Friday, January 22, 2010

Toy OTD: Colgate Soaky Toys: The Chipmunks - Alvin, Simon, Theodore (1964)

I'd like to hope that most viewers of the latest Alvin & The Chipmunks movie know that it's based on a series of hit novelty records (and a popular animated cartoon) from the sixties. Being a successful pop culture property, the Chipmunks naturally spawned a slew of merchandise and product endorsements.

A popular item at the time was a "Soaky" - a bath soap bottle shaped like a cartoon character. The idea was that children could play with the bottle while bathing, and keep it well after the soap was all used up. It's a simple but effective idea... the brand itself is long gone, but the concept has lasted forty years past the original toy! Naturally, Alvin and the gang were perfect candidates for "Soaky" immortality.



A big part of the "Soaky Secret" is that they're very cheap to make - some plastic, a couple of paint passes, and a touch of cardboard for packaging. Still, there was some thought (and taste) put into designing them.

The sculpts - taking into consideration that all of them needed to conform to the same basic bottle - are quite good. The head pieces (which cover the actual screw-on bottle cap) are pretty appealing interpretations of the very 2-D designs. Like many of the other Soakys, extra props are sometimes added in when the source character is too short to fit the bottle shape. Here, you can see the sculptor(s) added a stack of books for Alvin and a small pedestal for Theodore to help preserve the idea that the Chipmunks are different heights. The props themselves seem a little arbitrary, but they get points for preserving the designs. In light of this, it's a little odd that letters were added to Simon and Theodore's sweaters, since they're not on the source artwork. At least it's duplicating an existing motif rather than adding something that isn't part of any of their costumes - and it unifies the group, too.

As these bottles are intended for tub play (not to mention cost factors), the paint work is pretty minimal - just two passes per character. The manufacturers and designers wisely used the bottle plastic to add a third color to their palette. Casting the head in a different color of plastic sometimes added a fourth, as you can see with Alvin. While there are some less than intuitive paint choices - Simon's glasses and face detail could have been black like Alvin's, and Theodore's sweater is left white rather than painting it a more accurate blue - overall the colors are sharp and appealing.

(It also appears that the paint and plastic colors varied depending on what the manufacturers had on hand - check out John K.'s variants here. Alvin even had a bottle-cap-style cap at one point!)

Since Soakys have to stand upright by definition, there aren't any balance issues here. Because they're containers first and toys second, articulation is a moot point too. Think of them as being closer to a rubber squeak toy than an action figure.

Soaky packaging is also pretty minimal - a simple cardboard box covering the base. This took care of branding without having to add much to the toy itself. Interestingly, the designers didn't brand the characters themselves, as is done so often today. The boxes could also be changed easily, depending on what function/decoration they might need to do, as in the case of this Santa Claus Soaky. It's got a built-in gift tag!

Soakys were very popular and made in huge quantities. As with many other collectibles, some characters are rarer (and more expensive to buy) than others. Fortunately, the Chipmunk gang isn't particularly rare. Alvin can range anywhere from $6.99 to $34.99 + shipping. Simon costs anywhere between $20 and $36 + shipping. Theodore's range hovers right around $24 - $25 + shipping. Feel free to be picky, as there's plenty of them for sale out there. Happy hunting!

Chipmunk Fun Facts: Did you know that Alvin, Simon and Theodore were named after Liberty Records (their first label) executives? Did you also know that they started out as puppets on the Ed Sullivan Show? I didn't!

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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Micheal Jackson Dies At 50

VARIETY: Michael Jackson Dies - King of Pop suffered heart attack in Los Angeles
by Pat Saperstein - 2:09 pm PT

Michael Jackson, the worldwide pop sensation was pronounced dead Thursday afternoon. He was 50.

According to reports on the Los Angeles Times' web site, Jackson was rushed midday Thursday from his home to a Los Angeles hospital, where he could not be revived.

Jackson was attempting a comeback after years of tabloid headlines, most notably his trial and acquittal on child molestation charges. He had been scheduled to perform 50 sell-out concerts at London's 02 arena from next week to March 2010.

To read the rest of this article, click here.

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Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Help! Comes to DVD - Widescreen At Last!

Yes, you can finally get Richard Lester's Help! without having to watch it cropped, or needing to own a laserdisc player. The title came out yesterday as a two-disc set, garnished with interviews and documentaries. Sadly, there's no commentary, but it's widescreen, and I'll bet the transfer is a big improvement from the last release! That's exciting, because I think it's a really sharp-looking movie.

