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DIGITAL MEDIA FROM THE INSIDE OUT: My focus is digital content -- production, distribution, collaboration, innovation, creativity. Some posts have appeared across the web (HuffPo, Tribeca's Future of Film, The Wrap, MIPblog, etc.). To receive these posts regularly via email, sign up for my newsletter here.

Thursday
Dec222011

• What Did You Learn This Week? Sharing favorite posts & links

As Christmas approaches I'm getting a head-start on my weekly round-up of favorite posts and links with this contribution to your mental lifestream. 

Best-of Lists

The lists, they just keep on coming, don’t they: reviews of 2011, predictions for 2012 and beyond. Among the posts that caught my eye this week were:

  • Walter Mossberg’s roundup of best 2011 gadgets.
  • Marshall Kirkpatrick of Read/Write/Web discusses the “Top 10 Feed & RSS Technologies of 2011."   Yes this sounds geekier than hell, but it's really more of a rundown of how one excellent observer uses web technologies to learn more about the world. I'll be making my own such effort in my year-end list of favorite apps, coming soon to this space. 
  • Innovative consultants and curators par excellence offered a slightly askew 2012 trend roundup from ten innovators. (As it happens Fortune Mag published a glowing review of PSFK, the consultancy of tomorrow --whew!)
  • The great Storify tool offers a step-by-step guide on how to turn your Facebook photos into the story of your own personal 2011, should you need a way to compensate for all those cards coming into your mailbox from people you didn’t send cards to (even e-cards).

Film

Who are they trying to fool, anyway, those list-makers: we are in the midst of the High Holy Days of film, and it all leads up to the Oscars. The Academy has published its list of the 265 productions eligible for 84th Academy Awards.  

I’ve seen 56 and counting. How about you? BTW, I will publish my own year-end top movie list after Christmas (still have more to see), but if you cannot wait to read reviews of the movies I already reviewed, check out this link on Flixster.

Film Comment published its annual year-end survey of film critics and editors, naming Tree of Life as Best Picture. Secret sauce is the list of best unreleased films. Enough to keep you going through the summer months of comic book movies!

MY STUFF

Tribeca’s Future of Film picked their Top 10 Transmedia posts of 2011, including two of mine!

Georgia Tech has posted videos from the Future Media Fest Conference, including the panel on the Future of Television in which I paraticipated. There are some good talks here. 

MISCELLANY

One of my very first and favorite Twitter discoveries was “Very Short Story” or VSS – inventive proof that one could say something “fictional” in 140 characters. Now you can read 300 of them in book form: Very Short Stories 300 Bite-size Works of Fiction.

Keep up with Apple’s plot to assault television as we know it, courtesy of some good reporting from the Wall St. Journal.http://www.inc.com/magazine/201112/evernote-2011-company-of-the-year.html

The Wrap profiles YouTube sensation Freddie Wong, one of the many young creatives whose popularity on the video sharing site have pioneered another method beyond conventional Hollywood.

Inc. Magazine names Evernote as Company of the Year. (Note: Evernote is one of my favorite apps, to be detailed in yet another forthcoming year-end post).

Friday
Dec162011

• Predictions (like the Future of Television), and other interesting posts of this week

It’s time to review the most interesting tweets, links, and posts I’ve stumbled across this week, for your reading and clicking pleasure. I call it NGIF, for Nick's Great Information Friday. You can get this and all my posts by subscribing to the free e-newsletter at www.nickdemartino.net.  

 ROUND-UPS

At the risk of getting too meta, many of the posts I liked this week were themselves end-of-year round-ups – either reviewing 2011 or predicting 2012. A selection:

FUTURE OF TELEVISION

Seemed like there were a LOT of articles this week that looked at the changing landscape of television (probably because all the “smart” apps I use notice I’m interested in this topic – that’s another post, however.)

