Skip to main content

Like everyone else on the planet, I have become a big fan of watching streaming video online. For the most part, as new sources became available, they were connected to a service that had something to gain from the offering, and the ones that didn’t gain anything soon went away. The new one that fits that description is XFinity TV from my cable provider, Comcast. It is a bit of a surprise for two reasons: first, they aren’t asking me for more money for the service, it is just there as part of the package I am already paying for. Second, it has a lot of video my TV set top box doesn’t have, and is missing a lot of the things my cable box delivers. Both of these things make sense once I looked into the reasons for them.

On the first point, I suspect I am not the only person that noticed the economy got a bit rough around the edges over the last few years. Lots of folks have cut back on expenses, and if you are Power or Water you have no worries, because those are live or die items. If you are TV, Telephone, or the Internet, people will actually survive if they don’t pay for you, hard though that may be to believe. Except for that occasional 911 call, of course. So every TV, Telephone, and Internet provider is busy building VARs into their service (Value Added Resources) to make their service too valuable per dollar spent for you to want to give it up. Which makes it obvious why my cable company is giving me a very valuable additional resource without charging me extra for it.

The second point stems from the fact that each network and program production team have their own deals with various distribution outlets. A good example of this is from the Big 4 (or so) Commercial Broadcast Networks; ABC, NBC, CBS, and Fox/CW. Both NBC and CBS are on my cable set top box Video On Demand service, with lots of the current programs. ABC is not there, nor is Fox/CW. So I can watch Chuck on NBC or Medium on CBS, but I have no access to No Ordinary Family on ABC, Smallville on CW/UPN or Fringe on Fox/WB. Or was it CW/WB and UPN/Fox? But when I log into XFinity, I have ABC and just watched the Pilot for No Ordinary Family, followed by this past weeks episode of Smallville, and tonight I just may rewatch Fringe. This combination works for me; I can watch everything I am looking for now, each through its assigned delivery system. And the streaming stuff goes with me, anywhere I have Wi-Fi access.

I first played with streaming online video in the mid 1980s, using the Multicast Backbone (MBONE) people were just beginning to develop. It could actually deliver low bandwidth audio in a two way environment at a reasonable rate, so even with a 3600 BAUD dial up modem you could do voice chat with people on another part of the planet. As long, that is, as you were both on one of the internet gateways like Q-Net, Compuserve, or AOL, rather than the much more common BBS systems. Video back then was a postage stamp sized picture at 16 colors refreshing at one frame a second if you had a good connection, and if you are interested in the basics of how it worked in olden days this thread is a good place to start.

It still pretty much works the same way today, except computers are much faster and more powerful, the ones on your desk, in your pockets, inside your TVs and DVD players, and most importantly the ones delivering the internet to you. So my Blue-Ray DVD player has its built in Netflix, YouTube, and Pandora widgets that pipe the output to my TV. On my computer, I have a premium paid account with Crunchyroll to watch Japanese, Chinese, and Korean TV programs an hour after they air in their respective countries, and another one with The Anime Network that gives me access to a completely different set of programming from those same countries. Similar fee-based arrangements are soon to be available in the US from sources such as BBC TV and Sky TV for areas outside the UK, and a whole lot of other programming suppliers from many other countries. In each case, you can watch the programs live (or near live, with a one hour delay being most common), which gives the license holder for that programming two instant advantages:

1) They get a regular payment from X number of online subscribers, without incurring any additional cost beyond building their server farm to handle the additional load. That load is minimal in a Multicast environment, and if you realized they have to pay their program suppliers for the additional people watching their show, you should also have realized they can see how many people are watching which shows based on the number of streams requested for each. So if I log into the BBC service, and only watch Doctor Who and Misfits episodes, all of the money they pass on go to the producers of those shows. That increases the odds that the programs I want to watch will be funded and renewed for another season; I know, because I helped fund them.

2) Both the Network/Service as a whole and those specific programs that pull in the subscription viewers get a spike in their ratings. In a commercial network environment, this means being able to charge more per 30 second spot. But even for non-commercial (in the sense of not running advertisements, NOT in the sense of not making money) networks like HBO or the BBC, ratings are king and are at the heart of increasing revenues.

