MAD

 

I thought MAD magazine stopped being funny decades ago – or when I finally grew up, whichever came first – but this new cover is awesome.

 

*****

 

Normally, I can’t watch MSNBC’s Chris Matthews without holding an umbrella, due to the voluminous spittle he ejects, but I thought Matthews did a great job summing up Donald Trump’s appeal at the end of his Tuesday show (41-minute mark).

 

*****

 

Gee, I wonder how The Huffington Post really feels about Trump?

 

Huff

 

And gosh, I wonder how The Donald really feels about the pundits?

 

Trumpy1

 

Trumpy2

 

*****

 

Thought I would check out Bing’s language translator:

 

Translate

Translate2

 

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Escape

Escape

 

After her family is slaughtered by a band of vicious bandits in 14th century Norway, teenage Signe must run for her life. Escape is nothing more than a 78-minute chase movie – but there’s nothing wrong with that when you have a likable heroine (or two) with grit and gumption, and a truly hiss-worthy villainess (Ingrid Bolso Berdal).  Release: 2012 Grade: B

 

*****

 

Antarctica: A Year on Ice

Antarctic

 

Fascinating documentary about the 700 or so hardy souls who spend winters at a research base in Antarctica, enduring the most inhospitable climate on Earth and, as the film points out, the closest environment we have to that of Mars. You can enjoy the film on two levels: Sit back and enjoy the spectacular scenery, which filmmaker Anthony Powell captures with state-of-the-art time-lapse photography (best seen in high definition), or marvel at a cabin-fever social experiment that puts the close environs of Big Brother to shame. Release: 2013  Grade: A-

 

*****

 

Foxcatcher

Foxcatcher

 

Here’s evidence that not every gunman who snaps and wreaks havoc is a young male living in his mother’s basement. Sometimes, they are middle-aged men living in mansions. If you can get past Steve Carell’s prosthetic nose, which is a distraction, and Mark Ruffalo’s average physique, which is unconvincing for an Olympic athlete, Foxcatcher – based on the true story of tycoon John du Pont — is an absorbing study of one sad rich man’s desperate search for relevance. Release: 2014 Grade: B+

 

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RB1

 

Every father’s nightmare: Your little girl grows up and wants to play football, like Arizona coach Jen Welter, number 47 above … and then some hulking defensive end sees the opportunity to vise-squeeze her ass.

 

.       RB2       RB3

RB4

 

*****

 

Kimmel

 

I’m sorry, Jimmy, but your crying jag over this was downright embarrassing.

 

*****

 

Stewart

 

Let me say a few negative things about the soon-to-depart Jon Stewart. I’m Negative Nancy not because I disagree with Stewart’s politics (mostly, I agree with him), but because I’ve never found him especially amusing, and I think his influence, though substantial, is mostly confined to the Beltway.

In 2004, I knew next to nothing about Stewart, and so I bought his book, Naked Pictures of Famous People. Here are excerpts from my review: “Unlike contemporaries Dennis Miller and Bill Maher, Stewart’s brand of humor just doesn’t seem to translate well to the printed page. The humor all too often falls flat … the essays … seem more like childish temper tantrums than genuine displays of wit.”

Presumably, Stewart wrote his own book. Presumably, he has a team of writers at Comedy Central. Even so, The Daily Show has never had impressive ratings. Politicians and media types dig it because politicians and media types enjoy watching themselves on TV – even if what they hear is negative.

 

*****

 

WhoCares

 

I’m confused — is this something that we should be alarmed about?

 

*****

 

Bila

 

Want to work for Fox News? Follow Jedediah Bila’s example and put pictures like these on your application.

 

Bila2

 

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Ducks

 

Fox News bimbo Julie Banderas (below) ran a video clip of ducks crossing a busy freeway in “Mindianapolis.” I guess the story was supposed to be cute, but let me tell you, as a resident of Mindianapolis, I can testify that these ducks, much like Donald (Duck, not Trump), are often ill-tempered, nasty little buggers. If I’d been on that freeway, I might have been tempted to make duck soup.

