We published the 13th episode of my wife’s cooking show, Ligia’s Kitchen, today. She’ll show you how to make a very quick and delicious raw tomato soup.
English subtitles are available on YouTube (toggle them on/off with the CC button).
My show, Romania Through Their Eyes, was featured on TVR International this morning, on a news program hosted by Horia Grusca, called “Romania in Vazul Lumii” (March 12th, 2011 edition). You can watch the archived show online. The segment where my show is presented starts at minute 14:05 and ends at minute 21:02.
And, if you haven’t yet seen the first two episodes in full length, you may do so as well, on my YouTube channel, in HD, with English or Romanian subtitles (click on the CC button to select your language).
This week’s edition of “Romania in Vazul Lumii” will be aired again on TVRi, tomorrow (Sunday) at 7:30 pm, and Monday at 6:30 am. If I understood Mr. Grusca correctly, segments from my second episode of Romania Through Their Eyes will be shown during next week’s edition of “Romania in Vazul Lumii”, so stay tuned for that as well.
Many thanks to Mr. Horia Grusca, and to the incredibly nice person who made him aware of my show!
By the way, I created a Facebook page for the show, so head on over and give it a Like if you want to be kept up to date with what’s going on.
We’ve all seen photos and videos of the 8.9 earthquake and tsunamis that have devastated Japan. My heart goes out to them. I hope as few people as possible died, and they recover as quickly as possible from this tragedy.
What bothers me more than the event itself is the unfeeling coverage of the event, exemplified by this video from CNN, which I can’t even embed here, because of their crass commercialism during a disaster.
There were people clearly dying under their very eyes, their cars engulfed by the tsunami wave, yet the two reporters covering it were blabbering on about how difficult it is to escape the wave, and what its speed might have been. This, more than anything, exemplifies what I hate about today’s news coverage, and why I seldom watch news on TV.
It’s that, and the endless pundit parade that goes on for days after something like this. All the old bags start foaming at the mouth thinking about appearance fees, dust off their suits, powder their rotten faces, and instruct their agents to start booking them anywhere they can go. Once on camera, they’ll spout off about anything, trying to look caring, slowly killing the viewers’ brain cells, one by one, with tripe and nonsense about what might happen or could happen. Meanwhile, the news stations will re-run the same clips, over and over, hour after hour, milking every second of coverage until it’s bone dry. It’s disgusting.
Want to read something worthwhile about the Japanese during this time of crisis? Don’t bother with the TV. Read this article by Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times, then imagine them at work, rebuilding their communities. It’ll be a far better image than what you’ll find on TV.
For example, you can see their “gaman” at work in this video. Even during the earthquake’s aftershocks are threatening to topple store shelves somewhere in Japan, they’re busy propping them up and have already started to clean up the store.
I’d like to wish them a heartfelt “ganbatte kudasai”!
I noticed something funny this morning, as I was watching “Feud in the Addams Family”, the second episode of the show’s third and final season (according to Netflix), or the eleventh episode of the show’s second season (according to IMDB). The set in one of the scenes looked awfully familiar — too familiar for my memory. As it turns out, the set was the living room from Mister Ed, another of my favorite classic TV shows, which at the time was in its fifth (or sixth) season, depending on which source you consult.
The original air date for this episode of “The Addams Family” was the 26th of November, 1965. It’s likely that when this show was filmed, they were also filming the 10th episode of the sixth season of “Mister Ed”, called “Ed the Bridegroom”.
Do you see it?
The Addams Family, Season 3, Episode 2: Feud in the Addams Family
Mister Ed, Episode 055: Wilbur, the Good Samaritan
I suppose it should come as no surprise. The same company produced both shows: Filmways, Inc. Its logo is included at the end of each episode of both shows, as seen below.
They needed a set for an incidental scene, and “borrowed” it from “Mister Ed”.
Last week and this week, Mitzi, Trixie and Sasha were featured on Good Morning Kitten, a lovely blog about cute kitties. I’d like to thank Andrea, who runs the blog, for being so nice to me, and for sharing the beauty of our little cats with the world.