If things look a little strange here, it's because I'm making a transition back to Blogger to generate my html for this blog. I had been using Dreamweaver, which of course wasn't specifically designed to handle blogs, but has many other bells and whistles.
Monday, April 07, 2003
Creek five miles up Millcreek Canyon, 04/06/2003, 6:06 p.m.
Found while looking for something else: Avoiding Armageddon - Utah's Role and Legacy at KUED.org.
Sunday, April 6, 2003
Shadow Greetings, 03/29/2003, 8:08 a.m.
Craig Nielsen responds to an earlier entry:
The Questions in your blog of April 2 are good ones, perhaps rhetorical, but I think they are also answerable. And the answer in most cases is a resounding YES!
Printing did replace the spoken word in the sense that it dealt the
final blow to strong and dynamic oral tradition (as in Homer).
Photography did contribute to the death of representational painting as
serious art (leaving aside such iconoclastic schools as "photo-realism".)
Movies are, of course, just a series of still photographs, so those are still with us. But people do prefer their visual images in motion. I don't think there is much question about that.
I don't see the analogy with newspapers and book, nor with radio and
records. But I think its obvious most people get their news today from
television and/or radio. And in a very real sense television has killed
radio, first turning it into an almost exclusively recorded music medium,
and now into inane blather, and rigidly formatted music formulae.
Broadcast television's share of ratings has declined steadily since the
profusion of cable. Television and videos have affected motion picture
theater attendance, and has lowered the demographic, so that the vast
majority of movies that make money at the theatre box office today are
marketed for 12 - 14
year old boys.
And I do think that the "Internet", especially in its future
incarnations, will incorporate newspapers, radio, and tv, and thus effectively
render them superfluous as separate entities. But that is in the future.
Anyway, you got me thinking!
My reply: Thanks, Craig. I'd started to think that despite my attempts to provoke a discussion here, I wouldn't get much dialogue, so your comments are most welcome. Regarding some of your points:
Many record companies went out of business as commercial radio took hold in the early twenties. "The size of the industry in the U.S. alone declined by about one half in the early 1920's," explains David Morton in his History of Sound Recording Technology.
Record sales started to rebound in the thirties as the industry made the transition from acoustic to electrical recording which brought a dramatic improvement in sound quality. Development of the juke box also helped boost record sales.
I agree that television forced radio into a much different role, but
the ubiquity of recorded music and "inane blather" also eventually
helped foster a niche for public
radio.
Speaking of radio, anyone remember Herb
Jepko on KSL radio?
I met Jepko when I started working part-time at KSL in 1973. Herb was
great at multi-tasking as he hosted the overnight Nitecap program. He'd
sit in a darkened studio, smoking a cigarette, drinking coffee (which
he called "Cinnamon Tea" on the air), running the audio board,
talking to a caller -- all while carrying on a side conversation with
me. When the caller would pause, he'd open the mike saying, "uh huh"
or "yes, dear" then turn off the mike and continue our off-air
discussion.
Found while looking for something
else: Helping
Kids Cope with War
Friday, April 4, 2003
Dry Canyon, 04/01/2003, 5:56 p.m.
"I find it strange that people 'play' golf, 'play' tennis, and 'play' volleyball; but when they swim they 'work out.' I never work out. I 'play' swimming. I play intensely, but it is play. Beats the heck out of working out." --Dr. Keith Bell, sports psychologist and Masters Swimmer (as quoted by Terry Laughlin in Total Immersion)
Found while looking for something else: Habay wants to rename bridge after Rogers
Thursday, April 3, 2003
The southwest corner of the Eccles Broadcast Center, 04/03/2003, approx. 8:58 a.m.
A reminder: Pola's March shows tonight at 9:00 on KULC-Channel 9.
Wednesday, April 2, 2003
A few questions I've considered as I hear various guesses about how rapidly any particular "new" technology X may replace and forever render as obsolete some "legacy" technology Y?
Did printing replace the spoken word?
Did photography obsolete painting?
Did movies cause the death of still photography?
Did newspapers reduce the market for books?
Did radio replace records and newspapers?
Did television kill radio?
Did cable television kill broadcast television?
Did home rental of movies wipe out movie houses?
Will the Internet kill newspapers, radio and TV?
Of course the interplay between these various media siblings, parents, cousins, etc. is as fascinating as any human dynasty.
From Steve Schoenherr's Recording Technology History:
1931 - The EMI studio that opened Nov. 12 at Abbey Road in London,
was the largest sound recording studio in the world; Louis Sterling hired
Alan Blumlein to install Blumlein's own electrical recording system and
Sterling stopped paying royalties to Western Electric. Alan Blumlein patented
the "binaural" (stereo) recording method in England.
Found while looking for something
else:
Weblogs at Harvard
Untitled, 03/28/03, 8:36 a.m.
"Color possesses me. I don't have to pursue it. It will possess me
always, I know it. That is the meaning of this happy hour: Color and I
are one. I am a painter. "
--Paul Klee
New Cancer Weblog
Welcome to the Utah Blogosphere, Dan's Cancer Welblog. As you may have read in one of my previous entries, Dan -- a long-time friend -- is contending with Myeloma, a form of bone cancer.
He writes in an e-mail, "A number of people have been urging me
to write about my experiences with cancer. I've resisted that until now,
realizing that cancer is not at all uncommon and that lots of people have
had significant things to say. So I'm trying something Rich Finlinson
suggested -- a weblog. Seems to be the personal news form of the 21st
century. Take a look; let me know what you think. If it's too self-indulgent
I'll pull the plug."
My feedback to Dan, "Great blog. Funny. Serious. Oh, a nice mug shot, too. How did you like writing it? Any other response yet?"
As Dan said, take a look and let him know what you think.
Found while looking for something
else:
Utah Electronic College
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