PropellerAds

Propellerads

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Sons Of Anarchy: Death Comes To SAMCRO

Don't read on unless you've seen Season 5, Episode 3 of FX's "Sons of Anarchy," entitled "Laying Pipe."
 


I hadn't planned on writing weekly review of any show this fall -- it's just too busy for me to commit to that -- but my hope is to write about individual episodes of various shows that stand out in one way or another, and "Laying Pipe" qualifies.
The title is another example of "Sons of Anarchy's" pitch-black humor at work: Opie was, of course, killed with a length of pipe, but the term also refers to the ways in which TV shows sets up future plots and machinations. No doubt what happened in this week's hour will resonate down the line, perhaps with more deaths down the road. (What, am I stupid? Of course there will be more deaths to come, and without question the prison guard will be one of them.)
But the future's already here, in a way: We saw the effects of Opie's death in this hour. We saw Jax die a little more, we saw the light go out in his eyes even more. We saw his hardness and his misery grow until they were fused into one driven mass of pain and determination.
I was very, very hard on "Sons of Anarchy" in my Season 5 review, and I stand by what I wrote in it, but the Opie-Jax storyline in "Laying Pipe" is the kind of thing that both gives me hope and makes me crazy. It gives me hope that "SOA" is still capable of telling stories that are not so bedazzled with external manipulations and nonsensical plot gyrations that the characters seem like innocent bystanders in the middle of an overcaffeinated snarl of story threads.
My God, in that cell, Charlie Hunnam did such a fine job of selling the Rico-Ireland-cartel nonsense that I almost bought it myself. And overall, in "Laying Pipe," it really helped that the Jax-Opie-Tig-Chibs storyline was economical and focused. There was a clarity of purpose to the story that the first two episodes -- concerned as they were with re-establishing the old stories, jamming in new ones and adding moments of ultraviolence -- lacked.
But in "Laying Pipe," we had Jax and Opie, two friends who have been through so much together, losing each other in the most painful and yet the most noble way possible. Hunnam and Ryan Hurst have always been great together, and the loss of Hurst is going to be a great blow to the show. Of course, I'm not arguing that the show shouldn't kill off key characters -- Season 4 was ultimately such a misfire because it gave us a bunch of reasons that Clay should die, then the show didn't kill him off. (I'm glad Opie and I are in agreement about that.)
But this is Jax's journey, and who is Jax without Opie -- even an angry, bitter Opie -- by his side?
And what makes me crazy? The show has turned Gemma into a cartoon character, and that makes me sad, because Katey Sagal is a capable of so much more than the kind of material that she's being given these days. "SOA's" female characters don't really have arcs; their stories -- such as they are -- fit in around those of the men. The women are who the show needs them to be that season or that week, and thus their personalities go through inexplicable shifts almost week to week. Quite often "SOA" doesn't even know what to do with them, so it gives them terrible stories like Tara's abduction in Season 3 or Gemma's general tendency to keep secrets and start trouble ... well, just because.
These days, Gemma exists to stir up sh*t in the "SOA" universe, and that's about it. The stuff with Jax's kids, the stuff with Clay's prostitute (hello, Ashley Tisdale!) -- I mean, she's just a hair-pulling, one-note character these days, and Stern Tara isn't much better. It's a testament to both these actresses that they made their characters work as long as they did, but I've just grown increasingly tired of their repetitive fights and shrill shenanigans. Isn't it interesting to contemplate the fact that the show's finest season gave Gemma a prominent and well-conceived storyline? Ah, Season 2, those were the days.
But back to Opie, who was the real focus here. Here's a possibly interesting fact: Before I watched the episode, I knew that someone was going to die in "Laying Pipe," and I knew it was going to be Opie. But it didn't matter. His death still had an impact, thanks to great performances and thanks to the kind of restraint that "SOA" can still pull off: The second most memorable moment in the episode was Jax turning away from the window where Opie was being beaten, as total silence descended. There were no words or music that could convey the pain of that moment.
I'm actually glad I knew that Opie was going to be the one who died; it made me appreciate Hurst's performance all the more. I think Opie decided early on in that episode, around the time of his confrontation in the cell with Jax, that he would be the one to sacrifice himself. He had nothing left to live for -- what kind of father would he be to his kids, as broken as he was by this point -- and this death would give two people (Opie and Jax) some kind of awful relief.
The most memorable moment, of course, was Opie, smiling-grimacing at Jax just before the end. Opie chose his death. Well, "SOA" chose his death, because there was really no way that Clay, Opie and Jax could sit around that table this season.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Bank of America website downtime issue prolonged

 

Bank of America


Bank of America's website

was sluggish and intermittently unavailable for many users on Tuesday, in an outage that the bank hadn't explained by the end of the day.
Bank of America spokesman Mark Pipitone said the company is "working to ensure full availability," and that online banking is available "although some customers may experience occasional slowness."

