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hamradio

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Posts posted by hamradio

  1. You're right, they shouldn't write such gossip. That should be left to the experts i.e. The National Enquirer. The next thing you know somebody be claiming that Elvis is still alive.

     

    Many people think that "Mommie Dearest" should be taken with a grain of salt but they are mainly Joan Crawford *fans!*

  2. Well I like to point out that there are Elvis fans and *there are Elvis fans!*. One of the people I work for is an Elvis diehard fan, lol! He and his wife collects about everything Elvis. I was going though my old photo negatives and remembered about the photo I took of a statue he bought a few years ago. Its life size, don't know how much he paid for it - thought it was a bit rude to ask. I scanned it in on my HP Photo Smart S20. He had it in an office building he was renovating until he found room to put it, ha ha.

     

    Here's *Elvis!*

    mrh1j.jpg

  3. People in my area rather have the cold than the *very heavy* snow we had a few days before Christmas. Some people didn't got their power back on until around New Years. I'm telling you that is the heaviest snow I've ever seen!. When I was outside trying to remove it, I can hear branches breaking and crashing every few minutes or so. At the beginning each flake was the size of 50 cent pieces.

  4. I also like "Mary Poppins" but I wish they didn't do the animated sequence - sort of ruined it.

     

    Loved Dick Van Dykes dance scene, "Step in Time" on the roof top. Lol, that got me to tell nosy people asking me whenever I'm up on the roof "what are you doing", I reply "I'm practicing my "Step in Time" dance number.

     

    Edited by: hamradio on Jan 9, 2010 10:32 PM Fixed TYPO!

  5. I still remembered the first time I heard about the tragic accident involving Vic Morrow on CNN. Can't forget the video they showed of the accident, very graphic.

     

    A good story on it http://www.findadeath.com/Deceased/m/Vic%20Morrow/vic_morrow.htm

    There is a book covering it "Outrageous Conduct".

     

    Sad that this is the only photo I can find of those kids, Renee Shin -Yi Chen and Myca Le.

     

    kids.jpg

     

    If anything good came out of it was stricter child labor laws.

    Today we have CGI in which the same scenes can be done in the computer without risking life and limb.

     

    Movie accidents still happens i.e. last year in New York.

    http://wbztv.com/watercooler/sorcerers.apprentice.nicolas.2.1002879.html

     

    Here is the National Transportation Safety Board report in October 1984 on the accident involving Vic Morrow.

     

    ? The probable cause of the accident was the detonation of debris-laden high temperature special effects explosions too near a low flying helicopter leading to foreign object damage to one rotor blade and delamination due to heat to the other rotor blade, the separation of the helicopter's tail rotor assembly, and the uncontrolled descent of the helicopter. The proximity of the helicopter to the special effects explosions was due to the failure to establish direct communications and coordination between the pilot, who was in command of the helicopter operation, and the film director, who was in charge of the filming operation. ?

     

    RIP Vic

     

    vic.jpg

     

    Edited by: hamradio on Jan 9, 2010 9:43 PM

  6. Whats even more dreadful is the old ViewMaster reels of "The Love Bug". The scene where Herbie is doing a wheelie has a major blooper. You can see the 2 steel cables holding the front of the car up. LOL!

     

    By the way I'm using a 1950's Model D focusing viewer - magnification X7.

     

    wvmdstand.jpg

  7. So happens I copied several of my converted Youtube videos to a flash drive including "The Changing of the Guard".

     

    My DVD recorder gave me a playlist to choose from and its was as easy as a standard DVD. My recorder has a USB port in the front so what I envisioned about having an entire movie on a flash drive is possible. Its only a matter of a short time before capacity increase and price decrease (nothing new there).

     

    I got my Flash drives on Ebay and I love them. Talk about old tech, I have "Highlander, The Renegade Version" on CD-ROM video (2 disc). It plays great on my computer but its a little pixalated on my TV , no big deal though. I can play it on my MS-DOS computer. I'm trying to see if the entire movie to be transferred over to a flash drive. What blows my mind is that it will not play on my DVD recorder even though it plays great on my other RCA DVD player.

     

    I used the old XingMPEG player on my computer. Snapshot at the bottom, yes that is Sean Connery.

     

    Blu ray 3D, no thank you, I hate wearing those glasses. We need a 3D tech that does NOT require those eye glasses. "Avatar" I haven't seen yet. Love that cellphone ad of the guy showing the "Avatar" clip on his *projector phone*, tada! Crying out loud people go home and properly watch a movie!!

     

    2uxzc09.jpg

     

    Edited by: hamradio on Jan 8, 2010 9:22 PM

  8. Ever wonder whats next after Blu ray? Will it be the last of the "any type or rotating disc" format?

     

    I foresee a type of read only flash drive that has TWICE the resolution of Blu ray? OMG here we go again! LOL!

     

    I can just hear the advertising jingle "Flash me a movie".

     

    Possible update for the old fashion Blu ray?

    rambo16.jpg

  9. The problem with those films made during the 1960's and 70's was that wretched vegeable dye based film stock they used. The *worst* I remembered seeing BEFORE a nice restoration was done on it is "Around the World in 80 Days". I thought that film at the time was awful in that it resembled a 1920's B&W (actually brown tinted) silent!

     

    Here is a forum on the subject,

    http://forums.creativecow.net/thread/2/933060

    The original poster's dad said that no one has yet created a "color safe film", which means that all movies are going to have to go through a restoration every 20 - 30 years. So many films, who's got the money?

     

    This is worth reading http://digitalcontentproducer.com/mag/video_first_person_restoring/

     

    A full restoration has to be done on any movie before its tranfer to Blu ray otherwise whats the point.

     

    Its amazing that the movie "Becky Sharp" (1935) held up better than movies shot during the early 1970's time period. Maybe sticking with the 3 strip technicolor might have given us better quality over the years.

     

    Becky Sharp (1935)

    Becky%201.jpg

     

    Gypsy Colt (1954)

    gc.jpg

     

    Edited by: hamradio on Jan 8, 2010 12:29 PM

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