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Surface Laptop and Windows 10 S Unmasked

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NEW YORK CITY, 2nd May – It’s been years since Microsoft released their surface tablet to the mass market, since then a niche portion of enthusiasts have been clamouring for a Surface brand laptop from the tech giant. Finally those cries have been answered with the unveiling of the Surface laptop, a Microsoft brand PC that takes strong influences from the Surface tablet and the unique Surface book. In theory it sounds like a great mix of style and power, however unlike its predecessors, the Surface laptop is a bit boring at first glance.

The Surface Laptop is a non-detachable 13.5” PixelSense display with touch and stylus support. It’s a 3:2 screen with 2,256 x 1,504px resolution (201ppi). Odd resolution to say the least, but seeing as the laptop promises around 14.5 hours of on screen viewing battery life, no one will mind. It also helps that it looks good; the body is very slim, being 14.5 mm thick with a slight smooth taper. The weight of the system’s also not bad at 2.76lb (1.25kg), which makes it an easy portable option for those looking towards the Macbook Air type of devices. The system interior has a premium unique touch which will seem familiar to those who have used the Surface Pro Type Covers. The Italian fabric called, “alcantara,” is famous for being used in luxury cars before it Microsoft picked on it. The color match between the fabric and the anodized aluminum are blended seamlessly together which adds to the product’s handsome look. On sale are Arc mice which are available in three of the four colors the laptop current comes in (Platinum, Burgundy, Cobalt Blue and Graphite Gold). First hand users have noted that the fabric feels warm, without any of the hard metal edges found on many laptops, as a trap for those who rest their wrists on the system.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74kPEJWpCD4

Moving onto the actual internal specifications, you won’t find USB Type-C or Thunderbolt 3 here, which in 2017 is not very forward thinking on Microsoft’s part. After all, even new high to mid-range phones are coming with USB Type-C. The Surface Laptop has a single USB 3.1 generation 1 Type-A port. No 10-gigabit-per-second generation 2; no SD card reader, and the list goes on. So if there’s no USB Type-C, how does this device charge its battery?  Microsoft has decided to continue the trend of using a proprietary magnetic charging-and-docking connector. That means that the Laptop is compatible with the Surface Pro 4 Dock. However, this choice feels more like a burden, rather than an added feature.

The pricing of this product, with the lack of future proofing is also a head scratcher, it starts at $999. That gets you an underwhelming 4GB RAM, 128GB storage, and a Core i5 processor which is only available in platinum. The other three colors are only available in one specific configuration: 8GB RAM, 256GB storage, and the same i5 processor, which is $1,299. If you want even more, juice under the hood, you have to switch back to platinum again; this will give you 8GB RAM, 256GB storage, and an i7 with Iris Pro is $1,599, and 16GB RAM, 512GB storage, and the i7 is $2,199. And before you think about upgrading parts on your own, every component is soldered onto the board, so what you buy is exactly what you get. Systems start shipping on June 15.

It’s also worth noting that this device ships with Windows 10 S, the S stands for streamline. This OS is to run on low-end computers with lower hardware requirements and smaller install size. It’s also designed to work faster, with the login process now taking only about 15 seconds from boot, which is quicker than Windows 10 Pro on the same hardware. Schools will also be able to configure multiple machines with a USB drive. Using preconfigured options, simply plugging in the drive in a Windows 10 S system will cause the PC to set itself up according to the preconfigured settings.

One major and potential deal breaking differences between the Windows 10 S and Pro, is that the Windows 10 S will only run applications from the Windows Store. Developers will have to package their existing apps and provide them through the Windows Store for users to install them. Which for a device targeting students at that price is simply ridiculous. Microsoft is currently offering free upgrades to the Pro version until the end of the year, after that, a charge of $50 will be required to upgrade the OS.

The Flash S03E18 Recap

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SOME SPOILERS AHEAD.

This was such a filler episode and it felt like one in which the writers tried to make it look like it had something to do with the overall narrative of the season. In reality, it didn’t. The way that the writers tried to that was by teasing not only Team Flash, but the audience, with the possibility that they would learn the identity of Savitar from this week’s villain, Abra Kadabra. Absolutely nothing that happened in this episode drove the main plot of the season forward. It’s just in there to pad the number of episodes.

Instead, what we got was an episode about a random villain stealing tech from basically every tech company in Central City  in order to build a time machine and return to his own time; the 64th century. Aside from Team Flash trying to thwart his efforts, he had to contend with Gypsy who was hellbent on capturing him so that he could be put to death, because he killed her partner three years ago. Not only was Gypsy a threat to Abra Kadabra’s efforts, she was also a threat to Team Flash’s plans to use him to find out the identity of Savitar.