 

Banderas

 

*****

 

RosieDonald

 

If Rosie O’Donnell pokes holes in Donald Trump’s presidential balloon, would that be considered fat shaming?

 

*****

 

Three weeks ago I complained about the lack of skin on this year’s Big Brother. Looks as though some of the houseguests heard me:

 

Jackie1

Jackie2

 

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by Ann Coulter

Adios

 

Ann Coulter is the right’s answer to the left’s Michael Moore: brash, passionate, sarcastic, and take-no-prisoners armed for political foes. Her can you believe this crap? outrage certainly grabs your attention, but as is the case with Moore, it can also make you wonder how fair she’s being. Does the other side have no legitimate arguments?

Coulter’s “other side” in the case of immigration includes Republicans as well as Democrats. The subject of Adios is the downside of illegal immigration, and Coulter’s approach is twofold: bombard the reader with horror stories about crime and other social costs associated with illegal border crossings (primarily from Mexico), and then bolster those anecdotes with facts and figures. I think the tactic is persuasive. Coulter is right when she claims that both political parties, most politicians, and much of the media routinely lie to the rest of us about unrestrained immigration, which benefits the few but harms the country as a whole.

By the way, I checked the book’s index and Donald Trump’s name does not appear. But I do wonder if the indomitable celebrity-candidate thumbed the pages of Coulter’s polemic and came to the same conclusion that I did: It’s time to build a fence.

 

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Common

Common

 

A gripping British drama about a working-class teen who, having driven some friends to a pizza parlor, finds himself on trial for murder after one of those friends fatally stabs a customer. The movie doesn’t hide its real goal: the repeal of England’s “joint enterprise” law, which critics claim targets the poor. I have no idea whether or not the law is just, but Common is genuinely affecting. Release: 2014  Grade: A-

 

*****

 

Zombeavers

Three boobs, and two bare breasts

 

If you dig Troma-style camp, you’ll dig Zombeavers, which follows the Troma formula of sex, stupidity, and low-budget effects as a group of youthful dimwits fight off crazed beavers at a lake cabin. The Good: 1) The beavers are more hand-puppet than CGI; they wouldn’t be as funny if they looked real. 2) Gratuitous nudity; the problem with similar exploitation on SyFy is that SyFy is too timid (or censored) to truly exploit. 3) The runtime is a brisk 77 minutes – although even that might be a bit long. The Bad: 1) A dumb subplot about the bratty young people cheating on each other. 2) They kill the dog. Film School 101: you never, ever kill the dog. Release: 2014 Grade: B-

 

Zom2

 

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Trump

 

The Huffington Post has decided that Donald Trump’s presidential campaign is not real, and so it will cover Trump’s exploits in its entertainment section, rather than in its politics section. Makes sense to me, given that The Huffington Post is not really a news site, but rather an entertainment site.

 

*****

 

Whenever I find myself watching baseball, I think about sex so that I can take my mind off the game.

 

*****

 

Finch

 

*****

 

“Immigration Reform” – What the hell does that even mean? Some people seem to think it means “amnesty,” while others seem to think it means “build a fence.”

 

 

*****

 

Geraldo

 

Fox News sent Geraldo Rivera into a dark, dank, secret criminal’s lair in Mexico, but Geraldo failed to find anything of much interest. Kind of like 1986, when Geraldo entered a dark, dank, secret criminal’s lair (Al Capone’s vault, below) and failed to find anything of much interest.

 

Geraldo2

 

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Grande2

 

Grande1

 

Taking a page from Ben Affleck and his holier-than-thou reaction to his PBS screw-up, pop star Ariana Grande got busted for misbehaving and then responded to Internet outrage by lecturing her fans about obesity:

 

“As an advocate for healthy eating, food is very important to me and I sometimes get upset by how freely we as Americans eat and consume things without giving any thought to the consequences that it has on our health and society.” – Grande’s “apology

 

OK, but what about the health of the poor schmuck who bought and then ate the donuts contaminated with your germs and dried saliva?