I agree with most folks that A Hard Day's Night is a lot better, but Help! is still a lot of fun, even if the Beatles were starting to lose interest in the whole movie-making thing at the time. Directing four guys frequently stoned on pot can't be fun (not to mention having to come up with another story), but I think it turned out pretty well! You can pick it up at Amazon.com for $16.95 + shipping.

PS - After seeing it for the first time, I always wanted to live in the four-house-wide flat that the guys live in at the beginning. Sunken floors are super-cool!

UPDATE: There's a great breakdown of the differences between this DVD release and the previous one at whatgoeson.com. Thanks to Bob Scott for the tip!

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Sunday, June 03, 2007

Aimee Mann on Sgt. Pepper's

NY TIMES OP-ED: P.S. I Loved You
By AIMEE MANN
Published: June 3, 2007

MY big brother was always the one to bring new music into the house. Until I heard the Beatles playing on his stereo in the basement, my favorite music had been Glen Campbell singing “Galveston” or my father playing “Won’t You Come Home, Bill Bailey” on the piano.

I was young enough to giggle when my brother changed the words of “P.S. I Love You” to...something more puerile, and four years later, young enough to think that “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” was really a band, and not the name of a Beatles record. In those intervening years, a transformation had taken place, and both the sound and the look of the Beatles had completely changed. Also, I was a little slow on the uptake, and didn’t notice the name “Beatles” spelled out in flowers on the cover.

Is it a testament to the quality, or purity, or beauty, or timelessness of that record (released 40 years ago this weekend) that it appealed so thoroughly to an 8-year-old, one who had virtually no contact with pop culture? I could not have been more out of tune with the zeitgeist — it would be two more years before I discovered radio, and even then I would have only the vaguest notion of what was out there. I bought my first LP solely on the basis of the cover (one of the reasons today I try to take extra care with the packaging of my CDs). It was pure dumb luck that it turned out to be Elton John’s “Madman Across the Water,” still one of my favorite albums of all time.

But the favorite is, and was, and must remain “Sgt. Pepper’s.” I had a love affair like no other with that record. My brother had bought it, of course, and when I heard it, I braved his wrath and smuggled it out to my friend’s house so I could play it over and over. You’d have had to know my brother back then to fully understand how daring that was.

In a way, that record seemed made for children: the fun false mustaches that came with the package, the bright shiny outfits, the cheery melodies, the jaunty horns. The band itself seemed almost irrelevant — scruffy mustachioed men in costumes, lost in a sea of collaged faces. I ignored them.

My ignorance extended to the opening song, which I took at face value as a real live introduction of the singer Billy Shears, who, whoever he was, became my favorite, with his dopey baritone, in humble gratitude for his pals — bless them, it all was so innocent, those marmalade skies and winking meter maids (whatever they were). The darkest moments were with the runaway girl — although a throwaway line in “Getting Better” (“I was cruel to my woman, I beat her...”) gave me pause. He beat her? What the heck? But hey — things were getting better all the time, so ... I shrugged and let it go.

And then things took a weird turn: a nightmare cacophony of strings, someone blowing his mind out in a car — what was that? Did he get shot in the head? What were the holes in Albert Hall? Things had gotten creepy and dark, and it lost me. I started skipping that last song.

I can’t listen to “Sgt. Pepper’s” anymore. As a musician, I’m burnt out on it — its influence has been so vast and profound. As a lyricist, I find that my ear has become more attuned to the likes of Fiona Apple and Elliot Smith, and though the words of “Sgt. Pepper’s” are full of vivid images — Rita’s bag slung over her shoulder, Mr. Kite sailing through a hogshead of fire, the runaway girl with her handkerchief — there’s an emotional depth that’s missing. I’m ashamed to say it, but sometimes John Lennon’s melodies feel a bit underwritten, while Paul McCartney’s relentless cheerfulness is depressing. The very jauntiness I used to love as a girl feels as if it’s covering up a sadder subtext. And what’s bleaker than a brave face?

The whole experience is uncomfortable, like realizing you can beat your own father at chess or arm-wrestling. I don’t want to go back and find that the carcass has been picked clean. Because I know without a doubt that “Sgt. Pepper’s” changed the course of my life. If the magic is gone, it’s only because first loves can’t be repeated. When I was 8, I’d never heard anything like it, and I can honestly say that if I live to be 100, I’ll never hear anything like it again.

