I swear, one of these times, you're gonna wake up in a coma.

Cordelia ,'Showtime'


Experimental TV: Non-Fiction  

This thread is part of an experiment to discern the Buffistas' future interest in television discussion. It will remain open until June 1st, 2007, upon which date there will be spirited debate regarding the infinite possibilities for our board's development. This thread is for non-fiction tv, including but not limited to documentaries and reality shows. [NAFDA]


sumi - Apr 29, 2007 7:21:19 am PDT #274 of 767
Art Crawl!!!

Top Chef: Bravo has season 3 cheftestants on their website.

Apparently, TC3 starts in mid-June so my guess is that the next Project Runway starts in August/September.


sj - Apr 29, 2007 7:39:51 am PDT #275 of 767
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

Why are we getting another Top Chef before another Project Runway? Shouldn't it be the other way around?


sumi - Apr 29, 2007 7:50:03 am PDT #276 of 767
Art Crawl!!!

I don't know. My guess would be that Project Runway is stronger than Top Chef so it's starting in/around the traditional new season starting time.


Jesse - Apr 29, 2007 7:53:39 am PDT #277 of 767
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

And Project Runway has to schedule around fashion week, too.


NoiseDesign - Apr 29, 2007 8:40:32 am PDT #278 of 767
Our wings are not tired

Anyone else watch the Ninja edition of Mythbusters this week? I have a few issues with how they did their tests.

First of all, they keep using themselves as the example of the best humans could do...um...yeah, I'm pretty sure there are humans with faster reflexes and that are stronger than the M5 crew.

Also, on the arrow catch it seems that they jumped from it not working to a totally extreme end of the scale to fix it. I was thinking that it might also not be a straight catch but that the person catching might be sweeping their hand towards the arrow to catch it and that could have an impact on the testing.


Liese S. - Apr 29, 2007 9:57:12 am PDT #279 of 767
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Mythbusters: I always have issues with how they do their tests. Also, they totally should have had a Japanese ninja expert. Also, also, isn't it totally funny how Grant was so serious about being the fastest/bestes of them to gauge against; it was a matter of pride.

But yeah, definitely could have used some other testing to set the reflex range. Reflexes are something that really vary widely. And that's the problem with mechanical testing. It takes out all the human variables, which, okay, good for consistency, but not necessarily representative.

Although I guess since I'm a direct line descendant of samurai, I should just say, neener neener, ninja peasant class!


Connie Neil - Apr 29, 2007 11:20:25 am PDT #280 of 767
brillig

I objected to the Mythbusters testing of the bronze-mirror-burns-ship test--they used multiple little mirrors instead of one big mirror. I don't have the link, but a large concave mirror has been proven to be able to focus sunlight into a Plasma Beam of Death.

The people trying to recreate historical things never give the ancients credit for brains, plus they never take into account the "I'm willing to risk serious injury to make this work" factor--or rather "I'm willing to have my slaves risk serious injury to make this work" factor. They always put in safety limiters that wreck the experiment.


Jessica - Apr 29, 2007 12:57:14 pm PDT #281 of 767
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

The people trying to recreate historical things never give the ancients credit for brains, plus they never take into account the "I'm willing to risk serious injury to make this work" factor--or rather "I'm willing to have my slaves risk serious injury to make this work" factor.

There's a BBC series called Secrets of the Ancients / Secrets of Lost Empires that does exactly that. I wish I could remember if it ever aired in the States. (It's exactly the sort of thing that would normally be sold to Discovery to air on the History Channel, but I don't think that series was a co-prod, so it might have gone to PBS instead.)


Jessica - Apr 29, 2007 1:05:08 pm PDT #282 of 767
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

Oh, and speaking of the Beeb, Planet Earth is out on DVD -- original BBC cut, original BBC narration. (And it's also available in Blu-Ray and HD-DVD, which if you have any way of playing them are definitely worth getting since the entire series was specially shot on HD -- there's no bought-in footage, and nothing's been upconverted.)


Liese S. - Apr 29, 2007 1:30:56 pm PDT #283 of 767
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Oh, good. Now I can delete all my unwatched episodes. It's something I really want to have and watch, but I can't handle now.