  • Why You’ll Buy TV on the Web in 2012, an interesting post at All Things D, summarizing analyst Rich Greenfield  
  • MIP’s blog ran an interesting post about Bluefin Labs, a social TV analysis firm that demo’d deep processing of Twitter and Facebook comments to provide insights into television. 
  • Siri’s implications on voice-controlled television (it will dismantle networks). See this post by WetPaint’s Ben Elowitz  
  • Why Google TV will Win, claims GigaOm’s Janko Roettgers.
  • Launch of the “Watch it” button, a social bookmarking system for television, creates a super movie queue across multiple sites. 
  • Gracenote, the Sony-owned database company that powers iTunes and other sites, will announce a second-screen content recognition platform at CES, reports GigaOm. 
  • Still unconfirmed, this week’s rumor mill has Verizon buying Netflix. 
  • What should a “TV Guide” product do? Jinni founder Yosi Glick gives you his vision.
  • Why not turn to “couch consultants” to learn more about what consumers want from tomorrow’s TV, in this ITVT post?
  • The “memeification” of the sitcom: the intersection of Twitter and television programs. 
  • Is there a future for “social TV”? Some say that most of the “social” features will become a standard part of content. 
  • A review of the “new” YouTube by NY Times TV critic Mike Hale
  • YouTube for Schools just launched as well, offering schools a way to filter for educational content and eliminate the, well, the other stuff.

SOCIAL

Sometimes it seems that Facebook and Twitter are the only social networks covered, but this Business Insider post reminds us that #3 site TAGGED is growing too, this time by acquiring hi5

Why Spotify can never be profitable: The secret demands of record labels. 

FUN

Loved this “transmedia purity test” quiz.

The “video essay” is a new form being pioneered by Press Play, in conjunction with IndieWire. Matthias Stork’s three-part series on “Chaos Cinema” finishes up, and “Magic and Light” about the career of Spielberg begins

R.I.P.

Christopher Buckley’s tribute to his friend Christopher Hitchens, who died this week, in The New Yorker

Sunday
Dec112011

Best of 2011 - My Favorite Books

Books bring escape into wondrous worlds -- a magic carpet ride into the realms of the imagination that still propels my life. As a young Army brat I found it easier to make friends with David Copperfield and Raskolnikov, Oscar Matzerath, even Perry Mason than the crowd of strangers I met in my real life.

Now, with an audio book in my car and ebooks in my pocket, as well as a stack of paperbacks on my night table, I’m always immersed in multiple narratives.

Although I average more than a book per week, my pattern of book consumption is quite different than movies or television, which are dominated by current releases and the compulsion to see what’s both great and hot.

In recent years I’ve taken to posting capsule reviews on Goodreads.com, which also enables sharing on Facebook and Twitter. Here are the reviews of the books I consumed this year that earned 5 stars, the top ranking, followed by a list of the near-misses that got 4 Stars. (In reverse order, most recently finished first)

Feedback always appreciated.

Cloud Atlas by David Mitchell (2008) Now THIS is post-modernism you can love, mainly because the guy can f-ing write like a house afire. Yes, there is structural experimentation in narrative style. Yes, we have linked stories that span the centuries from the past to the future and back again. Yes we have different tones and styles. But oddly, it all makes sense. There is a thematic unity in this exploration of freedom, oppression and resistance, and a fierce commitment that the actions we take today will echo down through the ages in ways we simply cannot predict. But mostly, I just enjoyed the yarns, especially the Sci-Fi interludes. Mitchell creates a language of corporatese that grafts today's brands and slang into eerily discernible locutions with nary a tongue in cheek. Tom Tykwer and the Warchowski Bros. will co-direct the forthcoming movie version -- perfect choice I think.

Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy by John LeCarre (1974). In honor of the forthcoming feature film version I returned to this, the greatest of all espionage novels (or so I remembered it), this time in audiobook form, which is really a perfect experience, given the importance of dialog, tone, class, and sheer Britishness to an understanding of the milieu and tale that LeCarre spins so well. I also have rewatched the classic BBC miniseries starring Alec Guiness. Obsessed, you say? Well… Naturally, and thank you for that, as George Smiley might say.