Aimee Mann is a singer and songwriter.

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Reading this, all I could think of was 'Star Wars' - how it affected me at the time, and how I feel about it now. Maybe I'll write something about that later on, if you're not completely sick of hearing me prattle on about that movie.

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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Brain Fart: Animators Are Observant

As you know, the Police have reunited and are going to tour soon. I was never a big Police fan, but I like some of their music, so I thought this would be a good time to examine their 'albums' more carefully, having never heard one (well, maybe Synchronicity) in its entirety. I had just heard Invisible Sun on the radio, so I thought, well, I'll get the 'album' with that song on it. That turned out to be 1981's Ghost In The Machine.

Now I've seen that cover design for almost thirty years now. I liked it because at the time, it seemed hi-tech and modern. But it wasn't until this week that I noticed that those cool LED glyphs formed the faces of the band members (the story is that they couldn't decide on a cover photo). I literally thought they were just abstract glyphs all that time. Oh, brother! I guess I'd better quit that amateur detective business!

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Sunday, February 18, 2007

The Police Prepare For Their Reunion Tour

NY TIMES: They Can Play. Can They Play Nice?
By JON PARELES
Published: February 18, 2007

NORTH VANCOUVER, British Columbia
IN a high-ceilinged studio at the Lions Gate film complex earlier this month, the Police were rehearsing for a very public first gig: opening the Grammy Awards broadcast last Sunday with their 1978 hit “Roxanne” before announcing a world tour the next day. Sting, 55, on bass; Andy Summers, 64, on guitar; and Stewart Copeland, 54, on drums, were working through a list of two dozen songs. For the first time in decades the Police would be back together for more than one night. “I’ve trapped myself back 30 years,” Sting said.

The old Police sound was a lean, nimble, pointillistic approach to syncopation and space that Mr. Summers called “the sound of tension,” and that tension sounded intact as the band kicked into “Message in a Bottle,” with its jumpy guitar riff and stamping beat. Half a minute later Sting waved the song to a stop. “Pick,” he said tersely, his voice slightly irritated. “It doesn’t work.”

Mr. Summers had been playing guitar with a pick, not his fingers as he used to. “You thought for a second that he wouldn’t notice?” Mr. Copeland cackled. Mr. Summers shrugged: “I played it with a pick all day yesterday, and he didn’t say a word.” He abandoned the pick, Mr. Copeland shouted “One! Two! Three! Four!” and in an instant the song was galloping forward again. It was just another moment of readjustment for three headstrong musicians rebuilding a tricky alliance.

Twenty-four years ago the Police ruled the rock world. Their seven-year career had been one unbroken ascent: each album outselling the last, each tour bigger. In 1983 they had claimed the mantle of the Beatles by playing Shea Stadium.

But as all three freely admit, their years as rock stars together were also years of bitter conflict, sometimes to the point of fistfights backstage. “We would be playing arenas and feeling the love pour onto us,” Mr. Copeland said. “And then you would come backstage, to the guys that mattered most, and feel the unlove.” From the beginning they had been three disparate personalities. Mr. Copeland is voluble and extroverted, Sting earnest and pensive, and Mr. Summers looks happiest talking about chord changes and guitar gizmos. What connected them was the music that they fought over most determinedly of all.

“We didn’t go to school together,” Sting said. “We didn’t grow up in the same neighborhood. We were never a tribe. There was friction for the right reasons. We care passionately about the music and we’re all strong characters, and nobody would be pushed around. So it was part of our dynamic. We fought cat and dog over everything.”

Although Mr. Copeland founded and named the Police, Sting quickly emerged both as the band’s voice and its hitmaking songwriter. But the band’s songs were simultaneously taut pop structures and improvisational melees, with Mr. Summers layering on complex chords and guitar effects, while Mr. Copeland’s drumming shattered and precisely reassembled the beat. As the Police worked up Sting’s songs, decisions were often made two against one. Sting grew to feel constrained.

“I wanted no rules, no limitations,” he said. “Bands that stay together have to toe the party line. And I wasn’t willing to do that.” And so, when the band wound up their 1983 stadium tour, Sting struck out on his own. “We were the biggest band in the world, by all intents and purposes,” he said. “And I just thought: ‘Well, this is it. After this everything else is just diminishing returns. I want another challenge. I want to start again.’ ”

In recent years each member has told his part of the Police story. Mr. Copeland made a documentary. Sting and Mr. Summers wrote memoirs. But the recollections are strikingly different.