I get that the writers were probably trying to show how evil Abra Kadabra was by having him kill the security guards at the beginning of the episode, but it was kind of unnecessary. Which I guess means it worked. But later on when he robbed Kord Industries there were no casualties. Another thing that bothered me about the character was the fact that he couldn’t get out of the meta prison. If memory serves, those were specifically designed to imprison metas by suppressing their powers. None of the “tricks” that he performed were because of meta powers. So why did it work on him? With his advanced nano-technology that enabled him to produce water out of thin air and teleport, there was no way that he could have broken out?

I thought that he was playing with them and would eventually break out, but that wasn’t the case. It was kind of confusing. He did escape, however, when Joe set him free in exchange for Savitar’s identity. A proposition that Abra Kadabra had already made to Team Flash and one that Barry and Iris agreed they wouldn’t do; they didn’t want to let a murderous criminal go free just to save her life. Joe’s decision to free Abra Kadabra ends disastrously when Gypsy interrupts their conversation and he runs to escape, throwing a bomb at Joe, Julian and Caitlin as they pursue him. Caitlin ends up impaled and with shrapnel in her abdomen.

I understand why Joe did what he did and I don’t blame him for it at all. I also don’t blame Gypsy for blowing up at Joe and chewing him out for what he did. She made some very valid points in her argument. But then Cisco had to intervene with this weird moral compass that the Flarrow-verse writers seem to have by getting upset with Gypsy for being upset with Joe. What Joe did had terrible consequences. Yes, we understand why he did it, but that doesn’t make it any less of a bad decision.

He did pretty much the same thing earlier in the episode when he seemingly couldn’t see why Caitlin’s stealing of the philosopher’s stone was a terrible thing to do and why Julian was still upset with her about it. Again, we understood why she did it but that didn’t make her actions any less of a bad decision that put everyone else at serious risk. Speaking of the tiff between Caitlin and Julian, their relationship was mended by Julian performing surgery on her to remove the shrapnel from her body. A surgery which, for some unfathomable reason, Iris – the least qualified of the team to do so – was assisting in and appeared far easier than Caitlin made it out to seem.

With the last piece needed for his time machine stolen from Star Labs, it was only then that Cisco realised that that was what Abra Kadabra was doing with the tech he stole; building a time machine (and the exact same one that Cisco had built for Eobard Thawne in season one at that). Given that Cisco built the thing, you’d think that he would have noticed that was what he was doing a lot sooner. But I digress.

Once the machine was completed, Team Flash and Gypsy capture Abra Kadabra right as he is going to escape through a worm hole. Before he’s taken to Earth-19 with Gypsy, Barry takes a moment to appeal to his humanity, begging him to reveal to them who Savitar is. Abra, of course, doesn’t (it’s a filler episode, they’re not going to find out) and instead takes pleasure in being able to save Iris but refusing to do so. Barry then decides to travel to the future to get the information that he needs to defeat Savitar.

Since a big part of this season was Barry dealing with the fallout from his creation of Flashpoint and learning that he should not and cannot use time travel to fix everything…you’d think that he wouldn’t now choose to use time travel to fix this problem. Arguably travelling to the future isn’t as bad as travelling to and changing the past, but Barry is still changing the timeline. Changing the timeline is what lead to this entire mess.

When Caitlin starts seizing,  Julian removes her power suppressing necklace so that she can heal. It works, but unfortunately she turns into Killer Frost in the process. Am I the only one that thinks that Julian had enough time to put back on the necklace? Perhaps he was so caught up in his joy that she was alive that he didn’t think of that.

Random thoughts:

  1. Team Flash should have been vibing the future to check on their progress a long time ago.
  2. What Cisco lacks in smoothness he makes up for with charm.
  3. The time vault is popping up a lot lately.
  4. Wally: “We can’t let him get past us.” Well DUH!
  5. I thought you learned your lesson about time travel Barry!

The Flash airs Tuesdays at 8 PM on The CW.

Girls S06E10 [SERIES FINALE] Recap

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SOME SPOILERS AHEAD.

This episode to me was a strange way to end the series and it wasn’t the direction I thought the show would take. As I said in the last recap, I wasn’t sure where the series would go for its finale considering the finality of the penultimate episode. But once I thought of this episode in relation to the series premiere and especially with Hannah’s encounter with the teen girl who ran away from home, I found it to be an appropriate and meaningful end to the series.

I must say that I was rather proud of Marnie for stepping up and being there for Hannah and helping her with Grover. Although it seemed like it was out some kind of selfish desire to be the best at being Hannah’s friend. I was surprised that she was even there because at the end of the last episode, it seemed like Hannah wouldn’t see any of her New York friends again. I was also surprised by the fact that Marnie was  quite good at helping Hannah and taking care of Grover. To the point that she probably read every pregnancy, maternity and parenting book ever published. She seemed better prepared than Hannah.