Black Water Rising by Attica Locke (2009). This one's got everything I want from a thriller: atmosphere, verisimilitude, heart, action, suspense, bad guys, social issues, sex. Set in 80’s go-go Houston, where money and power inevitably flow back to Big Oil, our hero is an idealistic lawyer and former student radical who stumbles across a thread in the tapestry of greed that defines the city. To unravel the thing, he needs to face up to his past (don't we all?), which in his case includes a pivotal episode as a black student leader on the edge of the Panthers and SDS, and his white girlfriend who betrays him (or not), and is, somewhat less convincingly, is now the city's Mayor. The story is chockablock full of gorgeous set-pieces (like the black-white tension in the Longshoreman's Union, the conduct of the student radical lifestyle, the venal maneuverings of politicians and business thugs) and memorable characters, especially those in the black community. You've got your well-meaning preacher (also the father-in-law), the shirtless part-time PI and bar owner, the white trash prostie whose tangle set off the chain of events that drives the relentless plot. I liked this book a lot. It reminded me of the early Walter Mosely, though set in a later and more hard-edged time, and with a lighter and more complex touch in matters of race and power.

Brooklyn Follies by Paul Auster (2005). This is the second Auster novel I've consumed in just a few months, both audiobooks that were delivered well by the author himself. His more recent Invisible was more focused and the touch of mystery surrounding events and characters made the narrative more satisfying, but nevertheless, I quite liked these Brooklyn follies. There's a shaggy-dog quality to Auster's storytelling. Characters arise like visions, necessary for the story to move, engaging on their own terms. Chapters are almost like short stories, tight and tidy amidst the perambulations of the larger project of the novel. The aging narrator finds meaning and love, corny enough, but how he does it is not.

The Weight by Andrew Vachss (2010). The first Vachss novel I've read (or heard of) that doesn't involve the avenging angel Burke, THE WEIGHT was really involving: a character study in depth, the story of a bad guy (a tough professional thief) who takes the fall for a rape he did not commit in order to avoid using his real alibi, which was a robbery. He's a standup bad guy who refuses to roll over on his confederates. He serves the time, but upon release, things get weird, then weirder, as he tries to use his somewhat limited smarts to figure out who's zooming whom. I love love love the voice (and the narrator of the audio version). You can hear Burke's fierce protection of women, his respect for the truth, and his relentless pursuit of justice. What you also get in this book is an authentic, inside-out view of the life of a professional thief. I was sad when the story ran down.

Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter, by Tom Franklin (2010). Nominally a police procedural because one of the two lead characters is a cop in rural Mississippi and the other is a suspect in two brutal crimes, CROOKED LETTERS has more in common with Faulkner and a long line of Southern gothic character studies. The past is the character, and liberation from its burden is the thematic driver. Franklin cannot write a bad sentence, and his narrative skill kept me awake too far into successive nights. You want to know what happened because you care about the people. As you discover more, you care more. Can't get any better'n that.

What would Google Do? By Jeff Jarvis (2009) Even though Jarvis covers very little terrain that I'm not quite familiar with, I experienced serial "aha" moments throughout the entire book, little jolts of pleasure at how well he marshalls an argument, how well he writes, how prescient his "rules" of the Google age have proven to be in the years since he wrote the book. He has elevated the business practices of Google and other web-centric companies into ethical and philosophical principals that drive his eponymous title, and then turns it back on the reader and the institutions that we all depend upon. Quite deft. This is one book that is probably BEST consumed in e-book format, given how many examples are provided, no doubt with links (the central organizing principal of the network and, arguably, of this book). I may be forced to e-buy, as I listened to the audio version.

Total Chaos by Jean-Claude Izzo (2005) Marseilles is the star, filled with thugs and mafiosi and hoors and Arabs and wops and cops. Izzo is the French David Peace: gritty, authentic, unrelenting, tough. So is the prose, but with the soul of a failed romantic. Our hero, a cop who escaped the ghetto and life of crime, searches for the reason why his two best pals from the old days have met with violent ends. It's as complicated a plot as you'll find, reminiscent of Chandler's THE BIG SLEEP, this one made even more challenging because of a ginormous multicultural cast of characters. Thanks to whomever it was that recommended this trilogy to me. I’ve got two more bedside waiting their turn.

