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December 17, 2007

"1999 A.D."

Welcome to the year 1999....as seen though the eyes of 1967. Today's offering is a series of clips from a corporate film, "1999 A.D." It was made 40 years ago and saw a future of on-line shopping, on-line banking, e-mail (almost), and a few other things that are now commonplace. In the screen-grab above, Karen, the woman of the house, prepares the meal via home computer.

And below, we find out how the family of the future shops and banks online. Mike--clearly played by Wink Martindale!--checks out the bills online and is disgruntled. Some late 1960s chauvinism is on display as the narrator Alexander Scourby reminds us Wink is responsible for paying the bills Karen has rung up. I bet she wants to work, but Wink won't let her, the oppressor! Besides, why the grumpy face? You'd think he'd have enough money left over from hosting "High Rollers" and "The New Tic Tac Dough" or something.

 

Next is the introduction to the film. Karen and son Jamie are on the beach. I can get over the manufactured lisp that boy has, but I'm having trouble believing a child that old would have trouble remembering what year it is....

 

...and is it just me or, with the music and all, did you also expect something bad to happen as Karen wrote in the sand? I thought maybe the camera would go wide and show a scrap of the fallen Statue of Liberty at the water's edge with a bunch of apes on horseback riding around it.

A few notes in conclusion: The film was made by Ford Philco and in addition to our man Wink, the  production features actress Marj Dusay as Karen. Don't know who that irritating little boy is.

 


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November 27, 2007

Throw Ya Hands Up: When Hip-Hop and Architecture Converged

Earlier  this week, I lamented over not finding an architecture-related video as good as Ted Kamp's brilliant Mies van der Rohe tribute that I posted a few months ago. Now comes Urban Observer reader Mike Waldinger who sent me a link to this above gem from the early 1980s PBS educational show, 3-2-1 Contact, which used rap music--and what I'm sure the producers thought was MTV style video--to teach kids about architecture.

Look closely and you can see at least two Chicago-related examples, such as the Pullman Factory and Administration Building at 111th and Cottage Grove and a real lost treasure: SOM's circa 1980 neon-like computer animation of Chicago and its skyline.

The young rappers on this clip wouldn't have made anyone back then forget about The Treacherous Three--and their 'street' pronunciation of "archi-teckcha" made me giggle--the idea that the newly evolved artform of rap was being used for educate city kids about architecture was kinda revolutionary. Now excuse me while I track down my old Kangol and my Adidases with the fat shoe laces...

 

 


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November 26, 2007

Documentary on Mondernist Architect Paul R. Williams

 

It's been a while since we've reached into the video grab bag--uh, partially because I havent been able to find anything as entertaining as the Mies van der Rohe music video I found a while back. Today's offering is a decent documentary on the late Paul Revere Williams, a modernist architect who just happened to be African American. He didn't do any work in Chicago, but let's not hold that against him.


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June 12, 2007

I Want my M [ies] TV

I found this video through the blog of Edward Lifson at WBEZ public radio. I like it. I can't stop singing the hook. And I don't think I want to, either. 


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