Today on
Boing Boing tv, we are proud to share the sneak-preview of a television pilot, the
AQUABATS! SUPERSHOW!, a live-action and animation program featuring the popular superhero ska band,
The Aquabats (
MySpace).
Jon Berrett of Yo Gabba Gabba explains:
This spring the Aquabats completed a pilot for a new television show
based on the misadventures of rock and roll's greatest super dude men.
The Aquabats have been a band for over a decade, have toured the
world, and put out 5 full length studio albums.
The AQUABATS! SUPERSHOW! TELEVISION PILOT will have a special
screening at the San Diego House of Blues show on July 25th, 2008 [during Comic-Con].. If
you already have tickets, you are STOKED!
The excerpt we are world-premiering on BBtv today is an animated portion of the show's first episode, and includes angry mushrooms, vengeful unicorn princesses, and a subterranean paradise with lakes of hot pink lava. The AQUABATS! SUPERSHOW! also includes live performance and real-world hijinks. We think it's pretty awesome.
(Huge thanks from all of us at Boing Boing to Jon Berrett and the crew at Yo Gabba Gabba, and to The Aquabats for allowing Boing Boing to share this first with the non-subterranean world!)
Continuing in the
Blade Runner theme of
our most recent Boing Boing tv episode, today
BB Gadgets editor Joel Johnson speaks with artist and futurist
Syd Mead about this rare treasure -- the only one in the world! -- spotted during a BBtv shoot in Mead's home and studio.
So what is that, Joel?
A one-of-a-kind official LEGO version of Mead's "Spinner" flying car from Blade Runner, presented to Syd by LEGO when he attended a design summit in Billund. Syd let me pick it up and swoop it around my head like a child.
LEGO and Blade Runner, two great tastes that taste great together. More on the story in this episode, and
more iPhone snapshots from the shoot here.
If you like this BBtv episode, you might want to pick up:
BLADE RUNNER: THE FINAL CUT [Amazon]
VISUAL FUTURIST: The Art & Life of Syd Mead DVD [sydmead.com]
And more Syd Mead books on Amazon.
Previous episodes in BBtv's Syd Mead series:
Syd Mead with Joel Johnson, part 3: BLADE RUNNER
Joel Johnson interviews Syd Mead: part 1.
Joel Johnson interviews Syd Mead: part 2.
(Footage from the movie Blade Runner courtesy Warner Bros. Entertainment / Warner Home Video; Artwork courtesy of Syd Mead Inc.)
The 1982 cyberpunk cinema classic
Blade Runner remains one of the most influential science fiction movies of all time, and tops many a nerd's favorite films list.
Today on Boing Boing tv, Boing Boing Gadgets editor Joel Johnson visits the studio of artist and futurist Syd Mead, who designed the film's dystopian look and feel. We learn about the "erotic machine" he dreamed for the replicant Zhora (this breast-shaped dreampod was cut from the script when director Ridley Scott ran out of dough), the 1 2 3 *4* alternate opening scenes designed by Syd (one of them, which involved shoveling dead bodies, was deemed "too Holocaust"), what really lights up those building facades, and many more secrets.
Syd explains he envisioned the world of Blade Runner as a place "you wouldn't want to be for too long," and describes the challenges of designing for "a love story with moralistic underpinnings... if we could actually make people, would we treat them like dishwashers? Just use them up and throw them away?"
If you like this episode, you might want to pick up:
BLADE RUNNER: THE FINAL CUT [Amazon]
VISUAL FUTURIST: The Art & Life of Syd Mead DVD [sydmead.com]
And more Syd Mead books on Amazon.
Previous episodes in BBtv's Syd Mead trilogy:
Joel Johnson interviews Syd Mead: part 1.
Joel Johnson interviews Syd Mead: part 2.
(Footage from the movie Blade Runner courtesy Warner Bros. Entertainment / Warner Home Video; Artwork courtesy of Syd Mead Inc.)