State of Wonder by Ann Patchett (2011) I've loved Patchett ever since my friend Anna Marie gave me BEL CANTO for my birthday years ago, and this year, we went together to hear Ann read from STATE OF WONDER -- so wonderful. Did the fact that she inscribed my book "Happy Birthday Nick" have anything to do with loving it? I doubt it. I love her characters, the situations she places them in, and the dramatic arc of her storytelling mastery. This one, perhaps her most exotic (bordering on sci-fi, it would seem to me) works because we care about the people. And somehow, always, Ann makes me cry.

A Visit from the Goon Squad (2010) - Was I simply over-influenced by the slew of prizes Egan got for this? Or was it the fact that I went to punk rock concerts and lived in NYC in the late 70s and early 80s? Or that I'm a sucker for great characters, beautiful sentences, and a wonderful clockwork storytelling structure? You guessed it, probably all three, and more. I simply loved this book. Sasha is a great flawed protagonist, supported by a rogue's gallery of messed up music biz habitues united by a love of attitude and wierdness. I even loved the power point chapter and the speculative final chapter.

The Troubled Man by Henning Mankell (2011) I felt quite sad when I brought the last of the 14 discs in from the car for this, the last of the Wallender tales. Everything felt right: the completion of the complex mystery (which I suspected, thanks to Mankell's masterful clues dropped along the way); the wind-down of Kurt's life, ever true to the depressed personality we have all known, followed, and loved; the relationship with his family, especially Linda, and his love from Riga. It just all felt right. I love the humanity of the guy. Kurt's scenes with the retarded girl, with the retired waitress in the old people's home, the widow of the military historian, and the various people surrounded the military family at the heart of this story, well, they were deep, emotionally resonant, and illustrate how every scene in a Mankell mystery illuminates character and plot in equal measure.

Invisible by Paul Auster (2009) Absorbing from the very first scene to the last, this brilliant, restrained and elegiac puzzle novel puts Auster at the top again in my heart. Invisible is what we are to each other, no matter what we may think. Because of lies we tell to each other, and to ourselves. The visible world of the central character is fairly prosaic -- a non-druggie Columbia student in the late 60s, he gets tangled up with an older couple, French and quite mysterious. We navigate through his life, including his intense relationships with his sister, a complicated visit to Paris where he reconnects with the couple, now separated, and ultimately traverses the rest of the century and beyond as a non-literary person who helps the poor in California. We learn bits and pieces in four parts by three different narrators, and so we really do not know what is true and what is being told in order to protect the secrets that live in the realm of the invisible. I loved this book, which hasn't always been the case with Auster's work, which can be busy and trickish.

When Will there Be Good News? By Kate Atkinson. (2008) I consider CASE HISTORIES one of my favorite literary/mystery hybrids of the decade, so it's no surprise that this one knocked me out. Plotted with complexity growing out of a half-dozen main characters who all suffer from loss, grief and anguish, this novel of contemporary manners is really only nominally a mystery. The real pleasure comes from Atkinson's deep understanding of the human heart. My only regret is that I didn't read the middle of the three novels in the series first. Too bad the TV mini-series made the whole thing predictably formulaic.

White Teeth by Zadie Smith (2000) Pow, this is a multi-cultural tour-de-force by a born storyteller who weaves the development of her many characters through the nineties like an old pro, bringing every strand into full finale that is satisfying in both a literary and human way. The quality of her satire is exceeded only by the appeal of her characters and the richness of her thematic development. One would stand, slack-jawed in awe, except that most of the time the jaws are forming guffaws. Really loved this one.

