Kool-Aid, drinking the

At work, I’ve finally had a chance to apply some of the practices I’ve been reading about (and advocating) for months. Foremost among them are the related concepts of test-driven development, (proper) unit testing, dependency injection and the principle of least knowledge (aka the Law of Demeter).

And what do you know: they actually work!

I’ve also wound up doing quite a bit of refactoring—mostly, as someone (maybe Michael Feathers?) put it, of “new legacy” code, stuff that’s been written in the last few months (not by me) which is full of global state and complex un-mockable setup. Most of that has been scattershot/mercenary work to make life easier for myself, rather than a concerted effort to rebuild the foundations without tearing down the walls, but I think I’ve made some incremental improvements that will help in the long run.

Now I just have to get the rest of the source control/build monkeys off my back. A few months ago I’d almost divested myself of one, through no small or short-lived effort, but just when I thought I was out….

Coin

Obverse:

It has been Hollywood gospel for decades that advertising and marketing can help a film to open strongly, but moviegoers talking with each other are crucial to its continuing success. [… Younger moviegoers] resist a choice that is not in step with their peer group. Having joined the crowd at Transformers, they’re making their plans to see G. I. Joe. Some may have heard about The Hurt Locker, but simply lack the nerve to suggest a movie choice that involves a departure from groupthink.

If I mention the cliché “the dumbing-down of America,” it’s only because there’s no way around it. And this dumbing-down seems more pronounced among younger Americans. It has nothing to do with higher educational or income levels. It proceeds from a lack of curiosity[…] This trend coincides with the growing effectiveness of advertising and marketing campaigns to impose box office success on heavily-promoted [CGI] blockbusters, which are themselves often promotions for video games. No checks and balances prevail. The mass media is the bitch of marketing.

Reverse:

Craig Ferguson, July 21, 2009

We got it all on…

The movie “UHF” was released to an unsuspecting public exactly 20 years ago today. #UHF

It sure was. Twenty years ago my friend Bob picked me up on the road in front of my parents’ house—we were in such a hurry, he pulled away before I was fully in the car, which caused me to rip the sole of my shoe as it dragged along the rough asphalt—and tore into London to the Huron Market Place theatre to see a double bill of The Karate Kid, Part III and Al’s magnum opus. (KK3 left so little of an impression in my mind that I had to look up releases from the summer of ’89 to figure out what else was on.) From the shot of the mountain at the beginning to Spatula City to “Supplies!” to “I knew she was gonna say that” I could hardly stop laughing.

Think I’m going to go put in the DVD. Don’t wait up!

It’s not elitism if you’re actually one of the elite

While reading I’m a proud Brainiac, Roger Ebert’s non-apology to those who call him “elitist” for not liking Transformers 2, I was reminded of one of my favourite moments from this year’s Fringe festival. It was during The NO Show, a nightly “talk show” put on by local sketch comedy group Fully Insured and hosted by scriptoris fecundus palmaris Jayson McDonald. The show is traditionally heavily comedy-oriented, including the interviews, just like the televised versions it springs from, and it’s really funny, due in large part to Jayson’s own ability to quickly riff on what his guest has just said.

What impressed me, though, was his interview with the cast and director of Never Swim Alone (Eva Blahut, Meaghan Chenosky, Tyler Parr and Justin Peter Quesnelle). Rather than play the interview for laughs, Jayson and his guests took the time to have an honest, insightful discussion about the show and their craft. It was a few minutes that demonstrated the intelligence of, and mutual respect between, the five people on stage.

Gene Siskel, Ebert’s partner on At the Movies until his death, said “I always ask myself: ‘Is the movie that I am watching as interesting as a documentary of the same actors having lunch together?'” Having now witnessed Eva, Jayson, Justin, Meaghan and Tyler “having lunch”, they’ve set a high bar for themselves and their companies (Passionfool and Stars and Hearts); but knowing the consistently high quality and passion each brings to her/his work, it’s one they’re all easily capable of leaping with room to spare.