The majority of Bank of America's customers were able to access the site, which remained online throughout the day, Pipitone said. Still, many customers were unable to connect because of the site's slowness.
Data from Keynote, a testing and monitoring company, showed that the problems began around 10 a.m. ET and were still ongoing as of 6:10 p.m.

"It's possible that something Bank of America has done on its end, some kind of change, caused the problem," said Aaron Rudger, Keynote's senior marketing manager of Web performance. The bank's homepage looked different before the trouble began, he said.

As of about 6 p.m. Tuesday, Rudger said, a "small percentage" of website requests were being fulfilled successfully, but the majority were still met with errors.

On Wednesday morning, Rudger said that the bank appeared to have "rolled out some change that improved the situation and modestly reduced the long time-out failures" on Tuesday night. By mid-morning on Wednesday, Keynote's data showed the site's performance had stabilized.

If the problem is indeed due to system updates that Bank of America rolled out, it wouldn't be the first time. The bank experienced nearly a full week of outages in October 2011, and later explained that the problems stemmed from a combination of technical difficulties and heavier than normal traffic. The bank had been migrating its online banking to a new platform and deploying new tools for customers when the problems began.

On blogs and Twitter, some hacker groups were claiming responsibility for the outage. But there was no evidence to support those claims, and several recent ones turned out to be hoaxes.

Earlier this month, a person affiliated with the hacktivist collective Anonymous said the group took down the web hosting service GoDaddy, and in June the group UGNazi claimed responsibility for downing Twitter. Both outages were later revealed to be technical issues.

"I can assure you we continuously take proactive measures to secure our systems," Bank of America's spokesman said in response to a question about whether the company had seen any signs on Tuesday of a cyberattack.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

LIVE: NFL menu offers 13 games in first Sunday of season

8:10 p.m.: Thanks for hanging with us. Enjoy Peyton Manning's return tonight vs. the Steelers.

8:01 p.m. (Cardinals 20, Seahawks 16): Kevin Kolb comes off the bench to throw the winning TD to Andre Roberts with 5 minutes to go as the Cards overcome the loss of John Skelton (and the replacement refs?) to beat their division rivals.

7:56 p.m. (Refs losing control?): It seems the referees lost track of the timeouts in the Arizona-Seattle game and may have given the Seahawks an extra timeout. Keep an eye on this one.

7:52 p.m. (49ers 30, Packers 22): NFC Championship Game preview? The Niners survived Green Bay's fourth-quarter charge and showed more offensive diversity in winning at Lambeau Field for the first time in more than two decades. Alex Smith matches Aaron Rodgers with two TD passes.

7:30 p.m. (Buccaneers 16, Panthers 10): Tampa Bay wins its debut under new coach Greg Schiano in workmanlike fashion. The Bucs' revitalized defense picked off Cam Newton twice and held him to 4 rushing yards. On the flip side, Tampa rookie RB Doug Martin (a.k.a. Ray Rice South) ran for 95 yards and Josh Freeman threw a TD pass to Mike Williams.

7:24 p.m. (Skelton out): After losing the Cardinals quarterback competition this summer, Kevin Kolb is back at the helm after John Skelton was carted off the field with a right leg injury. Kolb led the Cards right down the field and fired a go-ahead TD pass against Seattle.

7:15 p.m. (Panthers also clawing back): Carolina has come out flat today, but a Justin Medlock FG has them within 16-10 even as the clock ticks below the 3-minute mark. Credit the Bucs and new HC Greg Schiano, who are turning around a defense that allowed a league-worst 494 points in 2011.
7:10 p.m. (Pack clawing back): Randall Cobb's 75-yard punt return for a TD (and a subsequent two-point conversion) has Green Bay within 23-15 after getting outclassed by the 49ers all day.

6:56 p.m. (PHOTOS): Take a spin around this photo gallery for Week 1 highlights.