It was the most selfless thing Marnie had ever done over the course of this series. She really, genuinely just wanted to help Hannah. As much as Hannah wasn’t there for her direct-from-the-text tips and the like, I admired Marnie’s efforts nonetheless and her willingness to be there and contribute to the raising of Grover.

Given Hannah’s personality, it made sense that she was nervous as a new mother. It was simultaneously adorable and hilarious that she asked so many question of the pediatrician and didn’t trust him because he wasn’t her usual one. Hannah was having a really tough time of it and for a while I thought that perhaps Lena Dunham was incorporating a post-partum depression story line. But the point of it all was just that Hannah hadn’t fully matured yet.

It was a little disappointing to see her acting that way after all of the growth she’d demonstrated over the course of the season, but she was in a high stressed, highly emotional state and at her wits end with worry about Grover not latching, so it was somewhat understandable. She was quite a bit over dependent on Marnie as well, handing off Grover when she no longer knew what to do and getting upset because Marnie wanted to go out and leave her home alone with her own child. Yes, Marnie did volunteer for it, but that didn’t mean that Hannah was to take her for granted.

Marnie did the right thing by reaching out to Hannah’s mother and asking her for help; she’s a parent with experience and both of them were struggling, Hannah especially. Her little speech to Marnie about the reality of parenting versus what she thought it would be, was in no way about or directed at Marnie at all. That was all Hannah. And while her mother was a little harsh in her chastising of Hannah’s behaviour, right as she was, Hannah’s response (throwing her father’s sexuality in her mother’s face) was rude and uncalled for.

Running into that teenage girl was the best kind of reality check for Hannah. She was the perfect mirror for not only how much of an entitled brat Hannah had been for much of the series, but for the way she’d been acting all episode. She also served as a realisation for what her mother would have experienced and as a mother herself Hannah, could sympathise with what the girl’s own mother felt. She got an overall lesson in the  realities of being a parent.

It was clear that Marnie wanted more than just taking care of Hannah and Grover. Again, her selflessness was surprising in that she was willing to sacrifice her happiness in order to be there for them. She had been so selfish and self-absorbed, even up to the last episode, that the degree to which she had changed was astounding. Hannah’s mother’s warning was correct; eventually she would have come to hate Hannah and resent her. But now that Hannah has started to make her peace with her motherhood and come to terms with it, Marnie pursuing her own life shouldn’t rip them apart.

Random thoughts:

  1. Marnie’s right; no one else is there.
  2. Oh wait, we didn’t see the birth.
  3. Admit it Hannah, you need the help.
  4. Hannah: “No one understands.” A woman who is a mother is right behind you Hannah.
  5. This little girl is an idiot.
  6. This policeman following Hannah is hilarious.

Girls S06E09 Recap

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SOME SPOILERS AHEAD.

Besides Hannah having her baby, it’s hard to imagine where Girls will go from here. This episode feels so final – as did the last one about Adam – that aside from an epilogue, where else could the show go? There has been so much closure in these last two episodes.

As the episode title suggests, Hannah went on a “goodbye tour”, seeking advice from her loved ones concerning whether or not she should accept a job offer as a university professor. A job which would require her to move out of New York City and away from them.

Naturally, the first person she told was Elijah and his reaction to the news of her potentially moving was similar to his reaction to her pregnancy. His major point of contention was the life that he and Hannah currently had and the one they had envisioned together and how this decision would impact and change that. By the middle of the episode, he seemed sad at the prospect of her going but ultimately supportive. She tells her father next and, true to how he’s been as of late, he is encouraging and sees it as a great opportunity.

Hannah tries throughout the episode to get in touch with Marnie, who we see is ignoring her calls. When Hannah goes to Shoshanna’s and accidentally crashes her engagement party, we see why; Hannah wasn’t invited, but Marnie was and she claims that she didn’t want Hannah to feel left out. That was honestly a terrible excuse and not at all a reason not to answer her phone. But this is Marnie, expecting better of her would be a fruitless endeavour.

At least now we have a reason for Shoshanna’s absence this season. She is no longer friends with the other girls nor does she want to be. She has a hot new fiance and new friends who are pretty girls with jobs and purses. Hannah, Marnie and Jessa are no longer good enough for her. She’s become the society snob she’s always pursued being. She was unnecessarily bitchy in how she addressed them.

She did have a point about their dynamic as a group and how they all try to make a situation about themselves. And the fact that  Hannah didn’t tell her about her pregnancy and that she didn’t tell Hannah about her engagement, spoke volumes about what they mean to each other. That being said, I’m sure that Shoshanna not inviting her was a childish response to Hannah not telling her about her pregnancy and not some slip of the mind.

