're a regular viewer.  Then it's just par for the course.  Nothing is sacred and everything is the object of humor.  I think that's why I have become a fan of Family Guy reruns over the past few months.  I feel a little guilty every half hour I give up, but it's usually good for more laughs than anything else on TV these days.

I especially appreciated what seemed to some an incredibly off-the-wall running gag of "boom goes the dynamite."  That reminds me of the time somebody in the office shared a video clip of a student newscaster from Ball State University.   Brian Collins became famous with his on-air display of his need for more study in Broadcasting class.   Turns out Brian did land a job in television journalism; my dad taught me that if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all, so I'll let you be the judge.

But I digress.  HA!  just like The Family Guy. That's part of its charm I guess.

Sep 29

The week before Hurricane Ike came traipsing through our city and took out our power here at CurrentMarketing, I was in a quandary. I deal with a lot of data, in the form of video and audio files mostly, and I have resisted buying a RAID storage system as being too expensive and complicated for my needs. When we first started editing video, all of our footage was delivered via tape. If I ever lost my digitized video due to hardware failure, I would just recapture from the physical media and order would be restored. About four years ago, however, we began shooting everything in HD, and the majority of our footage came to us via hard drives. Since we work primarily with compressed HD (DVC-Pro HD 720p), we can store our footage on external drives and work with the files over the firewire bus. So the more cost-effective solution was to purchase external drives and use them as if they were physical tape.

The only problem with that solution is that hard drives fail. So the digital assets need to be stored on at least two different drives, one of which should be in semi-active use. Eventually, I acquired an array of desktop hard drives that increased my storage capacity to more than 4 Tb, but became increasingly unwieldy to manage. Which footage was on which drive? At first, there was a plan, and certainly good intentions, but with a heavy workload, quick decisions had to be made and organization went out the window.

A few weeks I received an email touting a device called the Drobo, an appliance that was essentially a RAID storage system that needed no management, which appealed to me, because my head is so full already, I didn't want to learn about RAID management. What the Drobo does is give me a storage device with multiple drives that automatically backs up my data. If I need more storage, I just purchase larger drives and put them in the Drobo, and voila! No more worries.

So we purchased a 4 Tb Drobo, and I began to fill it with all my digital-only assets. Two days later the power went out. Fortunately, I had no pressing deadlines at the time, so I decided to wait until the power came back on. I got to take the kids to the zoo, I got to spend time with my wife, I occasionally had to come down to the office and help make plans for accommodating the workflow. But as the days dragged on, it became more apparent that I would eventually have to find a way to power up the computer and get some stuff done. Almost everything I do is digital. Without a computer, I'm idle, and I had projects that were beginning to nag for my attention.

I carefully weighed my options. I could run my rig off of a generator, but that would eat gas, be environmentally unfriendly and would act like a countdown clock - gotta finish before the gas runs out! I could harness the energy of all these kids and dogs that tend to lope around here, put them all on a big hamster wheel, hook that up to a turbine that turns a generator... but that's too much effort to set up. At last, facing deadlines, I hauled my CPU, extra-big monitor and almost all of my hard drives home. It took me about 2 hours to break down, pack up, transport and set up in the bowels of my house, but by dinnertime, I was ready.

36 hours later the power came on. I had only got one solid day of work done in my basement, and I came down to make sure the power was on in my office before hauling everything back down to Bakery Square. By 11am, I was back in business and ready to check my Facebook page again.

So lessons learned: electricity is a good thing; it's worth the time and money to buy a storage solution that is compact and self-saving; and when the infrastructure collapses, I may still be able to make a living lifting heavy things.

Sep 26

I happily raised my hand to critique the new version of a show from my childhood. Knight Rider. I thought watching an old favorite that has been updated with a kick-ass car, based off a new Mustang Shelby GT500KR would be fun.

But sometime over the last 20 years, KITT turned into a full-blown transformer. What? Yeah. Within the first 5 minutes, KITT (Knight Industries Three Thousand) transformed into a dragster, a pickup truck and something that resembled a hovercraft!? You know, special effects are cool – being an artist, a lot of times I will watch a movie specifically for that reason – but damn, this was an assault on the senses. I made it to the first commercial break before deleting the episode from my DVR.

You know, I guess the original '82-'86 series  may have been cheesy too (what wasn't in the 80's?), but the new series adds about 10 layers of special effects' cheese. At least in the old days we had the Hoff. Thanks for ruining a childhood memory.

Sep 26

I will now attempt to write about the Heroes premiere without spoiling anything for those of you who have DVR'd it and not watched it yet (this one's for you, Jim Bag).

