Simpsons’ Springfield revealed – Is this the beginning of the end?

Springfield...Oregon?

One of the unspoken rules was that we didn’t know where the Springfield from The Simpsons really resided.  It could Massachusetts, Oregon, Illinois…or nowhere.

And creator Matt Groening always said he wouldn’t tell us where it was, if indeed it was somewhere real.  People became so obsessed with finding this out, it became a joke on the show (“the state that Springfield is in” anyone?).  Anytime we saw a map, we never saw where Springfield fell on said map. It was an ongoing joke.

So when it was announced today that in an interview in Smithsonian magazine, Groening revealed where Springfield really was…it shook me up a bit.  And let me down.

Can you name them all?

The place that is home to Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, Maggie, Mr. Burns, Smithers, Stupid Flanders, Rod, Tod, Edna, Grandpa, Patty, Selma, Troy McClure, Lenny, Carl, Dr. Nick – basically the cast of characters who have been with me since I was in high school – isn’t some magical  happy land existing only in our imaginations and yes, in our heart. It’s in Oregon.

You know the one. Near Portland. ‘K.

This is Groening response when asked why the town was named Springfield:

Springfield was named after Springfield, Oregon. The only reason is that when I was a kid, the TV show “Father Knows Best” took place in the town of Springfield, and I was thrilled because I imagined that it was the town next to Portland, my hometown. When I grew up, I realized it was just a fictitious name. I also figured out that Springfield was one of the most common names for a city in the U.S. In anticipation of the success of the show, I thought, “This will be cool; everyone will think it’s their Springfield.” And they do.

I get it. I really do. What better way to make the show that much more universal than have everything think that Springfield was the town just a few towns over.  We could all be just a short ride away from Moe’s.

But I loved not knowing. I loved having all these crazy antics occurring in a bubble of sorts, in a town that could be next door, but really was anywhere. And now that magic is kinda gone. Which is sad.

Of course the interview is more than just the reveals. Groening talks about how the show comes from his family, which any true fan knows, and I think, hints just a bit at a dissatisfaction with the current show:

How typical is the Simpsons’ home of an American home? How has it changed?
I think what’s different is that Marge doesn’t work. She’s a stay-at-home mother and housewife, and for the most parts these days both parents work. So I think that’s a little bit of a throwback. Very early on we had the Simpsons always struggling for money, and as the show has gone on over the years we’ve tried to come up with more surprising and inventive plots. We’ve pretty much lost that struggling for money that we started with just in order to do whatever crazy high jinks we could think of. I kind of miss that.

We miss that too. Do we really need such crazy high jinks all the time or can the show go back to just being damned funny without losing itself in unnecessary wackiness?

I’m sure it’s just me, but I feel that now that we know where Springfield is, the end could be nigh. The mystery is gone and things should start winding down.  No more wackiness, no more plots that start out of nothing and go nowhere. It’s time.

To help us remember Springfield in its heyday…
http://youtu.be/61kHpmenkT8

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HBO renews Game of Thrones for 3rd season; fans everywhere say “duh”

Entertainment Weekly just reported that HBO has renewed Game of Thrones for a third season, surprising no one.

This was announced on the heels of the second episode keeping 97% of the viewing audience from the 2nd season premiere, which translates into 3.9 million an episode. Pretty good for something that is only for D&D fans.

While the first season focused on the first book of the George RR Martin series A Song of Ice and Fire and the second season on the second book, the third season is probably going to focus on half of the third book. A Storm of Swords is just huge (the paperback version clocks in at a healthy 1,216 pages) and an insane amount happens, not to mention introducing even more new characters and making this world that much bigger. So it would make sense to split it.

This is great, if not at all shocking, news for all of us GoT fans, as well as the cast members who survive this season.

To celebrate, let us watch Joffrey get slapped a bunch.

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New Trailer: A Fantastic Fear of Everything

Secret Confession: I love Simon Pegg.  I have loved him since I saw Shaun of the Dead.  Loved him more once I watched, nay DEVOURED the brilliant show Spaced, and continued that love through Hot Fuzz and even the Mission Impossible movies. Hell, I even bought him as Scotty.

Pegg looking rather undapper in his new movie. Great hair though.