Hannah was somewhat justified in her anger about the slight and it didn’t help that Marnie knew and purposely avoided her. But that was admittedly a tricky situation to navigate on Marnie’s part. That Marnie was the one who tried to be an adult and address the situation by having everyone air their grievances was a surprise, considering that she is the least matured one in the group. In some ways though, having a group meeting is kind of juvenile. It’s still admirable that she attempted to repair their friendship however.

I was glad for the reconciliation between Hannah and Jessa. I was surprised that they started talking – and amicably at that – and that despite their last encounter, Jessa still bought her something for the baby. They both apologised to each other for everything and forgave each other. It was sweet and not something I expected to happen. It made me wonder if Jessa and Adam were still together.

The episode ended with Hannah doing her signature awkward dancing and watching each of her girlfriends off by themselves, doing their own thing; essentially she was watching them be the people they’d become over the course of the series. It was sad seeing them all separated and realising that their little foursome had drifted apart. Even sadder still was the fact that there was not just one, but two shots of Marnie, Jessa and Shoshanna framed together in Shoshanna’s window. They weren’t exactly together, but Hannah was absent.

The final shot in the episode really drove it home; Hannah hugging herself and looking a little melancholy.

Random thoughts:

  1. I know Hannah was a high school teacher, but is she even qualified to teach at tertiary level?
  2. This woman interviewing Hannah is really weird.
  3. This is an amazing opportunity. Why isn’t Hannah saying yes?
  4. Caroline is still super weird.
  5. Where’s Marnie?
  6. Online therapist? Really?
  7. Hannah’s having a boy!

Reign S04E10 Recap

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SOME SPOILERS AHEAD.

Mary continued to not handle Darnley correctly or treat him fairly.

Firstly, she still refused to sleep with him to hide the fact that she became pregnant before they got married. I wasn’t – and am still not – sure if she was trying to hide the fact that she’s pregnant from him or that she got pregnant before they were married. In either case, it wasn’t something she could hide for very long. Really, if she’d been trying to hide either from him then she did need to sleep with him, but he didn’t seem particularly bothered when she told him. He was just happy with the news. I honestly expected her little secret keeping to blow up in her face by the end of the episode, but it didn’t.

Secondly, she kept her meeting with the Hamilton family from him, since they have a long standing feud with his family and she didn’t trust him to be on his best behaviour. Given Darnley’s talent for screwing things up, keeping him away from the proceedings was perhaps a wise move. That being said, she still should have told him about it. That is not to say that she should be asking his permission, only that she should keep him informed. Their relationship isn’t the best, but as her husband Darnley deserves her respect. At the end of last week’s episode it really seemed like they were both willing to work on improving their relationship. It was really only Darnley who was, it seems.

He was rightfully upset when he found out and Mary had the gall to ask him to be the better man in the situation and put the past behind him for the sake of Scotland. As king, that is of course what he should be doing, but it wasn’t particularly fair of Mary to make such demands of him for something she didn’t trust him enough to tell him about in the first place. Given that Darnley was in fact the better man when he visited Lord Hamilton and admirably controlled himself whilst being goaded, had she discussed it with him at first and asked him to do so, the result would have been the same. I wish she’d been there to see it.

If there is one thing about Darnley – despite his failures – it’s that he always tries to be the man that Mary wants and needs him to be and live up to her standards. But she never gives him credit for that. He would have been – and was – the better man simply because she asked him to be. It’s not like he doesn’t understand his duties as king either. He wants to be more actively involved in the governing of the country even; he wants to take on the responsibility of his position.

There was perhaps no way to prevent the debacle that result from Knox’s playing Mary and the Hamiltons against each other. I was suspicious of the fact that Emily had any information to give James at all considering that Knox knew of their relationship. The man would have been extremely careful. It was still a surprise to learn that she was a knowing participant in the plot. I assumed that Knox had set her up as well. I don’t blame her for wanting to hurt James and Mary, their exploitation of her was always sleazy considering her naivety and innocence.

Sadly, the whole mess meant that James needed to shoulder the blame and be banished from Scotland. I’m not so much saddened by his having to leave as I am that it means that Greer has yet again been unlucky in love. The girl just can’t catch a break and her relationship with James ended before it could have ever started.

In France, Leeza continued to cause trouble from afar by sending a letter to Henry imploring him to return to France and take the throne from Charles. In an effort to spare her son his life, Catherine had Narcisse ask Nicole to convince Charles to abdicate the throne. Unfortunately for Nicole, this meant that she would need to disappear from court with Charles; something she didn’t want because, surprise, she’s in love with Narcisse. When he spurned her, she ended their partnership and refused to help.

