Thursday, December 17, 2009

Ernie Kovacs

Ernie Kovacs, a creative and iconic comedian, pioneered the use of special effects photography in television comedy. He is probably the greatest role model that any comedian can have, especially any comedian who wants to get into television. Legendary and pioneering in his day, he is best remembered for creating many of the camera gags and camera techniques that are common today, influencing and inspiring such later shows as Laugh-In, Saturday Night Live, The Today Show, and television hosts like Johnny Carson and David Letterman.


During the 1950s, Kovacs' innovative use of video comedy illustrated the distinctive prospects in television, all of which lead to similar techniques used on the Johnny Carson and David Letterman shows. His live shows were characterized by ad-libbed routines, enormous flexibility with the TV camera, experimentation with video effects, complete informality while on camera, and a permissiveness that expanded studio boundaries by allowing viewers to see activity beyond the set. He developed such ideas as blackouts, trick photography, on-the-street interviews, and clowning with the camera crews and other backstage persons.


After a career in radio, Kovacs' move to television came in the 1950s, when he hosted several programs at the same time. His first show, Deadline for Dinner, consisted of cooking tips from guest chefs. When a guest did not show, he did his own recipe for "Eggs Scavok," his name spelled backwards. Another program he hosted was called Pick Your Ideal, which was pretty much a 15-minute promotional for the Ideal Manufacturing Company. In November of that year he launched one of TV's first morning wake-up programs. The unstructured format required improvisational abilities Kovacs had mastered on radio. The daily 90-minute slot was titled 3 To Get Ready.


Kocacs' off-the-wall style was considered extremely eccentric in early television. He approached the medium as something totally new. While other men in his field were treating TV as an extension of Vaudeville, Kovacs was expanding the visible confines of the studio. His skits incorporated areas previously considered taboo, including dialogue with the camera crew, the audience, and forays into the studio corridor.


Later, in 1952, Kovacs appeared on daytime TV as host for Kovacs on the Corner. Kovacs strolled along a cartoon-like set and talked to such neighborhood characters as Luigi the Barber, Pete the Cop, Al the Dog, and Little Johnny Merkin, a midget. One program segment allowed a selected audience member to say hello to folks back home. A closed window filled the screen. On the window shade was printed the phrase "Yoo-Hoo Time." When the shade was raised, the excited audience member waved, saying "Yoo-hoo!


Later still, CBS aired a new, national Ernie Kovacs Show. Kovacs produced and wrote the show himself and, as with his earlier broadcasts, much of the program was improvised. Unlike other TV comedies, there was no studio audience, nor was canned laughter used. In Kovacs' view, the usefulness of an audience was diminished because they could not see the special effects. Described as his "hallucinatory world," the program featured many ingenious video effects as though illusion and reality were confused. In his skits, paintings came to life, flames from candles remained suspended in midair, and library books spoke.



Works Cited:
  • Chorba, Frank J. Ernie Kovacs. 14 Nov. 2009 <http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/K/htmlK/kovaksernie/kovacsernie.htm>.
  • Benson, Kit and Morgan. Ernie Kovacs. 14 Nov. 2009 <http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=587>.
  • Quagliata, Albert J. A Short History of Ernie Kovacs. 14 Nov. 2009 <http://www.erniekovacs.net/ernie1.html>.
  • Tuesday, December 15, 2009

    Life In Beta--How Design thinking Can Help Us Navigate Through This Time of Cascading Change

    Article link: Life In Beta--How Design thinking Can Help Us Navigate Through This Time of Cascading Change

    This post is about a talk that Bruce Nussbaum gave at the Singapore Design Thinking Symposium. Bruce's speech discussed where design was going, and how to merge design and economics.

    I thought the speech was very interesting since having read his previous speech in Korea. I like that people are turning to Design Thinking, a term that Bruce uses to describe a way of thinking that merges design with business and economy.

    Designomics

    Article link: Designomics

    This post had Bruce Nussbaum's speech that he gave when he was at the design conference in Korea called Design Korea 2009 International Conference.

    I learned a lot about Korean history, not only in design but in culture, and was surprised at the interest that Nussbaum had in the subject.

    Tuesday, December 8, 2009

    Damjan Stankovic's traffic light countdown display

    Article link: Damjan Stankovic's traffic light countdown display

    This article is about a new way to look at and design stop lights. It would show a "progress" bar in the light to show how long the lights would last.

    Frankly, I love this idea. but I think the lights have to be bigger so that the progress bar can be seen better from far away.

    Mag+: The magazine's digital future

    Mag+ from Bonnier on Vimeo.



    Article link: Mag+: The magazine's digital future

    I thought this video was truly amazing - I always find it fascinating when people predict the future. I'm not sure how I feel about carrying an e-reader to read my magazines, though.

    Thursday, December 3, 2009

    Things to remember on a job interview


    Article link: Things to remember on a job interview

    Although short, this article links to a much longer article about job interviews, and tips that the writer witnessed after watching 28 various interviews captured on hidden camera. Here are the 22 tips he came up with:

    1. Cover letters are worthless
    2. 10 seconds to sell or say so long
    3. Be on time
    4. Cell phone off
    5. Know the company, and why you want to work there
    6. Bring resumes
    7. Bring a notepad
    8. Dress in a clean conservative manner
    9. Profiles to private
    10. Don't make jokes
    11. Don't babble
    12. Don't badmouth a boss
    13. Don't flirt with the interviewer
    14. Don't play with your face/hair
    15. Don't mention your spouse's job
    16. Have good eye contact
    17. Honesty (sometimes not) the best policy
    18. Have goals
    19. Have accomplishments
    20. Have passion
    21. Ask Questions
    22. Send a thank you note

    1 Hour Design Challenge Highlight: Earbud Speakers!


    Article link: 1 Hour Design Challenge Highlight: Earbud Speakers!

    This article shows a result of a design challenge: earbud speakers done by the username "DC-Design" on Core77's forums.

    I thought these were very clever! I wonder how he got them to work?

    Tuesday, December 1, 2009

    What is school for?

    Article link: What is school for?

    The article is a list of things that schools do for children and their future. I particularly liked #7: "Give kids something to do while parents work" because it reminded me of what I used to do when I wasn't at school and my parents were at work, which was explore every nook and cranny of the house for something interesting. The list also made me think about what school does for me personally, and give some more thought to whether or not I should go to grad school or not.

    Nokia Headset Comp Winners


    Article link: Nokia Headset Comp Winners

    This article shows off the winners of the Nokia Music Almighty Headset Competition, which started sometime last year and ended early this year.

    I love the creative idea of some of these headphones, especially the one on the right. In a way, it's extremely geeky, but at the same time, it's incredibly beautiful.