I am not quite sure what this movie is about.  According to IMdB, this is the summary of the plot:

Jack is a children’s author turned crime novelist whose detailed research into the lives of Victorian serial killers has turned him into a paranoid wreck, persecuted by the irrational fear of being murdered. When Jack is thrown a life-line by his long-suffering agent and a mysterious Hollywood executive takes a sudden and inexplicable interest in his script, what should be his big break rapidly turns into his big breakdown, as Jack is forced to confront his worst demons; among them his love life, his laundry and the origin of all fear.

That is one scary hedgehog

Sure. Sounds plausible. But they forgot the super scary hedgehog and Pegg running around a lot in his underwear.

Either way, very very curious about this one.

Also, seriously, if you haven’t seen Spaced you are doing  yourself a massive disservice.  Here is the first episode to entice you…

http://youtu.be/qHc0VDdhXVQ

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SNL Correction!

Even those of us who spend our days thinking about TV and movies and can quote the Simpsons like it’s going out of style (which, let’s face it…it is) can make a mistake.

My mistake? In my recap/review of the SNL with Sofia Vergara, I said that the sketch Almost Pizza was too much like Colon Blow for my taste.

Problem is, I didn’t mean Colon Blow. Colon Blow is a damned funny commercial about fiber in your breakfast cereal, but it wasn’t the commercial I was thinking of.

I was thinking about the SNL commercial for It’s Not Yogurt. Still has some Phil Hartman smarminess, but totally different product.

Watch it and man oh man will it remind you of Almost Pizza.

My apologies.

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New Trailer: Lola Versus

Lola Versus starring Greta Gerwig

In Lola Versus, a new film brought to us by the studio that produced (500) Days of Summer (aka Fox Searchlight in an oddly place promo there), Greta Gerwig is Lola, a young woman living in NY whose fiance breaks it off with her three weeks before the wedding. And it seems she then has to figure out who she is and what she wants.  But in a quirky, indie fashion.

So another indie movie, right?  Maybe. Maybe not.

I sorta love Greta Gerwig, not only because her name is Greta and she voices Pony on China, IL on Adult Swim (watch it, it’s super sick and twisted), but she’s figured out how to be awkward and uneasy in her own skin without being totally unappealing.  Something she and Lena Dunahm seem to have in common.

This movie also stars Joel Kinnaman, the non-gum chewing partner in AMC’s The Killing. I watched the first season and while I didn’t love the show, I enjoyed him.

Some of the lines are quite funny, “I’m eating – I’m POWER eating” and the even stranger line, “I didn’t want to be a prison architect, that somehow just happened.”
Plus I always like a movie that dispels the myth that all women feel comfortable walking in heels, cuz that’s some serious bullshit.  Seriously.

http://youtu.be/15kG87BW22Y

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SNL: Sofia Vergara brings some funny

I find her to be a modern day I Love Lucy in her own way

After a few weeks off SNL returned with Sofia Vergara as host and boy band One Direction as musical guest.  Overall, Vergara was pretty good.  She did a good job with the material they gave her and was very open to using her…assets (and by that I mean her boobs) for comedic purposes.

Also, she’s got a great laugh.

But how did the episode break down?

The Good:

Bein’ Quirky – They debuted this Zooey Deschanel satire when ZD herself hosted.  Abby Elliot was a barely serviceable job as Deschanel, but at least she looks the part.  Kristen Wiig was there as her BFF Drew Barrymore, which was a heck of a lot better than Elliot’s Deschanel, and Taran Killam was there once again as Michael Cera, and Vergara came on as Fran Drescher. While initially I could see how the hell they would have Vergara as a Jewish New Yorker, she managed the abrasive voice and braying laugh quite well.  That being said, Taran Killam continues to be made of win this season. His Michael Cera was jsut perfect.

Can you tell whose booty is whose?

Just Friends – A very silly little commercial for male booty shorts, declaring your heterosexuality.  I just love seeing Sudekis and Samberg cavort about the city together the booty shorts.  Ridiculous and amusing.

What Andy Cohen's face would look like on a Pomeranian. Something we've all wondered.

