Friday, February 26, 2021

"Without Peele, Key turns to the future"/ "Disney star finds her voice" (Keke Palmer)

 I'm posting this in honor of February which is Black History month. This post shows the Black actors Keegan Michael Key and Keke Palmer.


Jul. 17, 2017 "Without Peele, Key turns to the future": Today I found this article by Barry Hertz in the Globe and Mail:


The Smothers brother. Abbott, singular. Laurel, sans Hardy. And, for the more modern-minded, Tim, forever searching for Eric. In the comedy world, it can be difficult for audiences to separate the artist from the artistic duo, and even more challenging for the performers themselves. 

But Keegan-Michael Key seems to have solved the secret to his post pairing success. Although the performer is best known for his collaboration with Jordan Peele on Comedy Central’s incendiary sketch series Key & Peele, he is hard at work creating his own singular career in film, television and the stage since the show ended its run in 2015. 

Part of this new path includes the Netflix series Friends from College, which premieres July 14 and offers a slightly darker side to Key. On the eve of the series’ premiere, Key, 46, spoke with The Globe and Mail about fulfilment, comedy and how not to write a sketch about Donald Trump.

Friends from College is an interesting choice for you, in that it’s an ensemble piece – are you seeking to immerse yourself in a cast, rather than stand out in your own project?

Not necessarily. It just happened to be that this ensemble was the one I wanted to work with. I do what I can to surround myself with people who are better than me or better than me at certain skill sets, so I’m always in a learning environment. 

Here, we have Cobie Smulders, who was on one of the most successful sitcoms of all time. Here’s Fred Savage, a child actor who’s now directing and acting. Here’s Nat Faxon, who started out in sketch comedy and now has an Oscar! To be in the midst of these people is lovely.


It’s interesting that you mention the learning aspect, because looking at your projects so far post-Key & Peele, they’re of such a varied range that you must have picked up quite a bit of knowledge on every type and size of project.

I do look for a challenge in everything. I want every project to scare me a little bit. I’m in what I would consider right now this lovely, exciting transition period in my career. When I was in grad school, I was 90:10 drama to comedy. 

And then, all of a sudden, my professional life had an amazing detour into sketch comedy, and the ratio was flipped, 90:10 comedy to drama. So the past few years of my life, I started nudging back a bit, to 88:12. With the film Don’t Think Twice, it was like 85:15. I’d love to get to this 50:50 place. I look at people such as Bill Murray as a model, or early De Niro, actors who were really trying to inhabit a character whose hearts beat at a different speed than yours, who never think about things that you think about. That’s what I crave as a performer.

Playing Horatio in Hamlet [off-Broadway] can only further balance that ratio.

Absolutely, but the funny thing about Hamlet is it also brings me back to my roots. I mean, some of the greatest days of my life were, I’m in Detroit, driving up to Ontario to go the Stratford Festival to see Shakespeare. It was always what I thought my life would be; it was something I’d craved for so long. So with Hamlet at the Public Theater, I’m coming home and evening out that ratio. I’m getting a two-for-one on this.

You mentioned Nat starting off in sketch and ending up with an Oscar [for his Descendants screenplay] – is that something you’re trying to actively emulate?

I’m not as interested in the writing of it, to be quite honest with you. I’m very interested in, and have always been, an interpretive artist. I do have a mild interest in being a generative artist, but it’s much more in taking others’ work and bringing it to fruition, or enriching it in some way. 

Every now and then, an idea comes into my mind and I want to bring it to life, but those moments are few and far between. Would I like to win an Oscar? If an Oscar was a byproduct of me being on the healthiest artistic journey that I can, then I would certainly welcome an Oscar. I’d also love, say, to be in a movie that Nat wrote. With Nat co-starring. And I’ll produce it! That’s more the framework that excites me.

In terms of working with great writers, what was your experience with Shane Black on his upcoming reboot of The Predator?

