After years of getting teased for not having cable, I now get the last laugh. Because WFAA is now carrying something called This TV on its subchannel 8.3. This TV is a blend of Metro Goldwyn Mayer’s film library and a bunch of classic TV stuff. Here’s the lineup tonight. While you cable people are paying the big bucks to watch Monday Night Football or Intervention, I’ll be watching the movie Sketch Artist, with Drew Barrymore, for free. Suckers!
A FrontBurnervian alerts me to this Editor & Publisher circulation report, which shows the News down big-time. Why do I think that’s good news? If you raise prices 30-40% and lose 22% of your subscribers as a result, you’ve gained. The old model was to do whatever poissible to get readers in order to charge advertisers more. The new model is to make money on circulation, serve fewer readers, and deliver a core, committed audience to advertisers. The News is doing what it needs to do.
So says Bob Gainey, the first general manager of the Dallas Stars, in an article on NHL.com. In moving the North Stars down south, Gainey decided on the best tactic to take with Cowboys-loving fans who didn’t know what icing was: play up the violence.
“We had a few comparisons (to football) and what we tried to utilize in any comparisons towards our sport and football was the physical contact. The Texans seem to be a very liberal and opened-minded people and they enjoyed the physical contract of ice hockey and they also seemed to warm up to the fact of the fighting in the sport and it was a selling point for us where it had been a detraction in Minnesota.”
Willard has come up several times recently in this space. For those who wish to meet the good professor in person, your chance to do so comes tomorrow, at a discussion he’ll lead at the Dallas Institute. The event is described thusly:
The word “happiness” presents us with a conundrum: how is it pursued, and how does one know when one has acquired it? Though the Greek philosophers gave us answers—that happiness comes to the well-ordered and virtuous life, which is also the life of greatest pleasure—such questions continue to vex us, one might say often lead us astray. In this three-part series, Institute Fellow and SMU Prof. Spiegelman will be our guide, speaking and leading discussions arising from his latest book, “Seven Pleasures: Essays on Ordinary Happiness.”
Anthony Tommasini adds his opinion this morning to our own Willard Spiegelman’s about the new opera house and its first production. On the Winspear:
Several bigger, more significant American companies are going to envy the Dallas Opera its new home.
On Otello:
At times, especially in Act I, the performance of the orchestra and chorus was insecure and shaky. Jitters on this momentous opening might have been a factor. Also, the set that dominates this production, an intriguing, starkly modern staging by the British director Tim Albery that is filled with militaristic imagery, may have made it harder for the performers to follow the conductor and hear the orchestra.
1. Earlier this month, a woman stopped for a traffic violation was ticketed for not having her driver’s license, an illegal u-turn, and her inability to speak English. Ernestina Mondragon, a legal U.S. citizen since 1980, held a press conference yesterday to express how that experience made her feel. (Hint: It wasn’t good.) Chief Kunkle isn’t feeling too great about it either.
2. Forget seven brides for seven brothers. Yesterday, Oak Cliff’s Concord Church hosted 18 brides and grooms who got hitched in a super-size ceremony. It was part of senior pastor’s Bryan L. Carter’s series for couples, “The Real Flava of Love.” Sadly, our favorites from the television series that I assume inspired the name of the event, if not the sentiment–Flavor Flav, Pumpkin, New York, and Deelishis–were not in attendance.
3. Southwest Airlines has more than 775,000 followers on Twitter thanks in part to tweets like this: “To celebrate our new in-flight wine selection, tell us why ‘You’d Rather Be Drinking Wine Than Working.’” I’m confused why that last part is in quotes and capped. And also it’s a dumb question. Obviously, I’d “Rather Be Working.” (Hi Mr. and Mrs. Allison!) Twitter, I’m breaking up with you.
“It’s not actually repetitive. That’s an illusion,” composer Philip Glass said in response to a question about whether playing his music on a keyboard causes his hands to suffer from repetitive stress syndrome.
Glass’ music generally leaves me cold. In fact, I find if I listen to it too intently the repetition can get maddening. But to have it played live in accompaniment to the 1931 film Dracula, as it was last night at the Winspear Opera House, was tremendous fun. Together the music and the movie (which only a generous critic would call “good”) were more than the sum of their parts. Glass explained during a post-performance Q&A that it was the film’s star, Bela Lugosi–or more precisely the tragic arc of Lugosi’s life–that drew him to want to write a new score for it.
It was my first time inside the performance hall at the Winspear, and it lived up to the hype. My wife only had one small complaint. The air vents beneath our seats were pumping cold air out with such enthusiasm that her legs felt like icicles by the end of the show. She was looking to let the management know afterward, and I had to argue with her to convince her not to force some poor usher to touch her cold ankles.
The Dallas Opera opened its season last night, with a performance of Verdi’s Otello at the new Winspear Opera House. Willard Spiegelman was there, and sends along this report:
Yes, I know that Eric no longer works at D Magazine proper. At some point, I will have to stop doing this. But I don’t feel like we’re at that point yet. Here he is trying to keep his head warm on the patio of Park, where several of us have gathered for a co-worker’s birthday celebration.
UPDATE: It’s an epidemic.
As a living, breathing organism, you are no doubt closely following recent developments at cement maker TXI. Having read our story from 2005 about how the company fouls our air in North Texas by belching forth pollutants in Midlothian, you are wondering what it means to our air quality now that a rogue group that controls 10 percent of TXI has gotten elected three of its people to TXI’s board in what is being described as an idictment of current management by the shareholders. Right?
Well, I asked Jim Schermbeck of Downwinders at Risk about all this. Schermbeck is a watchdog who has been hounding these cement makers in Midlothian to clean up their act for years. I found his take on the situation instructive. In short, he thinks the new guys on the board might be getting ready to try to sell the company. Read on only if you have lungs:
Bob Sturm has a real job. Well, he’s got a day job, anyway. He’s got a wife and family. And yet over on InsideCorner today, he has put up a 2,600-word post about the Cowboys-Falcons game this weekend. It’s insane — in a good way. As Eric has pointed out, I’m not a sports fan. So I don’t understand anything that Bob wrote. But I can tell — like when my doc shows me my EKG strip — that it’s important stuff, meaningful to those who’ve been trained to read it. Last night, Bob’s small children probably sat naked on the kitchen floor and ate dinner out of a cereal box. All the while, he was click-clacking away at his computer, breaking down every aspect of the upcoming game for us. God love him. Go, Cowboys.
If you didn’t go to last night’s Two by Two First Look Party, benefiting amfAR and the Dallas Museum of Art, here’s what you missed. Hint: Gavin Rossdale sang (meow), Christian Siriano showed off his Spring 2010 collection (fierce), and lots of people partied (natch). If you’d like to go to the Two by Two gala on Saturday night, good for you. Get more info here.
The charge: being a non-English speaking driver.
The lady: 48-year-old Ernestina Mondragon.
If you’re not lucky enough to go to Otello tonight at the Winspear, you might want to tune in to Channel 8 at 6:30. The station is airing a half-hour special on the PAC. To wit:
WFAA takes viewers on a guided tour of all parts of this impressive complex in a half-hour special hosted by the station’s performing arts reporter, Gary Cogill. It’s a rare backstage and behind-the-scenes tour of the inner workings of the Winspear Opera House, Wyly Theater [sic] and the arts complex that critics all over the world are raving about.