I didn’t buy that she actually had feelings for Narcisse and believed that she was only saying that so that she could stay at court. If Nicole has proven anything, it’s that she cares only for herself. But her feelings are apparently real because it was incredibly easy for Narcisse to convince her that he was hesitant to love her due to his having loved and lost Lola. Despite the fact that Nicole expressed suspicion upon first hearing it. It was a genius play on his part, but it meant tarnishing the memory of the woman he still loves, for which he was understandably upset.

Because of a band of rogue Protestants taking Catholics hostage at the baptism of a child however, Catherine and Narcisse needed Nicole to convince Charles to take military action. When he did and the hostages were successfully saved (with the exception of the one that the Protestants killed), Charles got his first taste of what it felt like to be a beloved king when they came to the castle to thank and praise him. Just when his rule seemed to be on solid footing, his younger brother Henry (who looks at least six years older than him) came home. He assured Catherine that he wasn’t going to go after his brother’s throne, but I don’t trust him. I believe that he’s working the Leeza to take control of France. Catherine doesn’t seem to believe him either, given the look on her face as she embraced him.

Elizabeth is herself trying to solidify her rule in England now that Mary has married Darnley, by seeking out a husband of her own. She threw a birthday party and entertained numerous suitors, eventually finding one that she was rather fond of. The only complication was that Gideon had developed feelings for her. Although she made it clear that their relationship is temporary and he understands that fully, he got jealous when he saw her with and she spoke kindly of the one suitor she liked.

He reacts angrily when she suggests they stop using contraception and test her fertility and cover up any resulting pregnancy with a hasty marriage to someone else. Gideon’s confession makes Elizabeth realise that she has feelings for him as well. I was a little surprised at the passion with which Elizabeth expressed her feelings for Gideon; I couldn’t help but think about and compare it to the feelings she had for Robert Dudley. She even hinted at the difficulties of the relationship she had with Dudley and Gideon assured her that he is not him.

I still find their relationship to be a little weird.

Random thoughts:

  1. Why is Mary preparing for Hamilton’s arrival when he hasn’t even confirmed it yet?
  2. You can’t tell James about the pregnancy before Darnley, Mary!
  3. I knew Elizabeth was meeting Gideon.
  4. Dang it Leeza! Go away!
  5. Are any of these suitors suitable?
  6. I thought Knox left Emily.
  7. Leaving Emily with Knox is a harsh punishment.

Reign airs Fridays at 9 PM on The CW.

Scandal S06E12 Recap

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SOME SPOILERS AHEAD.

Team Pope continues in their efforts to take down Marjorie and Payas and things are just starting to heat up and get very interesting. Now that they’ve freed Cyrus from their grasp and are keeping Papa Pope safe – more like imprisoned – under lock and key, it’s time for them to focus on Mellie and saving her from them.

I do so love it when Mellie tries to exert power and agency when dealing with Marjorie, but she’s little more than a puppet to the woman. It’s admirable, though, that she still tries despite knowing that she’ll be denied every time. And that she still wants to do what is right and best for the country, despite being under the thumb of terrorists who only want to serve their own needs. Which, we still don’t know what it is exactly they want to get out of controlling Mellie’s presidency. Marjorie and Payas don’t want Mellie to pick her own cabinet, let alone her own V.P.

When Huck told Liv that she had a visitor, I knew that it would be Payas and that he was the pick for Mellie’s V.P. Who else would they put in such a position of power? That seems to be primarily what they’re after. I also loved seeing Liv stand up to Payas and calling his bluff about releasing the photos of Jake getting rid of Liz’s body if she didn’t have him resign as V.P. (as much as her bravado was a clear facade). Her argument that tanking Jake would tank Mellie, thereby losing them their meal ticket was an excellent point and I don’t think he expected her to fight back.

But as she said later, they would have killed Jake since their blackmail didn’t work. As much as I would have liked to see them try to kill Jake, same as he did (we all know it would not have been easy), his resignation was the best route to take and the safest for him. It was disappointing nonetheless, that after everything she’d said to Payas, Liv still gave in to his demands. That is, until it became clear that that was part of her ploy all along!

When Fitz walked into the room with Mellie and they were met by Liv, David, Jake, Cyrus and Marcus I got so pumped. That moment had exactly the punch that the show was going for and the moments leading up to it were so satisfying. It was gratifying to see Marjorie freaking out about being separated from Mellie and not being able to make a call from the bunker. It would have honestly been the perfect time to kill her, Team Pope doesn’t seem to want to do that however.

Unfortunately, the alliance started to crumble fast. Understandably so; there was too much history between the people in the room for them to not end up bickering. The collapse was more or less ignited by Papa Pope and his refusal to aid them in their crusade and his defeatist attitude about the endeavour. Marjorie and Payas so thoroughly broke him that the once fierce leader of B613, Command, just wanted to turn tail and run (He didn’t completely lose his edge; he did catch on that Cyrus was going to try to kill him when he took him down into the wine cellar). I expected him to turn down their request for help, he’d been resistant for the entire episode up to that point.

