Wednesday, October 14, 2009

"You ain’t heard nothin’ yet!”


On October 1927, a film was released that memorized audiences with the use of a new technology that changed the way movies were viewed. It was the release of The Jazz Singer. It was one of the first films to use new Synchronized Sound technology in front of a public audience. It still had elements of silent films along with recorded jazz songs. Halfway through the movie, the main character burst towards the audience shouting, "Wait a minute, wait a minute. You ain’t heard nothin’ yet!” The audience was said to have stood to their feet and cheered at the first synced voice.

Warner Brothers became the first to pioneer this new technology, taunting other film companies to 'catch up.' Unfortunately, the earlier innovations had a flaw that it required someone to swap 'disks' at precise times in order to stay synced to the screen. The Jazz Singer required at least fifteen disks for all it's parts. One miss, and the effect would be out of sync.

Other problems that strung up were for filming, the technology was noisy and production crews were untrained in their use. Techniques were started that still were in use today, like directional Microphones. Actors and Actresses were also at risk, those without acting skills or accents had lost their jobs because they couldn't hide it very well. The movie, Singing in the Rain, actually is based on these historic events in the film industry.

EAK
Sources:
http://www.essortment.com/all/firsttalkies_refn.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Jazz_Singer_%281927_film%29
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_film

The Birdseye View

Clarence Birdseye found a way to flash-freeze foods and deliver them to the public---one of the most important steps forward ever taken in the food industry.

After observing the people of the Arctic preserving fresh fish and meat in barrelsof sea water quickly frozen by the arctic temperatures, he concluded that it was the rapid freezing in the extremely low temperatures that made food retain freshness when thawed and cooked months later. The fish were frozen too quickly for ice crystals to form and ruin their cellular structure. Birdseye the businessman saw that the public back home would gladly pay for such frozen foods, if he could deliver them. He returned to New York, and in 1924 founded Birdseye Seafoods, Inc. 

Later, he invented a system that packed dressed fish, meat or vegetables into waxed-cardboard cartons, which were flash-frozen under high pressure.


Today, we especially appreciate that Birdseye's process, still basically in use, preserves foods' nutrients as well as their flavor. In fact, we can say that Clarence Birdseye has indirectly improved both the health and convenience of virtually everyone in the industrialized world.


Blanche
Sources:
http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blfrfood.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarence_Birdseye
http://web.mit.edu/invent/iow/birdseye.html

The Move to Hollywood


Between 1915 and 1920 grandiose movie palaces sprung up all throughout the U.S. The film industry moved gradually out of the East to Hollywood, where now-famous independent producers as Thomas Harper Ince (1882–1924), Cecil B. de Mille, and Mack Sennett set up their own studios.  Hundreds of films a year poured from the studios to fill an increasing demand from theaters. The vast majority of them were Westerns, slapstick comedies, and such elegant romantic melodramas as de Mille's Male and Female(1919) .


Silent films: Mack Sennett became known as the king of comedy; he introduced slapstick to the screen. His style of comedy was altogether new, combining elements of vaudeville, the circus, comic strips, and pantomime. He was a master of timing who kept his films moving at a dizzying pace. Sennett once said that a gag could be planted, developed, and completed in less than 100 feet of film, or one minute on the screen. He had a talent for creating an atmosphere in which artistic temperament could flourish. His corps of players included Marie Dressler (1869–1934), Mabel Normand (1894–1930), Fatty Arbuckle (1887–1933), and the English comic named Charlie Chaplin.

Chaplin was a comic genius whose work lit up the screen. His presence in a film virtually assured its success.He was the first truly international movie star and a legend well within his own lifetime.  He continued to produce, direct, and star in his own films well into the sound era and was especially memorable in The Great Dictator (1940),Monsieur Verdoux (1947), and Limelight (1952). In 1919, Chaplin, along with Griffith and popular stars Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, formed the original United Artists Corp. and ushered in the star system as well as a golden age of silent film in the U.S.


Blanche

Sources:
http://www.cecilbdemille.com/
http://www.moviediva.com/MD_root/reviewpages/MDDynamite.htm
http://www.history.com/encyclopedia.do?articleId=216967

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

A Kiss for the Children


Located in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, the Milton Hershey's company began producing milk chocolate in bars in 1907 in wafers, bars, and the signature flat-bottomed cone shaped "kiss". At first they were individually wrapped in little squares of silver foil, but in 1921 machine wrapping was introduced. That technology was also used to add the signature “plume” at the top to signify to consumers that this was a genuine Hershey's Kiss chocolate. In 1924, the plume became a trademark.

For the next several decades of production, the Hershey chocolate bar sold for a nickel. It was nicknamed the "nickel chocolate bar." Milton's goal was to take chocolate from the luxury class it was in and make it affordable to everyone. Though it shrank in size several times due to the cost of production, the company managed to sell the bar for a nickel from 1903 to 1970. The bar continues to fluctuate in size with the cost of production to this day but the company is quick to point out that it does in fact sometimes increase in size as well.


But Milton Hershey did more than invent a recipe for chocolate.

He and his wife, Catherine, were sad because they had no children of their own, and they were anxious to put their growing chocolate profits to better use. Much of the money he made from the recipe was poured into founding the 1909 Hershey Industrial school, a 10,000-acre plot of land with schools that continues to provide education for over 1200 children today whose family lives have been disrupted at home. Their initial enrollment was just 10 but grew quickly. Today is a safe haven for children K-12 from broken or financially troubled backgrounds.

From the Milton Hershey School page:

At Milton Hershey School, we know that in order to be happy, safe, and productive, students need guidance and support in all parts of their lives.

