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Long Time, No Blog

Yes, this blog’s been collecting dust again. The two jobs have kept me quite busy, plus I’ve been chasing handsome young Welshmen across the Georgian countryside (tough gig, I know.) But I haven’t forgotten about the few readers I possibly have left.

I’m fairly certain that if I say one more word about “Doctor Who” or “Torchwood” my friends will throw me off the bus. But I can’t let this opportunity go by to introduce y’all to the BBC Proms, a classical music event which takes place annually at the Royal Albert Hall. This year’s show was DW-themed and featured this awesome vinegette.

I’ve been watching “The X Factor” for the first time, and while it’s by no means another “Britain’s Got Talent”, it beats “American Idol” up one side and down the other. This is possibly the best hard-luck story of the year.

If you like “I can’t believe they actually let them air that” comedy in British style (note: they get away with five times more over there), here’s some Kevin Bishop.

In case anyone’s thinking that I forgot about Robbie Williams, I haven’t. I kinda dig his longhaired paunchy look.

Finally, I try very hard not to talk about religion or politics on this blog, because discussing those subjects never seems to end well for me. However, the Red State Update’s reaction to Sarah Palin is very spot-on and very accurate.

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‘Journey’s End’ Review and Therapy Session

July 5th, 2008 | | Posted in british, british tv, doctor who

Suffice it to say that if you want to remain at all unspoiled about anything Doctor Who, ever, don’t go near this. Please come back in 2-4 weeks if you’re waiting for Sci-Fi. I don’t know how you do it.

Also, a bit of strong language and defiling of the Lord’s name. Forgive me.
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Feel Good Friday: ‘Angels’ and ‘God’, On High

I was going to not post anything today, because I am completely and utterly obsessed with tomorrow’s DW finale, and I’m trying not to put my Twitter readers through more. But the folks at Robbie Williams News reminded me that it’s the 10th anniversary of Robbie Williams doing “Angels” at Glastonbury.

For everyone who hasn’t read his quasi-autobio, “Feel”, Rob was pretty much Amy Winehouse-gone when he recorded this song, which came from a fragment Rob thought up whilst looking at a waterfall in Ireland during a major bender. Unlike Amy, Rob had great management that made him stay in rehab long enough to stick eventually. But before he appeared at Glastonbury and sang this, he was basically known for getting kicked outta his band, a la Doherty.

It’s a credit to him as a performer that he made one great performance into the career he’s achieved everywhere but the U.S. And that’s what I love about festivals, even though I don’t really go to many anymore. You get everyone who has at least a couple of monster hits and lots of the folks on their way there. Like Tori at Glastonbury in ‘98, who I’ve been listening to also. Wow, the same year. And if you’re an old-school Tori fan (Fox, Brittney, Matt…) you need to hear this. So today you get two.

Actually, watch this one too. And this. Heck, watch the whole search results.

Now I’m going to fight off the urge to learn how to make fanvids so that I won’t make a Ten/Donna fanvid for this song, who is @mikeschmid on Twitter, one of those folks I friended and admire from afar. There’s a lot of indie artists on there like that. Check out @thehighwaygirl, too.

And that’s it, unless anyone wants to hear my new theory about what’s going to happen to Donna tomorrow. No? Really?

Edit: I lied. I have to add this fanvid, because 1) it’s incredibly awesome if you’re a TW/Doc slasher (as far as I’m concerned, they should move the show to Cinemax and let them all go for it. Kidding!) 2) Who doesn’t want to watch three hot men and a TARDIS? 3) Captain Jack’s got the most prolific scorecard ever, and 4) This is secretly one of my very favorite songs ever.

It is the one and only song Pete Wentz had association with that I can listen to, and I know this is going to ruin my rock cred worse than the fact that I ADORE Miley Cyrus’ cover of “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun”. Okay, that’s it. I’m not sure that anyone will ever listen to me seriously about music again, ever. *wanders off to listen to The Cribs to help self-esteem*

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We All Need Our Wellies

June 18th, 2008 | | Posted in Uncategorized, british, news

Pig In Wellies

In a day where the news sucked, we all need a little cute. And this is such an awesome story:

Cinderella, a six-week-old saddleback pig has conquered her fear of walking in mud with the help of a pair of bespoke wellies.

After her birth, the piglet refused to join her brothers and sisters as they splashed in the muck because she suffers with mysophobia - a fear of dirt.

But now the pig has overcome her fears with a pair of green boots made of rubber - which have been created with no footwell so that her trotters slip straight in.

Former pig farmers Debbie and Andrew Keeble, who run a farm near Bedale North Yorkshire, were initially baffled by their piglets behaviour.

Debbie Keeble, 40, said: “It was the strangest thing. When the batch ventured away from their mother, Cinders just stood at the edge of her sty shaking while the others explored.

“We thought it was just that she didn’t want to leave the sty or the sow but we soon noticed if we moved them to where there wasn’t any mud, she happily left it and roamed around without any nonsense.