The great thing about that was Shane would turn to me sometimes and say, “I want this to be this, but how are we going to do it? Throw a line at me.” I think of him as a singular voice, but there was always a collaborative sense of wanting us, the cast, to bring ourselves to these roles in the framework he set up. He’s exactly the kind of person who I just want to spend time with – people who are better than me.

It seems there are increasing opportunities to do that these days, with the explosion of productions thanks to companies such as, well, Netflix here.

The opportunities abound. But what’s most attractive, artistically, is that we don’t get these homogenized stories. Netflix has been so niche-y, showing us what’s going on in our world. 

There is this strange cultural polarization taking place in our country, and I think that Netflix, you can explore it and one of its shows will make you go, what the heck is this? But then you watch a person’s story that has nothing to do with anything in your life, and suddenly the human connection is built. It’s a wonderful, varied landscape.

Speaking of a culturally polarized country, though: Do you wish that Key & Peele was still around to scrutinize what’s going on in the culture right now?

I do, I do. I think if Jordan and I did that, though, it would manifest itself in a way that you’re not expecting, necessarily. I know that we would sit down with our writers and say, “How do we talk about the state of our country and never ever make a sketch about Donald Trump specifically?”

 I’ll share this sketch idea with you. We never made it, but I might put it in something else. What if you had a guy who was spying on his neighbours across the street? He’s got binoculars, and he’s looking at these people who are brown and clearly Muslim. They’re living their lives, playing with their kids.

 His next-door neighbour, meanwhile is Chechen. He’s also a Muslim, but with blonde hair and blue eyes. So while this guy is watching his neighbours across the street, his other neighbour is building a bomb. But he doesn’t look at him because he’s white and and has blue eyes, so he can’t be bad. 

The way to get the story across most effectively is to get granular. Get the minutiae of how we’re really being affected. Trump is a whole other discussion, but he’s not the problem.

 There’s something going on systemically in our country, and that’s how we elected him. We’re not connecting, and that’s what I would want to reflect on. I do wish we had that opportunity.

This interview has been condensed and edited.



Feb. 17, 2017 "Disney star finds her voice": Today I found this article by Alicia Rancilio in the Edmonton Journal



If you’ve seen images of Keke Palmer on the red carpet in recent years, it’s clear the performer who charmed audiences as a child in Akeelah and the Bee and Nickelodeon’s True Jackson, VP has grown into a sultry star who knows who she is.

“People don’t understand. Nickelodeon, Disney Channel — those are corporations. That is a machine and it’s a well-oiled machine. … Not only when you work with them are you working on their show, but you’re working with their brand. 

So you become that identity in which they want you to be,” the actress said. “There’s rules and regulations and so they pigeonhole you when the reality is, ain’t nobody that PG!”

It’s that kind of real talk Palmer, 23, shares in her new book, I Don’t Belong to You: Quiet the Noise and Find Your Voice. She says one goal was to let readers know that just because she’s in the public eye doesn’t mean she’s perfect.

Q Why did you decide to be so honest in the book?

A I was like, “I don’t want to hold back,” and not even so much because of my story, but more so because I wanted people to know the truth so they could apply it to their lives. 

I didn’t want to gloss anything over. I wanted them to know the truth about me, you know, so they could put themselves in my shoes and realize that just because they know me or recognized me or that I’m a celebrity to them, doesn’t mean that we’re not the same.

Q Who has inspired you?

A Rihanna. She’s a pop icon saying how she feels. We would always see and hear people not really saying how they felt, saying what I feel like they wanted us to hear them say. And I really loved her courage, her courage to say how she felt. 

And I remember writing that to her in her DMs (direct message), I was like, “Rihanna, you inspire me so much with your ability to just have courage in who you are and speak your truth. I want to be like that. I want to be able to say how I feel and I love that you do that.” 