6:47 p.m. (Photo of Davis blowing the dunk): TE Vernon Davis caught a 4-yard TD pass from Alex Smith to give the 49ers a 23-7 third-quarter lead at Lambeau. But good thing the Niners didn't need Davis to go for two ... because he blew the post-TD dunk attempt over the crossbar. We hope to bring you the video later.

6:40 p.m. (Video of Brady's broken nose): If you missed Titans DE Kamerion Wimbley re-arranging the face of Patriots QB Tom Brady earlier in the afternoon, here's the evidence ... much to Gisele's chagrin.

6:10 p.m. (Record-tying field goal): K David Akers' 63-yard FG at the halftime gun gave the 49ers a 16-7 lead at Green Bay. Akers boot bounced straight up off the crossbar before falling over for three points, tying the previous marks of Tom Dempsey, Jason Elam, and Sebastian Janikowski.

6:09 p.m. (Jets' Scott flips script on reporters): Everybody in the Jets' locker room was smiling after Sunday's 48-28 whipping of the Bills. Everyone except LB Bart Scott, who was steaming, then venting about the Jets being portrayed by a New York newspaper as a summer-long circus.

"I've got a media mutiny,'' Scott said when approached by USA TODAY Sports at his MetLife Stadium locker.

You mean a media boycott?

"Yeah, a boycott.''

Can you explain why?

"You guys treat us like we're a (bleeping) joke,'' the 32-year-old defensive leader said. "You all want us to feed your papers, but then you all talk (bleep) about us. So why would I want to give you all quotes to sell papers with if you all treat us like (bleep)? That doesn't make sense. ... You all talk stuff about us and then when we win, you flip the story. You all win either way.''

So you're boycotting the media because you take exception to the circus references?

"I'm just going to be quiet,'' Scott says.

Even coming off a great all-around, season-opening team performance in all phases?

"You're all going to screw us next week or the week after, you're all going to get us eventually,'' Scott said.


5:53 p.m. (Seattle's Wilson serves up his own INT): Seahawks rookie QB Russell Wilson lofted his first career INT to end the half at Arizona (it amounted to a harmless jump ball that Cardinals S Adrian Wilson came down with, though it could have become disastrous had CB Patrick Peterson not been tackled after taking Adrian Wilson's lateral). Rookie QBs have now accounted for 11 combined INTs today: Andrew Luck (3), Ryan Tannehill (3) and Brandon Weeden (4).

5:20 p.m. (Schaub cashes in): Texans QB Matt Schaub passed for 266 yards and a TD in his first game since a Lisfranc (foot) injury ended his 2011 campaign after 10 games. But that was mere prelude to Schaub's biggest score of the day after Houston announced signing him to a contract extension. Per NFL Network's Steve Wyche, Schaub's new deal is worth up to $62 million over four years with nearly $30 million guaranteed. "We've got a tremendous organization," Schaub said, "an owner that really cares about us as players in providing an environment to win. I'm really excited about that."

5:16 p.m. (Revis hurt): It wasn't all roses for the Jets. All-pro CB Darrelle Revis suffered an apparent head injury after being accidentally kicked by teammate Bart Scott. Revis did not speak with reporters following the game.

5:11 p.m. (No Moss? not exactly): Welcome back, Randy Moss. He terrorized the Lambeau faithful again by snaring his first TD pass in two years to stake the 49ers to a 10-0 lead at Green Bay. It was Moss' 154th career TD grab, breaking his tie for second place all-time in that category with currently unemployed Terrell Owens.

5:02 p.m.: We referenced Rex Ryan's sideline collision with Bills TE Scott Chandler earlier.

4:56 p.m. (Jets 48, Bills 28): And if you haven't been reading along all day, tales of the Jets' demise and Bills' ascent in the AFC East seem to be premature for now. Jets QB Mark Sanchez passed for 266 yards and three TDs (Tim Tebow rushed five times for 11 yards) and Bills QB Ryan Fitzpatrick was intercepted three times in a game that wasn't as close as the score indicates.

4:52 p.m. (Patriots 34, Titans 13): The defending AFC champs had little trouble handling the Titans on the road, limiting RB Chris Johnson to 4 yards on 11 carries. Tom Brady threw two TDs, and Jake Locker was forced from the game with a left shoulder injury.


