Friday, December 7, 2012

Technology for Christmas, Mail Privacy, RIP Mr Food



 "The View From the Phlipside" is a media commentary program airing on WRFA-LP, Jamestown NY.  It can be heard Tuesday through Friday just after 8 AM and 5 PM.  The following are scripts which may not exactly match the aired version of the program.  Mostly because the host may suddenly choose to add or subtract words at a moments notice.  WRFA-LP is not responsible for any such silliness or the opinions expressed.  You can listen to a live stream of WRFA or find a podcast of this program at wrfalp.com.  Copyright 2012 by Jay Phillippi.  All Rights Reserved.  You like what you see?  Drop me a line and we can talk.

Program scripts from week of December 3, 2012



My name is Jay Phillippi and I've spent my life in and around the media.  TV, radio, the movies and more.  I love them, and I hate them and I always have an opinion.  Call this the View from the Phlipside. 

Technology for Christmas                                                                                   

I have to admit that the Great American Activity this time of year is something that I absolutely can not abide.  I’m just going to put it out there and I’ll deal with whatever backlash is headed my way.

I hate Christmas shopping.

Don’t get me wrong.  I really enjoy shopping.  In fact my wife and I trade the traditional gender stereotypes when it comes to shopping.  She likes to go in, get what she wants and get out which is the traditional “male” shopping style.  I enjoy window shopping, comparing prices and features and just generally making a project out of it.  Except at Christmas.  You see I hate crowds.  You are all lovely people I am sure.  But when we all get together in a bunch our less desirable personality traits begin to emerge.  Plus there’s the added problem that when that many people all show up at the mall then you end up parking somewhere near Rochester.  Which means I end up having no idea where I parked the car.  Which just adds to the overall level of frustration.

So I think what is being tried at the Mall of the Americas in Minneapolis is a really cool idea.  The super mall has a parking lot with over twelve thousand spaces.  Now they have a text based system that will not only remind you of where the car is parked but also can answer any question you may have about what’s going on at the mall, all done in real time.  You start by texting your location before you leave your car (all the instructions are posted throughout the parking lot.)  Then later in your shopping adventure (and if you’ve never been to the Mall of the Americas let me assure you that shopping there is an adventure.  That place is enormous) you will get a text message with the location of your car.  All provided by actual live customer service reps right there at the mall itself.

Mall of the Americas says it has average over a thousand lost customers every year for a while which is why they added the text service.  Our malls are smaller but I’d bet at Christmas time most of us would consider such a service to be a real gift.

It might even make me a tiny bit less grouchy this time of year.


Mail Privacy                                                                                                          

Privacy is an issue that I’ve talked about many times before on this program.  Privacy covering our personal information, privacy concerning who we are and what we do while we’re online.  The reality is that none of this is particularly easy or clear cut.

For example - we all know that what we post on Facebook or Twitter or any other social media is pretty much public.  There are some ways to control that but the reality is once you put it out there, it’s out there.  Now I would imagine that most of us think that our messages on Facebook are somewhat more private (as compared to posts to our timeline).  And most of us probably presume that our e-mails provide us an even higher level of privacy.

Of course if you follow the news you know that may or may not be true.  E-mails between the former director of the CIA General David Petraeus and his biographer have had massive personal and professional repercussions for Petraeus and the U.S. Intelligence community.

But that required authorization from a court to violate the privacy, right?  Well, it may not be as hard to pull off as we think. For example did you know that if the government wants copies of your e-mails from the last couple months they need to get a court order.  But if they want to see your e-mails that are older than 180 days they don’t need any such thing.  180 days.  So we’re in the first week in December, that would mean anything from this summer and before is pretty much fair game.  

The issue here is that once again the law is trailing real life.  You see we used to store our e-mails on our personal computers.  Now more of us (for example if you use Gmail) keep our e-mail in the Internet “cloud”.  The current law offers limited protection for files stored for more than 180 days on an online server.  There is proposed legislation to change this but at the moment it doesn’t have a great deal of support.

It’s easy to sit back and think that our personal e-mail is part of our private life.  It’s easy to think that we are protected by our Constitutional rights.  Turns out it’s never that simple.


RIP Mr Food

There’s a very special place in the American mythos for the self made man.  We love successful people but our mythology is really built around the person who starts with nothing and makes something out of himself.  It speaks to potential, the American Dream that with a little luck and hard work any of us could be a success.

Two weeks ago we lost one of those great American success stories.  Art Ginsburg passed away back in November.  You probably don’t know that name.  If you do recognize it’s only because of his obituaries.  But you’ve almost surely seen him on TV and maybe even own some of his books.  Art Ginsburg was better known to the world as Mr. Food.

Ginsburg was born in 1931 in Troy New York.  His father was a butcher and that’s what Art grew up to be as well.  The story probably would have ended there except that through a little bit of luck he ended up in the catering business.  His success there led to a local TV station in Schenectady asking him on to do those little drop in bits that are a staple of morning television today.  That grew into a syndicated program that at its peak had 168 affiliates.