Watch What Happens Live – Killiam continues his MVP status as Bravo’s way-too-delighted-with-himself Andy Cohen.  I’ve only caught Cohen’s nightly show Watch What Happens Live a couple of times, but this was extremely on point.  As Cohen/Killam said, “Anything can happen but don’t worry nothing will.”  They had it all, the hunky bartender of the day who seriously looked like he is too stupid to breathe, Nasim Pederad and Vergara as the stars from the Shahs of the Sunset Strip or whatever that show is called and Desmond Tutu as the famous person that you cannot for the life of you figure out why they agreed to do the show.  Killam really got down Cohen’s got his maniacal laughter and over the top self absorption. And ending with “After this an all new repeat of the same episode”, just clinched this for me. Bravo — you’ll never miss an episode because we repeat them ad nauseum.

Seriously. How do these things NOT look like they're selling you sex with the shampoo?

Pantene – This episode also marked the debut of a new cast member, Kate McKinnon who was featured in two roles, Tabith Coffey on the Bravo sketch and as Penelope Cruz in the Pantene commercial. This was a great send up of those shampoo commercials which are all basically soft-core porn and of a nice faux (faux?) rivalry between Vergara and Cruz.  …go you. Vergara sold her innocence about getting all the easy lines “I had to say Pantene and then I had to say hair!”  or “I had to say yaaaay!”  I can also watch both of those ladies repeat the word “refrigerator” because accents are funny.

The OK:

Cold Open – Once again, we are opening the show with Sudekis as Romney, incapable of connecting with anyone and saying anything to sell himself.  Pandering: It’s what’s for dinner.

Monologue – More of the Colombia/boobs/accent jokes. She did good. The material was OK. So…OK. Not good, not bad.  Cute son though.  She had him when she was 18…in case you were wondering.

Weekend Update – Starting with an amusing joke about Matt Lauer’s new $30 million Today Show payday “Where in the world is Matt Lauer? Buried under strippers and blow”, this week’s Weekend Update was alright. What stood out the most was Bobby Moynihan’s recurring character of Drunk Uncle.  I loved the tattered bunny ears he wore at the start while singing “Simply having a wonderful Easter time”, and his rants were as varied and as off topic as ever. Ebay of Pigs? The best part of waking up…(long period wherein Drunk Uncle might be passed out…..is Folgers in your cup.  And eating all those Peeps proved to me that Moynihan will do anything for his art. Those are vile vile things.

Mustaches all around!

Manuel Ortiz – I can pretty much take of leave this sketch, but loved Taran Killam as the shrink and of course, Bill Hader as the cheating husband.  There was also a cute cameo by One Direction.  Mustaches for all!

Hunger Games – Vergara as a loud mouthed reporter in the Hunger Games was cute.  Again, she used her voice and accent (and boobs) for comic purposes: BOOOOM HUNGER GAMES.   And while Abby Elliot’s Katniss giving her the berries was a nice touch, the entire sketch existed for this: the Hunger Games Puppy Bowl.

Hunger Games Puppy Bowl. All the violence, more fur.

The Bad:

Almost Pizza – Another commercial.  This was a bit too much like Colon Blow (without the panache of Phil Hartman) + Happy Fun Ball (do not taunt Happy Fun Ball)

News Team Promo – Overall just not funny.  Armisen just kept doing the same thing.  However, I did like the line, “Don’t hand me your wallet”, don’t ask me why, it just tickled me the right way.  And again, Vergara did some yelling, “HE  NEEDS TO TURN” as she manually turned Armisen so he’d face the camera. Meh.

Gilly in Sex Ed – I’m so tired of Gilly.  Even the reveal with her afro as pubic hair…really? I will say that Gilly had more attitude than usual, with a bit more of a variety in her little statements and I didn’t hate her as much I normally do. Gilly seemed more…self aware.  With rumor of Wiig leaving was this Gilly’s swan song?

Really? Lil Poundcake for the third time this season!?  It was funny the first time. Mildly ok the second time. Third time? Just lazy.

And what about the musical guest? Literally 2 seconds into the One Direction song I was bored. Are they aiming for lack of individuality?  Was BSB or NSYNC this bad? … Probably.  Reminded me of the Warblers from Glee, sans Darren Criss. I didn’t watch their second song.

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Game of Thrones – Now with Peabodys!

The Peabody Awards, which honor excellence in all electronic media, were announced yesterday. And unlike the Emmys or the Golden Globes, as Stephen Colbert would say, they’re “it getters”.

Along with Homeland, Parks and Rec, Portlandia, and the above mentioned Colbert Report (all extremely excellent shows), the Peabody award committee saw it fit to recognize Game of Thrones, giving them the “First Annual Montgomery Burns Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Excellence”.