4:45 p.m. (Redskins 40, Saints 32): In the stunner of the day, Redskins rookie QB Robert Griffin III outgunned the Saints and Drew Brees, handing New Orleans its first Superdome loss in two years ... a defeat that obviously stings on the heels of the franchise's Bountygate-dominated offseason. Griffin (320 passing yards, 2 TDs, 42 yards rushing) was the only first-year QB in the early games who played like a veteran. The Saints' remade defense clearly has a lot of work ahead of it.

4:41 p.m. (Eagles 17, Browns 16): Eagles QB Michael Vick atoned for his four INTs by leading his team on a 16-play, 91-yard touchdown drive for the go-ahead TD with 1:18 left. Vick capped the drive with a 4-yard touchdown pass to TE Clay Harbor. Browns rookie QB Brandon Weeden was picked off four times himself but didn't throw a TD pass.-- John Perrotto for USA TODAY Sports (@jperrotto) from Cleveland

4:36 p.m. (Bears 41, Colts 21): Colts QB Andrew Luck looked like a rookie, throwing three INTs as Indianapolis was overrun by the Bears and their new weapons. Chicago got a combined four TDs from players who weren't on the roster last year: Michael Bush (2), Brandon Marshall and rookie Alshon Jeffery.

4:32 p.m. (Vikings 26, Jaguars 23 OT): Rookie K Blair Walsh's 38-yard FG in OT put a cherry on top of RB Adrian Peterson's triumphant return. Peterson ran for 84 yards and two TDs in his first game since tearing two knee ligaments on Christmas Eve.

4:26 p.m. (Lions 27, Rams 23): In what seemed like a mismatch going in, the Lions needed aTD pass from Matthew Stafford (who overcame 3 INTs) to Kevin Smith with 10 seconds left to overcome the plucky Rams.

4:21 p.m. (Scary injury): Rams LT Rodger Saffold was carted off the field Sunday with what appeared to be a neck injury. Per AP, he crumpled to the ground after a block and didn't appear to be moving much as he was lifted into the ambulance (UPDATE: Saffold has movement in his limbs but will undergo a CT scan).

See more from the source:
http://content.usatoday.com/communities/thehuddle/post/2012/09/live-nfl-menu-offers-13-games-in-first-sunday-of-season/1#.UE03ua5jvYg


Saturday, September 8, 2012

Star Trek: The Original Series' surprising role in US civil rights



The Google logo today pays homage to the legendary TV show Star Trek: The Original Series.

1. Meet the Trekkers Welcome to the bridge, where so much of Star Trek: The Original Series takes place. Forgive appearances – the crew is not quite itself today. Google swapped out our usual heroes for a band of alphabetical stand-ins. You may recognize the capital G as Mr. Spock, complete with pointy ears and thick eyebrows. Next, we have O playing the roll of Lt. Uhura, chief communications officer. Standing boldly in the center is Captain Kirk, with his blonde coif in perfect order. Filling out the right flank are Dr. McCoy, Sulu, and a nameless redshirt (more on him in a moment).

The Google on Friday depicts cartoon versions of the crew of the Starship Enterprise – an homage to the legendary television show Star Trek: The Original Series, which celebrates its 46th anniversary on Saturday. In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Google designer Ryan Germick said he intended the doodle (pictured above) to be the ultimate geek homage.

"For me, [Star Trek] was a vision for the future," Germick said. "I think it was also that it was multicultural, pro-science, and full of curiosity and passion. I think like a lot of good science-fiction, it sort of says a lot about its present era. We can really appreciate what Star Trek did in its time. As an adult, you can appreciate how progressive it was. You learned to be compassionate towards all kinds of people – even alien creatures."

Germick is right: As a television series, Star Trek was far ahead of its time. For starters, there was the multiethnic cast, which included Asian-American and African-American actors. And then in November of 1968, there was "Plato's Stepchildren," an episode that featured one of the first interracial kisses in television history. The participants? Captain Kirk, played by William Shatner, and Lieutenant Uhura, played by Nichelle Nichols.

"It didn't hit me at the time until somebody told me," Nichols told The Huffington Post earlier this year. "I splashed onto the TV screen at a propitious historical moment. Black people were marching all over the South. [Martin Luther King, Jr.] was leading people to freedom, and here I was, in the 23rd century, fourth in command of the Enterprise."

In fact, Nichols later revealed in an interview with NPR, King was actually a driving force in persuading her to stay on the show when she was mulling other career opportunities. This happened in the 1960s, at an NAACP fundraiser in Beverly Hills. Nichols was approached by King, who claimed to be a "Trekkie" himself, as well as her "greatest fan."