And she wrote me back and I actually say that in the book. She’s like, “Keke, you are a light. Continue to embrace God’s anointing and you will be all that you want to be.”

Q Season 2 of your show Scream Queens recently wrapped airing. What’s next?

A I’m also getting more into production, producing and, hopefully, directing. I wrote my first script two years ago. I’m working to get that done. I’m hoping to also be a conduit for others. Queen Latifah has done so much for me. I want to be in the position of someone like her giving opportunities to other people.

Friday, February 19, 2021

"A steadier Dave Chappelle talks politics, gender and race at Radio City"/ "A hard road to making it in LA" (Reginald Nelson)

 I'm posting this in honor of February which is Black History month. This profiles the Black comedian Dave Chapelle. There is also an article about the Black actor Reginald Nelson.



Aug. 8, 2017 "A steadier Dave Chappelle talks politics, gender and race at Radio City": Today I found this article by Jason Zinoman in the Globe and Mail.  I'm not really a fan of his.  I have seen a little bit of his show and his stand up act.  My little brother likes him.  This is a good interview.

Feb. 6, 2021: I reread this article.  I then told this to my brother P and he remembers this joke:


Chappelle asks emphatically: How far is Dolezal willing to go to become black? “Are you willing to refinance your house,” he says, pausing for the first wave of laughter before finishing the sentence, “so you can invest in a mixtape that won’t pan out?”

Here's the article:


Dave Chappelle is the only artist alive who would close a comedy show by finding a ray of hope in our current political situation through a poetic recounting of the tragic murder of Emmett Till.

No reviewer’s recounting can do justice to his intricate, virtuosic storytelling, so you will have to buy a ticket to Chappelle’s show at Radio City Music Hall to find out how he pulls off this feat. As audacious as it is, this set piece is also an example of how his singular daring can be in tension with a comic’s instinct to be as funny as he or she can be.

There’s no joke at the end of this bit. Instead, Chappelle says that he has had trouble sleeping since U.S. President Donald Trump was elected. His new set exudes the weary tone of many following the daily bombshells in the news, with Chappelle even expressing second thoughts about his Saturday Night Live monologue after the election, in which he said he would give Trump a chance.

Chappelle hasn’t just started a 3 1/2-week stand-up run, which ends on his birthday on Aug. 24, when he’ll turn 44. He’s producing a massive cultural festival, headlining with a lineup of some of the greatest comedians of colour in the United States (Chris Rock, Leslie Jones, Ali Wong, Trevor Noah) along with top-shelf musical acts (Solange, Lauryn Hill, Chance the Rapper, Ice Cube). By presenting in the sleepy month of August, he turns Radio City into the most exciting party in New York.

Chappelle has always had an instinct for showmanship, honed from doing stand-up since the age of 14. His new show starts theatrically, with the comedian ascending from beneath the floor of the stage under a ring of lights and over a cloud of smoke. Puffing on a cigarette, he wears what has become his customary military jacket with his last name printed over his left breast pocket. This uniform makes him look more formal and severe than he did in his earlier days.

His stage persona has changed too, with less animated physicality and a faster, raspier delivery. Chappelle’s jokes once moseyed before they exploded. They’re steadier now, quicker to start, but less likely to dart off in wild directions. And his voice doesn’t range as much, staying in a deeper register.

Some of his agility and mischievousness has been replaced with an increased narrative ambition, rooted in a confidence in his ability to get a laugh so firm that he goes deep into ideas without a punchline. 

This strategy has risks, which he not only embraces but also luxuriates in.

As he often does, Chappelle tells a story of getting booed onstage – this time it was about a show in Cleveland after making a joke about a killer at large there (along with the nearly-as-provocative admission that he’s a Warriors fan). 

Another time, he introduces a bit about Michael Jackson by saying it’s not going to work. (It did OK, but not nearly as well as his jokes on the same material from his 2004 special For What It’s Worth, one of the best this century has produced).

