Archive for January 25th, 2012

Flashback: LYSISTRATA JONES’ Journey to Broadway

LYSISTRATA JONES plays its final performance today at 3:00pm at the Walter Kerr Theatre (219 West 48th street). Upon closing, the musical will have played 34 previews and 30 performances. Written by Tony nominee Douglas Carter Beane (book) and Lewis Flinn (music/lyrics), LYSISTRATA JONES is directed and choreographed by Tony nominee Dan Knechtges.

LYSISTRATA JONES stars Patti Murin (Lysistrata Jones), Liz Mikel (Hetaira), Josh Segarra (Mick), Jason Tam (Xander), and Lindsay Nicole Chambers (Robin) with Alexander Aguilar (lsquo;Uardo), Ato Blankson-Wood (Tyllus), Katie Boren (Lampito), Kat Nejat (Cleonice), LaQuet Sharnell (Myrrhine), Teddy Toye (Harold) and Alex Wyse (Cinesius), with understudies LaVon Fisher-Wilson, Libby Servais, Charlie Sutton, Barrett Wilbert Weed, and Jared Zirilli.

The Athens University basketball team hasnt won a game in 30 years. But when spunky transfer student Lysistrata Jones (Murin) dares the squads fed-up girlfriends to stop lsquo;giving it up to their boyfriends until they win a game, their legendary losing streak could be coming to an end. In this boisterous new musical comedy, Lyssie J. and her girl-power posse give Aristophanes classic comedy a sexy, modern twist and take student activism to a whole new level. Get a look back at the production – from its Dallas incarnation to Broadway – below!

5 Big Gizmo Trends for CES 2012

Each year begins for technologists and geeks with the annual pilgrimage to Las Vegas for CES. Its easy to write off this massive technology trade show as an outdated, overrated, and overhyped gizmo-fest. But I think its incredibly valuable, and often results in real marketplace knowledge ahead of the curve.

That said, I go into CES each year with some insights and some crystal ball gazing that often helps me focus on what Im expecting to see. This year, 2012 CES has a handful of trends that will impact media, content creators, and devices.

Here are FIVE CES PREDICTIONS you can expect to see come true in Las Vegas this year.

TVs get sexy. Expect Samsung, Vizio, Panasonic, Sony, and more to come out with sleeker, brighter, more awesome screens. A related new technology called 4K is expected to greatly improve image resolutions. While its still early on, there will be some new voice control gizmos trying to get a jump on the Siri TV product that Apple is rumored to have on its way to market. However, as always, no Apple at CES. Last year the big buzz was 3-D on the heels of Avatar. But the glasses were expensive and proprietary to the set manufacturer, which kept customers away. Expect a new batch of passive 3-D glasses that are cheap (like the ones in the movie theaters) and interchangeable from set to set. LG is planning to offer 4K HDTVs that include passive 3-D technology. TVs with 4K resolution will be able to deliver full HD resolution with the passive 3-D. Maybe 3-D will break out this year? Could be.

Game platforms vie for dominance. Nintendo and Xbox both promise new home-media friendly devices that will put them even deeper into the battle for living room dominance. Expect more improvements with Microsoft Kinect as a device-control interface for your home TV.

The year of the app. Theres huge jump in the number of web-connected TVs shipping this year, from 60 million last year up to 80 million this year. And Adobe has come out swinging, saying it wants to be the dominant provider of technology in the new world of app-centric viewing.

The cable-cutting dilemma. While the buzz on cable cutting has been huge, the reality of life without cable TV has proven to be a bit of a programming minefield. This CES will see a series of shifts in the space, with Boxee shifting from a computer-centric model to a hardware+software solution. Roku will continue to build a base, with content deals and its new Streaming Stick looking to grow its 2.5 million customer user-base. Tivos offerings or new gizmos are under wraps (or nonexistent) this year. But the dark-horse candidate for most disruptive new technology may come from a small company, Syncbak. Syncbak founder Jack Perry is no stranger to Web TV, having launched TitanTV.com at CES back in 2000. Perry says the big guys have it all wrong, and that web video isnt about search. Instead, he says, content should search for consumers.

Were taking broadcasters OTT in less than 5 minutes at no cost, Perry told me. He claims 50 TV stations reaching 22 million households have been testing the technology over the past year. Syncbak says Spokane, Wash., will launch in January with several TV stations. Theyll use Syncbak to distribute live broadcasts to viewers mobile devices. The app will also include two national broadcast channels (but Syncbak wont reveal who they are).

Laptops will make way for Ultrabooks. Mobile computing will get lighter and thinner as Ultrabook manufactures like Dell, Lenovo, Samsung, HP, and others hustle to catch up with Apples popular Macbook Air product line. Intel is driving the Ultrabook push, but it wont be till Windows 8 shows up that youll see really snappy performance. So, Apple still has a running head start. Oh, did I mention that theres no Apple booth at CES? Yet their impact is everywhere.

Expect CES 2012 to be a hotbed of disruptive technologies, changing screens and devices, and programmers looking to protect their existing revenues while getting a piece of the future.

Good times in Vegas, if youre willing to place a bet or two.

How I’m Living the Dream

Ebony Utley, author and speaker about pop culture, race and romantic relationships, is scheduled to speak at the University of Dayton as part of the Universitys annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration.

Utley will deliver a lecture on Social Movement Strategies and the Hip-Hop Generation at 7:30 pm Tuesday, Jan. 17, in the Kennedy Union ballroom. The event is part of the 2011-12 University of Dayton Speaker Series and is free and open to the public.

Utley is the author or editor of two forthcoming books, Rap and Religion: Understanding the Gangstas God and Power and Pleasure in Popular Culture. She co-edited the 2009 book Hip-Hops Languages of Love. A former Javitz Fellow at Northwestern University, she now teaches in the communication studies department at California State University, Long Beach.

The University of Daytons office of multicultural affairs is promoting events for students throughout the week, Jan. 16-20, with the theme How Im Living the Dream. Visit http://oma.udayton.edu for more information.

  • Monday, Jan. 16: The MLK Dayton Community March. Students meet at 10 am at the office of multicultural affairs in Gosiger Hall for breakfast and to make signs and posters. The march begins at 11 am at Welcome Stadium and ends at the Dayton Convention Center.
  • Tuesday, Jan. 17: Ebony Utley lecture.
  • Wednesday, Jan. 18: A campus Day of Unity with an open microphone at 6 pm in Kennedy Union Boll Theatre.
  • Thursday, Jan. 19: Open discussion, What will your legacy be: How are you living the dream? 1-4 pm in Roesch Library.
  • Friday, Jan. 20: Video, How am I living the dream?, shown on television sets in Kennedy Union all day between classes.

The University of Dayton Speaker Series is in its inaugural season, dedicated to the theme: Building Movements for Social Justice. The series evolved from a combination of the Universitys popular Diversity Lecture Series and the Distinguished Speaker Series.

David Suzuki, co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation and award-winning scientist, environmentalist and broadcaster, is slated to give the final lecture of the season April 16 on The Challenge of the 21st Century: Setting the Real Bottom Line.

Growgirl: Heather Donahue’s Journey From ‘Blair Witch’ to Growing Marijuana

Heather Donahue chronicles her journey from starring in the cult classic to growing marijuana in her memoir, “Growgirl,” in stores now. She tells Marlow Stern about her path to pot.