Sting’s “Broken Music” dispatches the entirety of the Police’s glory years in just two pages. Mr. Summers’s “One Train Later,” by contrast, details an exhilarating whirlwind of tours and ends soon after the band’s breakup, which he calls an “open wound.”

“At the time there was a sort of numbness,” he said at rehearsal. “I don’t think I realized what was happening. I felt like I walked off a cliff and realized. ...” He looked downward, as if into a chasm. “It felt like a limb had been chopped off. It was like being deserted by a lover.”

Since that time Sting has remained a rock star, with multimillion-selling albums and well-publicized causes like rain forests and human rights. Mr. Summers has been leading groups on the jazz circuit, from clubs to festivals. Mr. Copeland established himself as a film composer (for directors including Francis Ford Coppola and Oliver Stone), and was coaxed back to performing by the jam band Oysterhead. No one had any reason to expect a reunion. “For years it was just, forget it,” Mr. Summers said. “Five years passed, 10 years passed.” Sting, in a radio interview, once called the prospect of reviving the Police insane.

And yet here they are: booked for arena concerts worldwide into next year, with some stadium dates on hold, just in case. The tour begins on May 28 in Vancouver and comes to Madison Square Garden on Aug. 1 and 3.

Band members had stayed in touch since 1983, but they only played together on a few brief and uncomfortable occasions. Then last year they all found themselves at the Sundance Film Festival, and later Mr. Copeland and Mr. Summers both attended the Los Angeles stop of Sting’s current tour. He is playing the lute songs of the Renaissance composer John Dowland. Mr. Summers and Mr. Copeland said they had both sensed a change. It was more than they had seen of each other in a long time.

“I was thinking, ’Well, now what do I do?’ ” Sting said in an interview in his hotel room. His lute was leaning against a wall. “Do another lute record? I don’t want to paint myself into that corner. Do I do another Sting record? What’s going to surprise people? What’s going to surprise me? Wow, can I really be thinking that?”

A Police reunion “just seemed right,” he said. “It felt right in the heart. I woke up, and I just had this instinct, just had this desire to call the guys up and say, ‘Let’s give this a go.’ ”

Actually his manager, Kathryn Schenker, made the calls. She sprang the idea on Mr. Summers and Mr. Copeland at a meeting where they expected to discuss plans for reissues of the five Police albums, which will mark the 30th anniversary of the band’s formation in 1977. “They were so shocked it wasn’t funny,” Ms. Schenker recalled. “They were so happy and excited but very, very, very, very surprised.”

The Vancouver rehearsal studio where they eventually reunited was a long way from the Police’s do-it-yourself beginnings in punk-era London. A film crew was on hand to make the inevitable documentary, with bright lights, makeup for the band members and a camera on semicircular tracks rolling around their setup. A caterer served lobster for dinner.

For pre- and post-rehearsal workouts there was a Pilates trainer who brought along with her a machine called, coincidentally, a Group Reformer. A beat-up guitar that Mr. Summers is playing isn’t the one that toured the world with him in the early 1980s; it’s an exact replica made by Fender, copying every nick, chip and scrape as well as the pickups (made by Fender’s rival, Gibson) and custom electronics inside. It’s part of a limited edition of 250 that sold out at $15,000 each — a measure of Mr. Summers’s lasting reputation among musicians and guitar geeks.

For all three band members, reuniting the Police wasn’t just a matter of relearning parts. They were also rebuilding a collaboration that had been as volatile as their music. “After 20 years we’ve all changed shape, and the pieces don’t quite fit together in the same way they used to,” Mr. Copeland said. “With the best of intentions, with the best of attitude, we were wanting to kill each other.”

Since they last worked together, all three had gotten used to being bandleaders and composers. “It would be much easier just to go in the studio and make a record with my band,” Sting said. “And it’s not just the musical stuff. It’s the social stuff, it’s the personal psychology stuff of going back to a marriage, returning to a dysfunctional marriage and making it better, making it work. I really want it to work.”

The Police had already had a few days of rehearsal before allowing a visit from an outside observer, and they had built a wary, joshing camaraderie. Sting, who at first had tried to lead the reunited Police by telling the others what to play, was still taking charge and picking songs to work on. But he was now prefacing his ideas with “I think” and “Perhaps” and “Do you think we might.” He and Mr. Summers hazed Mr. Copeland about wearing a sweatband; in turn Mr. Copeland would punctuate their discussions over abstruse chord substitutions with mock exasperation.

