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Tube: Big Brother

You may have noticed the link to Dingo's HamsterWatch to the right - that's my "Big Brother" site.

I like reality tv in general better than scripted tv - I don't like the elaborate competitions or the sensationalist way it's edited, packaged, and promoted, but I like the fact that it gives us real people reacting to various situations and to other people in the often unexpected ways that real people do. I like reality tv for the sideways insight it gives us into human behavior, and for the weird social experimentation that it is.

"Big Brother" isn't the best reality show, but it is the only one that lets us watch it unfold. We get to see what goes on before the editors and writers get hold of it and hack away at it to give us the 30 or 60 minutes a week that they'd like to present to us. It's also a plus that it's on three times a week throughout summer.

The show is also a bit different than most others in that its contestants run on paranoia, cabin fever, and very little else, especially towards the latter part of the season, and those are good things to throw in when doing a social experiment.

"Big Brother" is not a huge show here in the USA, but it has versions that run in dozens of other countries using the same format: 12 to 14 people thrown in a house together with no tv, radio, music, or outside contact, eliminating each other one by one while being watched at all times. I don't know what it means that the show is much more popular in other countries than here but I am pretty sure it means something. In many countries it makes front page news; in the UK and other nations with legal gambling, betting shops take wagers on BB's weekly & final outcomes right alongside the horses.

The first year of "Big Brother" the 24/7 webcast feeds were free, and I started watching them early on. That's when I discovered how incredibly skewed the edited tv version was compared to what actually happened, and that added a whole new layer of interest for me, that's what hooked me. This is the show's sixth year and the feeds cost about $25 for the summer now. The cast is made up of more actor/model hopefuls every year as opposed to ordinary people, but it's still fascinating for the most part. Everyone's got some insecurities no matter how good-looking or confident they may seem and "Big Brother" always brings them out. Those are the things that make people tick.

It's also fun to watch the liars interact with both the gullible & the distrustful; the backstabbers with the naive; the cocky with the meek. It's like a super-compact demo of Darwinian principles in action, and the fittest are not always who they seem. And sometimes it's just downright hilarious - whether we're laughing at them or with them is irrelevant, and we get equal doses of both.

Last year I started the HamsterWatch site a few weeks into the series, posting pics captured from the web feeds with short recaps of what was going on inside the house each day along with my opinions of why people were acting like they were, and also busting the producers for how badly they butchered each episode's events from what had really gone down. It was great fun and I was able to be as snarky as I wanted since I was doing it mostly just to amuse myself. But it also reminded me how much I enjoyed writing. I had a job at the time that had been slowly sucking the life out of me, and I hadn't quite realized how much until I was doing something creative and fun again, something that got generally good reactions from people, and something that I loved doing. I left that job about two months into the BB season and haven't regretted it at all since.

I'm not proud of this obsession with watching the "hamsters" inside the house (and it is very much like watching captive hamsters in a cage), but I am proud of the work I do at HamsterWatch.com.. maybe one day it'll lead to a nice opportunity for me that will help pay the bills along with providing me with a creative and snarky outlet.

The problem with this obsession of mine is that it'll take just about every bit of time I can find for the next three months. It isn't that it takes all day to put the site together each day, or that there's something happening on the feeds all the time (far from it!) but it's more a question of opportunity: something could happen at any time, and when it does, I hope to be monitoring the feeds so I can catch it. There are also a number of online communities I enjoy who share the BB obsession.. 10 years of being online has given me a pretty cynical attitude about most online communities so I take that enjoyment where I find it.

All this means that Another2cents.com is likely going to slow down quite a bit for the next three months. There aren't a ton of you visiting here regularly, but there are a few of you (and I appreciate it!) so I hope to continue posting links and cams and hopefully the occasional article or review, but regularity here is going to slow down a lot. I'll be back though, and in the meantime I'll still be around at HamsterWatch.com - click on over and take a peek.

browse or buy tv shows on DVD at Amazon.com

7.6.05 @ 7:18 AM pdt [add 2 cents]



Fireworks in space

Crashing the comet was a rousing success - so much so that the roomful of engineers & scientists at JPL broke into applause, all of them jumping around the room and cheering. That didn't used to happen in the old space age days.. even a moon landing you might have had a couple faint golf claps but for the most part they stayed huddled back down around their monitors.. it's good to see they've lightened up some. I guess they've got computers that do a lot more of it for them now, and it isn't like there's a crew or a return flight to worry about on this mission - this was more a case of <BOOM>.. done.. time to revise their resumés.

Once it was over and the hoopla settled down, a bunch of politicos came in to congratulate everyone for a job well done.. I figure if they were really behind the project they would have been there all along whether it was a success or a failure, but these guys just showed up when it was a done deal and the taxes luckily spent as promised. Must be an election year for them.

Pics here are from the NASA TV webcast - the impact as seen on their wall monitor above, and a view that came in later with extra data for them (and prettier for us) to the left.

The Vanderbilt University/ Sonic Foundry live video link was out to lunch every time I tried it earlier, but they have the replay up now. It has a very slow start - half hour or so of wait time - but it's a very nice setup and amazingly crystal clear resolution, wow! check it out

I am letting both the link & cam o' the day ride thru the 4th as they are both timely - have a safe holiday.

7.4.05 @ 1:13 AM pdt [add 2 cents]



NASA's Deep Impact

You saw that movie, right? The one where President Morgan Freeman sent some astronauts to blow up a comet before it blew up the planet? Well, it's happening for real on Monday.. yep, that's right, the 4th of July will have extraterrestrial fireworks this year.

That's when NASA's Deep Impact spacecraft concludes a six-month, 268 million mile voyage to comet Tempel 1 by sending a washing machine-sized probe into the comet at 23,000 mph. Unlike the movie version, we aren't in danger of a reverse scenario, but the hope is that the probe will find out some cool stuff about comets from the inside that we didn't know before (or, as CNN dramatically puts it, "Scientists hope the collision will reveal the comet's nucleus, which holds the frozen primordial ingredients of the solar system." The crash may produce a spectacular explosion visible with binoculars, or it may just go pfffft.. we'll know soon enough.

Of course there will be live video of the event. The main spacecraft will release the washing machine err.. probe on Sunday, and 24 hours later it will plow into the comet. It will all be viewable via webcast and highlights will probably run on the evening news, just after the weather and clips of 4-year-olds at a local parade or fireworks display. If you're hungry for more, here are your clicks:

Live video of the crash hosted by Sonic Foundry and Vanderbilt University begins July 4 just prior to the collision, scheduled for 1:52 am Eastern (that's still Sunday night for westies). An archive of the event will remain online for 30 days. (The link is currently generating an error message - maybe it will work when the time is here.

NASA's Deep Impact site has a countdown, news, updates, tech stuff, and all the mission and comet info you'll ever need. Of course there's a ton of other fun stuff on the NASA site too - click around.

NASA TV also has video that begins today! Find it on digital, satellite, cable, or on the web.

NASA TV can also be found on this page (June 14's cam du jour, remember?) which has 14 other cams at Kennedy Space Center that are getting active: the shuttle is getting ready to go up there on July 13, in the first manned flight since the Challenger disaster.

Enjoy.

7.1.05 @ 7:27 AM pdt [add 2 cents]