Friday, June 13, 2008

Television Worth Watching

I'm a pretty big fan of television. There's nothing I like more than kicking back on the couch with a bag of chips and a can of pop, ready to waste a couple hours watching The Simpsons, That 70s Show, or Lost. With the lack of pertinent prime time recently, though, I've been a bit disappointed with TV's offerings. But this past Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, I was able to catch a mini-series corroboration between GlobalTV and the BBC called Burn Up.

The story is set in the not so distant future, when leaders from developing nations are meeting in Calgary for a summit on the new "Kyoto 2" agreement, concerning carbon trading and caps, among other things. The main characters are the CEO of a fictional oil company in Britain (Rupert Penry-Jones), the "minister of renewables" recently hired by said company (Neve Campbell), and the marketing spin doctor in charge of way too much (Bradley Whitford).

Throw in a dedicated and passionate aboriginal woman (Sandrine Holt) with a burning message for the oil tycoons and her attempt to grab attention by burning herself alive, and you've got the makings of a brilliant, relevant, thought-provoking four hours of television. Her suicide letter included hard facts on climate change affects to her people, and six simple and moving words. "Think of me when you lie."

The show was a fascinating look into government politics. At one point I said to myself, "Is that how summit meetings work?" I can only assume it is... and I was impressed. Much more organised than any House of Commons gathering in Ottawa. Even the way the US filibustered the new agreement was orderly, albeit frustrating as hell.

In the end, the good guys won, but the US still got their way. We saw dramatic changes of opinion from more than a couple characters, learned of the possibility of waning oil reserves in the Middle East, and were shocked by the fictional (or is it?) readiness of the US government to "eliminate" any high-profile opposition. Eye-opening, to be sure. If you can find it online, I highly recommend you watch it. (Or not, since watching streaming video of previously aired programs is now illegal, stupid mofos.)

Oh, and if you're American, don't expect to see this on the local airwaves anytime soon. I'm not surprised by this at all. And as a bonus, I found some pics on Flickr from the film set taken last November:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/thivierr/sets/72157602894699044/

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Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Weekend Update

This past weekend was fun and tiring all at the same time.

Friday night we started out by pre-drinking at James' place...

Gathered, Waiting

And then we went to celebrate Colin's 30th at Lot 16. It was awesome to see all of his old buddies there, and the whole bar sang to him when the cake was brought out (I think most people at the bar were there to see Colin spin anyways). It almost brought a tear to my eye!

Saturday morning Stef and I woke up early to go get some free compost from the city...

Free Compost

Saturday night the weather was crappy, so I watched movies all day. The Princess Bride, some Sex and the City episodes (season three)... and I rented The Last King of Scotland and The Queen. Both were just meh.

Sunday Stef came over and we worked on the garden some more...

Overview

Sunday night I vegged out in front of the TV. Gotta watch The Simpsons!

The weekend continued last night with a BBQ at Clark's place. There was lots of meat...

Passionate BBQing


All in all, a weekend well spent. Here's a link to more photos:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/ravenswift/

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Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Happy Wednesday

Cameron, the chic on House, said it best last night:

"Valentine's Day is for people who are paired up. For every one else, it's just a Wednesday."

Also, for anyone who watched House last night, I WISH I could say (to anyone) what Cameron said to Chase at the end of the episode. Hmmm... now I've got you guessing, don't I?

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