Showing posts with label u2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label u2. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Too Much Information, Part One

Jaquandor answered these questions at Byzantium's Shores last week and it's been a while since I've done one of these too. They're good questions, though I've edited them for length and...well, timeliness, I guess. The original questions included the inspiration for asking them and - as Jaquandor points out - that dated the thing in a way it didn't need to.

So here's more than you wanted to know about me.

1. Have you ever been bothered by a TV show or movie series changing actors who play a character you love?



Not recently. When I was a kid, I remember losing whatever interest I had in Days of Our Lives when they swapped out Bo Bradys. Bo was pretty cool and I couldn’t buy the new actor. I guess they changed him back eventually, but my Days curiosity was always shaky at best, so I never came back.

The one that still bothers me is another old one: all the Felix Leiters in the James Bond movies. Some people think that replacing Felix actors every movie is funny or somehow endearing, but it’s not. Felix is a cool character in the novels and it bugs me that none of the movie fans know who I’m talking about because they can’t put a face to him. I was thrilled when Jeffrey Wright showed up again for Quantum of Solace, but it's too bad the character apparently isn’t in Skyfall at all.

2. What are some things people should know before spending time with you?



My eyes will begin to glaze over the moment you start talking about sports and I’ll have completely checked out by the time that conversation reaches the 30-second mark.

3. What is something you often do without realizing that you're doing it?



According to my wife, I have a Look. It’s the one that says you’re making absolutely no sense and I’m going to stop listening to you in 3…2…1…

This is related to Question No. 2. I’m an introvert and interacting with people one-on-one is hard work for me. Sometimes - though I try hard to hide it - I just don’t have the energy. I do a much better job at hiding it when I’m with people I don’t know that well though. Which leads me to…

4. Who has the capacity to make you angrier than anyone else in your life, and what in particular does he or she do to make you so angry?



My wife. I’m not going to get into particulars, because they aren’t important. Everyone has buttons that – when pushed – will get them going and I’m no different. Diane and I have a fantastic relationship and work hard not to push each other’s buttons, but when you’ve been married for a while (fifteen years for us, so far), you’re inevitably going to slip up every once in a while. I’d much rather focus on and celebrate how much we’ve been able to become a smoothly functioning team, but the question is about who has the capacity to tick you off and that’s always going to be the person you’re closest to.

5. If a fairy waved a magic wand and gave you the house of your dreams, where would it be and what features would it have?



A castle on the Scottish coast, but with central heat and air conditioning, and a modern kitchen and bathrooms. Also, a fireplace large enough to walk into.

6. What’s a belief that you hold with which many people disagree?



I’ve never had a conversation with anyone with whom I’ve seen totally eye-to-eye about God. I believe that the universe didn’t just happen – that it had to come from somewhere – but I don’t believe that the Genesis account should be read literally as an answer to that question. I also believe that the central message of Christianity is that people are supposed to love and take care of each other, but when I look at Christianity at large, I feel very alone in that interpretation.

7. If you were talking in your sleep tonight, what do you think you would say?



“I’ll nail yer suckers to the mast, ye scurvy squid!” (Totally stole that image from Stephen Keane. I'm sorry.)

8. Have you ever attended a midnight premiere showing of a movie?



I used to do this all the time, but as it became standard practice for theaters to run midnight showings, it became less of an event and I lost interest. By “event,” I mean an event for me personally. Obviously it’s still an event for a lot of people, but it became less fun for me and I’m rarely so excited about a new movie that I’ve got to see it the second it comes out. The last one may have been Pirates of the Caribbean 3, but I don’t rightly recall.

I could see myself doing it for The Hunger Games, though. I’m pretty stoked about that one.

9. How would you react if you saw, “Caution exotic animals; stay in your vehicle,” displayed on a road sign?



I’d roll up those windows and keep an eye out, but I’m not a panicky person. If I actually saw a tiger or something, I’d probably stop to gawk, depending on the animal’s mood.

10. If a company opened a theme park aimed at adults, what would you name one of the rides?



Alien vs. Predator: The Hunt. You would, of course, be the prey.

11. Imagine you just moved onto Sesame Street. Which puppet would you want as your new roommate?



I have a low tolerance for drama and shenanigans, so I’ll go with Kermit. He’s funny, but grounded.

12. Have you ever had a weird crush on a famous person that didn't make sense to you?



Matt Damon, because I’m straight. I understand all my crushes on famous women.