Chappelle likes the high-wire act of comedy, using the tension produced by wading into polarizing, treacherous material to set up the release that laughter provides. It’s why he has long avoided taking on Rachel Dolezal (he says it’s too easy), but in one of his funniest tangents, he confesses he can’t stop thinking about her. 

It’s no surprise that the comedian – who included in the first episode of Chappelle’s Show a sketch about Clayton Bigsby, a blind black man who thinks he’s white – is drawn to a white woman who identifies as black.

Chappelle asks emphatically: How far is Dolezal willing to go to become black? “Are you willing to refinance your house,” he says, pausing for the first wave of laughter before finishing the sentence, “so you can invest in a mixtape that won’t pan out?”

No comedian has done more confident and nuanced work about the fluidity of race; think of his inspired “racial draft” sketch, which began with an idea from Bryan Tucker, the current co-head writer of Saturday Night Live. But Chappelle finds himself on more unsure footing when it comes to gender. 

In his recent Netflix special, he drew considerable criticism for his jokes about transgender people in which he took umbrage at having to change his “pronoun game” for what he referred to crudely as someone else’s “self-image.”

In this new show, he tells a story of a fan who expresses hurt over such material, which leads Chappelle to examine himself. What follows is both fascinating and frustrating, searching and often funny. 

Like his material about Emmett Till, it’s organized like an onion, with an initial response peeled away to find a different one which leads to a third and most absurd finale. 

Some of the biggest laughs of the show come from the transitional line he uses more than once: “But if I’m honest.”

Chappelle makes earnest pleas for treating transgender people with respect and even praises their courage relative to Dolezal. But when he goes deeper into his own feelings, he returns to the frame of race.

He finds the discussion about sensitivity toward transgender “reeks of white privilege” and wonders pointedly why it’s easier for Caitlyn Jenner to change gender than it was for Cassius Clay to change his name?

This is one of those lines that gets not a laugh but a kind of audible nod of the head – or, to be more precise, a “hmmm” that suggests an idea has lit up the minds of audience members. 

Chappelle gets more of this kind of feedback than most comics. Increasingly, he searches them out, which is part of why he remains one of the most compelling figures in popular culture.

At his best, Chappelle proves that thoughtfulness can make a joke funnier. Making smart comedy that is argumentative and funny is not a zero sum game, but his first performance of a long residency at Radio City does occasionally makes you wonder if it is.


 "A hard road to making it in LA": Today I found this article by Brooks Barnes in the Globe and Mail.  I don't know who he is, but I thought this was a positive article where Reginald Nelson was homeless and he lifts himself up out of poverty:

Reginald Nelson’s pursuit of stardom landed him on the streets – but there’s a twist to this aspiring actor’s story

Reginald Nelson moved to Los Angeles in 2004 to become a star.

Yes, his dream was a clichĂ©. But he figured he had a better shot than most people. He had studied theatre at Howard University with Taraji P. Henson, whose career was then taking off. 

While performing in Chicago, Nelson had become acquainted with David Schwimmer, the Friends alum and a founder of that city’s Lookingglass Theatre Co.

Instead, Nelson ended up on Skid Row.

“I was having a hard time getting attention in auditions,” Nelson said. “Then my mom got sick, and I was embarrassed to ask for help with the bills.” He added, “I slept on park benches and finally found the Union Rescue Mission, where I got some health care myself. By that point, I was clinically depressed.”

That was 2014. Ready for the plot twist?

In May, while still living at the mission, Nelson, 44, got a call on his cellphone from a former Howard classmate, Neil Lewis. They had not been in touch for years, but Lewis, who had found some traction as an actor, had unbelievable news. 

Remember that scripted podcast they created in 2010? BET wanted to buy it as source material for a possible TV series.

Their old audio project, The Primordials, told the story of African deities living in contemporary New Orleans. Lewis and his lawyer confirmed the BET deal. A BET spokeswoman declined to comment.

