Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Monthly Archives: February 2011

    • A Fresh Look at Video Stores

      Posted at 2:55 am by kayewer, on February 27, 2011

      Back in the old days, the world had movie theatres.  One screen per building, one movie at a time.  The place sold out.  In our parents’ time, in the heyday of Hollywood, films were released in batches, and the screenings changed a few times a week to accommodate the big producers’ large catalog of new product.

      Nowadays, the new movies come out on Friday a few at a time, and most of them are horrible.  Still, we have movieplexes with 20 screens (or more), and on opening night they’re packed, too.  Once the freshness dies, we wait for the movie to come out in another form, like on pay cable or DVD.

      I’m going to miss DVD when it dies.  Like I miss the videocassette.  When we look back on how recorded media has changed from the 33 rpm record to cassettes to the (relatively short-lived) 8-track tapes to CDs to cyberspace downloads, it’s enough to make your internal memory (brain) explode.

      Along with the turnover in media goes the fate of the video store.  It’s strange to me that people are increasingly turning to more impersonal forms of entertainment rather than actually interacting with a person at a store.  Not so long ago, we had video stores like Erol’s, Hollywood Video and Blockbuster easily accessible to everybody.  I especially remember, with fondness, the Movies Unlimited store.  Now there was a store run by people who knew movies (they do mail order now, along with a wide audience of cable channel TCM’s fans who want to collect classics).  Today, stores are shutting down and turning to mail order services like Netflix.

      My Blockbuster just shut down earlier this month, but the owner turned me on to their mail service, and I love it (I don’t intend to turn to the Netflix dark side).  I get deliveries to my mailbox with no restricting return policies.  Sure I can watch movies in my pajamas without having to jump into the car to return the movie by midnight, but with my time schedule it’s the delivery convenience that sold me on this new idea.

      No matter what, I refuse to approach a kiosk like that carmine colored souped up ATM in front of the pharmacies and grocers that spits out rentals like a vending machine. Talk about impersonal.  One even sprang up just yards from that ill-fated Blockbuster, and folks flocked to it.  There is something kind of creepy about that to me.

      In the movie Dune, humans became so dependent on machines to do jobs for them that they fell into apathy and were subdued by enterprising men who formed alliances with those machines to take over the world.  We are seeing a society grow more like that frightening archetype, as we gravitate more toward internally gratifying amusement that seals you into pressing buttons and putting earphones on to block out the rest of the human race.  There is another Blockbuster within five miles of home, so I’m visiting there now (I didn’t tell you that I can return my movies to the store instead of mailing them, and get another movie on the spot).  Kicking and screaming into the death of video rentals go I.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • Times Races On

      Posted at 2:24 am by kayewer, on February 20, 2011

      For some strange reason, my new clock has lost track of time.  Or else somebody is lying about what time it really is.

      As I mentioned in my March 2010 post, my old faithful clock radio lost its LED readout.  It still woke me up on time, but I couldn’t see the time readout.  When a thunderstorm caused a blip in the power, the clock became useless and I had to go out and buy another one.  The one I chose came with claims of being automatically set to my time zone with help from an acurate atomic clock source in Boulder, Colorado, which claims accuracy without losing a second in something like a billion years.  It also has a backup battery in case of other power outages.

      It has worked well, but the time has always been about two minutes behind what the cable company displays on the converter box.  Suddenly, this past week, the clock gained another two minutes.  Or else Comcast is trying to speed the time along so they can get more programming into a day.

      According to an online resource called Weather Shack, the clock is probably not receiving the atomic clock signal, so it has resorted to being just an ordinary clock with no idea whether it is telling the correct time or not.  The website recommends unplugging and re-plugging the clock to see if it realigns itself with the mother ship in Boulder.

      As a final resort, I will have to take the clock out at night, unplugged, and allow the ET function to phone home.  I’m sure the neighbors will gossip about that for a month afterward.  I just hope no UFO’s show up.

      How did our technology get so strange that we have gone from aligning our television antennas on the rooftop to aligning our clock radios at night?  And can the aliens tell us what time it really is?

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • Hearts

      Posted at 2:46 am by kayewer, on February 13, 2011

      Love is still the world’s most unexplainable human quality, and that’s terrible.  Every year around this time (Valentine’s Day), millions of dollars are spent on cards, flowers, jewelry and trips to hotsy-totsy naughty late-night getaways with satin sheets and champagne bubbles in the hot tub, while untold numbers of folks get zilch.  Oh, sorry, that’s wrong, they do get one thing:  forgotten.