Her husband, Andrew, 42, added: “We scratched our heads a bit but then we thought, we wouldn’t go in the mud bare-footed, so why not try some wellies?”

When we all need to face our fears, we just have to find our own kinds of wellies.

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Thoughts on Donna, Rose…and Hannah

June 15th, 2008 | | Posted in british, british tv, doctor who

Spoilers for the preview for next week’s Doctor Who and anything previous to this week, as well as the Torchwood ending and the whole of “Secret Diary of a London Call Girl”, which I iove and which everyone should watch on Showtime starting next week:

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Feel Good Friday: Something Beautiful

June 13th, 2008 | | Posted in british, british tv, music, robbie williams

Thanks to my Twitter buds GingerSnaps and Newscoma, I have found out about the Feel Good Friday thing. And it’s very cool, because I knew exactly what my first one would be, and it seems appropriate since we’re only a couple of weeks removed from Britain’s Got Talent.

As with most Robbie songs, this song and video have a story. This song was originally written by Rob and his former writing partner for Tom Jones, but he passed on it and Rob decided to stick it on my favourite album of his, Escapology.

Rob was in the middle of touring and couldn’t appear in a video, so his management and MTV-UK teamed up and did a reality show where people could try out to “be” Robbie. They weren’t going on physical resemblance, but were looking for the person who embodied his spirit and enthusiasm onstage.

The top three performed on the show and the public picked out the winner. In the extended version (which has disappered from YouTube) the winner leaves the studio to catch a bus, sits down on the bus bench and discovers that Robbie’s sitting next to him. Pretty neat.

In any case, this is one of Rob’s few truly cheerful songs. It’s a nice listen. And I dare you to even try to be depressed after playing this.

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Finishing Up Britain’s Got Talent

June 5th, 2008 | | Posted in british, british tv, television

I’m very late on this followup to my original Britain’s Got Talent post, but a big migraine, elections and life conspired against me. However, since my original post has proven to be very popular both stat-wise and reaction-wise (it’s cool when folks who live in the UK link to an American’s post about their TV, even when they’re related to me) I’ll go ahead and finish this up. At least I don’t have to worry about spoiling anyone now (and if you’re in England and have been in a cave this week, go watch it before reading the next paragraph.)

If you’re in the U.S. and wonder which kid ended up winning (because really the chances of a non-kid taking the prize were pretty bleak after the semis) it was the kid dancing in the fake rain. Which was preferable to me, because both of the other kids were supposedly in the process of signing with Simon Cowell before the finals even took place. And folks wonder why people thought the show was rigged.

But I’m glad he won out, because as Cowell said the last night of the semis, this is not called “Britain’s Saddest Story”. While the choir boy was lovely, he carried the bullying story a little too far. George had not tried to ploy the audience with sympathy for his crippling scoliosis, even though he could’ve. George’s win lead to this great moment:

The runner-up was my favourite of the finals — a pair of Indian guys who did an awesome dance routine to “Thriller”. If they had been under 18, they would’ve won.

The best pure talent of the show was probably this four-woman act called Escala. Three of them played electric violin, while the fourth played electric cello. They were all incredibly hot, and they’ve supposedly already signed with Cowell. This is their semifinal performance, which kicked serious ass.

Because this is my blog and I’m a bit of a girl who likes eye candy, here’s the guy I called “the cute Scottish plumber”. His semi performance was better than in the finals, so you get that. Andrew Muir, come over and marry me and try out for American Idol. I think you’re much better than that cheesy David Cook bloke. And you can fix my plumbing.

…..what? My sink’s got a leak. My KITCHEN sink. What did y’all think I was talking about, pervs?

And while I’m in the semis, here’s the performance that almost got Piers and Amanda into a fistfight in the middle of the show. This kid was a former Arsenal youth player who did really cool footy tricks. He was amazing in the tryouts, but he was clearly overcome with nerves and dropped the ball a couple of times in the semis.

Amanda loved him and the guys didn’t, and there were some real words exchanged. He almost got through anyway on the public vote. I thought he was a novelty act that was clever, and he’s destined to do awesome YouTube vids.

Speaking of novelty acts, this is a husband-and-wife team from Blackpool who did a quick-change act while the wife sang a Madonna song. It was pretty fun, but Cowell hated them and clanged Amanda’s buzzer. That didn’t go over well with Amanda or the couple, who did not take the criticism gracefully.

Finally, in the spirit of what Britain’s Got Talent is really, truly about, here’s a guy named Craig Harper who had been performing in clubs all his life and got to the semis and almost made it through. I hope he does get a lot of extra work from his appearance on the show, because he was not only a good act but a sweet guy. Good luck, Craig. You touched this American’s heart with your grace in losing.

Simon Cowell has announced plans to make a World’s Got Talent show, so expect posts about cheesy Japanese karaoke acts and African tribal drummers someday soon. In the meantime, I’ll have to figure out how to live without Ant and Dec on Saturdays for awhile. It’s gonna be hard.

