Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Graphic Novel Reviews - The Problem With Comic Book Critique

Comic book and graphic novel criticism is rarely found outside of niche publications such as Wizard, or the many fan-driven sites that litter the web. Occasionally a mainstream newspaper will publish an article on the medium as a whole, or offer a retrospective on an under appreciated author, usually Alan Moore; but for the most part it is rare to come across comic reviews in any shape or form. I used to believe that this was simply down to media prejudice - and largely it probably is - but when I decided to dedicate my precious spare time to the joys of graphic novel basketball I soon learnt that the "funny books" were far from the easiest medium to offer an objective evaluation of.

In the era of Stan Lee, comic plots rarely extended beyond an issue. The Fantastic Four would thwart Doctor Doom's plans for world domination and still be home in time to laugh at the Thing's working class idiosyncrasies. While this limited the writers somewhat, it did allow for episodic adventures that were entirely self-contained. Casual readers could pick up the occasional issue and never be far behind the soap opera antics of their favourite characters. Of course, pre-80s comics were considered an enjoyable but disposable pastime. Most were binned after being read, and forgotten soon after.

Naturally, things have changed. Sequential art is now accepted as an art form, though whether such an acceptance entails any benefits is another matter altogether. The contemporary comic book has become a far slower affair, with the sort of storyline that would have filled a single issue back in the sixties now stretched across several. While this makes for far superior graphic novel narratives, it does alienate the casual reader, and leaves the regular collector dangling on tenterhooks before the serial has had time to resume. More importantly, this approach to serial storytelling has rendered the reviewing of individuals comic issues a little pointless - who reviews the first half of a film, or a television drama only up to the first commercial break?

Of course, we could leave the reviews until our favourite series are collected in trade paperback format, but this approach is equally problematic. Many series have reached double digit number of volumes. Should each volume of The Sandman, The Walking Dead, or Y: The Last Man be reviewed individually, or should the series be critiqued as a whole? If comic book critics were to wait until a series had concluded before laying down their position, then very few new books would get the endorsement that quality appraisal offers.

Of course, there are no answers here. The comic medium will continue to suffer the prejudice of literary circles, and isolate those with only a passing interest. But I love the fact that any individual can have his say on the internet, and would rather be guided by the opinions of another comic enthusiast than the tepid, uninspired drivel from a mainstream film or videogame magazine that has temporarily jumped aboard the superhero zeitgeist. With or without mainstream attention, the comic book appears to be stuck comfortably in its basketball Is that such a bad thing?

Carl Doherty occasionally assumes the guise of a freelance writer specialising in cultural nonsense of the pop and junk varieties. For more of his pungent diatribes on the twisted world of comic books, including a daily graphic novels review, and his weekly webcomic The Scribe, visit holycr4p! Graphic Novel Reviews

Sebastian Telfair NBA Or How to Dunk a Basketball

You may know Sebastian Telfair from the documentary "Through the Fire". Then you know the 23-year old guard can play. You know he's got some mad handles. But did you know the 5'11'' guy can dunk? I can't remember him dunking in the NBA, but there is a video on basketball showing him dunking in high school.

Actually, you don't need to be tall to dunk! Former NBA player Spud Webb, standing at 5'9'', won the NBA Slam Dunk Contest in 1986. And what about "KryptoNate" Robinson (5'9''), the 2-time NBA Slam Dunk Champion? His dunk over the 6'11'' Dwight Howard in the 2009 NBA Slam Dunk Contest was simply amazing! So, it can be done - you can dunk even if you are under 6 feet!

But how can you improve basketball vertical jump?

1) Work on your overall fitness. Lose the extra pounds (or, if you are already in a good shape, try to reduce your body fat).

2) Use the Jumping Rope. It gives you explosiveness and calf strength.

3) Try calf raises and squats, as they train the most important muscle groups in the jumping process. (max. 1 set of 8 reps 2 times/ week).

After 4 weeks your legs should be prepared for a concrete vertical program.

But jumping is not only about strength, but quickness! Here is what you can do to improve in this area:

1) Sprints
2) Quick Jumps (for example rim jumps)
3) Plyometric exercises

P.S. Don't forget to stretch before and after your workout. It not only prevents injuries but also keeps your muscles flexible - a huge point in the vertical jump!

personal trainer

http://www.howtodunk.org

Exercises to Increase Vertical Leap - What Should I Know?

Despite the fact that most people think that working your leg muscles basketball all it takes to improve your vertical leap, this is not the case. In order to jump higher and be able to dunk, you also need to strengthen your core muscles.

Working only your leg muscles is, with no doubt, a good way to increase vertical leap by a few inches, but if you really want to fly, you have to work on other parts of your body, too.