Big ups and big downs, to sum it up:

Big ups:
- The Mohinder/Maya narrative, particularly what Suresh does after his experiments. Without spoiling it (since that's what I committed to), I loved the fabulous effects.
- The Sylar/Clare scenario, for two reasons. First, I have always been irritated with the Clare character, so felt a slight twinge of glee when she got what she got. Getting to see Sylar's talent in action was just the foam on the Frappuccino (that's not really a spoiler, Jim).
- The shooter revelation - as big, if not bigger, than who shot JR.
- Weevil. Brilliant. Shout out to Veronica Mars!
- Mama Petrelli has a power and it is enormous in the Heroes universe.
- Sylar, Mama Petrelli and Peter's relationship takes a new twist, which informs the bond/conflict between Gabriel and Peter on a whole new level.

Big downs:
- Peter and Clare. Come on, Clare - you can't do that to Peter! He can stop time AND spontaneously heal. Either power pretty much makes him invincible.
- Whiny Elle (shout out number two to V. Mars!). I love Kristen Bell, but her character is a self-important spoiled rich kid. I hated that kid in high school.
- Speedster. Cliche power. Faster than a speeding bullet! Yep, that one's been done. And it was pretty early in the development of the most iconic superhero in history.

Overall, I'd give the ep a reserved thumbs up. A lot of discoveries and many plot entanglements will keep me watching this season, at least for the next few. I'm hoping that good things are coming to those who wait...because I'm waiting.

Sep 26

On Wednesday night,  I bypassed the Prez and tuned in to watch the series premier of Gary Unmarried.  I can see why his wife left him.  Gary is predictable, a little boring and kind of looks like Barney Rubble.

Gary is freshly divorced and has two kids.  He and his wife have joint custody and are learning to live as newly single, single parents.  The opening scene shows Gary and a one-nighter that he picked up.  They wake up to his ex dropping off the kids.  The one-nighter is upset that Gary didn't tell her he was previously married and has two kids.  Later it's revealed that the one-nighter also has a kid, but after a brief session with a relationship counselor, who also happens to be Gary's ex-wife's new fiancée, they decide that it was no big deal and they are going to give it a whirl.

Everything about the first episode was predictable, from the ex-wife's engagement to the marriage counselor to Gary and the one-nighter's new relationship.  At one point I wondered if the audience was laughing because they were just giddy to see the taping of a show live or if the "laugh" sign was lit up.  The most enjoyable character is Tommy, who is Gary's 12-year-old son.  He has the best comedic timing of anyone on the show and the least dysfunctional one as well.

While this was not one of my favorite premiers this year, it could potentially do well.  I think that the first show is always awkward because the writers have to explain who the people are and how they got to this point.  But what do I know...I didn't like the first episode of Two and a Half Men either!

Sep 25

So far I'm 2.5 hours in to the 5 hour/3 day premier of Dancing with the Stars' 7th season.  There's another 1.5 hours of cha-chas on my DVR and I'll tune in for a 5th hour tonight.  The length of the first half of the season is the only negative about this show!  Does anything really need to be on for three nights in a row?  Well, maybe Entourage.  I could watch Ari scream at Lloyd every single day for a month and not get tired of it!  Anyway...

Season 7 has one of the best casts yet.  The 13 stars are: Lance Bass (member of NSYNC), Toni Braxton (remember "Unbreak My Heart"?), Brooke Burke (model and reality TV host), Rocco DiSpirito (famous chef that I've never heard of), Maurice Greene (Olympic gold medalist from back in the day), Kim Kardashian (former Paris Hilton BFF and reality show star), Cloris Leachman (82-year-old Emmy winning actress and freaking hilarious), Cody Linley (18-year-old actor on Hannah Montana), Susan Lucci (the queen of daytime), Misty May-Treanor (volleyballer that scored gold in Beijing), Ted McGinley (Marcy D'Arcy's husband on Married with Children), Jeff Ross (comedian that's somewhat funny) and Warren Sapp (former quarterback killer for Tampa Bay).

Most of the celebrity dancers busted their moves pretty well.  After seeing one dance from everyone it seems that Lance, Toni and Brooke have emerged as the faves.  Warren Sapp is right up there too.  You have to love a graceful 300-pounder.  He would make former DWTS champ Emmitt Smith very proud!  Cloris Leachman won her fair share of votes by hiking her leg up on the table in front of Bruno (the judge that you can barely understand), then sitting on Carrie Ann's lap after her first dance, and making ABC censor her reaction after she didn't approve of the scores that she received.  This cast seems to have a great mix of personalities that are going to be a lot of fun to watch.

The actual dancing is probably the element of the show that I enjoy the least, even though it is completely awesome.  I think I watch mostly to root on the celebs that I like (Go Kim Kardashian!) and for the amazing outfits everyone wears.  The must have a huge double-sided tape budget!

My prediction is that the winner of the silver disco ball will be...Toni Braxton.  The 7th season is sure to be followed by many more seasons of boogieing B and C list celebrities, but if anybody at ABC is reading this, let's try to cut this down to 3 hours or less per week.  Five hours is a little much, unless you can recruit Jeremy Piven.  Then, by all means, dance away!

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