But thanks to Marcus and his motivating speech to Mellie, she got back into the game and infected everyone with her fervour to fight. Choosing Cyrus as her V.P. was a brilliant move. I was surprised when he turned her down, especially since he offered himself up in the first place. In fact, when they had first thrown around the idea of Mellie announcing someone other than Payas as her pick for V.P. I immediately thought that it should be him.

When Liv suggested that their pick be someone pure who would be willing to join them in their efforts, I thought of Susan Ross, but she was V.P. already. So I had no idea who they could have chosen. I in no way expected that it would have been Luna Vargas. That being said, she’s an inspired choice. Once brought up to speed about the situation she would definitely want to be a part of their team since she would want to bring down the people who killed her husband. Beyond just that, choosing her would assuage the people since they would be getting the leadership that they voted for. It would solidify Mellie’s presidency and make it considerably less tenuous.

Elsewhere, Quinn was dealing with Charlie’s jealously and avoidance of her stemming from her behaviour when Huck was missing and later when he was recovering. It was kind of adorable seeing Charlie be jealous. I didn’t think he had anything to worry about, although it got a little iffy there in the middle of the episode when Quinn and Huck got a little awkward with each other. In the end, it all worked out.

Random thoughts:

  1. Liv: “You’re safe. Dad.” Does she really think that Marjorie and Payas wouldn’t at least try to get to Papa Pope? And get pretty far at that?
  2. Why did they give Eli so much food?
  3. Pretty sure Papa Pope could take those guards.
  4. Aww. Charlie’s jealous.
  5. Team Pope unite!
  6. Say “please” Fitz.
  7. Well that fell apart fast.
  8. The team is back together!
  9. I still say we should kill Marjorie.

Scandal airs Thursdays at 9 PM on ABC.

ICYMI: Adaeze Releases ‘Hero’ and ‘Lamb’

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As part of her Dae + Nate Project, recording arts and philanthropist Adaeze released two music videos earlier this week; “Lamb” and “Hero.” The first sees the artist herself performing in the empty parking lot in front of the new Popular Discounts outlet in Kendall Hill as well as from atop the hood of a car. In the second – appropriately released on Heroes Day – she performs on a dirt path lined with palm trees, accompanied by a Mother Sally and a tuk band. The songs were written and produced by Adaeze and the videos were filmed, directed and edited by both Adaeze and Nathan Mack (she cuts together the video and he does the colouring).

In a statement to Zeitgeist Entertainment Magazine, Adaeze said of the project:

“For me the project is just about freedom of expression, exploring concepts, experimenting and creating for the sake of creating. [A lot] of the time artists get trapped in the machine and get trapped in following a plan – but I think art is about flow. I don’t ever wanna lose the art of it, so this is my way of whipping out the paint brush and seeing what happens. It requires discipline – it’s [a lot] of work to produce and write a song, film and edit a video in a matter of daes [sic]. But that’s the [challenge] that excites us and makes it fun for us. We started on a whim and we’ll keep producing dope videos until we stop. Then we’ll do something else! “

Watch “Lamb” and “Hero” below.

Review of Once on This Island [OTT] and We Like It So [Laff-It-Off]

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I had the good fortune to see two productions in two consecutive nights both with different fare but the end result speaks volumes about the state of theatre in Barbados.

Laff-it-Off-We Like It So, ended its three month run at the Lloyd Erskine Sandiford Centre to a large cross section of nationals while Once on This Island, the musical production put on by Operation Triple Threat finished with an almost full Frank Collymore Hall. I liked both productions if only because they make clear that there are markets for both types of work; that Barbadians are willing and able to support theatre for children and theatre for adults; that there is the personnel both on and offstage to make these productions please the patrons and all three theatre institutions-the secondary schools’ CSEC Theatre Arts programme, BCC with its Theatre Arts Associate degree and EBCCI with its Fine Arts thrust are capturing those intent on making a career in show business.

The lessons for artists therefore are: we must push for knowledgeable staff in the theatre colleges and the secondary school programmes; we must continue to stick to our resolve; get your qualifications and get your feet wet in all types of theatre work; find directors who will carry you to the next level; if you are in the technical theatre field get apprenticed; learn as much as you can. The longevity of theatre as a craft will only happen when people remain committed, find the formula for success and work collaboratively to achieve the desired end result. For theatre to become a driver of the economy there must be incentives from philanthropic foundations and from government. We already have multiple, multi-talented crafts people. There must be incentives for doing Barbadian work.