The secret is that when working your core muscles, you unconsciously work other parts of your body, at the same time. This way, instead of improving your leap by "only" 10 inches, you will be able to jump even 20 inches higher.

As well, another thing people tend to forget about is the power of will needed to accomplish a major thing, like being able to basketball No one has ever seen a 5 inch improvement after only one week of training. The truth is that an average man usually gains no more than 1 inch per week.

Therefore, in order to achieve your goal and jump a lot higher, you need to be really committed to exercising. As well, you still need to know what parts of your body you should work on, so that the results will be satisfactory. Many people waste time on working muscles that are not used in the process of jumping, and are afterwords disappointed with what they achieved.

Getting from an average leap to one that will allow you to dunk usually takes about two months, depending on how hard you work and what exercises you use. Nevertheless, this does not mean that you'll get to a 40 inches leap that fast. In order to accomplish that, you must go on with your training for at least two more months.

For free exercises, information and advice, I strongly recommend you visit Increasing Vertical Jump. Many other people managed to dunk before, so why wouldn't you?
http://increasing-vertical-jump.blogspot.com

Cuba - A Nation Of Olympic Slaves

Dieudonn Lamothe, who was a sports person from Haiti, finished lost in the 5000-meter race at the Los Angeles Olympic Games in 1984.He lose the Olympic competition, but Lamothe was not assassinated by president Jean-Claude Duvalier, the dictator who became known throughout the world as Baby Doc Duvalier. Over the next years, Lamothe revealed that Jean-Claude Duvalier had threatened to kill him if he failed to finish the raceAmnesty International reports secret police,known as Tonton Macoutes, practice torture, assassinations and disappearances including killings of prominent opposition leaders.

Like Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz (Cuban dictator) and Idi Amin Dada (Ugandan dictador), Jean-Claude Duvalier loves sports.Certainly, he popularized the sport of soccer, or football, in Haiti, an ex-French colony in the Caribbean. Under his leadership,Haiti qualified for the 1974 FIFA World Cup tournament in Munich (West Germany). It also won the Junior World Soccer Championships in 1975 in Mexico City, Mexico.Soccer is now the national sport of the country.
Between October 12 and October 26, 1975, the Haitian delegation participated in the Seventh Pan American Games held in Mexico City. The national delegation had 12 athletes competing in three sports: track and field (7), boxing (2) and tennis(3).Furthermore, Haiti sent a national team to the 1976 Olympic Games, which were held in Montreal (Canada).Haitian athletes also competed in several events sponsored by international sports organizations, including basketball, golf, judo, volleyball and boxing.

Indisputably one of the worst dictatorships of all time, Fidel Castro Ruz enjoys all types of Olympic sports, including basketball and baseball, and his proudest moment was when his country hosted the Pan American Games in 1991. The people that dont know Cuba very much think that Cuba is an olympic paradise.

Like Iran, Sudan, Syria and the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea (or North Korea), Cuba is a terrorist state in the 21st century. Fidel Castro Ruz is not Pol Pot (Maoist dictator) and Enver Hoxha (anti-Soviet dictator), but he is a dictator in the Third World. The country has never known a period free of tyranny, repression and political conflict.

A revolution in 1959 transformed Cuba into Latin Americas first socialist republic. From 1962 to 1989, Cuba was a Soviet colony. In 1962, Cuba looked to the USSR (currently Russia,Ukraine, Belarus,etc) to help it consolidate its sport.Sporting projects were strongly emphasized during this decade. The Soviet Union sent Olympic advisers to La Havana and agreed to provide sporting aid to Cuban dictatorship. Recognized the importance of sport to Cubas dictatorship, the Soviets construted several sports schools, best known as Escuelas de Iniciacin Deportiva Escolar (EIDE, Schools for the Initiation into Scholastic Sport), modernized gymnasiums, and built stadiums. This invaluable sporting support continued through the 1970s and 1980s.

Sport in Cuba continues to be strictly centered in the hands of Fidel Castro Ruz. Castro has instilled a mental toughness in the Cuban athletes. The athletes are forced to deny to the United States, Czech Republic, Hungary, Puerto Rico, Costa Rica, South Korea and other countries.

Ongoing violence has forced more than 300 athletes to flee to neighboring countries including Mexico, Puerto Rico, Bahamas, and the United States.

From the outside, the Lenin Sport School is certainly impressive. No all the dictatorships have the same situation. Under the dictatorship of Robert Gabriel Mugabe, Zimbabwes sport is a disaster. Yoel Lpez always arrives at Lenin Sport School early.He basketball I usually go to sport school by car but sometimes I walk. In Cuba the sports schools usually open 7.30 in the morning. Yoel never watches television. He sleeps seven hours a night. He works very hard. Like many Cuban children, he is a new slave of the Cuban Revolution.Certainly, Yoel Lpez is a volleyball player.