 

*****

 

CarTalk

 

I’m trying to imagine the uproar from feminists if the roles were reversed in the annoying UnitedHealthcare commercial pictured above. The woman talks to her hapless husband as if he were a small child with learning disabilities.

 

Simple-Minded Husband:  “I took the trash out.”

Condescending Wife:  “I know, and thank you so much for that.”

Condescending Wife:  “You do your pushups today?”

Simple-Minded Husband:  “No, I watched cartoons instead.”

 

Just kidding on that last response.  But I’m surprised she doesn’t ask him if he remembered to wipe after going number two.

 

*****

 

I can’t wait to read the truly life-affirming autobiography by Fox’s Gretchen Carlson, who overcame the twin horrors of losing a job once and growing up chubby. Take that, Holocaust survivors who write books!

 

*****

 

Donald Trump might be an egocentric blowhard, but I’m beginning to agree with him: We need to build a fence.

 

*****

 

Scream1

 

I’ve been watching MTV’s new series, Scream. Yes, I said I’ve been watching MTV’s new series, Scream. And lord help me, I’m kind of digging it. So sue me.

There are lots of great shows these days with vexing moral dilemmas and topical, complex themes. With this piece of mindless fluff, you get a break from all of that, and who doesn’t need a break from all of that?

 

Scream2

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by Jack Finney

Time

 

Writers are taught that details matter, and that they should be sure to include lots of them in their stories. But that advice can be taken to an extreme, and as evidence we have this 1970 science-fiction novel, which time and again is bogged down by tedious, nonessential detail. Stephen King in his nonfictional On Writing had better advice when he said that a writer can evoke almost any setting by using a few vivid, well-chosen details, and then letting the reader’s imagination fill in any gaps.

It’s too bad Finney didn’t heed that advice, because the concept of his novel, in which a lowly graphic artist is recruited for a top-secret time-travel experiment, is a fun one. But Finney’s obsession with describing every horse, buggy, building, and snowflake on the streets of 1882 New York makes reading most of this book a chore.  Time and Again finally springs to life about three-quarters into the story, when Finney abandons his love affair with descriptive passages and turns his attention to characters and plot, at which point the novel turns charming and entertaining. I’m just afraid that many readers won’t make it to that point, having long since decided that the preceding sluggishness is a waste of their time.

 

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MrRobot

 

TV Updates

 

Mr. Robot (USA Network)

An intriguing new series from, of all places, USA Network. Through two episodes, this tale of a hoodie-clad tech genius who gets drawn into the mysterious world of corporate hacking is timely and compelling. But that geek, as played by Rami Malek, is so depressive, so gloomy … will viewers be willing to enter his downbeat world, week after week? Is Elliot’s cynical attitude a rational reaction to the corruption around him, or is he just another whiny Millennial? Also, Robot is the kind of show that could turn disappointingly dumb, given its conspiracy-theory plot. But so far, so good.   Grade:  B+

 

**

 

Orange Is the New Black (Netflix)

Now in its third season, Orange consistently tackles social issues we don’t normally see on TV, yet continues to stay entertaining. One downside is that protagonist Piper Chapman (Taylor Schilling), the focus of the series when it premiered two years ago, has devolved into the show’s least interesting character.   Grade:  A-

 

**

 

BigBro17

 

Big Brother (CBS)

Two weeks into the show, and none of the houseguests have gotten naked for the CBS cameras. Don’t they understand that’s the main reason we tune in?  Grade:  Can’t say, because the report card was last seen floating in the hot tub

 

**

 

Deutschland 83 (SundanceTV)

The premise is a bit iffy – East German commie kid goes undercover in West Germany, transforming overnight from awkward momma’s boy to James Bond – but it’s fast-paced and less dour than, say, the similarly themed The Americans on FX.  And unlike the party poopers on Big Brother, the blondes in this show aren’t overly modest (below).  Grade:  B+

 

Gerhardt1 Gerhardt4

 

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