Another important aspect is whether any of these productions can become the template for theatre for the future, a theatre that can stand the test of time in foreign destinations. Can either of these productions travel to the Caribbean diaspora and touch a chord with the audiences longing for a piece of home? Can the imported musical compete with the North American versions? Can it be viewed as expressing a Barbadian identity?Can either of these productions represent us as the National productions for the upcoming CARIFESTA XIII?These are questions that can be answered by the theatre going public and they are by no means meant to pit one production against the other. Both have their place in my opinion.

Both show the quality of our theatre. Both demonstrate that there is room for theatre for youth and theatre for adults and together they show clearly they have found a formula for success.

So, the first production showed the well-rehearsed nature of the musical Once on This Island, done previously by Dawn-Lisa Callendar Smith when she had her Pippin Company, but which can now be credited to the director Janelle Headley and her music coach Maachelle Farley. Both know what they are doing when it comes to mounting a musical. Headley has found her niche and has attracted the interest of young people and their parents since the inception of Operation Triple Threat. Furthermore, her company, through its involvement with theatre arts schools abroad, offers opportunities to pursue further education in the arts, a great incentive for the keen participant. This is, I suspect her main motive for pursuing the foreign material. Her student performers will have much to show for any audition abroad.

Director Janelle Headley
Maachelle Farley – Vocal Coach
Choreographer – Rene Blackman

 

Once on This island, a Broadway hit and very popular staple in the drama programmes of American high schools, is set in a French Caribbean island and is a story within a story. A little girl is lost during a storm and to assuage her fears and loneliness she is told the story of Ti Moune by an old man and woman of the village who adopt her. Ti Moune, played very sweetly by Shade Jacques, ventures to seek love in the world which denied her healing powers. Her sacrifice of self and her eventual loss of the one she loved through his capitulation to his social class, presents the reality that poor black girls face in a world based on race and class.

Shade Jacques who plays Ti Moune

Hers is a tragedy associated with the history of colonialism and the writers-Lyn Ahrens-book and lyrics- and Stephen Flaherty-music, make clear that she will never win against these odds. We have no doubt that the haughty people of the town represent the Creole mixed race groups who exploit the situation for their gain. One cannot help but feel that this is Haiti with its gradations of colour and its frustrations after its seminal revolution that changed the plantation culture and the world. In fact this is suggested in background notes about the play. But the writers offer no overthrow of the old order of things. Ti Moune is turned into a tree for all her heart ache and life continues with its disparities of race and class. Hers is the story told over and over to warn young girls of the futility of crossing those barriers. This is where I take issue with the story line and OTTs preference for a story that does not overturn the old order of things. And even though I liked the energy of the performers, the elements that make it pop, I am disappointed yet again with the choice of work that looks at our struggles through the lens of others. The subliminal message of this play needs to be exposed if only because it is our world that is the subject of the play. Also where opportunities arose for the instruction of the audience through costuming for the vodun deities- Erzulie and Agwe, the spirit figures who guide or antagonize Ti Moune, the director made conservative choices that miss deepening the meaning of this play.

Nonetheless, the set, a series of levels made to look like hastily put together poor people’s dwellings made of pallet wood, serves as the backdrop for this fantasy. This was good execution by Barbadian company Fieldtech with Headley’s design. It was not overpowering but a reminder of the circumstances of the characters. However, it is the acting, singing, dancing, lighting and visual effects that make this work the spectacle we enjoy in the theatre. We have the Caribbean’s bright colours appropriate for the villagers, family members and the haughty Creole people from the other side of the town. The lighting enhances the set and works well for the creation of the hurricane that begins the play, the changes in mood of the principals especially when they meet adversity and the happy moments when all seems well. Exceptional are the scenes depicting wind and rain, the market scenes, Ti Moune’s journey to the city, the tastefully executed love scenes, and the moments where Ti Moune shows her African dances. The sparing use of props and the reliance on the actors’ bodies, their gestures and facial expressions make the whole musical appealing.

In addition to Jacques, the other standouts in the musical were Philip Holder as Ti Moune’s love interest, Daniel Beauxhomme, Toni Mc Intosh as Asaka, Jon-Mykul Bowen as Tonton Julian, Mary Walker as Mama Euralie and Ammunikee Gomez as Papa Ge. On the whole, the ensemble of triple threat performers brought a great deal of satisfaction for the appreciative audience. Credit must also go to Rene Blackman for his choreography for the play.

On a scale of 1-10-1 being lowest/10 being the highest- I give it 8 for its youthful energy, its acting, singing, dancing and visual effects.

 

©Laff It Off Productions.