      Holidays in general are depressing times for people who are left out of the loop.  In December one bunch of people are celebrating Christmas while another waits for Hanukkah or a third waits for Kwanzaa.  The nature-based religions (Druids and such) who used to make merry on dates like 12/25 have to share, and I guess that over time nobody minded that much, as long as they still had the right to celebrate.

      The exclusivity of holidays tend to leave large numbers of people segregated yet unable to escape the din of the merriment, much like a teetotaler making a wrong turn onto a street full of boozers.  The best you can do is politely push on and hope it’s over soon.

      When I used to take the train to and from work, I would see men in business suits holding huge balloons or red and pink bags filled with gifts bound for an appreciative mate.  As I observed the passengers I could see those who would raise their books a bit higher to cover their eyes or opted to look out the window at the passing scenery instead of lingering on the loneliness of going someplace where nobody would be bringing such appreciation home to them.

      Fate or circumstance makes some people prone, for whatever reason, to avoidance by the opposite sex.  Nobody really knows why.  There doesn’t seem to be much reliable data on depression or suicide rates specifically related to Valentine’s Day, but spring tends to cause a slight increase in suicide rates, and with all the lead-up in the media and in storefronts nationwide, you can be sure some folks will get the blues come 02/14 when there is no balloon or flower to mark somebody’s love for them.  It’s just plain sad that on a day meant to celebrate love, some just won’t get it.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • What Can We Eat?

      Posted at 2:47 am by kayewer, on February 6, 2011

      Don’t you agree that we have all had enough of all the dieting and restrictions and arguments over what to eat on a diet and what to or not to restrict?  Our country is so full of fat people (or, if you’re sensitive, dimensionally challenged) and reduction methods that don’t work, we’re smothering in poundage and pages of useless research about the epidemic that offer nothing solid in return for all the grant money spent (plus the trees to make the paper are dead and gone).

      I count myself among the obese in America, and yet I supposedly eat healthy.  In my childhood I was the weirdo who actually liked vegetables (I had issues with brussels sprouts but tolerated them) and drank milk and orange juice daily.  Now, if you believe the propaganda, orange juice is not good for you because of its sugar content, and most veggies will pack on the pounds as surely as an ice cream cone, because they harbor starches.

      Sugar is bad.  So are sugar-free substitutes.  Salt is bad.  Green peppers are bad.  Yessiree, those staples of the average salad plate should not be there, according to an expert who champions Atkins style diet choices.  He suggests more meat because we were designed to eat it:  we started as hunters, and we killed and cooked our own animal flesh, and nobody has ever seen a cave drawing of a fat caveman, he says in so many words.  The health community, however,  says not to eat meat because it can lead to heart disease.

      Potatoes and pasta are out, too.  And certain fish are already on the no-no list because of mercury and contaminants.  The late fitness guru Jack LaLanne (who died January 23, 2011) claimed that if man made it, he wouldn’t eat it.  The Atkins supporters say if it grows in the ground you shouldn’t eat it.  Recently apples were touted as being the worst fruit you could eat, so I guess stuff on trees are out, too.

      I’ve been eating 80 calorie yogurt, but since it has sugar substitute, I guess I should drop that habit.  I also include green pepper (oh no!), carrot, celery and radishes in my lunch.  They’re all, to put it in British vernacular, right out.  Cereals are made with the wrong grains and add sugar, so they’re not right for any diet.

      That leaves us with water, in which are mercury and contaminants that kill the fish we used to eat.   I’m waiting for somebody to tell me that water should be off everybody’s diet.

      Maybe the solution is substituting all food with an IV diet of just essential nutrients.  Can’t you see Campbell’s and McDonald’s and Atkins going into the medical supply business to stay solvent?  I don’t know about you, but I wish somebody out there would just come out with the outright truth and stop stacking the deck against everybody who has to eat to stay alive.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • Feedback

      Eden's avatarEden on Getting the Message
      Eden's avatarEden on The Unasked Questions
      Eden's avatarEden on And Her Shoes Were #9
      Eden's avatarEden on The Poison Field
      Eden's avatarEden on Final Tally

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Susan's Scribblings the Blog
    • Join 32 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Susan's Scribblings the Blog
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d