What the Peabody Awards ceremony must look like

No wait, wrong award. But I think you get the picture.

HuffingtonPost quotes the Peabody write-up on GoT:

Peabody writeup: Adapted from dark-age fantasy books by George R.R. Martin, the series immerses viewers in a multilayered, distinctly imagined world of mysticism and earthiness, fidelity and deceit, wonder and mayhem.

The HuffPo writer Maureen Ryan adds:
Mo comments: A dense, compelling saga of intrigue and survival in an unsettled kingdom, “Game of Thrones” examines themes of loyalty, family and ambition against an epic backdrop. Just as a previous Peabody winner, “Battlestar Galactica” ably transcended the “science fiction” label, “Game of Thrones” is more than just a “fantasy” drama; it’s a deeply relatable story about flawed, complex people trying to figure out the right course of action in a world that is crumbling around them.

I agree completely.  GoT is a show that goes beyond the mere thought of the fantasy genre, showing us human nature even when showing us dragons.

And this is of course mud in your eye, NY Times

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For the Night is Dark and Full of Terrors: Game of Thrones returns with a vengeance

(My apologies for the delay in posting this…life decided to get in the way)

And we are so back.

The first episode of season 2 of HBO’s Game of Thrones refused to let you settle in after the long wait.  While this is still somewhat of an introductory episode, it’s more to set things in motion for the rest season, something that it took several episodes to do in season 1.

Joffrey -- proof positive that incest is a bad idea

We open on King’s Landing with Joffrey acting like the vicious little tyrant we all knew he could be.  For his name day (birthday) he is making men battle each other to the death, and because this is Game of Thrones, we see the death part.  The show has never shied away from showing us exactly what is at stake with every single blow; when the nameless knight is knocked off the ledge by the Hound, he lands with a thud and as he’s dragged away, we see enough blood to know how dead he really is.

Poor Sansa is still at his side, having to parrot back lines about her “beloved Joffrey” even when said beloved is making her declare her family as traitors.  Sansa tries to talk Joffrey down from drowning a sad display of a knight in wine, showing some of the wiles her father seemed to lack when dealing with the Lannisters, and thankfully the Hound backs up her assertions about reaping all year what you sow on your name day.

Luckily, we are spared more of this butchery in the King’s name once good old Tyrion shows up.  Side note: It is amazing that Myrcella and Tommen, Joffrey’s younger siblings, aren’t absolute horrors.  Tyrion manages to have more swagger than the entirety of King’s Landing (Littlefinger and Varys not included) and shows a bit more heart than his nephew when he tells Sansa he’s sorry for her loss.  Of course that swagger serves him even better when he walks into the Small Council and tells Cersei who’s in charge.  He mocks her losing Arya, killing Ned, screwing Jaime…well that’s more implied.

The night is dark and full of terrors, but the fire burns them all away

One of the exciting things about this new season is the opportunity meet new characters, especially those at Dragonstone: Stannis Baratheon, Robert’s till-now-unseen-brother and his “spiritual advisor”, the red priestess Melisandre.  We meet them (and Davos the Onion Knight who gets short shrift here but should get more screentime going forward) on the shores of Dragonstone, burning the statues of the Seven worshiped by the southern part of the kingdom. Melisandre has swayed Stannis from worship of the Seven to the worship of Rh’hlor, and Maester Cressen ain’t too happy about that. The scene where Cressen tries to poison Melisandre is slightly different in the book, but we get how she has some actual power and is a pretty scary lady in her own.

Oh, and Stannis is a huge pain in the butt; no wonder Renly thinks he would be more popular. Nitpicking over every word in his “incest announcement” that he is sending to every corner of the kingdom, denouncing Joffrey as the product of 2 Lannisters, not a Baratheon hair to be found on his body, thereby justifying Stannis’s claim to the Iron Throne.  Really Stannis? Really…you think someone is going to question whether Robert was your “beloved brother” or just “brother”?  However, I did love his insistence that Jaime was both a Kingslayer and a knight, one clearly does not preclude the other.