Even if a series never materializes – most pilot ideas die – the BET money allowed Nelson to sign a lease for an apartment. (He declined to say how much BET paid for The Primordials. He also works two restaurant jobs.)

As he gets back on his feet, Nelson has high hopes for another audio drama called Red Sun, about a modern-day samurai. Over the past few years, he has produced several episodes, using libraries and coffee shops as an office.

“I got a lucky break with BET,” he said. “But I never stopped trying to lift myself up.”


Feb. 18, 2021 Black Lives Matter issues on TV shows:

1. Deputy: This show came out in Jan. 2020.  There was a scene where Deputy Joseph Harris was playing basketball and two cops come and point guns at him.  He is black.

2. This is Us: Randall who is black and is talking to his daughter's boyfriend Malik (who is black) about the news.  Randall's sister Kate (who is white) asks what BLM charities to donate to.




2021:

3. Prodigal Son: JT is a black cop and he had cops point guns at him.

4. Nancy Drew: Nick is black, and his mom visits him.  Mom says: "You may look bigger and scarier than you really are."

5. Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist: At the end of the episode "Zoey's Extraordinary Trip", the black guy Simon calls out the company that he works at, for the the glitch in the software where they don't recognize black and brown faces.

The next episode "Zoey's Extraordinary Reckoining", the whole episode deals with Simon.  There was also a bit with Toby being an East Indian guy who works there and Zoey being a woman in a male- dominated company and tech field.

6. The Rookie: Jackson is a black cop and he has to deal with his training officer Doug Stanton who is racist.


This week's theme is about Black celebrities in honor of February being Black History month:

"Do unto the others" (movie Get Out)/ "Cheers for fears" (Jordan Peele)




Kadidja Yansane: "Manifest Clients Now: Amplify your Confidence and Get Fully Booked in Any Economy"






My week: 

Feb. 17, 2021 Leo opinion: The polls were:

Are you going out on Valentine's Day?

No: 96%
Yes: 4%

My opinion: I said no.

Is Valentine's Day overrated?

Yes: 51%
A little: 20%
No: 15%
I don't know/ prefer not to answer:14%

My opinion: At first I was going to say "A little" and then said "Yes."

I don't really like Valentine's Day, because if you're not in a romantic relationship, then you feel bad.

I remember that other poll:

Do you like Christmas?

Yes: 80%
No: 20% 

I did find this on Facebook: 








Feb. 18, 2021 Gradual or fast change:

The Simpsons: The episode called "Lisa's Wedding" that's set in the future.  Cut to Homer and Marge in bed watching TV.

Marge: Too bad Fox turned into a hardcore sex channel.  It happened so gradually, I hardly even noticed.

Retail stores closing down: Does anyone remember the end of 2014?  Smart Set and Danier Leather closed down their stores.   

Jan. 2015 comes and Target closes all their stores in Canada.  That was fast change.

"Do unto the others" (movie Get Out)/ "Cheers for fears" (Jordan Peele)

 I'm posting this in honor of February which is Black History month. This profiles the Black actor/ director Jordan Peele.


Feb. 24, 2017 "Do unto the others": Today I found this movie review by Liz Braun in the Edmonton Journal:


Horror and social satire are a great mix. Get Out is a clever film about a black guy meeting his white girlfriend’s family, and it manages to be both comical and scary. Under all that is razor-sharp commentary on contemporary race relations.

Chris (Daniel Kaluuya), is nervous about meeting Rose’s parents for all the usual reasons, and then there’s that race elephant in the room.

But Rose (Allison Williams), assures him that her parents don’t have a racist bone in their bodies. They’re sophisticated liberals, her folks — mom (Catherine Keener), is a psychiatrist and dad (Bradley Whitford), is a surgeon.

But Chris is uncomfortable to discover that Rose’s parents have a black gardener and a black maid at their house in the country.

