Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Culch.ie can feck off

This?



Never going to happen. Despite what he says. Or she does.

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Newstalk: Dr Horrible's Sing-Along Blog



Tonight on Culture Shock, the Newstalk 106 Arts and Culture show with Fionn Davenport, we're discussing the internet mini-series, Dr Horrible's Sing-Along Blog.

Aspiring super-villain Dr. Horrible wants to join the Evil League of Evil and win the heart of Penny, the girl of his dreams, but his nemesis, Captain Hammer, stops him at every turn in this three-part musical.
The three part movie was written by writer/director Joss Whedon, creator and head writer of the well-known and popular television programs Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly.

Recognise the main actor - Neil Patrick Harris? Once upon a time he used to be Doogie Howser, M.D!

The Arts and Culture show is on Newstalk 106-108fm from 7pm. You can listen live through this link.

Have a look at the show. Let me know what you think of it!


Wednesday, June 11, 2008

La la la la la la, la la la la la

They're making a Smurfs movie!


Image taken from here

According to Reuters:

"The Sony studio said it has acquired motion picture rights to the Belgian-born characters from Lafig Belgium S.A. for a big-screen Smurfs adaptation mixing computer-graphic imagery and live action.

A similar "hybrid" treatment was recently given to another popular cartoon ensemble in the highly successful "Alvin and the Chipmunks" movie from 20th Century Fox.

Like Alvin and his rodent companions, the Smurfs will be created by CGI technology and interact with real actors portraying humans."
It's going to be interesting to see how this is done. Will they keep the same Smurf theme?


Image from firstshowing.net

The Smurfs aired from 1981 to 1989 with around 256 episodes. I reckon I must have seen most of them. They were on Dempsey's Den, and on a Sunday morning before(?) Sesame Street.



Classic table quiz question - can you (without checking Wikipedia) remember the name of Gargamel's cat?

Monday, June 09, 2008

My dad's not Written Off either

My dad was 55 when he decided to learn how to read and write.



Having seen his children through school and into college and with my mother and him having an emptier house, they took it on themselves to find out where and how he could finally get rid of the one thing that he felt was holding him back.

It was never discussed that my dad couldn't read - I knew he didn't read but it was one of those family things that was glossed over, never talked about. My mother taught me to read at an early age and was always the one that I went to for guidance on pronunciation or spelling, despite herself having left school at 13.



Dad was a builder, a labourer, he worked on the land, he had a few cows. He'd never be accused of intellectual pursuits - TV was the news, the GAA and the Sunday Game, maybe a bit of Glenroe. He'd be silent while we'd shout out the answers to Where in the World or to Countdown, the odd time the weather was good/bad enough to make out the faint signal. He "wouldn't be bothered with books now at all, though make sure you do your lessons and learn. That's very important".



The postman wouldn't have been as much welcomed as feared if my mother or sister weren't around. Forms would not be signed. Bills would be paid if he recognised the colours or knew where to pay them, but otherwise nothing. How he got through and managed is a testament to his own resourcefulness as well as the support of his wife.

It was only late into my teens I began to ask Dad about his youth, about growing up, where he was from and what he did when he was younger. I'd been happy enough to accept the fobbed off answers when a child, but the more my identity became important to me, so did the identity and story of my parents. Being in a small village things like this were not talked about, were not acknowledged. After all, what would the neighbours say?



When I was studying in Dublin, he decided to start to learn the basics. TV programmes like Read Write Now were coming on air and with the help of the local health board he found a tutor to give him weekly lessons.

He started out on the basics - writing his name, his address. He moved to sentences, to verbs, to spelling and some grammar. He worked his way through basic books and beyond on to more complicated lessons, where he was reading and comprehending, answering questions and writing down his own memories, telling his own stories.



Every time I go home now I see him working on something. He has three big folders full of exercises and he'll lift up a newspaper now to try and understand. It has made him more confident, more empowered to deal with things, to not be daunted by bills or forms or long words. He breaks it down until he understands. He may not be online yet but he's getting there.

And I'm very, very proud of him.



He is not alone. The Government target for adult literacy target by 2016 states the proportion of the population aged between 16 and 64 with restricted literacy will be reduced to between 10 and 15%. According to CORI:

Even if this target is achieved it means that Government accepts as okay that there will be between 320,000 and 475,000 people with basic literacy problems in Ireland in the working age group in 2016.
NALA, the National Adult Literacy Agency do amazing work in this area. At present there are more than 28,000 people participating in VEC adult literacy programmes. This is more than a four-fold increase since 1997 when 5,000 people were attending the literacy service and 25% of the Irish population were found to be at the lowest level of literacy.

Tonight I watched their latest TV series, Written Off?



The show follows the progress of eleven individuals embark on an education course not only designed to teach them to read and write, but to attempt to improve their lives dramatically.

There's a wide mix of people ages from 17 to 52 - the street trader from Dublin, the homeless 18 year old, the Cork taxi driver whose business failed under the pressure of getting through the paperwork and more. It's quite an inspiring show that RTÉ and the production company, Animo TV should be congratulated for.



The bravery of these people to both do the course and to do so on camera should not be underestimated. Most of us would be daunted enough about saying "I don't know this" but doing so to the whole country on National TV about something most people think everyone does anyway is something else.

A round table discussion at the Kilternan Open Market in tonight's show was fascinating - a local farmer shared his story of being able to read but whose spelling and numeracy were very poor, so when Department of Agriculture forms or the like came in, it presented a monumental challenge.

He's now doing his Leaving Cert after doing maths and English in his Junior Cert. As he described his challenges, the eleven around him nodded their heads in recognition and were delighted in his success, recognising how much effort it had taken and seeing that they were not alone. One woman was delighted at her new ability to fill out an Xtra-vision application form.

Thank God we as a nation seem to be facing up to problems like this, that we're empowering the people who didn't have the opportunities to learn to access the information, to get that level of confidence and skill that so many of us take for granted.

The more we talk about things, to show that it's okay to admit that we can't read or write so well, that we can't use computers or Google, that we don't know how to comment on blogs the more opportunities to learn we can create and the more people we can help.



If you know anyone who could do with help with their literacy, please direct them towards the NALA website or freephone 1800 20 20 65. They'll get materials posted out to them which they can then use at their own pace in the comfort of their own home.

You can watch the previous episodes of Written Off? here.