The excellent education at Milton Hershey School starts with dedicated teachers who care about each student's learning experience. Classes are small - an average of 15 students for each teacher, so each student gets individual attention and support.

Students live in large, comfortable homes with 10 to 14 students in their own age group. A pair of married houseparents oversee each home, providing the structure that children need and taking an active interest in their development."

Hershey's belief that an individual is morally obligated to share the fruits of success with others resulted in significant contributions to society.


The Milton Hershey School today:





Blanche

sources:
http://www.hersheys.com/discover/milton/hershey_ind_school.asp
http://www.thehersheylegacy.com/
http://www.hersheys.com/discover/history/company.asp
http://www.ehow.com/about_5036350_history-milk-chocolate-candy-bar.html

The Wilde stuff (late Victorian/Art Nouveau period)


The Irish playwright Oscar Wilde was born in Dublin, Ireland on October 14, 1954. His father was a respected surgeon and his mother a writer and playwright.


He began composing poetry as soon as he could hold and pen, and in his later years because immensely popular for his plays. He was the guest of honor at every party for his extraordinary ability to set the room rocking with laughter at his bright manner and lively wit. He was loved by everyone, and he loved people, but loved himself the best...and everyone knew it.


In 1892 he arrived in New York City and began a year long tour of North America. When a customs inspector asked him if he had anything to declare he replied, "Nothing but my genius."

Wilde helped to found the Aesthetic Movement (or "art for art's sake") under the influence of writer and critic Walter Pater.

He himself wrote over over 200 plays and poems, including Salome, The Importance of Being Earnest, Lady Windermere's Fan, and An Ideal Husband. A comprehensive list is in the links below.

His life was riddled with personal drama and complications. In 1884 Wilde married Constance Mary Lloyd (1858-1898) with whom he would have two sons; Cyril (1885-1915), who was killed during World War I, and Vyvyan (1886-1976), who would become an author himself. He had numerous affairs, including male lovers, the last of whom was Lord Alfred Douglas, "Bosie". Wilde argued against religion his whole life, but converted to Catholicism on his deathbed in 1900.


Some of his popular quotes:


Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.

I love acting. It is so much more real than life.

The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about.

Arguments are to be avoided; they are always vulgar and often convincing.

The only way to treat a woman is to make love to her if she is pretty, and to someone else if she is plain.

I can resist anything but temptation.



Blanche


sources:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/wilde_oscar.shtml

http://www.online-literature.com/wilde/

www.readprint.com/author-90/Oscar-Wilde-books

http://www.readprint.com/quotes-90/Oscar-Wilde-quotes

http://www.readprint.com/quotes-90/Oscar-Wilde-quotes

Monday, October 5, 2009

The Great Bambino

Arguably the greatest baseball player that ever lived, George Herman "Babe" Ruth was a legend.  Played in major league baseball from 1914 to 1935, he had gone from pitcher, to right fielder, to one of the greatest hitters in the history of the game.  

Most people know of his home run accomplishments, but early in his career he was a very well accomplished pitcher for the Boston Red Sox.  Currently his record still holds for having 13 scoreless innings in a World Series game.  His pitching only lasted a few years as new management sold him over to the New York Yankees in 1919.  Ever sense, the Yankees went on to win several Pennants and World Series victories, while the Red Sox haven't had a victory till the 2004 season.  Not to mention a number of other achievements like the home run record at 54 runs.

During the World Series game against the Chicago Cubs in 1932, Babe Ruth made one feet that has yet to truly be repeated. In the third game, with 2 wins against the Cubs, tied 2-2 with 2 strikes on him, the Babe stepped out from the batter's box and pointed.  It is disputed whether he pointed to the center field or to the pitcher, but upon remerging into position he struck a curveball over 430 feet.  His called shot brought victory over the Cubs, he himself not truly realizing the unbelievable impact he had caused.

EAK
Sources: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babe_Ruth
http://thelongestlistofthelongeststuffatthelongestdomainnameatlonglast.com/trivia113.html
http://www.baberuth.com/biograph.html

Water Skiing!

Ralph Samuelson of Minnesota invented water skiing in 1922. After unsuccessful attempts of skiing on water with barrel staves and snow skis, the 18-year old tried out pinewood boards with curved tips. For the tips, Samuelson applied boiler steam to the 8' x 9" wooden boards. Other materials were used as well: an iron ring for a handle and 100 feet of cord for a towrope.


Ralph Samuelson was born on July 3, 1904. He was the official inventor of "water skiing" where he performed his ideas in the summer of 1922 in Lake City, Minnesota around the age of 19 years. While the sport of aqua planning, or standing on a single board while a powerboat pulled you, was already existent, Samuelson had ideas about creating something such as snow skiing on water. Ralph practiced his experiments with different materials of wood on Lake Pepin, which was a wide portion of the Mississippi River between Minnesota and Wisconsin.



Samuelson's early attempts included using staves from wooden barrels and snow skis before he created new skis made of pine boards 8 feet long and 9 inches wide (240 × 23 cm). He bent up the front tips after softening the wood by boiling them in his mother's copper kettle. His brother Ben operated the powerboat that pulled Ralph along, towed by a rope. Gaining confidence on the water, he began jumping wakes, but broke the original skis (the remains of which were believed to be found on a beach on Pepin) in one landing. His slightly-modified second pair still exists; today they are at the Lake City Chamber of Commerce, in Lake City, Minnesota.

Thanks to Ralph Samuelson, we are now living in a world filled with many fun water sports people do today in competition like the summer X-Games and Summer Olympics or just to have a good time enjoying life on the water. Water Skiing over the years has drastically changed giving newer ideas on how to make the sport more interesting and fun. There are those who just like to ride calmly and then there are those so-called "x-tream" water sports fanatics who love to take the sport to the next level.