TWIRFMR

Archive for the ‘TV’ Category

Double Shot Tuesday! Breaking Bad

In Music, TV on March 23, 2010 at 1:05 am

In celebration of this week’s Breaking Bad premiere, here’s two songs instantly recognizable to any self-respecting BB fan. Both good, but were made great by their electrifying use on the show:

Saturday Night Cinema: Spaced

In Movies, TV on January 9, 2010 at 3:02 pm

Juice up the laptop, hop in your jammies, and fluff the pillows—-it’s time for Saturday Night Cinema!

Welcome to TWIRFMR’s newest feature, Saturday Night Cinema. Our first entry is actually a TV show, but it’s cinematic enough to qualify as film. Five years prior to Shaun of the Dead, Simon Pegg created and starred in a British television show called Spaced. If you like the look and feel and of Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz (and if you don’t, what’s wrong with you?), you’ll be sure to appreciate Spaced, as it shares the same director as those two films (Edgar Wright). Both seasons of Spaced are legally available in their entirety here. To get you started, here’s Episode 1 in all its non-embeddable glory:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHc0VDdhXVQ

BONUS PEGG: Pegg was a cast member and writer for Big Train, a sketch comedy show that aired in the UK from 1998-2002. The sketches were hit and miss, but this one definitely delivers.

Freaks and Geeks: Haverchuck’s After School Ritual

In TV on December 30, 2009 at 9:50 pm

In a series chock-full of great scenes, it’s damn near impossible to pick the greatest. However, this scene, from the episode “Dead Dogs and Gym Teachers”  (a.k.a. “The Who Episode”) is at once funny, sad, poignant, and revealing (all achieved in under two minutes) and is unquestionably one of the best in Freaks and Geeks short lived history:

The Bizarre, Baffling Song Choices of Kids Incorporated

In Music, TV on December 19, 2009 at 6:15 pm

Kids Incorporated was a not-very-good children’s TV show that ran from 1984-1993. The show was ostensibly about the life and times of a group of adolescents who also happened to be in a “rock” band, but it was really just a lot of singing and dancing with little plot to speak of. Kids Incorporated is probably best known for giving the world Stacey Ferguson, a.k.a. Fergie (yes, that Fergie). Many of the performances were the usual kid-friendly pop standards but every once in a while, the strangest of songs would appear. Behold, the bizarre, baffling song choices of Kids Incorporated:

The Angels Want to Wear My Red Shoes – Elvis Costello

Costello’s sardonic paen to unrequited love and flirting with death as interpreted by a kid in a headset mic.

Don’t Dream It’s Over – Crowded House

Lil’ Fergie waxing poetic about catching the deluge in a paper cup.

Million Miles Away – The Plimsouls

No song is sacred as this 80′s power-pop classic gets the Kids Incorporated treatment.

Cherry Bomb – John Mellencamp

Cherry Bomb is a middle-age man’s ode to the good ol’ days; i.e. fighting and fucking as a teen in smalltown America. Not exactly kid-fodder, now is it?

Just Got Lucky – JoBoxers

WTF?!?

Aloha Kikaida

In Hawaii, TV on August 14, 2009 at 3:39 pm

 kikaida and kikaida01

In late 1970′s Hawaii, TWIRFMR could be found running home from school as not to miss a moment of Kikaida, a Japanese live-action program (or “tokukatsu” in Japanese, Godzilla and Ultraman being the most famous examples of this genre) broadcast on Honolulu’s KIKU, a local station known for it’s Asian-friendly programming.  As the story goes, a KIKU station executive caught a few episodes of Kikaida during its original run in Japan (1972-1973) and knew the show would be a perfect fit for Hawaii. Kikaida’s 68 episodes (43 plus 25 of its sequel) were first broadcast in Hawaii in 1974. The show was an immediate sensation and over the next several years, additional tokukatsu shows, all produced by the Toei Company, including Rainbowman, Inazuman, The Five Rangers, and Kamen Rider, joined Kikaida on KIKU’s programming roster.

Despite many production similarities between Kikaida and its tokukatsu peers, Kikaida had a distinct charm that the others shows lacked. Kikaida and its sequel, the confusingly titled Kikaida 01, were about a brilliant robotics expert, Dr. Komyoji, who is held captive by the evil Professor Gill for the purposes of creating, you guessed it, evil robots. Komyoji instead creates “good” robots however, his androids, Kikaida and Kikaida 01, are susceptible to the call of evil forces (in this case, the playing of a flute [an evil flute?] by Professor Gill) due to a conscience malfunction during their creation.

When not transforming into latex clad super-heroes, Kikaida and Kikaida 01 are portrayed in human form. Jiro plays the guitar and rides a motorcycle called “Sidecar”.  His “brother”, Ichiro, plays the trumpet and runs strictly on solar-power.

                                                                                      ichiro and jirojiro

Sure, there’s more. More characters, more sub-plot, but in all honesty, the show can be boiled down to this:  super-cool costumes, tons of ass-kicking, and a musical score that was way better than it needed to be. In other words, cheesy entertainment at its finest. Exhibit A:

Since its 1974 debut on KIKU, Kikaida has remained a cult icon throughout the islands. The blue and red android has met with at least two sitting govenors (hey, who invited Kamen Rider?)…. 

kikaida with govenor ariyoshi

 kikaida with govenor aiona 

….continues to thrill new generations of fans (largely due to the efforts of this site ,who help keep the Kikaida phenomenon alive)….

honolulu star bulletin 2002

…and what do you know, recently celebrated its 35th Anniversary in Hawaii. You go-go-go Kikaida!

kikaida_35th

 

 NOTES:

*According to Wikipedia, the creator of Kikaida, Shotaro Ishinomori, was, “Paying tribute to Astro Boy, created by his mentor Osamu Tezuka, Ishinomori used the stories of Carlo Collodi’s Pinocchio (which was also the basis for AstroBoy) along with Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein as the basis for his science fiction action story.” 

*Kikaida is sometimes referred to as “Kikaider”—this is a transliteration issue which has never fully been resolved however, the preferred translation in Hawaii is “Kikaida”.

*The actor who played “Jiro” (the guitar slinger), Ban Daisuke, was “Dr. Ikuma” in the Japanese version of The Ring (Ringu). Daisuke is, of course, very popular in Hawaii and occasionally visits the islands to attend Kikaida fan events. 

*Speaking of, there is an interesting article here about the guys who don the sacred suits at those fan events.

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