In contrast, Laff-it-Off’s We Like It So is a revue with acting, singing, movement and satirical sketches that capture the topical issues of the day, born and artistically bred in a Barbadian consciousness. This is the difference between the two productions. Whereas OTT relies heavily on foreign material, for over three decades a local company catering to adult Barbadians has managed to attract old and new audiences expressing itself about Barbadian themes. Potholes and their inherent dangers to the populace and the politicians who speak about them was one thread that ran throughout. The not-so-bright local who cannot make sense of her life and its meaning was another issue. And of course the topical events like the shortage of water, the charade of the Health and Tourism ministers ‘swimming’ on the south coast during the sewerage outflow were some that caught the audience’s attention.

The set is simple and effective- a series of modules which become beds, chairs or anything else set against the painted backdrop of the Nook and Cranny Bar which serves as Willo’s abode, the place where neighbours come for advice and discussion and for enactments of the topical events. The lighting assists the revue overall -spots where needed, some specials in different colours to create mood or shifts in time, general lighting and special effects to create dramatic moments. The costuming too was effective for the varying scenes capturing well the personalities and the situations.

Laff-it-Off is in its 32nd dispensation-having started with a completely different cast in 1985 and to date it is the well-known staple on the Barbadian theatre calendar. None of the other companies can rival its longevity, all others born around the same time having declined or ‘passed away.’ The material is a mix of scripted pieces by several local writers as well as improvised pieces by the cast. The sketches are humorous and biting all at the same time. They poke fun especially at the pompous politicians and not even the political head honchos are spared. The cast creates skilful parody of these through a remake of their famous gaffes, their intonation and speech, and their dress. Laff-it-Off is for adult audiences expressly and judging by the faces of the audiences and their vocal responses, there is something about this work that can be understood and appreciated by all classes of Barbadians who yearly trek to the venue to see the performers and laugh until their sides ache.

 

©Laff It Off Productions. Audience at Laff-it-Off, Sponsors Night

The cast of Peta Alleyne, Toni-Ann Johnson, Ishiaka McNeil, Janine White and Angelo Lascelles, all triple threat performers and a well-knit ensemble, keep us keen on the happenings on stage and this year was no exception.

Laff-it-Off is always able to avoid a conventional approach by introducing new elements-this year a Trump look-alike complete with hair and voice played by Lascelles. Then they are the tributes to local singers – this year RPB – a selection of top tunes arranged dramatically by Lowrey Worrell, musical director, and sung with great feeling, and the video clips – a series depicting the wholly ‘foolish’ husband played convincingly by Combermere Dramatic Society alumnus Jeffrey Brathwaite. The cast is clever, knowledgeable about their craft, have good rapport and together create the moments that please us. Congratulations are also in order for director Cecily Spencer-Cross, producer Ian Estwick and the tried and tested Stage Manager Shakera Williams, her crew and front-of-house staff.

Seasoned director of We Like It So-Cecily Spencer-Cross
©Laff It Off Productions. Cast of We Like It So from left: Janine White, Angelo Lascelles, Toni-Ann Johnson, Peta Alleyne, Ishiaka McNeil

Any flaws in this production would be the occasional glitch in sound, and the tenuous connections between a few of the sketches, but on a scale of 1-10,  I give it 9 for its talented cast, its comedic timing, its set, lighting and costuming and its commitment to the use of local material.

Another Win for A Caribbean Dream

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The awards keep rolling in for the Barbadian-UK co-produced adaptation of Shakespeare’s A Mid Summer Night’s Dream. A Caribbean Dream has won the award for Best UK Feature at the London Independent Film Festival, where it was recently screened. The announcement was made yesterday on the film’s Facebook Page. This comes on the heels of the film’s last win at the Charlotte Black Film Festival, in which it was awarded “Best International Film.” A Caribbean Dream also won Best Produced Screenplay at the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival and Awards.

The film was written by Shakirah Bourne, produced by Melissa Simmonds and stars popular comedian Jherad “Lord Zenn” Alleyne, Keshia Pope, Marina Bye, Sam Gillet, Adrian Green, Susannah Harker, Sonia Williams, Lorna Gayle and Patrick Michael Foster.

It’s world preview was on January 14th during the inaugural Barbados Independent Film Festival and it premiered at Limegrove Cinemas on February 28th. It had a two week run there and at Olympus Theatres starting on March 1st. The film will premiere in London this summer.

Congratulations to the cast and crew of A Caribbean Dream on another success.

You can visit our Facebook page for photos from the world preview and the premiere and read our review of the film here and listen to our discussion of it on Popdown Podcast here. Watch a video from the London Independent Film Festival preview below.

Watch: Bamboo – Robbi Niles feat. Emile Straker of The Merrymen

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Toronto based, Barbadian recording artist Robbi Niles today released the music video for his new song “Bamboo.” The song features lead vocalist and guitarist Emile Straker, from the legendary Barbadian calypso band The Merrymen.

You can follow Robbie Niles on social media platforms Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and subscribe to his YouTube channel for the latest news and updates. Watch the “Bamboo” music video below.

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