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Dan Culberson

“Don’t Hate Me Because I’m Intelligent”

Jun 30th

Posted by Dan Culberson in Naked Curmudgeon

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Here’s what gets me.

Dan-1

Full disclosure: I was graduated Phi Beta Kappa from college, where I took an IQ test for a psychology class and scored 160, which was classified as being “genius.”

Consequently, I have usually been successful at what I did, not always at what I wanted to do. For example, although I decided at an early age that I wanted to be a writer and was writing stories even earlier, I was a reporter for my high-school weekly newspaper and co-editor-in-chief my senior year, I received a journalism scholarship to college, but then I changed my major from journalism to English literature because I decided that I wanted to be a famous novelist instead of a reporter or own a newspaper.

Eventually I did publish a novel, Plastic Man: A Novel of the Sixties.

Which brings me to television, and for those of you too young to know or too old to remember, the title of this piece is a play on the catchphrase for a Panteme commercial in the 1980s featuring Kelly LeBrock, a beautiful and famous woman at the time, which was “Don’t hate me because I’m beautiful.”

Speaking of old, I am old enough to remember when television became socially popular and pervasive and when TV executives and society in general debated whether television should give the audience what they wanted or give them what they needed. In other words, to use newspaper terminology, should network television be produced to appeal to the least common denominator of the viewing audience or should it be of higher quality and enrich and enlighten the audience.

There was even the notion that television was going to educate the masses either actively, for example, from “educational TV” or passively from just watching worlds and customs and countries different from our own.

Just look at your TV schedule today, and what do you see? So-called “reality-TV” shows, which are anything but, because they are cheap to produce and they are scripted to bring out the worst in its participants. Unfortunately, “give the producers what they want” won out, and the producers and network executives are greedy and want money.

Which brings me to politics.

I was very much interested in politics and believed that I could make a difference. I attended my first precinct caucus in 1976 for the Democratic party and was disillusioned when the candidate I supported didn’t win and another attendee urged me to change my vote to the leading candidate and said, “It’s a shame that you won’t be represented at the state convention.”

In other words, she believed that the best way I would be represented would be if I voted for a candidate I didn’t support.

However, I did attend the state convention and became even more disillusioned when I saw most of the people there spending more time wheeling and dealing to be selected to attend the national convention than they did in conducting the business at hand.

Although I stopped participating actively in my party, I continued to vote in every election as I have done since I became eligible to vote, and except for 1976 I was disappointed in every national election for president.

Then came 1992, and I again attended my precinct caucus. Bill Clinton was the candidate I supported, and not only did he win the vote in my precinct, but because the precinct chairman was resigning after the caucus, I volunteered to be the precinct chairman, a position I held without any assistance until I became burned out in 2008 when Barack Obama was running, and I essentially retired from active politics.

I was still writing during that time, however, and wrote and published the newsletter for the county Democrat party.

Politics today is obscene when elected officials vote according to what their pockets and lobbyists tell them instead of what their constituents want.

Which finally brings me to religion. Although I was raised by my parents to be religious, I lost my religion when I thought about all the inconsistencies I was being taught as absolute truths, and I even published a book, An Atheist’s Handbook, about my experience.

And to complete the trilogy, I also published The Searcher, my secular response to the hugely popular The Prophet.

I don’t need or desire approval from other people to make me happy, and I don’t care what other people think about me.

I don’t use Facebook or Twitter. I am content being me.

I rest my case.

O'Meara Ford - 100 Anniversary Celebration

O’Meara Ford – 100 Anniversary Celebration

Jun 29th

Posted by Channel 1 Networks in 2013 Denver Auto Show

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We go back to O’meara Ford in Northglenn for their 100th Anniversary Celebration and talk with their famous spokesperson Bonnie and she introduces us to Brian O’meara and his family and learn about the long history of the O’Meara Ford Center in Colorado and Denver. Lots of fun at this event including Face Painting, Jumpy Castles, Rock Climbing, Photos, Petting Zoo, Animal Riding, even Fishing, Stilt Walkers and Unicycling, with special music by Buckstein.

“The Bling Ring” Shows Stealing from the Rich and Famous

Jun 29th

Posted by Dan Culberson in Hotshots Movie Reviews

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“Stealing from the Rich and Famous”

“Hotshots” looks at a movie!

The Bling Ring is based on actual events, was directed very nicely by Sofia Coppola, and serves as a many-layered warning to perpetrators, victims, fans, and viewers alike.

The Bling Ring

 

Heck, it should also serve as a warning to the police:  Appearing in a movie about an actual case you were involved in can hurt not only your career, but also the prosecution of the case itself.

The story is about a group of teenagers who blatantly broke into the homes of Hollywood celebrities and stole whatever they wanted, clothing, jewelry, makeup, and any drugs they could find.

Or, as one of them says as they are about to ransack a home, “Let’s go shopping.”

We meet Marc on his first day at a new school that is for troubled teenagers, he is lonely, he has no friends, and he meets Rebecca when she shows him some kindness and attention.

Rebecca introduces Marc to checking parked cars to see if they are unlocked and taking anything they can from inside them.

One day Rebecca gives Marc a ride after school and asks him if he knows about any families who are out of town.  He does, they go to that house, and Rebecca introduces Marc to finding a way inside and stealing items from the house.

When they see on the news that Paris Hilton is hosting a party in Las Vegas, it is easy enough to use the Internet to learn where Paris lives, easy enough to find the key to the front door underneath the welcome mat, and easy enough to be bedazzled by everything that Paris owns and puts on display, again taking whatever they want.

Incidentally, Paris allowed the filmmakers to use her house for filming all the scenes there, and we can also assume that all the clothing and jewelry are hers, too.

The victims have no shame, either.

And then everything gets out of hand.  Friends of theirs at school want in on the action.  Everyone is obsessed with taking “selfies” of themselves in their stolen swag and posting them on the Internet, but when some of the celebrities’ homes have security cameras, you can guess the rest even if you don’t know what actually happened.

The Bling Ring shows just one of the downsides to our obsession with the lives of the glitterati.

I’m Dan Culberson and this is “Hotshots.”

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