Sure there was Julia Child and Graham Kerr but Mr. Food was different.  He had no interest in showing off his arcane knowledge of exotic foods.  Ginsburg was quoted as saying that “...chefs cook for other chefs, I cook for America”.  That meant that he had no problem using canned soups or cake mixes along the way.  The idea was to create good food that didn’t require stuff you couldn’t find in the average American home and to do it quickly and easily.

Along the way Art Ginsburg and his Mr. Food persona became a comfortable and friendly presence.  Maybe you’d start with his stuff and go on to the fancy cooking but you could stay right there with him.  Ginsburg wrote 52 cookbooks that sold over 8 million copies.  He used to record over 200 episodes every year of his show.  He remembered that cooking was about the food we serve our families not a culinary competition.

Along the way he became the great American success story.  And yes, I’ve got to say it,  Oooh, it’s so good.

Art Ginsberg, Mr. Food, was 82 years old.


Call that the View From the Phlipside

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

In Flight Movies

Had the opportunity to go to Germany last week with my 9-5 job.  All that time flying over the Atlantic and free movies is pretty much as good as my life can get.  So I watched the following:

Jumper - (2008)  If you take away all plot logic, character development and don't worry about actually explaining what's going on you end up with Jumpers.  There is a really cool concept here (that some people have an ability to "jump" instantaneously from one place to the next.  If they can visualize it they can jump there) that gets utterly squandered by the script.  An attractive cast that obviously had some fun doing this movie also gets let down by just a really weak story.  Where does this ability come from?  Don't know, never explored.  Is it only the lead character (played by Hayden  Christiansen) or are there more?  Well we know there's at least one other (we meet him) and he seems to imply there are more out there.  But otherwise unexplored.  There is a group of folk (led by Samuel L. Jackson) called the Paladins who are hunting down the jumpers and killing them.  Why?  Small spoiler here because I'm about to tell you EVERYTHING the movie supplies as an answer.  They're religious zealots who have been doing it for years.  Basically a ten word explanation.  That's it.  The movie was clearly aimed at being the first of a "Jumpers" franchise.  They chose to set up the franchise rather than actually make a complete movie.  Tag on a stupid and undeveloped ending and you end up with a silly pointless movie.  The only surprising thing is that the cast has enough fun with the pitiful dregs of a story they're given to make the movie at least fun to watch.

Rating - *** Worth a Look (but only just barely)

Prometheus - (2012)  Let me get this out of the way right off the top.  The movie is visually stunning.  Really impressive. That's pretty much it.  This movie is derivative (you can play a game during it.  See how many ideas and images have been lifted from other movies for this one.  That will give you something to amuse yourself during this drivel), tedious, badly acted, unimaginative, pretentious, and utterly unworthy of the amount of movie spent to make it.  I kept thinking that director Ridley Scott had decided to out do the visual impact of "Blade Runner" and gotten lost in the attempt.  The story certainly did.  A train wreck.

Rating - ** Don't Bother

The Bourne Legacy - (2012) I loved the original Bourne trilogy with Matt Damon.  So I didn't know how this extension of the franchise with Jeremy Renner taking over the lead (not as Jason Bourne but as another product of the secret government program that created him) was going to do.  In the end I liked it, maybe even liked it a lot.  It's a Bourne movie so it's action over in depth thoughtfulness but they all are.  The script gives enough depth to the characters to make them interesting.  If there's a complaint it's that the basic story line is familiar.  An agent of a rogue covert U.S. operation designed to create super soldiers decides he's had enough.  He wants out.  The program can't have that so they decide to eliminate him (and all the other agents in the program as well).  He escapes with the help of a beautiful woman who is drawn into the action against her will.  They survive a series of attempts on their lives, win in the end and fall in love.  If you've seen any of the Bourne films you know this by heart.  It's too bad they didn't decide to mix it up somehow.  The fact that this movie is barely making the break even mark should probably tell the producers to try something different if they ever make another.  The cast is great, the story is predictable, the action is fast and furious.  Two out of three isn't bad for an action picture.

Rating - *** Worth a Look

The Descendants - (2011)  This one made the others worth wading through.  To be honest I probably had the lowest expectations of this George Clooney flick of any I saw on my travels.  Yet it out performed the others by miles.

It's the story of a nice if rather ineffectual guy (Clooney) who is suddenly shoved into a series of high stress situations that only he can handle.  He lives in Hawaii and is part of a family descended from the last king of the islands.  They have a large tract of undeveloped land that they have to decide how to handle.  Sell it and become individually wealthy or try to hang on to some of the last undeveloped land in the islands?  Add to that an accident that results in a massive head injury to his wife forcing him to face decisions about pulling the plug.  He has two daughters in crises of their own, a variety of other family issues and a final complication that I won't give away.  All of them are problems that he has to solve.  No one else.  The movie is filled with heavy, serious issues that could have turned this is a ponderous and dour film.  Instead Clooney, the writers and the director manage to give it a warmly funny grace that is charming.  It never cheats and makes fun of any of the situations but it never lets them overwhelm the humanity of the story either.

I loved this movie even as tears poured down my cheeks as the father, daughters and other family members face the horrible waiting for mom to die after being taken off of life support (I've been in that very situation following my mom's stroke).  The cast is wonderful, the script is deft, the direction is exceptional.  It all works.  This is the one I'll recommend to everyone I meet.

Rating - **** Recommended