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald (1925) Inspired by the recent "reading" play ("Gatz"), which I did not get to see in NYC, I picked up this wonderful audio version by Alexander Scourby, one of the great voices. The beauty of Fitzgerald's prose, those perfect sentences and the blank-verse meter are even more apparent than my memory of reading it (which was, after all, decades ago). The plot, it's true, is almost classically "tragic," in the sense that embedded in the soul of the main characters lives a character flaw that, at least in part, leads to the bad outcome, one which of course, works symbolically as well as the definitive deconstruction of the American dream, a house built on sand, a whole people buying the lie in order to succeed. In today's context, of course, it seems quaint. Swindlers on a scale unimaginable back then get away with anything they try, indeed, are rewarded for it, not murdered and certainly not seen as shameful. Ironically, it's the same character defect, is it not? This audiobook was pure enjoyment.

Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison (1952). This superb audiobook, brilliantly performed by Joe Morton, reawakened my deep respect for Ellison, whose achievement here is tremendous, literally crackling with vibrancy and insight, pathos and fury, taking us into each phase of the unnamed narrator's life, from his beginnings in the rural and viciously racist south to the patronizing integrationism of an all-black college, to the wildness of a black roadhouse populated by mental patients, to his migration North to NY City where he lives in Harlem and moves in and out of corporate numbness, blue-collar labor and union struggles, and then finally, and pivotally, the Communist Party, where he realizes that he is yet again being used and abused. Despite moments of hope and triumph, his is a journey of grim and Job-like visitations and indignities, illusions and naivete, double- and triple-crosses by both blacks and whites, seductions and betrayals that trample his soul and destroy his mind -- spiraling him down, literally, into 'invisibility'. A jazz riff of luscious language and rage-propelled storytelling, and informed by intense intelligence, INVISIBLE MAN is one of the greatest novels of the 20th century and a pivotal achievement in the history of social consciousness. I'm slayed.

The First Rule by Robert Crais (2009) I remember previous Robert Crais mysteries, which starred his groovy laid-back SoCal sleuth Elvis Cole, as light-weight. Fun while they lasted, but not epic or powerful on the order of Macdonald, Connelly, and other favorites. Until now. THE FIRST RULE is the first of his books I've consumed featuring Joe Pike, Cole's hard-as-nails, former soldier of fortune sidekick. The mystery kicks off with what appears to be a routine home invasion gone bad, only it features one of Pike's "guys" back from his days as a contract military operative in places like El Salvador and Africa. It winds up in the middle of a gang war between factions of a Serbian criminal underworld, fascinating in itself. With multiple plot switchbacks, some truly memorable characters, and a deep ethical vein running through Pike's every move, THE FIRST RULE kept me going. A plus on this audiobook is Crais' self-narration, which is excellent.

Art of Immersion by Frank Rose (2011) Frank Rose is a great reporter, which means, he's a storyteller. (I've been reading his stuff for years in WIRED). This shows on every page of this book about the way media are morphing in the age of digital platforms and audience participation. But Rose goes well beyond the fascinating character studies and on-site reportage for which he is known by using these particularities as emblems of our new age. There is a theory of media that emerges from the details of his storytelling, but he doesn't cram it down your throat like so many academicians and special-pleaders. I especially appreciate Rose's respect for the past, even as he hurls us towards the future, from mass culture merchants to the esoteric frontiers of cutting-edge science.

