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SansFin

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Posts posted by SansFin

  1. They are pysanky. They are made by a reverse process. You begin with a white egg and put wax on all the parts you wish to remain white. You then dye it yellow. You put wax on all the parts you wish to remain yellow. You continue in this way with darker colors.

     

    There are excellent tutorials available on the Internet. There is a site dedicated to people wishing to learn:

    http://www.learnpysanky.com/steps.html

     

    A demonstration of the process is at:

     

     

    I have never been able to do it well. It requires a truly steady hand and great patience. I have neither of those! :) I believe the supplies are not expensive. I know from watching my mother that it requires hours for even simple designs.

     

    yaica.jpg

  2. > {quote:title=ValentineXavier wrote:}{quote}

    > Deleted, because it was too silly, even for me... :)

     

    It is said that a good man knows his limits. ;)

     

    I am now very curious what could possibly be so outlandish that you would consider it out of bounds ...

  3. > {quote:title=Hibi wrote:}{quote}

    > I guess the railway gets a lot of usage during those periods. Are you from there?

     

    The tram is always much used. The Soviet did not encourage ownership of private cars and tramways were built to compensate for their lack. Many people can not justify a car even today.

     

    Odessa was always my home. We moved to Russia for my father's work when I was a child and we moved back as quickly as we could. I was stationed in many places when I was in the military and I returned at every opportunity.

  4. > {quote:title=fxreyman wrote:}{quote}

    > Sans provided proof that TCM has always showed more older films than newer films. He ... His count ...

     

    I know I am not a typical American girly-girl and yet it should be "she" and "her". ;)

     

    > As far as Coca Cola is concerned, they did change it's branding after many years.

     

    ??The Real Thing?: Nominal Price Rigidity of the Nickel Coke, 1886-1959?, Daniel Levy and Andrew Young, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking (2004) underscores how the world is changing. What remained constant for seventy years now undergoes weekly changes. How can we expect any thing to remain the same when Coca-Cola does not?

     

    What were your comments on thread-drift? ;)

  5. > {quote:title=TCMfan23 wrote:}{quote}

    > A few days ago , i came on here to tell you my concerns and asked your thoughts on my ideas. Suddenly , i'm flamed with disagreements. The problem with people these days is no one can agree with anything. People aren't respected for what they think. You talk with anyone without having a fight or a arguement.

     

    I sincerely hope that my posts did not give the impression that I was being argumentative or putting-you-down. I did not mean them in that way.

     

    There have been many posts on this same subject since I have come to this forum. I did not consider most of them worthy of comment. I choose to comment in this thread as you are a new poster and I hope you can become a valued member of this forum.

     

    My only hope was to provide you with a new perspective and to provide that as objectively as possible.

     

    Is TCM the same as it was fifteen years ago? I believe it is not. Television stations must evolve to meet the changing needs and desires of its viewers. I am reminded of an old saying: even if you are on the right road - you will be run over if you just sit there.

     

    I believe a considerable amount of the perception that TCM is airing newer movies is that they are maintaining an average in the age of the movies they chose. By that I mean that five years ago the scheduled movies averaged x+ years old and now they are x plus 5+ years old. A new viewer could easily overlook the movies which they knew from recent sources. As time passes and the average year date of the movies increases the number of movies remembered from such sources also increases even though those movies were on those sources many years ago. -I will appreciate any person who understands this paragraph will translate it into a more understandable form.- :)

     

    I believe another possible reason for the perception is the interstitials. I have seen recordings of those from ten years ago. They were less garish and trendy than they are now. They felt as if they fit into the mood of a gentler time which the movies personified. Those today feel more suited to MTV. The impression that you have been ripped out of the past and dumped into a dystopian future remains with you when you use the time to check what is scheduled later in the day and your subliminal dissatisfaction taints how you analyze the schedule.

     

    I hope you will not judge the people on this forum by any comments in this thread and I hope you will understand that many people here have become sensitized to posters whose first post is a complaint. There have been many such over the years.

  6. > {quote:title=Hibi wrote:}{quote}

    > Does it snow in Odessa? Or is it too warm? I'd hate to be on shoveling detail for those........

     

    The snow is most usually light. In March there may be two inches on the ground which has not melted. It is bad when there is a great amount of snow because it is unusual and there are no preparations.

     

    This is Arkadia beach which is very popular during the summer:

     

     

    This is typical:

     

     

     

    This is less typical:

    http://youtu.be/twTPEyyzN58

     

    This is an inane video for it is the same image for fifteen minutes. It is the only image I can find with snow on the steps:

     

  7. > {quote:title=Hibi wrote:}{quote}

    > One gets tired just looking at them (LOL).......

     

    :) There is a funicular.

     

     

     

    I thank you, FredCDobbs, for posting that picture and video. All that I could find were stills of low contrast or limited view.

  8. > {quote:title=TCMfan23 wrote:}{quote}

    > It wasn't until around 2004 / 2005 did TCM start showing 70's movies.

     

    I am sorry to say that you are mistaken in your belief.

     

    The schedule for January, 1998 is available online:

    http://web.archive.org/web/19980131213949/tcm.turner.com/CAL_TXT/9801/02/9801CT.htm

     

    It clearly shows that eighteen movies were from the 1970s and four were from the 1980s.

     

    I believe the schedule for November, 1995 has been removed online. If my database is correct fully 16% of the movies shown that month were from the 1960s or later.

  9. > {quote:title=Hibi wrote:}{quote}

    > WOW! Impressive set of stairs.......

