air, new york, city, japan, pop, culture, zine,
blog, weblog, web, log, journal, ivan, corsa, movies, music, lifestyle, design, art, fashion, gear, television, advertising, technology
AIR MASSIVE
GLOBAL POP CULTURE MEDIA STYLE WEBLOG

FRESH TAKES
ON MOVIES, MUSIC,
PEOPLE & MORE

CONSUMING CULTURE, SPITTIN' HYPE


ON OUR STEREO Air Massive

The Top 10 discs that get us through the night...

1. Deerhoof - "Friend Opportunity" (Kill Rock Stars)
2. El Perro Del Mar - "El Perro Del Mar" (EMI)
3. Lily Allen - "Alright, Still" (Regal/Parlophone)
4. Cat Power - "The Greatest" (Matador)
5. Kanye West - "Late Registration" (Roc-A-Fella)
6. Gorillaz - "Demon Days" (Virgin)
7. M.I.A. - "Arular" (XL)
8. Kaiser Chiefs - "Employment" (B-Unique)
9. Bright Eyes - "I'm Wide Awake It's Morning" (Saddle Creek)
10. Mos Def - "The New Danger" (Geffen)


Kickin' It Ol' Skool on Our Stereo...

1. Bob Marley and the Wailers - "Exodus" (Island)


Favorite Kicks ...
Grand Theft Auto
Adidas "Adi Color Winner" -- Fresh high-top sneaker design from the German tennis shoe maker.


Favorite Video Game on Our PlayStation...
Grand Theft Auto
Grand Theft Auto - San Andreas (Rockstar Games) -- The greatest GTA eva'! It's been out for over two years and we're still freakin' playing it!



Overheard...

Guy talking into cellphone on West Broadway in Soho, NYC:

"Hey man, can you hear me? Got a new cell phone -- it's a Treo, man! That's right, a Treo. Yeah, the Palm Treo 650 and it's aaaawesome ... uh ... hello, can you hear me? Hello? Hello ... Shit!"

MASSIVE

Supercore:
Ivan Corsa
Princess Lower
East Side:

Reiko Oishi
OK Computer:
Typhoon
Lost in Translation:
Ken Taniguchi
Sources Direct:
Rob Samra
D. Carter Witt
Damon Smith
Adrian Tharani
Jess Eddy
Gravy to Potatoes,
Luke to Darth Vader:

Lao Tzu


Powered by
Movable Type 3.2


Hardware:
Apple Macintosh PowerBook G4 + G3 Computers w/ OS X

Toshiba Satellite Laptop w/ Windows XP

Krups Il Caffe Duomo Espresso Machine



Resources Directory [Beta]:

TECH GEAR
Mobile Devices We Like:
T-Mobile Sidekick and Sidekick II
Easy to use, unbusinesslike and not too techy-looking, we like the Sidekick 'cause it's easy on the thumbs for typing and is probably the most comfortable cell phone and text-messaging device in terms of keyboard size and design.

Palm Treo 650
The treo 650 is to the Sidekick what Prada dress shoes are to Adidas sneakers. Despite that analogy, the Treo will not win points for style compared to many cell phones, though the Treo is well-designed and nice on the eyes. The Treo is a so-called Smartphone and runs an OS for its Palm PDA functionality. Part phone, part PDA and part e-mail and Internet-enabled handheld computer, the 650 comes in slightly different versions for Cingular, Verizon, and Sprint. The best part of the 650 is its keyboard and high-resolution color screen.

TEST




June 25, 2004

Brit Comedian Graham Norton Lands at Comedy Central with The Graham Norton Effect

062504_1_gnorton.jpg

"So, like, what's with this hyperactive spikey-hair gay dude with the British accent reviewing Internet porn?" our guest asked. Our visitor, a culturally-deprived Southern Californian with a fake-bake then added, "Like, dude, this guy needs a Ritalin prescription and a one-way plane ticket back to London like right now!" Okay, so not everyone is instantly smitten with Graham Norton. But then again, this is America, not the U.K., where Norton is the hottest and funniest man on British television. And then again, Norton probably doesn't care what a twenty-something California girl with a fake tan thinks of him.