Speaking of this Kingslayer knight…he’s still being held captive by the Starks. Jaime is looking a little worse for wear, grimy and bruised, and sitting in a cage. Robb Stark who looks much more like the King in the North, enters followed by Grey Wind who looks much more like the Direwolf I imagined/feared in my dreams.  The CGI here isn’t particularly great, but you get a sense of how imposing Grey Wind is, especially since they switched from using dogs to real wolves this season. Dirt and chains haven’t dulled Jaime’s spirit and he spars nicely with Robb – “Three victories don’t make you a conqueror,” says the Kingslayer. Robb shoots back, “It’s better than three defeats.”  Grey Wind does make Jaime shut it fairly quickly.

King in the North, Robb Stark, looking quite handsome

Robb continues to impress as he sends a Lannister cousin back to King’s Landing with a list of his demands, knowing full well Joffrey aka Cersei won’t comply.  He also sends Catelyn to meet with Renly and see if they could unite. Catelyn who only wants to return to Winterfell to give some attention to Bran and Rickon, the youngest Stark who might as well not have a name with all the attention he gets in print and on screen. Catelyn tell Robb Ned would have been proud of him; sharp contrast to how Robert would feel about his disgusting “offspring”, ruling on high from King’s Landing.

Sidenote and slight spoiler:
Theon Greyjoy will become more than “just another Northern boy in furs” this season. I don’t know much about Alfie Allen and we haven’t really gotten a sense of his acting abilities, but I hope that he is up to the challenge of Theon on as the series progresses.

Bran as acting Stark in Winterfell is listening to a lord’s complaint, Maester Lewin by his side.  Bran looks bored until the lord starts bad mouthing Robb.  But rather than throw him from a parapet or have his tongue cut out, he reminds the lord that this is not Robb’s war, that Joffrey killed Ned.  When you compare Bran’s reaction to Joffrey’s, it just goes even further to insist that Joffrey is a horrible excuse for a human being, not just too young for the job. That and Ned and Catelyn did a much better job raising their children in the north than Cersei and Robert did in the south. Bran has started having his “wolf dreams” and all I’ll say is warg. Warg.

Another new development this season what lies beyond the Wall. The Night’s Watch ventured out at the end of season 1 and just keeps moving in season 2.  They stop by Craster’s for shelter for the night. Craster would give the Lannisters and the Targaryans a run for their incest money. He marries his daughters only to have them birth more daughters for him to marry. How classy.  We very briefly meet Gilly, played by Skins’s Hannah Murray.  Jon Snow, still very pretty, catches Craster’s eye. Jon Snow also can’t keep his own mouth shut.  This leads to this quick but strong worded chastisement from Commander Mormont
http://youtu.be/TLSqsh1sFUk

What is beyond the Wall is really quite different than anywhere else in the Seven Kingdoms and I’m very curious to see how they handle Mance Rayder, a former man of the Night’s Watch who became King-Beyond-the-Wall, over the wildlings.  This is a true betrayal of everything the Night’s Watch stands for.

What of dragons? Poor Daenerys. Drogo was dead. Her khalasar abandoned her. The few stragglers following her into the red waste.  Her dragons are too small to be anything other than additional mouths for food that doesn’t really exist. But as we all know, don’t count out Dany just yet.

A scene that I don’t remember from the book provided a fascinating look at Littlefinger. He   all but tells Cersei that he knows about her and Jaime, snidely remarking “Knowledge is power.” Cersei responds as any Lannister would —  has her guards rough him up, stopping them right before she laughs, says “I’ve changed my mind” and then looks him in the eye and says “Power is power.”  I am not a Cersei fan by any stretch of the imagination, but she has a point.  We’re seeing the shift from a world where people like Littlefinger and Varys could bend the wills of other simply by knowing something dangerous to one where it’s very much a “might makes right” situation.  It’s also a new thing to see Littlefinger so unnerved.

But who or what can unnerve Cersei? She stood her ground when Ned confronted her about her relationship with Jaime.  She withstood Robert’s entire existence, drunken and whoring and let’s face it abusive.  Put her in front of Joffrey and his own accusations about her incestuous relationship and Robert’s bastard offspring though…
http://youtu.be/lnyyF3oJDuYz
Ballsy, Cersei. Ballsy.