Freedom by Jonathan Franzen. (2010) As one of a handful of people, evidently, who simply couldn't read THE CORRECTIONS, I approached this Franzen epic with both mild dread and a wisp of hope... maybe this time. Indeed, I devoured the thing whole in three days, a glorious, compulsive, nostalgic dive into a very old-fashioned sprawl of a novel about some not so old-fashioned people, very few of them particularly admirable. Aside from his sheer talent and storytelling bravado, what Franzen has going for him is a profound and often surprising understanding of the psychology of love and need. These people are all very needy, even rock-star Richard who acts like he isn't, but certainly Patty and Walter, the other points of the central triangle in the story. The particularity of their love and cruelties towards each other, driven by both nature and nurture (or lack thereof) is breathtaking, digging backwards in time through several generations of ancestral pain, and then forward as their spawn emerge from childhood just in time to hurt and be hurt. All good novels are political, as well, and Franzen does not disappoint. Perhaps because I agree with most of his critique of contemporary politics, especially what has happened to the environmental movement, but I found myself mentally pumping my fist during the scenes when Walter finally confronts the energy company, amidst his own betrayal of ideals. I also loved the crisp strokes he paints of various boho milieux, such as the punk rock scene, the downtown NY theatre/performance scene, the opportunist GOP war profiteering scene, and liberal Democrats (Patty's mom). Even in the small sections, designed primarily to move the story forward, there is a true and killing aim, tied to character and enough to make a person weep. 

Additional books (four stars) I enjoyed this year:

Let the Great World Spin, Colum McCann

The Keep, by Jennifer Egen

Steve Jobs, by Walter Isaacson

Macbeth: a Novell by A.J. Hartley

Good Strategy / Bad Strategy by Richard Rumelt

The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde

End Games (Aurelio Zen, #11) by Michael Dibdin

Galveston, by Nic Pizzolatti

In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin, by Erik Larson

Started Early, Took My Dog, by Kate Atkinson

Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide, by Henry Jenkins

The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis, by Lydia Davis

The Snowman (Harry Hole, #7) by Jo Nesbo

On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft, by Stephen King

The Sentry (Elvis Cole, #12, Joe Pike, #3) by Robert Crais

Behind the Scenes at the Museum by Kate Atkinson

Smoking Typewriters: The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of Alternative Media in America by John McMillan

Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation by Stephen Johnson

A Novel Bookstore by Laurence Cosse

Thursday
Dec082011

• MOVIES, BOOKS, VIDEO, TRANSMEDIA, PREDICTIONS & MORE: My Weekly Round-up of Links 

It’s the end of the year, and I’ll be unfurling my favorite TV, films, software, and books of 2011 in a series of posts, beginning with television, here.

Speaking of lists, one of the most informative movie lists is from the BFI’s Sight and Sound, which polls 100+ critics to come up with the top movies. But the real fun are the critical commentaries that follow the main chart, where I discover lots of gems that I would otherwise never know about.

MOVIES: Speaking of movies, I for one can’t wait for the international coproduction of David Mitchell’s complex novel CLOUD ATLAS, which I just read. Evidently, the production financing may be as big a story as the ambitious movie itself, according to this report from the NY Times.

Meanwhile, Hollywood studios continue to roll out digital access to more movies via the UltraViolet “locker” project, with Sony releasing its first U.S. titles, and Warners expanding to the U.K.

PUBLISHING: Over in the disrupted world of books, Hachette tells the world why publishers are relevant in today’s digital ecosystem via a leaked memo, drawing a quick response from one J.A. Konrath, a successful self-published author. Makes for interesting jousting.

I learned more from a GigaOm post that shows how publishers have given “Amazon a stick to beat them with” by insisting upon DRM that locks readers into the Amazon walled garden. 

VIDEO: Online video viewing has crossed the threshold of 50% of the U.S. population this year, according to eMarketer.  

Beleaguered Netflix CEO Reed Hastings, on the offensive after a couple of brutal quarters, predicts that 50% of TV viewing will be on the web in ten years. He also announced that Netflix will stream more than one billion hours of video in Q4 of 2011. 

The web was abuzz with news and leaks about a planned streaming video competitor to Netflix from Verizon, which will team up with RedBox.  

Machinima.com, an online video site featuring (what else) Machinima videogame content, has hit an amazing one billion monthly views, according to my old pal Allen DeBevoise. While the gamer niche is certainly an aspect of the success of the site, the larger implication to me is the success of ultra-niche video programming channels. Machinima will be of the 100-plus new YouTube partner channels that will begin rolling out in 2012, much as cable introduced “vertical” programming back in the ‘80s.