Oh, don’t be silly, says Rose — Walter and Georgina (Marcus Henderson and Betty Gabriel), are more like part of the family than servants.
Maybe so, but their behaviour is odd.

Chris’ discomfort increases at a garden party where the middle-class white guests fall all over themselves to show how colour blind they are. Weird little incidents are building up, and Chris is increasingly anxious about being stuck in the middle of this vaguely menacing environment.

The only other black people he encounters all seem strangely ... controlled somehow.
His suspicions about something nefarious going on are soon confirmed.

Get Out is written and directed by Jordan Peele — better known as half the comedy duo Key and Peele, with Keegan-Michael Key — and it’s a directorial debut. The screenplay is a masterpiece of subversion, laced with race-based fears and notions of stereotype that are played for laughs, but hit home.

Chris is subjected to seemingly benign comments that reveal white fears about black sexual prowess, athleticism, criminal tendencies, etc.

He laughs them off — just the usual stupidity — the way he laughs off his best friend’s (LilRel Howery), comical fears about white people.

Fear of the ‘other’ is pervasive. It’s laid out in a light and comical fashion, but as the horror side of the story blossoms and Chris has to fight for his life, violent action is required. Justified, in fact.

Maybe Get Out should be required viewing.



"Cheers for fears": Today I found this article by Bob Thompson in the Edmonton Journal


Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key signaled the end of their five-season Key & Peele comedy collaboration with their movie Keanu last year.

Now, Peele is returning to the spotlight as first-time director and writer of the horror-comedy Get Out, which opens Friday.

In it, an African-American man (Daniel Kaluuya) meets the parents of his Caucasian girlfriend (Allison Williams) at their family estate. That’s when things get horribly weird in a Twilight Zone meets The Stepford Wives kind of way.

The 38-year-old Peele talks about his film during an interview in Los Angeles.

Q Why do a genre movie for your directorial debut?

A A great horror film for me is a such a powerful thing. Even in my comedy, I’ve always had a dark sensibility. I guess there’s a psychopath floating around in my brain.

Q Was it challenging to mix the comedy and the terror?

A Every little choice in the movie has some deeper meaning for me or a satirical reference of what it means to be black or white and the notions of what we think it is.

Q Was casting the two leads key?

A Oh yeah. That was really important. It took a while but I loved Daniel (Kaluuya) in Black Mirror. And Allison (Williams) as Marnie in the series Girls is the great jumping off point for her Get Out character, who is a privileged but sassy city girl. 

Q Some of the white stereotyping is exaggerated. True? 

A Yeah, but I do poke fun at various black clichés, as well.

Q Would you say you are encouraging audience participation in Get Out?

A Absolutely. This is about crafting a movie that satisfies the seasoned horror veteran as well as somebody who hasn’t necessarily fallen in love with the genre like I have. I want to get them involved.

Q How involved?

A When it comes to the payback violence, I wanted to make sure the violence gets some cheers.

Q What was the priority?

A It was important to me that funny moments ring true. Everybody has to play it straight.

Q The timing might be right for something like Get Out. Do you agree?

A Part of the problem is when we discuss race in the U.S. these days, it seems to be such a feeling of defensiveness.

Q So?

A I’m hoping Get Out injects a little bit of relief in that conversation and shows we don’t have to take ourselves so seriously.

Q Do you have any plans to return to comedy as a performer?

A I’m not a fan of my comedy. It’s like hearing my voice on a recording. I never like it.

Friday, February 5, 2021

"Kids' artistic flair about to get an upgrade"/ "I want to be a computer animator"/ Beamdog

 

Jul. 27, 2017 "Kids' artistic flair about to get an upgrade": Today I found this article by Russell Smith in the Globe and Mail.  This article is about the Paint program on Windows.  My siblings and I used to play on that.  It was fun.