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Getting This Off My Chest to BBC, ITV, GMTV, Etc.

I had every intention of writing a post last night about the last two semifinal shows for Britain’s Got Talent, with videos and reviews and a listing of who I would vote for if I were able to (even though it’s debatable if the votes mattered, if past history serves.) But I was unable to locate the full Friday semi until this morning, and by the time I’d seen it the finals were underway. I still haven’t seen the results show, although I was accidentally spoiled on who won.

And this leads to a rant/plea I need to make. If you’re American and don’t work for a network, feel free to skip the rest of this post (actually, stop by the end of this one before you do) and wait for my upcoming post on BGT. I know the Twitter folks are sick of hearing my bitching on this subject.

I understand why it’s important for TV networks to hang on to the rights of their TV shows for syndication and DVD sales. I know BBC has made a mint off of sending us unlucky Americans to Amazon in search of Vicar of Dibley DVD’s. And I also understand that there are concerns that if we see shows like Doctor Who live on UK feeds, we won’t watch it two weeks later (and edited) on Sci-Fi, then six months later on BBC America, and then finally pay $90 for the series DVD. BBC gets a ton of money for all of that, and they don’t want to lose value. And there’s the whole issue of how much ESPN and Fox pay for footy rights, too.

That said, there are a small but loyal bunch of us who have gone to a LOT of trouble to get live or almost-live feeds or downloads of British shows because we LOVE them. We are the ones who get our friends over here excited about shows that will eventually be shown here and become fairly decent cable hits (Robin Hood and Jekyll, in particular, have been huge performers for BBC America, and a lot of that success comes directly from buzz from expats and other fans. And who would’ve ever heard about the Kumars otherwise?) We’re vocal and many of us blog, and you can usually find a pretty cracking discussion of DW on Twitter most weekends.

But with BBCA having, um, questionable choices sometimes in programming (and being unwilling to hear negative feedback on such on their message boards) the Brit TV fans here are very cheated. I have about 200 channels on my digital box, and only one is devoted to us at all. Sci-Fi caters to the DW lovers and I get Torchwood on HDNet, some PBS affiliates play Fawlty Towers and some other older shows, and once upon a time the original Katie & Peter show was on E! (I hope that eventually they’ll pick up their new series, which is better than Living Lohan by far.) But that’s it. Some shows are too bawdy to ever have a chance on our channels (namely Two Pints and a Pack of Crisps and The Friday Night Project.) And the closest we can get to most British reality shows are the inferior American remakes.

There was a site called LiveUKTV that was shut down last weekend (it’s under debate in some places whether it was done by “licence police” or not.) Other means used are either extraordinarily expensive (I love live telly, but I don’t know if I could get $110-a-month use out of it by myself, especially without footy) or of questionable legality or very delayed, like my BGT experience. And the folks who would rather get Doctor Who for free instead of watching it being replayed in the US are already doing it. Trust me, they are. Most of the true fans are watching it three times with all three methods because we love it enough to want to keep the ratings up. We remember the days before Sci-Fi bought the rights to the first new DW series when we waited for over six months to see it at all.

So please, please consider banding together like you’re doing for Freesat in the UK and give us a chance to pay what the natives do. The BBC Trust is unhappy about how much has been spent on their Web sites. Why don’t you let us subscribe for the use of BBC iPlayer? Same goes for ITV.co.uk. You would have international publicity for your shows and let us spread the word, and you wouldn’t have to pay us for it. In fact, we’d pay you.

Also, I would have loved to have written a post before tonight’s final for I’d Do Anything, the great BBC 1 show that cast the leads for a West End production of Oliver! I was all ready to sweetly ask my British readers to call in and vote for Jodie, who ultimately won the role of Nancy. Since it was against BGT tonight, the Beeb could’ve used any fan support it could get. But I wasn’t able to write that post, because BBC has blocked American access to clips of all their shows on YouTube, and I had nothing to show my readers.

I’m very, very sad, but I’m also frankly pissed off. I can see why they block DW because it’s airing here, but BBC America is too busy showing reruns of Dancing With the Stars to buy the rights to this show. It will most likely never air here, especially without Americans who give a crap about it. So if anyone with the net reads this, you have frankly blown it. But I would like to thank the British people for giving Jodie the win and giving me the opportunity to see Cameron Mackintosh look like someone’s twisting his testicles on live TV. Because if Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber was being truthful, Mackintosh had been slagging on Jodie’s weight, and that was really wrong. I liked seeing the right person win even if she’s seen a meat pie at least once in her life.

Rant over. My review of the rest of BGT (with nice YouTube clips) will come shortly, I hope. In the meantime, I wrote a review of something American for a change for the job that pays me. If you’re not utterly sick of Sex and the City reviews, give mine a try. It’s actually somewhat positive, and I loved doing it. Please give it some click love so I might get the chance to write more.

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Possibly the Best British Show Americans Will Never See

May 29th, 2008 |