13. If you get ten minutes to interview any celebrity of your choice, who would you like it to be?



Bono. I’m currently reading his Conversation with Michka Assayas, so that may answer most of the actual questions I’ve got, but he was a hugely influential force on my life in my twenties, so I’d also just like to meet him.

14. You've just won the complete DVD collection of all the movies starring one actor or actress. Which actor/actress would you pick?



I used to try to collect all the movies by actors I liked. I accumulated a ton of stuff by Harrison Ford, Kenneth Branagh, and Sandra Bullock, but eventually learned that – like with all artists – I didn’t care for every single thing they did. But since I’m winning this and not buying it, the Johnny Depp collection probably has the most movies in it that I’d re-watch again and again.

15. What is something you've said through social media and then regretted it?



Most of this post.

16. What musician would you be most interested in learning behind-the-scenes facts about?



Someone new that I don’t know much about. Like Brite Futures. I’m curious about their influences and their name change from Natalie Portman’s Shaved Head.

17. If you stumbled across someone's personal written journal that was accidentally left in a public place, would you read any of the content?



Just enough to see if I could tell who it was in order to return it to them. I’m not naturally curious about other people’s personal stuff.

18. What is the title of a self-help book that you'd never want to see on a store bookshelf?



Develop Jedi Self-Confidence: Unleash the Force within You. Oh, crap.

19. Which Halloween costume do you think will be overdone this year?



Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter

20. Should a marriage license have a renewal date or expiration date, like a driver’s license?



I understand the reason for the question, but no. Actually, I’m not convinced we should have marriage licenses at all. I’m not a Libertarian, but marriage is a relationship that I’m not convinced that government (or a church, for that matter) should have any say about. Like most of life, we’ve overcomplicated something that’s very simple in concept (though extremely tough to execute in practice).

Sunday, May 16, 2010

My Favorite Musician: Bono



Like Casablanca, this is another favorite of mine that also happens to be a favorite of most of the rest of the world. I would've chosen the entire band, but the item on the list I'm working from said "musician" and I interpret that as being a single person. It's hard not to also include the Edge, Larry, and Adam, but if I have to pick one, Bono's an easy choice.

I discovered U2 in 1984 or 1985 after The Unforgettable Fire came out, but that wasn't the album that did it for me. My brother brought home a copy of Under a Blood Red Sky and between the two of us we wore that thing out. It was a cassette tape, so we literally wore it out, having to rebuy it at least once. Rather than sending us to U2's back catalog though, Under a Blood Red Sky led us to The Unforgettable Fire, which I didn't like quite as much except for "Pride" and the title track. I especially liked the video for "The Unforgettable Fire" with the band walking through the snow (a common theme for them, I guess) and a carousel that turns into a mushroom cloud at a particularly dramatic musical moment.

I don't know exactly what it was about them that I connected to. I was into New Wave and the Poppier side of Punk at the time, so I guess they fit into that niche. I do know that at the time my interest in them was entirely musical. I just loved those damn songs. By 1987, I was watering at the mouth for a new album from them and The Joshua Tree didn't disappoint.

I go on far too long about all this after the break.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Happy Bono Day!



Bono's turning 50 today. Happy Birthday, Old Friend Whom I've Never Met!

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Music Meme: 2004

Continuing my list of favorite albums from every year I've been alive.

2004

U2: How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb



In 2004, the light appeared at the end of my dark tunnel of adult contemporary music. The best radio station in the history of mankind wouldn't go on the air until the following year, but at least I had the best U2 album since The Joshua Tree to keep me company until then.

Riot on an Empty Street by Kings of Convenience was also released this year, but I wouldn't learn about it until 2005 thanks to the Current. It's a great album to chill to, has a fantastic single ("I'd Rather Dance With You"), and it introduced me to Faust.

But U2 had "Vertigo."



Runners Up:
Kings of Convenience: Riot on an Empty Street

Singles:
The Killers: "Somebody Told Me"

Sunday, August 02, 2009

Music Meme: 2000

Continuing my list of favorite albums from every year I've been alive.

2000

U2: All That You Can't Leave Behind



The Year 2000. Wow. Remember when all the computers crashed and the world blew up?

After a couple of disappointing albums (especially Pop), I was thrilled to hear U2 go back to a sound I recognized and loved. I'd gotten away from buying new U2 albums on the day they came out, but as single after great single was released for this one, I got more and more excited.

It's not one of my favorites of their albums, but that's probably because it was so overplayed on the radio that year. "Beautiful Day" is an excellent song, but all these years later I still never find myself thinking, "Boy, I sure would like to hear that again."