Every computer I have ever had has come preloaded with a program called Paint. It has been a part of Windows. It allows you to draw (usually shaky) lines of various thicknesses and colours with your mouse, so you can do stick figures and messages and apologetic hearts that you can send to your girlfriend when you have annoyed her. 

Children could draw with it and practise controlling a mouse. And indeed any children who grew up in the nineties probably did use it. It was a very practical program.


Paint was also useful for creating cool advertising posters or CD covers: You just imported a photo and you could lay text over it in any font. It was a primitive graphic-design program.

I say was because it now risks being laid off as a stalwart Windows workhorse. In a recent statement, Microsoft has listed applications slated for “removal” or “deprecation” from the next iteration of Windows. 

Paint is “deprecated,” meaning it is no longer “in active development” and may well be cut from the bundle. (A couple of other programs you may enjoy have also been fired: Outlook Express, for example, has been removed for being “non-functional legacy code,” which is how I feel some days.)

You can download a free program that is almost exactly the same, called Paint.NET – indeed some people say it’s better than Microsoft’s Paint – but you won’t because you will never think about Paint again. 

Windows 10 has a more sophisticated drawing program called Paint 3D, which enables you to draw three-dimensional objects and have them automatically shaded, and then placed and rotated as you wish.

 If you are good at it, you can make cartoon-like figures that look like the products of Hollywood animation studios. It also provides you with a number of stock people and animals to use; they can also be rotated as if three-dimensional. Your drawing skills have been upgraded for you.

This means all children’s drawing skills have been automatically upgraded, too – and changed to better imitate a dominant entertainment paradigm.

Windows apps have an effect on how we perceive drawing itself, on what we imagine drawing to be. When millions of computers around the world have the same free drawing app – and that app makes childlike, finger-painty drawings – then the global visual landscape is perceptibly altered. 

The next generation will perceive drawing to be a reproduction of a different kind of children’s illustration – that of the big-budget computer-animated movie (think Despicable Me).

 Unlike the images generated by Paint – which could pretty easily be duplicated with coloured markers – the kind of smooth shading provided by Paint 3D is hard for a child to accomplish with everyday tools. 

So the app has moved us away from a concept of drawing as achievable with material tools. It moves us close to a conception of drawing as something that is done only in the digital realm.

Perhaps purely by coincidence, a new video game for computers and phones turns Paint-style drawing into a competition. Passpartout: The Starving Artist allows you to draw clumsy pictures with your mouse and then sell them to virtual passersby. The more you sell, the more you can build your career and the more fine tools for prettier pictures you can acquire.

 It combines creativity with the financial pressures of an actual career. This sounds insanely stressful to me (I mean, surely most people turn to video games as an escape from having to have a career?) but reviewers say the pleasure is in creating the pictures using this simple, old-fashioned interface. It doesn’t have the instant 3-D option. 

I’m guessing most of these reviewers were children in the 1990s – they are experiencing the nostalgic pleasure of Paint.

The tech media have been reporting on the demise of Paint with a vague alarm. They can’t say why they feel its loss is a big deal – is it just nostalgia? – but they know it is somehow significant, symbolic of something. 

Perhaps what they are feeling is the realization that a hegemonic software company has the power to change, with one top-down marketing decision, the look of amateur graphics around the world, and to define the aesthetics of a generation.







Mar. 28, 2018 "I want to be a computer animator": Today I found this article by Jared Lindzon in the Globe and Mail:



Job: Computer animator

The role: Computer animators are the artists and designers behind the digital effects in film productions, both within fully computer-animated entertainment as well as productions that blend reality with digital animation.


"'Computer animator' is a broad term to describe anyone that's working in the animation industry doing 3-D animation, and that includes several different roles," said Noel Hooper, a professor and program co-ordinator for Sheridan College's faculty of animation, arts and design. 

Prof. Hooper explains that those employed by smaller animation studios - which focus on fully animated projects - and smaller visual effects studios - which combine computer-generated (CG) images with live action - are often employed as generalists. 


