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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: mysterious television programming, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Video Sunday: Beaucoup d’Imagination

She’ll have a book contract within a week.  This was undoubtedly the most popular video of the past week, making the rounds amongst folks who (A) like cute French kids (B) like Winnie-the-Pooh and (C) are aware that Pooh books are strikingly lacking in “singes”.  Many thanks to BoingBoing for the link.

But really, this week 100 Scope Notes had all the good videos.  In fact, if you read your 100 Scope Notes regularly (as I know you should) then you’ve probably seen all of these already.  Like this young woman reading Fox in Socks faster than any human has ever been able to before.

What really stands out to me while watching that video is how remarkable Seuss’s writing is, was, evermore shall be.  He did something so original that it can never be effectively replicated.  Now I need to run off and read some Fox in Socks.

Oh, how adorable.  I’ve only attended the ALA Media Awards since they got huge.  But Travis managed to find an old C-Span video of the award announcement from way back in 2001.  A full ten years ago.  How time has changed things.  And did I hear Lisa Von Drasek screaming “Yes!” when Casey at the Bat was mentioned as a Caldecott winner?  I think I did.  In any case, these are always fun to watch, if only to hear the reactions from the audience.

Fabulous find, Travis!  Thanks to 100 Scope Notes for the link.

In this next one, I saw on Swiss Miss that a photographer had taken a lot of neat photographs around New York, many in Bryant Park behind my library.  I then discovered this video of how he made the photos.  The first one shown here is in the Bryant Park fountain.  Apparently they took some in my library as well (undoubtedly when the guards were looking the other way).  Here’s a video on how they were made.

Thanks to Swiss Miss for the link.

Booktrailer time.  Carolrhoda Books (in conjunction with Lerner) put out this great little quick look at how Stephen Gammell paints his newest creation Mudkin.  Gammell.  There is no one on this good green earth that kind paint like he can.  No one.

6 Comments on Video Sunday: Beaucoup d’Imagination, last added: 1/24/2011 Display Comments Add a Comment
2. Return of the mysterious Lizard Music

The year: Somewhere between 1984-1989.  Thereabouts.

The place: Kalamazoo, Michigan.  Home of Gibson Guitars, celery, taxicab production, etc.  This may turn out to be important.

The mystery:  So I’m watching what must have been PBS during the day.  Possibly over the summer, since I was a school aged child at this time and the only other channels I indulged in were Nickelodeon and the USA Network when they were showing Space Ghost.  This show, however, was definitely not my beloved superhero of the stars.  In fact, the more I think about it the more I am convinced that it was PBS.  The budget was just that low.

This show consisted of a fellow, possibly with a beard, who would read a chapter from a great work of children’s fiction.  As his voiceover read the chapter the multiple cameras would remain fixed on the man as he began his sketch.  The sketch would relate to some element of the chapter, but whether that scene was at the beginning or the end of the was unknown until the sketch was done.

Now there was a nice variety of books read for this show, including titles like Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry (the sketch involved the man with no nose, which I’ve always found memorable) and Caddie Woodlawn.  One day, though, the sketch was from a book called Lizard Music by Daniel Pinkwater.  I’d never heard of the book.  I hadn’t heard of most of the books this guy did, but this one definitely sounded interesting. Particularly when he got to this part:

“I was almost at the point of running into the kitchen and looking up the number of the resort where Mom and Dad were staying, when the lizard band came onto the screen.  These were real lizards, not people dressed up as lizards, and they played regular musical instruments.  There were five or six of them.  At first it was scarier than the movie, especially the close-ups, but as the lizards played and swayed together, I sort of got used to it.  The music was very strange.  It wasn’t like anything I’d ever heard before.”

The story, if you want the condensed version, is about a kid named Victor who sees these mysterious musicians on his television after the late-late movies have broadcasted (his parents are out of town, y’see) and he wants to know where they come from.  The book is a bit of a cult hit too.  Originally published in 1976, since its creation I’ve heard it mentioned as the Daniel Pinkwater touchstone.  Seek ye to know the mysteries of why men all over this country go crazy for his stuff (including Neil Gaiman and Cory Doctorow, judging by their blurbs on the back of this reprint), look no further than this brand spanking new edition published by the fantastic New York Review Children’s Collection.

According to the bio in the back, this was the first book Pinkwater wrote.  He has, as you may have noticed, continued his productivity relatively unabated since.  I’ve kept an old and original 1976 copy on my own library branch’s shelves, just in case a Pinkwater fanatic (or, simply, “Pinknatic”) asks for it by name.  Now that I’ve cast mine eyes on this pretty little edition, though, I may scrap the old for the new.  Here’s the old:

The covers are gratifyingly similar.  Fortunately the new one classed up the title’s font a bit.

10 Comments on Return of the mysterious Lizard Music, last added: 1/20/2011
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