The episode ends not on a great battle or revelation, but on the most biblical of sequences.  We see Roz of the Constant Nakedness, now a madame in Littlefinger’s brothel instructing her workers on proper technique, all so similar to the sexposition of season 1.  In walks Janos Slynt, commander of the City Watch of King’s Landing.  Rather than visiting for a quick roll in the hay, Slynt and his men are there for the baby we met towards the end of season 1, one of Robert’s out-of-wedlock offspring that Ned has sought out before he lost his head. And thus begins a great slaughtering of all of Robert’s bastards, and supposed bastards, within King’s Landing and most likely outside its walls as well.  Throats are slit, heads held under water until their owners drowned, babies carried by their ankles to their doom.  It was vicious. Of course we have Cersei to thank for this. Goaded into it by Joffrey’s vileness.

The only one who seems to escape this violent fate for the moment is Gendry who along with Arry (Arya), is slowly making his way north to the Wall.  Gendry and his telltale bullshead helm.

The red comet...just hanging out

Tying together all these disparate characters and locales is the appearance of a blood red comet in the sky. From Winterfell to the red waste, everyone claims its omens for their own, but what does this comet really signify?

So there we are. Pieces set in motion, the world of Game of Thrones starting to crack open.  I can’t wait for this Sunday.

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New Trailer: Rock of Ages

I'd say bring your lighters, but that would start a fire in the theater

I saw Rock of Ages on Broadway, when it started Constantine from American Idol.  And being a child of the 80’s, I loved it.  It wasn’t deep or particularly emotionally moving, but it had all the music from the glorious hairbands I listened to in elementary school and high school.  Warrant. Bon Jovi.  Poison. Journey.

And they gave out fake lighters to hold up during the power ballads.

Despite the front placement of Tom “I’m Running!” Cruise, I am excited for the movie version.  Movie version of Broadway shows don’t always go over so well. While I loved Rent, the movie left me a little cold and seemed a little dated.  Chicago worked almost in spite of Renee Zellweger and had to make some serious changes to accommodate the songs.  The Producers movie version of the musical of the movie version was a mess, even though the musical was genius. Don’t get me started on the movie version of Guys and Dolls, it is just so painful.

Alec Baldwin and Russell Brand are perfectly cast for Rock of Ages even though their hair looks like what someone in 2011 thought 80’s hair looked like…and I’ll even concede that I can see Tom Cruise as Stacee Jaxx. He certainly bulked up and put on a nice wig for the role. Can’t say much about the two leads as I know nothing about Julianne Hough except that she was in the Footloose remake (ugh) and Diego Boneta is an unknown quantity at this point.

But here is the newest trailer for Rock of Ages, you can judge for yourselves:

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Titanic in 3D — Now with Corrected Stars

What’s that you say? You don’t remember the night sky from the movie Titanic? You mean when Rose (Kate Winslet) was clutching to the big chunk of wood and watching her beloved Jack (Leonardo DiCaprio) freeze to death and sink to the bottom of the seas, you weren’t paying attention to the stars above them?

That can only be because you are not Neil deGrasse Tyson.

Possibly more accurate telling of the the Titanic sinking. (courtesy of http://www.playtime-magazine.com)

NdGT saw the movie, which was being bathed in the glow of “historical accuracy”, and was surprised to see that Rose was looking at a “lazy” night sky — wrong and a mirror image of itself.  So NdGT sent a, as Cameron calls it “snarky”, email taking him to task.

Cameron, then King of the World, didn’t respond.

Years later they met at a science-y meeting and when NdGT asked Cameron if he knew that the stars were wrong, Cameron said he didn’t know and it happened in post production.  To quote NdGT who admits to being immature about the subject –  “I wanted him to grovel at my feet”. Which of course Cameron did not.

Fast forward another 3 years and Cameron is being given an award by Wired Magazine at the Rose Planetarium…which NdGT runs.  “Now he’s in my house!”  Of course NdGT prompts him again to find out why the stars were wrong and this time Cameron has a response “Last I checked, Titanic worldwide has grossed $1.3 billion dollars. Imagine how much more it would have grossed had I gotten the sky correct.”

Now that there’s a rerelease of the film, Cameron decided he should protect his reputation as perfectionist and told the British magazine Culture that he contacted NdGT  – “So I said, ‘All right, you son of a b**ch, send me the right stars for the exact time, 4.20am on April 15, 1912, and I’ll put it in the movie.’ So that’s the one shot that has been changed.”

Of course Dr. Tyson was pretty damned thrilled to be consulted as seen in the video below:

But let’s be clear, I’m STILL not seeing Titanic again. Especially in 3D. Corrected night sky or not.

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