Archived entries for TV

Watch Streaming Online Shows On Your HDTV

No GravatarHave you ever had a rough day at work and then went home and fell asleep minutes before the episode of “Lost” that was going to explain the entire series? What is a guy to do when he forgets to Tivo or DVR his favorite show? Do you run over to the neighbors house and beg him to transfer it to a VHS tape? No way!!!! You can always go to ABC.com and watch it on your computer screen. You’ve most likely already spent eight hours in front of a computer monitor at work, but what other options do you have?

You can always hook up your computer to your HDTV and watch it on your full sized television screen. Now that sounds like a much better plan of action. It only takes a few minutes and two cables to get the setup working.

Here is a short video that I shot that may(or may not) help you.

*Note: The video was put together in only a few minutes, so the first segment that shows the PC and Audio inputs is on the rear of the television. This was not explained very well in the video.

    Lost 4×05 The Constant Official Promo

    No GravatarSneak Peek #1

    Sneak Peek #2

    “What is happening”?

    Other than the certainty that Elizabeth Mitchell as Juliet Burke looks hot (for someone who has been running around in a grimy island all this time) there are more question coming. What will happen if the helicopter doesn’t stay on course. Daniel Faraday hints at some “side affects”. Well if you saw Gia (with Elizabeth Mitchell and Angelina Jolie) can we expect the same? Probably not, but a dude can hope.

      Lost 4×05 The Constant Preview

      No Gravatar

      “What the bloody hell is going on?”

      Good question…

      Word has it that it will be a Desmond centered episode.

      Stay tune for more…

        Miley Cyrus Seat Belt Flap Debated..Enough Already

        No Gravatar

        NEW YORK (AP) — When Consumer Reports posted a blog last week criticizing Miley Cyrus for not wearing her seat belt in a new film, Hannah Montana Nation rallied in her defense. Before long, the posting had received nearly 200 comments (far more than the typical one or two) – and made national news.

        “Absolutely we were caught off-guard,” said Don Mays, who wrote the post. “Whether people agree or not with our analysis, at the very least, I would like them to understand the risk.”

        But anyone looking for car safety tips from Hollywood would be advised to avoid most movies. Immediately, one might write off the work of Bruce Willis, Steve McQueen and Burt Reynolds – not to mention avoid “Thelma & Louise” entirely.

        Even aside from Hollywood’s propensity for road rage, movies generally don’t portray seat-belt usage. A study in 2001 found that only 30 percent of movies showed seat belts buckled.

        Was Cyrus singled out?

        “Absolutely,” said Heather A. Jacobsen, a professor at the Saint Louis University School of Public Health and lead investigator of the 2001 study. “It is the norm for characters in movies to not wear a seat belt.”

        In her new 3-D Disney concert film “Hannah Montana & Miley Cyrus: Best of Both Worlds Concert,” the actress and her father, Billy Ray Cyrus, are seen riding, not bucked up, in the back seat of a Range Rover.

        Mays’ post criticized Cyrus for not buckling up and thereby influencing her legion of young followers. It had a snarky title, too: “Note to Hannah Montana: Seat belts are necessary not an accessory.”

        Billy Ray Cyrus subsequently apologized: “We made a mistake and forgot to buckle our seat belts.”

        Mays said that Cyrus has a greater responsibility to her impressionable fans. To explain the issue’s seriousness, he cited statistics from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that people were not wearing their belts in 55 percent of passenger vehicle fatalities in 2006.

        The effects of sex and violence in films, of course, have been an issue of debate for decades. The closer parallel, though, might be smoking.

        Smoking on television and in movies has declined over the years, partly thanks to campaigns to drive it off screen. Just this week, the New York state Health Department took out full page ads in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal encouraging the movie industry to give movies with smoking an R-rating.

        According to the Motion Picture Association of America rating board, the percentage of films that included smoking dropped from 60 percent to 52 percent from July 2004 to July 2006.

        But the romantic portrayals of smoking (think Humphrey Bogart lighting Lauren Bacall’s cigarette) don’t exactly compare to the more utilitarian buckling up. No protagonist ever got the girl by flaunting state seat belt laws.

        “It’s not so much that people mimicked the behavior, but because films established that behavior as very normal and something everybody did,” said Jacobsen.

        That is out of line with the pattern of seat-belt usage by the public, which Jacobsen’s study counted as about 70 percent. (In many states, it’s the law to buckle up.) The reason for the discrepancy may be suggested in Billy Ray Cyrus’ explanation.

        “We got caught up in the moment of filming,” said the country music star.

        Family films typically give seat belts more attention. In 1995’s “Toy Story,” for example, even Buzz Lightyear buckles up with a belt nearly as big as he is. A 1997 study by Michigan State University found that one of the most seat belt-friendly movies was “Dead Man Walking” (1995), which depicts buckled-up drivers in five of the film’s six driving scenes.

        So how far should movies go in putting forth images of health and safety?

        “People may want to see more vegetables in film and less fast food. Less soda, and more milk or juice,” said Jacobsen. “There are any number of health issues whose agendas can be set forth through movies.”

        Robert Thompson, professor of television and popular culture at Syracuse University, believes safety and health advocates have every right to raise awareness for an issue by criticizing films or TV shows. But he thinks concerns over seat belt use should stick to reality and keep out of fiction.

        “If you’re going to start strapping any storyteller, whether it be a movie or a television show or a novel with only behavior that’s good and healthy role-modeling behavior,” said Thompson, “then we’re in really big trouble.”

          ‘Lost’: Mind-Blowing Scoop From Its Producers

          No GravatarSource: ew.com
          By Jeff Jensen

          Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse tell Doc Jensen what they’ll answer this season, how they’re handling the time/space plot, what’s relevant (or irrelevant) to the story, and more…

          THE TEASE!
          If I had to sum up tonight’s episode in one word, it would be ”Kate.” If I had to choose two, it would be ”Dharma bums.” Three words? They would be ”Deals with devils.” And if I had to pick four or more, I’d say, ”Let’s just ask executive producer Damon Lindelof.”

          ”Remember last week when you were left wondering if Ben was a member of the Oceanic 6? Well, the last line of dialogue of this episode will cause the fans to ask a very similar question.”

          Okay, since you brought it up, Damon: Is Ben a member of the Oceanic 6?

          ”Nothing precludes him from being a member of the Oceanic 6 — other than he wasn’t on the plane,” says Lindelof. ”But he does have a room full of documents and passports. He could have just, you know, done some research and doctored some records and adopted the identity of someone on the plane — someone with no family or friends who would know otherwise. So who’s to say he isn’t?”

          So…when will we know for certain?

          ”By the end of the seventh episode, the audience will now know who the Oceanic 6 are.”

          Well, whaddyaknow: a Doc Jensen column with some genuinely useful information for a change! And guess what?

          We’re just getting started. Read More…



            eXTReMe Tracker

            Copyright © 2004–2009. All rights reserved.

            RSS Feed. This blog is proudly powered by Wordpress and uses Modern Clix, a theme by Rodrigo Galindez.