Computer animators at larger firms, however, may be employed as a specialist with a focus on one part of the animation process. 

A modeller, for example, uses two-dimensional renderings to build computer-generated models, while a rigger builds the structures that allow the model to be animated. 

From there, an animator is responsible for getting the model to move realistically. 

A texturing artist matches the model's textures to its original design and a lighting artist ensures the textured model is lit appropriately. 

"And then a compositor puts it all together at the end and does final tweaks," Prof. Hooper adds. 


Salary: While generalist computer animators can expect a starting salary of between $35,000 and $50,000 annually, Prof. Hooper says specialists tend to make slightly more, typically earning starting salaries between $40,000 and $60,000. 


"And where it goes from there is difficult to say; it really depends on the ability of the artist," he adds. "Someone can accelerate to a six-figure salary fairly quickly - say, within five years - and certainly beyond when they get to a senior position, but it really depends on the artist. It can vary quite a bit." 


Online job-listing search engine Indeed pegs the average salary of 3-D animators in Canada at $63,769, while competitor Neuvoo says the national average for visual-effects artists is $71,284. 


Education: As a rapidly evolving field, up-to-date education on the latest tools and trends can be vital to a successful career in computer animation, although it is not mandatory for securing employment. 

"The artists' demo reel is the one thing that gets them in the door and gets them the job," said Prof. Hooper, adding that while rare, completely self-taught computer animators can still have successful careers in the industry. 


For the rest, however, Prof. Hooper says there are educational programs countrywide, ranging from short-term crash courses to multiyear postgraduate programs. "You need to find the one that suits the direction you want to go, the time you have and the money that you have, but they're available across Canada," he said.

 Although the industry is wholly dependent on technology, Prof. Hooper adds that educational programs often seek to teach programming skills to talented artists, rather than the other way around. 


Job prospects: Demand for computer animators tends to ebb and flow, Prof. Hooper says. He explains that two or three years ago, demand began to skyrocket and there was a shortage of talent, but supply has since caught up with demand. 


"There's a good, consistent need for entry-level artists now, and judging by the number of products happening, I think it will be consistent for a while," he said. 


Challenges: Like many professions in the film industry, Prof. Hooper says computer animators often have to deal with strict deadlines, which can require staff to work longer hours as the deadlines approach. 


Why they do it: For Prof. Hooper and many of his students and colleagues, there really is no business quite like show business. "We love movies, we love animation and there's nothing quite like sitting in a theatre and seeing your name come up on the screen after a movie," he said. 


Misconceptions: With various specialties and different studio types, Prof. Hooper says the terminology and titles surrounding computer animation often get confused. 


"Even on just the visual-effects side, they're called 'visual effects' or 'special effects' or 'digital effects' or even just 'effects' - everyone's saying the same thing but they're getting confused, and that's true within any area of computer-generated animation," he said. "The labels often get mixed up."

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Jun. 22, 2020 Beamdog: I was looking for a job and I found this Edmonton company:

WHAT WE DO

For nearly ten years, our main focus has been engineering excellence to delight our fans. We craft compelling game experiences, wherever you choose to play--whether that’s on desktop, mobile, or beyond.
At Beamdog, we don’t just value quality in our products, but quality in our workplace. To this end, we make sure to cultivate the following values:

OUR HISTORY

Beamdog is a Canadian video game studio located in Edmonton, Alberta. Founded by veteran game developers Trent Oster and Cameron Tofer, Beamdog has grown into one of the largest game studios in Alberta.
Beamdog creates compelling game experiences for our fans, wherever they choose to play: PC, Mac, Linux, iOS, & Android. Since 2009, our team of artists, designers and developers have crafted original content and engineered enhanced editions of classic games. We’re best known for bringing beloved Dungeons & Dragons roleplaying games like Baldur’s Gate and Planescape: Torment back to life on desktop and tablets.