Fringe reviews

As an unofficial part of the 2009 London Fringe Festival, I organized a group of seven people to write opening-weekend reviews for every production. (Which has given me a whole new level of respect for Kathy Navackas and Alison Challis, who do about a million more things for the festival with fewer mistakes than I made with a much smaller group.) I posted a summary of the reviews on Theatre in London.ca earlier today.

I also wrote a few reviews on my own and wanted to hold onto them, as the Fringe forums are purged every year, so here they are for posterity.

archy and mehitabel

i wish…

if i were a cockroach
i would want to be like archy
but im not so
i want to be like jeff culbert

who else in london could be
a cat
an ant
a worm
a robin
a beetle
another cat
another cat
a poet
and a dancer

the black shire is hot
but jeff archy and mehitabel are hotter

toujours gai

[with apologies to don marquis and jeff culbert]

Magical Mystery Tour Rockumentary

Where’s the magic?

It appears I’m in a very small minority (of one?) in not particularly liking this production. The clips from the film make it pretty clear why it’s only got 5.8 stars on IMDb, and don’t do more than interrupt the flow of the concert. (And don’t be confused, this is a concert, there’s no story or context for any of the music.) The music’s played well enough, but the only performers who seemed to have any sort of energy or sense of fun were Yuri (“Paul”), both flautists, and one of the sax players. The whole thing came off to me as safe, over-rehearsed and passionless.

They got a standing ovation, though, so maybe it’s just me.

A MOST Unimportant Criminal

I liked it… I’m not sure I *got* it, but I liked it

At the end of the show I turned to my viewing companions and said “I have to meet Colette Nichol, because I need to find out how someone writes something like that.” Haven’t done so yet, as far as I know—funny how simple black eye makeup and a beret can change someone’s appearance so completely—but there are still two days left in the Fringe, right? (CN: I’ll be the one in the green T-shirt. :))

[For those looking for absurdist fare after the Fringe, Bumbletea Theatre has a show called Smell Co. at TAP starting on July 15. Actually, I don’t know for a fact that it’s absurdist, but it is being performed by the playwright and group that did Twicken’s Book last year. –pej@til]

Never Swim Alone

The beach. The bay. The point.

I’ve raved about this production to anyone who will listen (and many others within earshot) since it was mounted last year. The 2009 Fringe version is even more intense—which those who saw it before may believe almost impossible—and very literally breathtaking in my case.

Funny, verbose, smart, physical, nostalgic, dark, and absolutely heartbreaking. Passionfool set an incredibly high bar with their 2008 production, and Eva Blahut, Meaghan Chenosky, Tyler Parr and Justin Peter Quesnelle have significantly raised even that standard.

Barenaked Ladies reveal all

This sort of thing fascinates me…

<p><a href="http://beta.twiddeo.com/133c">A video of Ed Robertson and Kevin Hearn in the recording studio, working out an awkward moment in a new song with producer Michael Phillip Wojewoda</a></p>

Interesting…

Sometime in the last few days all of these blogs (aggregated at Planet CBC) have disappeared:

  • http://quietlytyping.blogspot.com/
  • http://princegeorgecbclockout.blogspot.com/
  • http://silencedatcbc.blogspot.com/
  • http://shealghscaravan2.blogspot.com/
  • http://infinitytoone.blogspot.com/
  • http://theproducerca.blogspot.com/
  • http://guildpeacetower.blogspot.com/
  • http://alexanderking.blogspot.com/
  • http://cbccalgaryreports.blogspot.com/
  • http://picketinthepark.blogspot.com/
  • http://qiqitiqpuq.blogspot.com/
  • http://bdowbiggin.blogspot.com/
  • http://cbcviktim.blogspot.com/
  • http://nosepressedtoglass.blogspot.com/
  • http://cbclockout.blogspot.com/
  • http://moneychangeseverything.blogspot.com/
  • http://dealforfreelancers.blogspot.com/
  • http://cbceyeball.blogspot.com/

It’s interesting to note that almost all of them were started during the last CBC strike. All of them had been inactive for a long time, which makes me think it’s simply Google doing some housecleaning, but I’m sure the conspiracy-minded are all a-tizzy.