Microsoft made news with a major upgrade of the Xbox 360 platform, adding functionality and content partners and prompting this love letter post on Paid Content, which coins yet another term: “engaged TV.”

TRANSMEDIA: Two deep and thoughtful posts went up from leaders in the transmedia storytelling movement. First, check out part one of Gunther Sonnenfeld’s piece about evolving investment strategies in emerging media markets. 

The second, from Conducttr founder Robert Pratten is a great post about “engagement-driven” narrative design.

PREDICTIONS: The New York Times published a killer interactive feature on the history and future of computing. A timeline dating from 1617 lays out key discoveries in computation, AI, Transportation, Lifestyle and Communications, and then invites users to submit their own predictions. You can also amend the predictions, which in effect constitutes a form of crowd-sourced prediction. It’s fun!

The Personal Computer is Dead, by Harvard’s Jonathan Zittrain, is a jeremiad against vertical integration and walled gardens (Re: Apple). 

This Business Insider’s post, entitled “The Death of Television May Be Just 5 Years Away,” is bound to send shock waves through some of my clients, as it cites various cracks in the current model. 

That's it for this week. Follow me on Twitter (@nickdemartino) for daily doses of info, or subscribe to the newsletter on my site to get updates directly to your inbox. 

Wednesday
Dec072011

• 2011 Lists - The Best of Television

As the year yawns towards a close, our culture begins its compulsive list-making. Me, too, beginning today with my list of the best television series and programs for 2011. In the coming weeks I'll burden you my choices among films, books, and computer software, as well.  

This exercise, which I only began to do a few years back, has been greatly aided by tools that record what I watch, read and like --- sites like Netflix, Into Now, Get Glue, Goodreads, and Flixster remind me of what I've consumed. 

We mere mortals are at a disadvantage compared to the lonely few still employed as professional critics, whose privileged access to screenings and review copies allow them to provide a veritable consumer guide for the work of a particular calendar year. My look back is idiosyncratic, and published here only as a way to generate talk and heat during the cold December nights ahead. Please feel free to fire back.

Of the four lists, television is the easiest, since we all have access to most stuff -- at least until the cable model cracks wide open and Internet content becomes competitive. So far, at least for my money, this is the Golden Age of Television, mostly provided by HBO, AMC, FX and other cable channels. I tried my best to watch network shows this year, and one by one, I deleted them from my DVR without watching.

Why? Network TV's business model, such as it is, still seems driven by the need to create a tidy formulaic story that more or less ends each week, in order to sell in secondary markets. The results are generally predictable, even when the talent is of the highest order (Maria Bello, Jim Caviezel, Suzanna Grant, Stephen Spielberg, etc. etc.).

Cable, on the other hand, delivers multi-level character-driven stories with minor and major plot lines that unfold over time. Like really long and satisfying movies. Every week. 

So, in no particular order, here's what gave me pleasure on the tube this year:

Breaking Bad. Week after week, plot twist after plot twist, scene after scene, Breaking Bad defies every convention of television storytelling to deliver powerful drama to the screen. Vince Gilligan and his cast and team create a sense of heightened suspense and danger, even as the story unfolds within the most banal setting possible, suburban Albuquerque. I will never forget the last image of Gus from the season finale.

Mad Men. If Breaking Bad is hot, hot, hot, Mad Men is cool, cool, cool, at least on its sleek surface, under which roil cauldrons of vengeance, lust, jealousy and all the fun stuff that people pretended they did not have in the 60s. The period setting brings historical shape and resonance to the unfurling of the lives of some very fascinating characters, particularly Don, Betty and Peggy.

Boardwalk Empire brings us up close and personal at the Prohibition-spawned birth of the mob, which in Atlantic City appears to have been primarily Irish. Michael is the central character, a bastard with two fathers, a monster horn dog of a mom, and a brain. Atlantic City was the prototype for Vegas, which itself is a metaphor for America, as Coppola showed us.