A really close runner-up to this record is a-ha's Minor Earth Major Sky. Actually, I replay the a-ha album much more than the U2 one, but I didn't realize it existed until a few years later. All That You Can't Leave Behind, on the other hand, is the year 2000 for me, musically speaking.

And "Elevation" is a song that I still can't get enough of.

U2 - Elevation


Runners Up:
a-ha: Minor Earth Major Sky
Richard Cheese: Lounge Against the Machine

Singles:
Coldplay: "Yellow"
The Dandy Warhols: "Bohemian Like You"
Doves: "Catch the Sun"
Nelly Furtado: "I'm Like a Bird"
Nelly Furtado: "Turn Off the Light"
Matchbox Twenty: "Bent"

Thursday, July 30, 2009

August Theatrical Releases: What Looks Good

Ooh! And I didn't wait until two weeks into August to post these this time!



Here's what I'm looking forward to (or at least mildly curious about) next month.

7 August

Julie and Julia: I love Amy Adams. And Meryl Streep looks like a hoot as Julia Childs. But mostly, I love Amy Adams.

Shorts: I liked the Spy Kids movies, so I'm hoping that I'll find something to enjoy in this too. The crocodile, if nothing else.

A Perfect Getaway: This could go a couple of different ways: cool, island thriller or lame, stalker horror flick. Either one's going to have Milla Jovovich doing a little butt kicking in the tropics though, so yeah, I'm interested.

G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra: Come on. How bad could it be?

Okay, in all serious, I've got zero expectations that this will be any better than Transformers 2 or even Van Helsing, so there's a miniscule chance that it'll pleasantly surprise by achieving some level of not-that-badness. Really though, the only reasons I'm even curious about it are the undersea headquarters and the combat subs.

14 August

Ponyo: A combination of Hayao Miyazaki and undersea fantasy can't be anything other than wonderful.

The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard: Stupid title, but I love Jeremy Piven when he's playing a butthole. And the trailer for this looks really funny.

It Might Get Loud: (limited release) I wish this was just about the Edge. Just saying. Update: Okay, I just watched the trailer and that first comment was a stupid thing to say. I'm initially interested in this solely because of the Edge, but it's really really cool seeing him interact with Jimmy Page and Jack White. I expect I'll come out of the movie with a greater appreciation for both of those guys.

21 August

Inglorious Basterds: It's Tarantino, Brad Pitt, and WWII. Pretty much can't go wrong.

Post Grad: What can I say? I miss Rory.

28 August

Halloween II: I only mildly enjoyed Rob Zombie's remake of the original, but I'm enough of a Halloween fan that I'll have to see this.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Music Meme: 1988

I'm at MicroCon all day tomorrow, so I'm posting this tonight.

Continuing my list of favorite albums from every year I've been alive.

1988

The Church: Starfish



If I'd been compiling this list in 1988, I would've picked Rattle and Hum. I went away to college in the fall of this year and my music allowance suddenly went down to almost zero, but I remember - still riding the high from Joshua Tree - walking six miles or so from campus to the movie theater to see Rattle and Hum on opening night. And I loved the movie, but mostly because it let me re-live seeing the band live the previous year.

I bought the album, but none of the songs grabbed me the way The Joshua Tree did. I thought they were pretty cool, but Rattle and Hum was never a "real" U2 album for me. I still don't even have it on CD. But, in 1988 U2 was more religion than entertainment for me and I would've faithfully told you that it was my favorite album from that year.

It certainly wouldn't have been a-ha's Stay on These Roads. With the exception of the title track and the theme from The Living Daylights, I was pretty disappointed in that album. I appreciate it a lot more now, but back then I figured that a-ha was almost done. Little did I know they'd keep putting out albums, but I wouldn't learn about them until 2003 or so.

The 1988 album I still listen to most is easily Starfish. New Wave was pretty much dead and "alternative" music (though I hate that name) was the next best thing. Especially if you put bagpipes in your song. It was like Big Country all over again! (Okay, I know now that they aren't really bagpipes, but I didn't know that then.)

The Church - Under the Milky Way



Runners up:
a-ha: Stay on These Roads
Enya: Watermark
Robert Plant: Now and Zen
She's Having a Baby Soundtrack
U2: Rattle and Hum

Singles:

Paula Abdul: "Straight Up"
DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince: "Parents Just Don't Understand"
Information Society: "What's on Your Mind (Pure Energy)"
Living Colour: "Cult of Personality"
Pet Shop Boys: "Always on My Mind"
The Primitives: "Crash"
Robyn Hitchcock and the Egyptians: "Balloon Man"
Roxette: "The Look"
Siouxsie and the Banshees: "Peek-a-Boo"
The Timelords: "Doctorin the Tardis"

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Music Meme: 1987

Continuing my list of favorite albums from every year I've been alive.