There are no real genre movies coming out this week, but Flickan som lekte med elden (The Girl Who Played with Fire) brings part two of the trilogy that began with The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo home. This Swedish series about an investigative reporter and a girl genius hacker is very much edge of your seat thriller to the core, so much so that even if you have to read subtitles it won’t slow down the movie. The third film, The Girl Who Kicked The Hornets Nest, is hitting the theaters on this Friday, October 29th.

For TV, they are finally releasing War of the Worlds: The Final Season, as well as the complete series in one box set, since it only ran two seasons. This was Adrian Paul’s last Sci-Fi TV roll before he became the Highlander. Someone is re-releasing the surviving episodes of Captain Video And His Video Rangers, America’s first Sci-Fi TV show. It ran live on the DuMont Network for half an hour every night from 1949 to 1954. If you don’t remember, Allen B. DuMont invented the cathode ray tube (also called the Picture Tube) in 1932, the Oscillograph (later called the Oscilloscope) in 1933, and Radar in 1934 (the US military asked him not to patent it so they could keep it secret). But he is best known as the inventor of the Television, and his company was selling the TV sets he invented beginning in 1938, with his TV Network going live in 1946.

Bridging the gap between TV and Anime, the American animation series Star Wars The Clone Wars: The Complete Season Two also hits the shelves this week. What I find much more exciting is the fact that Lucasfilm Animation is looking into doing a new animated series with direct creative involvement from Seth Green and Matthew Senreich.

In Anime, Birdy is back with all new adventures in Birdy the Mighty: Decode. Birdy is an interstellar agent with one minor flaw; she is more dangerous to innocent bystanders than the bad guys she pursues, and has been known to take out an entire planet while trying to stop one evildoer. This is part one of the new series, with part two coming out around Thanksgiving. You can watch the first episode online to give you an idea of what the series is like.

In the finest tradition of the Girls with Guns sub-genre, Canaan – Complete Collection takes place after biochemical attacks become common usage, and some assassins have synesthesia, giving them a distinct edge. If you liked Noir, you will love this series. Also in combat mode, Queen’s Blade: The Exiled Virgin – Complete Series takes place in a world where the Queen is chosen by being the last woman standing at the end of a series of battles. All contests are magically transmitted to crystal spheres for the entertainment of the populace. I don’t think either one of these places sounds like somewhere I would want to live, but the shows themselves are fun to watch.

Pandora Hearts part 1 seems to be a twisted variation on Alice in Wonderland meets the Count of Monte Cristo. For his birthday present they put him in a dungeon, with no explanations and no obvious way out. And Fullmetal Alchemist: The Complete Second Season (Viridian Collection) also becomes available, bringing still more world class timeline jumping steampunk into our hands at a more reasonable price.

Also out this week, Naruto Shippuden: Box Set 4 continues the ninja adventure (although there is some evidence it came out last week, since I already saw it on the shelves), while Hetalia: Season Two continues the rather silly story of WWII nations as schoolchildren. This program could actually be used as a teaching tool for that period of history, not because it is particularly accurate, but because it might catch a child’s attention and make them curious. Every teacher I know considers that the most difficult step in the education process, because once they are interested they seek out new knowledge on their own.

There is a new trailer for the UK show Misfits which is about to launch into season 2. If you enjoyed Heroes back when they were good and you like intelligent comedy, this may just be the show for you. A group of scruffy young folks on a Community Service sentence get struck by lightning and develop strange powers. This program actually won the British Academy of Film and Television Arts award for Best Drama, awarded in June. So far as I know, no one is currently planning to bring this to the US; I hope that changes soon.

Mamoru Oshii’s latest feature film Assault Girls takes us to a future dystopian China where we return to the virtual realm called Avalon, for more beautifully filmed and soundscaped combat. The environment is very like the one he created for Ghost In The Shell, and could easily occupy that same universe, shifted to the mainland instead of the home islands. This one gets my vote as must-have of the week.

It seems like Predators was just in the movie theaters, but it is already coming out on DVD. In this entry to the franchise, a small selection of Earth’s top killers are exported to a hunting planet as prey. And in absolute last place for this weeks feature films, I am only mentioning Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl because the title gives me a grin. But the people who built both this movie and Tokyo Gore Police look to be the Troma of the orient, except without the humor. And notice I am not even mentioning Zombie Christ.