“Somewhere in the beginning of 2008,” Mr. Copeland said, “we’ll be playing the last show of this tour. And I’ve got $10 here that says Sting will suggest another chord for Andy to play.”

“And why not?” Sting said.

During a break Mr. Summers said: “I feel it all coming back, the whole thing. Some of it’s moronic, like wandering around being a rock star, and everybody going, ‘What do you need, what do you need?’ And I’m thinking, ‘Oh, yeah, I remember this.’ But it’s like getting into an old familiar suit. I feel all the old reflexes coming back.”

They were the reflexes of virtuosos determined not to become their own tribute band. “At the moment it’s an exercise in nostalgia, certainly,” Sting said, “but also trying to get something modern and something new out of this situation. That may result in another song. I can’t predict. I’d like that to happen. But we’re just trying to remember the chords at the moment.”

The sound the Police created in their seven years together — light-fingered but assertive, musicianly but unmistakably pop — hasn’t aged as fast as much 1980’s music, and it has been emulated by musicians from Fugazi to Tool to Incubus to John Mayer. “We were the greatest rock band in the world, and that’s the way we want to be,” Mr. Summers said. “And we still have enough ego to think that we can come back, probably just like all bands, and blow every other band out of the water.”

But not yet. “Right now we’re not incredible,” Mr. Copeland said. “We started out like a high school band last week. We got to be like a college band. Yesterday we started to sound like a bar band. Today we sound like, ’O.K., we could earn a living like this.’ But we are not yet playing like we deserve to play in a stadium. We’ll get there, now that we’re on the right track.”

Sting kept working to add subtleties to songs that he has been performing continually through the years. He described “Every Breath You Take” to the band, explaining why he wanted nothing flashy, just a subdued, metronomic beat. “To me it’s like a Bergman movie,” he said. “Nothing happens until two very violent acts. One is the bridge, two is the coda. But not a mouse stirs. It’s like a still life.”

Mr. Copeland interjected, “But there might be a lion, sir.”

“Yeah,” Sting said. “That’s me.”

For the Grammys the Police’s allotted television time would hold a tightly abridged “Roxanne.” A crew member was timing the song. “We’re going for a clean 3 minutes 30,” Sting said.

This “Roxanne” would mix the familiar and the exploratory, announcing both the return of the Police and their determination to be more than an oldies act. “ ’Roxanne’ needs a slightly new dress every night, a slightly different pair of heels to get me excited,” Sting had said earlier.

The first verse and chorus had the old Police attack. Then the middle floated into new, echoey improvisations before the end charged back into the chorus that used to have whole arenas shouting along. Here the big finale was followed by a brief silence and a call from the crew: “3:37.”

“What happens if we go over by seven seconds?” Mr. Summer asked. “Emasculation?”

“They’ll take a Grammy away,” Sting said.

“For each second over, you lose one,” Mr. Summers agreed.

“But that does leave us with another 16 or something,” Sting replied. (He has won 16 Grammys, including five as a member of the Police and one as the songwriter of “Every Breath You Take.”) A second runthrough ran 3:32.

“We only lose half a Grammy,” Sting said.

“We only lose Andy’s Grammy,” Mr. Copeland said. (The Police’s “Behind My Camel,” written by Mr. Summers, was named best rock instrumental in 1981.) Then he changed his mind, looking toward Sting: “Now wait a minute. You’ve got the most Grammys. So we start with Sting’s Grammys.”

“Easy, big guy,” Mr. Summers said.

Battles had been reduced to banter. The Police knew they would have to get along for a year to come. “I used to think that strife and struggle and tension were important in a band,” Mr. Copeland said. “I no longer believe that. And in fact this band has been rescued by our refusal to fall into strife and confrontation.

“When we arrived here in Vancouver, we had big musical problems. And we didn’t resolve them by shouting at each other, by getting angry at each other, by power plays, by any of that stuff. We resolved our musical issues by comity. The music was sick, and we had to use our social bond to get through and try different solutions to the musical problems.

“It sounds cool that angst, sturm and drang, produces music with fire. No. We’re going to get to fire by love. Because we love each other.”

Sting said: “There’s more compromise now. There’s more sense of, just relax and this will be O.K.” He paused. “So far.”

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Tuesday, January 30, 2007

New Nationwide Insurance Commercial

Okay, I have a little more respect for Kevin Federline now. Check it out!

Thanks to the Superficial for the heads up.

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