On behalf of all my Boing Boing and Boing Boing tv colleagues, I'm excited and proud to announce the debut of a new series within our daily video program: BBtv World. This ongoing series will feature first-person glimpses of life around the world, told through the lenses and voices of Boing Boing editors, guest collaborators -- and through the people in these places, their own stories, their own way. When we can, we want to place the camera directly in the hands -- literally -- of the people whose lives, cultures, and lands we're visiting.
We're kicking this off with an episode I shot during a recent visit in a K'iche Maya village in the highlands of Guatemala, where I go a few times a year to work on sustainable development projects with an international project managed with local indigenous leaders.
"El Molinero," the title of this debut piece, refers to the corn mill where young girls go every day to grind soaked, hulled corn ("nixtamal") into soft dough for tortillas or tamales (in K'iche, "k'osh").
The old machine -- hacked together by local craftsman from various components -- is extremely loud, spews smelly fuel exhaust, and like many aspects of daily life and work here, is dangerous.
The K'iche girls you see in this episode helped me shoot some of what you see. In future episodes, they'll tell their stories themselves, and we'll visit other places -- Tibet, Africa, Mexico, China, India, and Japan, to name a few of the destinations planned.
WATCH THIS VIDEO ON BOINGBOING.NET.
Today on Boing Boing tv,
Xeni and
Pesco dive deeper into the magical chocolate factory founded by a NASA software developer.
In this installment of BBtv's 3-part series on TCHO Chocolate, we learn more about the hacked-together, home-tinkered machines and high-tech wizardry that keep the factory running. The philosophy is "scrappy, not crappy," as founder Timothy Childs explains.
TCHO's R&D lab contains such diverse components as Space Shuttle tape, a modded RONCO turkey oven, stone grinders used in Indian restaurants, and deconstructed space heater parts from the local hardware store.
Next, we zoom in to the molecular-level science behind this most delicious confection. Science buffs, rejoice! This episode is as fun for your eyes and brain as the "obsessively good" chocolate is for your mouth -- Polymorph fun for the whole family. Warning: this episode is NSFC (not safe for chocoholics).
Previously on Boing Boing tv:
* TCHO, part 1: chocolate origins.
Related: read a feature about TCHO by David Pescovitz in the current issue of MAKE Magazine, Timothy and the Chocolate Factory.
Here are some iPhone snapshots from Xeni on Flickr: TCHO, Boing Boing tv.
(Special thanks to Amy Critchett, and Wayne & Breanna)
Boing Boing tv's UK-based music correspondent
Russell Porter of "
Porter Report" fame interviews the legendary
Hot 8 Brass Band, from New Orleans.
Band leader Bennie "Big Peter" Pete explains the history of second line, the roots of New Orleans jazz, and what it took to survive as jazz band in the French Quarter.
Today's BBtv episode is a little longer than usual -- 9 minutes -- so we can share with you an extended musical segment, with the Hot 8 performing their song "What's My Name" live on the streets of Brighton. Their performance is breathtaking, and quite possibly the funkiest, most soulful sounds you've ever heard on Boing Boing. The band is currently on tour throughout the USA. Enjoy!
Previous PORTER REPORT episodes on BBtv:
Russell Porter: Transgressive and rockfeedback.com, pt. 2
Russell Porter roundtable: Transgressive Records, rockfeedback.com, pt. 1
Russell Porter with Alice Russell, pt. 2
Russell Porter with Alice Russell
Russell Porter and Cadence Weapon, pt. 1.
Russell Porter and Cadence Weapon, pt. 2.
Russell Porter with George Pringle
Russell Porter with The Young Knives pt 1
Russell Porter with The Young Knives pt 2
Russell Porter with The Futureheads
Russell Porter with The Guillotines
Russell Porter with Peggy Sue and the Pirates
Russell Porter with Dockers MC
Russell Porter with Dan le Sac vs. Scroobius Pip