In Britain, Norton reigns supreme with the television sensation So Graham Norton, a talk show-like hour of assorted comedy bits, bawdy humor, celebrity chat and interactive stunts involving his audience. The show often includes segments that are--in the U.K.--shockingly funny and in questionable taste.

In one example, Norton, his guests and a studio audience review Internet porn Web sites, with Norton scrolling through a site on a computer.

It is a barely modified verison of this format that Comedy Central is producing for the American public. The U.S. production of the show is called the Graham Norton Effect and is taped in New York in front of a live studio audience. The show premiered Thursday night on the popular cable TV comedy channel. Twelve more episodes are scheduled. (The program will air Thursdays at 10 P.M. ET/9 CT.)

The Graham Norton Effect is more like a collection of post-modern side shows than the straight-up talk show with comedian as host. There's no opening monologue. And while there are celebrity guests, there is virtually no interview-style chat. Instead, guests participate in whatever bizarre antics Norton has dreamed up.

In the debut American episode, Norton and one of his guests, stand-up comedienne Sandra Bernhard visited a Web site run by a man who has a thing for toothy grins and has a close-up picture of Bernhard's gap-toothed smile on his Internet site. They then called the man and Bernhard chatted with him.

During the hour-long program, Norton zips in and out throwing zings and one-liners like sharp darts, that is, when he's not otherwise already dominating the dialogue and shepherding the show from one off-beat segment to the next with ADD-esque momentum. The Irish-born comedian is contstantly in motion and and sucks up most of the oxygen in the room. His guests can barely manage to get in a word edgewise; A meaningful comment is virtually impossible.

The Graham Norton Effect seems incoherent and shapeless, but this just might be because Americans have a set idea of what a show that looks like a comedic talk show is supposed to look like. Letterman, Conan, Leno, Stewart, Killborn--we've got their routine down: Open with a monlogue, share repartee with a sidekick, perhaps the house band leader, do some very short topical comedy sketches, follow with two--sometimes one, sometimes three--guests plugging their new movie/TV show/book/CD/agenda, and then end with a live performance by a musical guest, if any. Roll credits. Go home.

But comparing Norton to America's late-night television royalty is unfair. There is nothing on U.S. television like The Graham Norton Effect. We couldn't take our eyes off the show (despite our visitor from Cali imploring us to change the channel.) Though some of Norton's laughs and one-liners seem spontaneous, the show is carefully planned. At times, a joke goes right over the audience's head or there's barely a titter to an off-cuff remark, but you'd be hard pressed to note it because Norton doesn't let that stop him. He just keeps rolling on.

Norton, who is openly gay, has the overly extroverted and dishy savoir faire of Carson Kressly from Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, but taken down a notch. But he could learn a few things about fashion from Mr. Kressly. Norton has a penchant for wearing loud suits and has been awarded the dubious distinction of worse-dressed man by British GQ magazine.

Whether or not Comedy Central will opt for a second season of the Graham Norton Effect will depend on whether America (and tanned girls in L.A.) warms to the show's off-beat formula and energetic host. Norton's British show, which he hasn't abandoned, has six seasons under its belt and will resume production back in London after the initial Comedy Central stint in New York ends.

--Instamatic


RELATED LINKS

Graham Norton Effect Homepage at Comedy Central
Graham Norton Web Page at Channel 4 in the UK
Unofficial Graham Norton Web Site
Wikipedia Entry on Graham Norton
He's Gay, Naughty and Tops in Britain [CNN]
So Television Company Web Site

Posted by Supercore at June 25, 2004 08:19 PM



Subscribe with Pluck RSS reader





SEARCH


ARCHIVES


PROJECT ARCHIVE

Selected articles, interviews, reviews and more from the Air Magazine NYC-Japan Web Project 1998-2002.


CONTACT

Submissions, info tips and feedback welcomed via email. Contact the Massive here.





Air Massive

[Let's
Push Things
Forward]

Copyright © 1998-2006 Air Massive. All Rights Reserved. Produced by Air Massive at Studio 1FW in New York City. A Lower East Side Design by Ivan Corsa.