     

    I believe no photograph can do them justice. They are a thing which must be experienced. I laughed when I heard a line in a movie which was approx.: "I dreamed I died and I had to climb the stairs all the way up to heaven" because that is the feeling one has when standing at the bottom.

     

    I searched for an image of them as used in *Battleship Potemkin* (1935). It is sad to say I could not find a good one.

  10. > {quote:title=aimalac wrote:}{quote}

    > I for one was quite impressed by SansFin's detective work tracking down that old schedule and the comparison with the most current schedule. I found the numbers to be quite enlightening.

     

    I thank you for those kind words. I am not deserving of the majority of the credit. Capuchin hunted old schedules available online in order to facilitate his creation of entries for the unofficial TCM Programmer's Challenges. He also created a method to translate the most vital information into a database which may be searched by many methods. I only choose the two schedules, sorted them by year and changed the list number of the movies to correspond with the change of years. I believe I spent less than half an hour because of these tools which are available to me.

  11. > {quote:title=FredCDobbs wrote:}{quote}

    > These documentary and history channels now just put a couple of guys in a boat, or a car, or a truck, and they talk for an hour about fishing or driving on a bad road.

     

    I have read that both the History Channel and its sister station had a period of time when it looked as if they would not survive. Quality documentaries have high prices and few people want to watch them. It was a choice of whether the stations would become a shadow of their former selves or would disappear forever. The former course was chosen.

     

    Programs which "are for the public good" even when few people will watch them is why you have the PBS system.

  12. > {quote:title=ugaarte wrote:}{quote}

    > what a Beautiful Structure that was of the Cathedral that has since, been torn down . . . how sad.

     

    I hope it will make you less sad to know that the picture I posted is of the Cathedral rebuilt. The "Orthodox Black Sea Fund" was established to rebuild it after Ukraine became an independent country again. I believe it was finished in 2010. I have not seen it since work began on the bell tower.

     

    This is how it once looked:

    37spaso_preobrazhensky_sobor.jpg

  13. The earliest TCM schedule I can find online is for January, 1998 at:

    http://web.archive.org/web/19980131213949/tcm.turner.com/CAL_TXT/9801/02/9801CT.htm

     

    There were 379 movies and 34 scheduled specials ranging from *MGM Parade Show#6* (1955) to *Festival of Shorts* (1998).

    The oldest movie was *Male and Female* (1919) which was 79 years old.

    The newest movie was *Marie: A True Story* (1998) with Sissy Spacek which was 10 years old.

     

    Per a fast-and-dirty sorting:

    1 movie of pre-1920s.

    11 movies of the 1920s.

    121 movies of the 1930s.

    101 movies of the 1940s.

    72 movies of the 1950s.

    51 movies of the 1960s.

    18 movies of the 1970s.

    4 movies of the 1980s.

     

    The April, 2012 schedule is at:

    http://www.tcm.com/schedule/monthly.html

     

    There are 444 movies and 15 scheduled specials ranging from *MGM Parade Show#9* (1955) to *Peter O'Toole: Live from the TCM Classic Film Festival* (2012)

    The oldest movie is *A Modern Musketeer* (1917) which is 95 years old.

    The newest movie is *Freaked* (1993) which is 19 years old.

     

    Per a fast-and-dirty sorting:

    3 movies of pre-1920s.

    20 movies of the 1920s.

    92 movies of the 1930s.

    89 movies of the 1940s.

    108 movies of the 1950s.

    109 movies of the 1960s.

    17 movies of the 1970s.

    4 movies of the 1980s.

    2 movies of the 1990s.

     

    The percentage breakdowns are:

    1998: 98.6% of movies were more than 20 years old. (374)

    2012: 99.7% of movies are more than 20 years old. (443)

     

    1998: 92.6% of movies were more than 30 years old. (351)

    2012: 98.8% of movies are more than 30 years old. (439)

     

    1998: 80.2% of movies were more than 40 years old. (304)

    2012: 95.9% of movies are more than 40 years old. (439)

     

    1998: 58.5% of movies were more than 50 years old. (222)

    2012: 79.0% of movies are more than 50 years old. (351)

     

    For April, 2012 TCM is airing more movies and older movies than they did in January, 1998.

  14. > {quote:title=MissGoddess wrote:}{quote}

    > Ah! Prosit! A bottle of 26K (or is that 26,000 proof??)

     

    Bud'mo!

     

    I like my vodka as I like my men: strong and peppery and I do not think I could drink 26,000 proof! I believe that looking at the bottle would make you intoxicated!

  15. > {quote:title=willbefree25 wrote:}{quote}

    >> They are required by law to listen to programming suggestions

    > I did not know that! Wow, they must really hate me, because I asked why I don't have WETA-UK of three, count 'em, three PBS stations, and none have answered me. That makes me special, doesn't it?

     

    I believe the law requires them to log all viewer contact and to consider the most-often suggested suggestions. I believe it does not require them to respond or to implement those suggestions.

     

    > I had fish as a kid and used to come home to find them on the floor - my fish committed suicide, what does *that* tell you?

     

    I know a person who claims his pet clam ran away from home.

  16. > {quote:title=Lori3 wrote:}{quote}

    > I never have liked my men (My men, I sound like Mae West) sorry. I have never found the "pretty boy" look or too beautiful of a man to be all that attractive.

     

    A man who is delicately finely-featured makes me wonder if he has a boyfriend.

     

    > I like a man to look like a man who has a handsome face yes, but who face also says, "I have taken all the world has heaved at me, and I am still standing strong."

     

    I share your sentiment. A man's face should be intense and it should say: "I have seen life". I believe it should also be a warning that little girls who play with fire can have their hearts broken.

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