alcohol coming to movie theaters in NY https://gothamist.com/food/coming-soon-ny-movie-theaters-beer-wine?utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&utm_campaign=shared_twitterCheers!
?[The exhibit is] a way to celebrate artists who never got screen credit,? Lippman says as he leads me past Mount Rushmore and down a hallway with two backdrops dominating each opposing wall. ?They credit graphers [in film credits] but not [backdrop] artists.?Pointing at a label that lacks a name, Lippman explains that it?s a mystery who painted much of the work on display. According to Lippman, the studios didn?t keep a record of who painted what, and when they were done with a backdrop, they stuffed it in a dank warehouse, where they didn?t even bother to write down what film the painting was used in. Hollywood kept such shoddy records that Maness and co-curator Thomas A. Walsh failed to identify which films some backdrops were painted for. Take the backdrop depicting a lavish staircase. Nobody could identify its origin until a guest recognized the backdrop from a scene in Hitchcock?s Marnie.This particular painting looks flat. Quite frankly, I?m unimpressed. But Lippman insists it?s magnificent. He encourages me to hold my iPhone camera up to it. Through my camera, the painting gains depth.
I never want to buy discs before viewing the movie, so what I typically did was rent the movie from Netflix, and if I really like it to the extent that i want to rewatch and own it, then I'd buy it from Amazon.
I am a privacy nut and have heard about hackers or gov't using people's own internet-enabled smart TV's to spy on people.
I guess I'll try hooking up the wife when the Netflix DVD runs out.