For live action TV series, a couple of classics are finally out on disk, starting with The Bionic Woman: Season 1, the original version. Personally I thought the recent remake was a much better rendition, with a more realistic story line, better acting and improved FX, if only because we are so much closer to having functional tech these days. The other TV golden oldie is Tales from the Darkside, with both the final season and the complete series being released this week. While it was more horror than Sci-Fi or Fantasy, every story had a little twist that gave it an edge, and figuring that twist out became the fun for watching this series.

Several goodies from the realm of animation this week, with Eden of the East: The Complete Series beating out everything else. I just reviewed it the other day, so my opinions should already be obvious, but let me just restate it for the record: this is the best Anime series I have seen this month, and in the top 10 (maybe the top 3) for this year. Its numerous awards come from many events, including the Tokyo International Anime Fair and Anime Kobe.

Tears To Tiara – The Complete Collection tells the Arthur/Albion legend from a new perspective. I haven’t seen this one yet, but it sounds very interesting and the artwork looks great.

Also out this week, Bamboo Blade: The Complete Series puts the entire girls kendo team storyline into a single box, in their never ending battle for sushi. And Hetalia: Axis Powers – Season 02 continues the personified silliness of WWII. And for western animation, Shaun the Sheep: Season 1 is also available Tuesday. Yes, this last group is just good old silly fun.

This week sees comic book into film Jonah Hex lead the movies onto the shelves, if only for the presence of Selma. The direct to disk Lost Boys: The Thirst was the second attempt to milk some additional box office returns out of the original cult classic. I don’t see how it can hope to cover the original attitude when its immortal vampires have aged so completely; I will not be adding this to my collection, but might Netflix it if they have it streaming. On the other hand, the 1959 classic Hakuôki (Samurai Vendetta in English) does look to be worthy of everyone’s attention, even if some of the sound stage filming is a bit surreal because of the background choices. Also out this week, the feature film animation How To Train Your Dragon from Dreamworks. If you enjoyed the movie and want more, they are also releasing it in a two pack with Legend of Boneknapper for further Dragon/Viking adventures.

Topping the TV choices this week is Dollhouse: The Complete Second Season. This is an amazing series, containing some of the best work of both Joss Whedon and Eliza Dushku, and this box completes the set. Also out this week, both the final season and complete box set of Ghost Whisperer.

If you only buy one Warner Brothers classic cartoon collection, make it this one: The Essential Bugs Bunny. This collection includes those musical masterpieces The Rabbit Of Seville and What’s Opera Doc?, and a lot of the top classic Bugs bits, including works with Elmer Fudd and Marvin the Martian. Of course, if you can afford to, you can skip this one and grab the full series of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection, which includes everything in this package and a lot more. Whichever way you go, these wonderful shorts never grow old.

Sengoku Basara Samurai Kings: The Complete Series takes you into a brutal world in feudal Japan of the Warring States period. This era was marked by continuous fighting between the various generals and warlords in an environment reminiscent of the city-states of medieval Europe, until the rise of the Devil King, Oda Nobunaga. He proved such a threat to all concerned that there was no choice; everyone else had to band together or be destroyed. And yes, this isn’t quite a pure history; there is enough genre content here to justify its inclusion. The other new Anime release this week is Tytania: Collection 2, finishing up the story of two Galactic Empires that go to war, and the rebel force that battle generates as common people do their best to survive.

Economical re-releases this week include the crossworlds demon combat story Tokyo Majin and the delightfully twisted hikikomori tale Welcome to the NHK, both in S.A.V.E. editions. If you shop around, you can pick up Super Amazing Value Edition complete 26 episode series for less than $20, quite a bargain.

This weekend is the New York Anime Festival, one of the truly monster events of the Anime calendar. This party is embedded in another one, the New York Comic-Con, but it has kind of become the tail wagging the dog. Musical guests alone include the Boom Boom Satellites, Vamps, Puffy Ami Yumi, Yoshiki of X-Japan, Zazen Boys, and many more. Tricia Helfer and Bruce Campbell will be there for the other con as well. Cosplay, Anime screenings, panels and parties, everything an Otaku could want in one place.


Boom Boom Satellites -Kick It Out
Uploaded by bludicolada. – Watch more music videos, in HD!