1987

U2: The Joshua Tree



Easy choice. Though I ended up overplaying it - along with the rest of the world - I played it that much because it was nearly a religious experience for me. Seeing the band live that year at Tampa Bay Stadium was a religious experience. I only thought I loved U2 before this album came out.

I remember that I liked this New Wave girl at the time and our second date was the night after The Joshua Tree came out. She was also a big U2 fan, so I didn't listen to the album as soon as I bought it. I saved it and the two of us went out to a cemetery that night to listen to it together. (Incidentally, our first date had been to see Sid and Nancy; our third date was watching Clockwork Orange - her favorite movie; my first time seeing it - on the VCR at my house. Such a cool, strange girl.)

I don't play The Joshua Tree a lot anymore. Although I still like U2, they never reached this pinnacle again for me and it makes me kind of sad to listen to it knowing that later on they'd be writing songs for Batman and Robin and making albums like Pop.

But then I hear something like this and I'm transported again:



Runners up:
Belinda Carlisle: Heaven on Earth
The Cult: Electric
The Cure: Kiss Me Kiss Me Kiss Me
Cutting Crew: Broadcast
Def Leppard: Hysteria
Echo & the Bunnymen: Echo & the Bunnymen
Fleetwood Mac: Tango in the Night
Guns n' Roses: Appetite for Destruction
Icehouse: Man of Colours
Men Without Hats: Pop Goes the World
George Michael: Faith
Midnight Oil: Diesel and Dust
Sinead O'Connor: The Lion and the Cobra
Pet Shop Boys: Actually
Prince: Sign o' the Times
R.E.M.: Document
The Smiths: Louder than Bombs
Some Kind of Wonderful soundtrack
Sting: ...Nothing Like the Sun

Singles:

Aerosmith: "Dude Looks Like a Lady"
Aerosmith: "Ragdoll"
The Bangles: "Hazy Shade of Winter"
Georgia Satellites: "Keep Your Hands to Yourself"
INXS: "Never Tear Us Apart"
M/A/R/R/S: "Pump Up the Volume"
Simply Red: "The Right Thing"
Sisters of Mercy: "This Corrosion"
10,000 Maniacs: "Peace Train"
T'Pau: "Heart and Soul"

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Music Meme: 1983

Continuing my list of favorite albums from every year I've been alive.

1983

U2: Under a Blood Red Sky



I'm breaking my own rules in picking this one because I didn't actually discover it until the following year. But it's such an important album to me, because it launched a long-term infatuation with U2. Even though there was other music I was listening to in 1983 instead of this one, I can't in good conscience pick them over this. Even though (or because) it's a live album and not a studio record, it's one of my favorite recordings of all time.

My brother was actually the one who brought this home, but I borrowed it from him and didn't give it back for about a year. I remember carrying it around in my Walkman at high school to listen to between classes.

Can't embed the video, but here's the Blood Red Sky version of "Sunday Bloody Sunday."

I have to embed something though, so here's a song from an album I was actually listening to in 1983.



Runners up:
Big Country: The Crossing
David Bowie: Let's Dance
Genesis: Genesis
Billy Idol: Rebel Yell

Singles:
Culture Club: "Karma Chameleon"
Def Leppard: "Rock of Ages"
The Eurythmics: "Here Comes the Rain Again"
Men at Work: "Dr. Heckyll and Mr. Jive"
Men at Work: "It's a Mistake"
The Romantics: "Talking in Your Sleep"
Styx: "Mr. Roboto"
Spandau Ballet: "True"
"Weird Al" Yankovic: "Another One Rides the Bus"
Yes: "Owner of a Lonely Heart"
Yes: "Leave It"

Edited to add: Rebel Yell by Billy Idol; "Mr. Roboto" by Styx

Friday, March 14, 2008

Videos du Jour: Batman themes

Speaking of Batman: man, he's had a lot of theme songs over the years. I only really like two of them (both from the current The Batman cartoon), but lets check them all out anyway, okay? Okay.





This one's not embeddable, but it's the cartoon version I grew up with, so I like it. Even with Bat-Mite.



This one was done by the Edge, so it's automatically a favorite.



But -- Bono forgive me -- I actually like this one better. One of my favorite TV themes of all time.



Rest in Peace, The Batman cartoon. Can't wait to see what the next version's like.

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