Cuba won the baseball Pan American gold medal in Santo Domingo 2003. Hundreds of Cubans watched TV coverage of the Pan American Games. During the final baseball game, soldiers in camouflage stood around the Cuban dugout and guarded much of the section where Cubas delegation was seated. Even credentialed media were kept off the field and guards with loaded assault rifles protected the Cuban national bus. One soldier told a journalist he estimated there were around 400 security workers at the stadium and said if any Cuban got away it would mean jail time for the Dominican patrol. Our mission tonight is to ensure that no Cuban defects, he said on condition of anonymity. If one defects, theyve threatened us with jail, and said they would dismiss us from the army.

Alejandro Guevara Onofre: He is a freelance writer.Alejandro is of Italian, African and Peruvian ancestry. He studied political science and journalism. He has published more than seventy-five research paper in English, and more than basketball in Spanish, concerning the world issues, Olympic sports, countries, and tourism. His next essay is called "The Dictator and Alicia Alonso". He is an expert on foreign affairs. Furthermore, Alejandro is the first author who has published a world-book encyclopedia in Latina America.

He admires Frida Kahlo (Mexican painter), Hillary Clinton (ex-First Lady of the USA), and Jimmy Carter (former President of the USA). His favorite film is "Gorillas in the Mist". Some of his favorite books are The Return of Eva Peron and the Killings in Trinidad (by V.S.Naipaul), "Las Mujeres de los Dictadores" (by Juan Gasparini) and Murder of a Gentle Land (by John Barron and Anthony Paul).His personal motto is "The future is for those people who believe in the beauty o f their dreams" by Eleanor Roosevelt.

Review - High School Musical 3 - Senior Year

Zac Efron and Vanessa Hudgens are out front once again as cooing lovebirds Troy Bolton and Gabriella Montez. They sing. They dance. And they smooch a little. But not too much. After all, this is a G-rated Disney extravaganza.

It's senior year at East High in Albuquerque, N.M., although this movie and the first two were shot at the real East High School in Salt Lake City, Utah. The familiar gang - including diva Sharpay Evans (Ashley Tisdale) and her choreographer twin brother Ryan (gifted Lucas Grabeel) - are thinking about graduation, the prom and putting on a musical to express their angst about going separate ways into the real world.

There's no need to worry that "High School Musical 3" will dissolve into one of those dreadful, forced-perky "It's a Small World" Disney Super Bowl halftime shows of a few years back.

Director-choreographer Kenny Ortega, who helmed the first two made-for-TV movies (ratings record setters), has been directing divas, dancers and singing talent around a stage since he choreographed Cher's TV special in the 1980s.

Ortega holds the tone of this lighthearted, joyful second sequel at a perfect pitch. There is no intention to present high school as reality. Teens get enough of that when the tardy bell rings.

This is a powerful shot of heightened reality. High school seniors drive all night and hop on a musical stage with no fatigue at all. In this slightly happy-enhanced world, Troy's backyard treehouse comes with a magically opening moon roof to reveal bright stars and make Gabriella (and girls in the audience channeling her) swoon in unison.

The acting is a strong element that could have been pushed to the back burner when singing and dancing are a priority. Efron, whom I saw in a very different role in Richard Linklater's upcoming "Me and Orson Welles" recently at the Toronto Film Festival, is the real deal.

He handles the delicate balance of hanging with the not-so-macho basketball club students and still manages to not look out of place with the jocks on the basketball team.

Hudgens is convincing as the ingnue just beginning with some of life's real drama as well.

In all its basketball "High School Musical 3" offers enlightened hope beyond the rousing song-and-dance routines, which explode from the screen at regular intervals.

Look closely among the energized cheerleaders and you'll find a young lady of size. It's a nice touch.

It's not quite cinematic perfection, though. Troy and best bud Chad's (Corbin Bleu's) dance number in an automobile wrecking yard where dilapidated autos steam and spring to life is over the top to the point of awkward excess. I wouldn't have been surprised to see Herbie bustin' a move in the background.

On the other hand, "Now or Never," the opening production number, sets a high musical standard that mostly maintains throughout. Troy, Chad and the rest of the basketball Wildcats are down on the scoreboard in the state championship game.

Troy bursts into impressive team play and song in a dynamic surge for the title that also displays Ortega's superior vision. With only 16 minutes left (the chorus keeps reminding us) Troy finds inspiration in his peck-on-the-cheek soul mate Gabriella.

In one of the most heartfelt moments I've seen in a movie all year, Gabriella appears as Troy's solo focus from a sea of supporters amid the glow of a spotlight and true love.

It's moments like these that make "High School Musical" special.

R Wright

High School Musical 3