The Killing (Danish Version) The American adaptation of this superb Danish mini-series had its pleasures, most derived from the basic concept of a season devoted to the investigation of a single brutal crime, the murder of a Laura Palmer-like school girl whose connections, when discovered, can take down the power structure.The original was, if possible, even darker, even in lamp-lit interiors, certainly a reflection of the dark secrets held by most of the characters. Plus, we get a lesson in the politics of Copenhagen, which I found fascinating.

Justified. The trappings of the classic Western came home to Appalachia, a place where feuds never end and people are just plain ornery. Relationships are complicated. People are crafty and brutal. Good and evil are relative. And every scene carries and edge and a clue. Oliphant leads a wonderful cast, including this year's standout, Margo Martindale as a matriarch you really don't want to cross.

Sons of Anarchy. Shakespeare takes a ride on a Harley in this compulsively watchable tragedy among a multi-generational tribe of motorcycle gang members in central California. Jackson (Charlie Hunnam) is the central character, hemmed in by the memory of his father, the founder of the gang, his man-eating mother (superbly rendered by Katie Sagal), his non-gang MD wife, and the amoral leader of SOA, Clay (Ron Perlman). The plot flips and slithers around and about, encompassing the IRA, the Mexican cartel, black Oakland rivals, and a wide assortment of law enforcement gangs, whose amorality mirror the gang life.

The Hour. I could quibble with this or that in this stylish BBC period drama, but I must confess that its brief three-episode life left me wanting more more more of the espionage, class warfare and media politics of Suez-era news casting in London. A superlative cast, great dialog, and just the right tone made this compulsive mid-week viewing this year.

Downton Abbey (Masterpiece). Anglophile soap opera with costumes, attitude, and Maggie Smith. What more could a person want from television?

Treme. David Simon’s move from the mean streets of Baltimore (The Wire) to the melancholy streets of post-Katrina New Orleans was a cause for celebration, not only because he brought back many of the earlier series most exceptional actors (and some great new ones, esp. Mellissa Leo), but because the intertwined story form plays both major and minor keys to deliver a jazzed up composition like no other storyteller can (literally and figuratively, of course, since music is central to the lives of the characters and the story). Thank you HBO for keeping this series on.

Modern Family and 30 Rock are classic family sitcoms -- one home family, albeit “untraditional” and the other a work “family” on the order of Mary Tyler Moore. Both have wacky characters, superb casting, and razor-sharp writing – throwaway lines in these shows are funnier than entire episodes of overrated schlock like Friends and Cheers, for my money. Characters in Modern Family address the camera in the now-familiar mock-documentary style.  Characters in 30 Rock just barrel along in mad pursuit of their own character defects. Louie is another kind of comedy entirely, a breakthrough form in which cruelty plays a major role – for the audience as well as for the title character, the stand-up comic Louie C.K. who sort of plays himself. There is precedence of sort for this kind of show-biz-centric sitcom (Burns and Allen, Jack Benny), but no other show has ever taken the audience so close to the despair that the character (and maybe the actor) displays in every aspect of his doomed life.

The Daily Show with Jon Stewart is essential. It would be hard to get through the mess we’re in, much less watch TV news, without Stewart and his happy band of insane “correspondents” and a peerless staff of obsessive-compulsive clip-hounds. My TV choices can be seen as a quest for intelligent life on the tube, and as such, Jon Stewart is the jewel in the crown. An intelligent guy, who presumes that I am too. Thanks Jon.

Other TV I’ve enjoyed this year:

  • Game of Thrones (HBO)
  • Too Big to Fail (HBO)
  • Glee (Fox)
  • Luther (BBC America)
  • George Harrison: Living in the Universe (HBO)
  • Woody Allen: American Masters (PBS)
  • South Park (Comedy Central)
  • Prohibition  (PBS)
  • Case Histories: Masterpiece (PBS)
  • Rescue Me (FX)
  • Entourage (HBO)
  • MI-5 (Spooks in US reruns) (BBC)
  • Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO)
  • Slings and Arrows (CBC, via Netflix)
  • Upstairs Downstairs: Masterpiece (PBS)