The Prism

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We talk.....we listen...we learn...we grow....

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Reverse the curse

A while ago I thought about doing this to Beyonce songs, cause the beats are so nice, but then the words pollute the music and the meaning and my ears.....so when I heard this I thought, YES, that makes since....reverse the curse.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Comment on The homosexual agenda

The homosexual lifestyle is an issue between that person, who they have sex with and their creator.

The issue is the perverse exhibitionism and objectification and simplification and dis-grace and sac-religious distortion of the purpose and power-full direction of sexual energy.

The only way you know people are gay is because you wonder about or come upon information about their sex life.

If you are not having, going to or want to have sex with them then why do you know anything about what they do sexually.

Porn is homosexual and voyeristic. If you watch another man or another woman engageing in sexual acts you are participating with your senses, in that act.

Porn makes me nautious, I hate the sound and the sight of others sexual episodes.

So, if our culture wasn't so out and about with sexuality.......... Selling sexual perversions because the more fantasies they can get people to create they can make more money.

If everyone was using sex for procreation and spiritual mental emotional physical well being of all involved ordained and meant for good in that conversation with the creator, "the industry" wouldn't make a lot of money off of that.

But, strip clubs and international human trafficing (think the movie "Taken"), kiddie, animal porn.....I mean really, what is homosexuallity morally and spiritually compared to beasteality?

.....It's all more than I ever need to know and the fact that I know of it is because the widespread exceptance into our society of perversion. I don't personally protest it's appearance, but I do actively stay away from the perversion.

What my sexual preference is has nothing to do with any of you people....only me, that person and our creator.......

And anyone who molests children and thus confuses their impressionable sexuality.....they will answer to their creator as well as that child.....and everyone else who is affected.

But I do think the homo/bi/tran- agenda in the meadia is about the independent women and the prison culture and the distruction of the family tribal unit.

Part 1 of the four part agenda.

If people are confused about sex then it makes sense they would be confused about family and then what will they teach these children begotten by perversion and confusion?

Part 1 The Destruction of the family
Part 2 The acceptance of the unnatural or supernatural as natural Part
3 The Militirazation of the civilians Part
4 Technological upgrades, universal mind control, Chip in your hand

Mission accomplished.........Check for these themes.....in your own programing

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Closed captioning for everyone

Okay...little thoughts lead to more little thoughts right. so I started thinking about how much I miss closed captioning. I really enjoy being able to read the transcripts with the audio off or when the audio is off. So I jumped into a thought and found out that there is a whole world behind closed captioning...of course. Found about more about my remote and where my closed captioning was. Turned it on.

Just had an urge for some biscutes and syrup and its not offten that I want syrup.

Okay, before I get into the long boring research, I wanna say that closed captioning is something I have been dealing with mentally and spiritually. I have a need for subtexts as I am selectivley hardof hearing or, I just need to see what's being said on paper to validate one way or the other.

but anyway, still thinking about my brunch.....


For the truth seekers.....who wanna know......a dose of info......stright from wikipedia:



Closed captioning is a term describing several systems developed to display text on a television or video screen to provide additional or interpretive information to viewers who wish to access it. Closed captions typically display a transcription of the audio portion of a program as it occurs (either verbatim or in edited form), sometimes including non-speech elements.

Terminology
The term "closed" in closed captioning indicates that not all viewers see the captions—only those who choose to decode or activate them. This distinguishes from "open captions" (sometimes called "burned-in" or "hardcoded" captions), which are visible to all viewers.


Most of the world does not distinguish captions from subtitles. In the United States and Canada, these terms do have different meanings, however: "subtitles" assume the viewer can hear but cannot understand the language or accent, or the speech is not entirely clear, so they only transcribe dialogue and some on-screen text. "Captions" aim to describe to the hearing-impaired all significant audio content—spoken dialogue and non-speech information such as the identity of speakers and, occasionally, their manner of speaking—along with music or sound effects using words or symbols.

Most commonly, closed captions are used by deaf or hard of hearing individuals to assist comprehension. They can also be used as a tool by those learning to read, learning to speak a non-native language, or in an environment where the audio is difficult to hear or is intentionally muted. Captions can also be used by viewers who simply wish to read a transcript along with the program audio.
In the United States, the National Captioning Institute noted that 'English-as-a-second-language' (ESL) learners were the largest group buying decoders in the late 1980s and early 1990s before built-in decoders became a standard feature of US television sets. This suggested that the largest audience of closed captioning was people whose native language was not English. In the United Kingdom, of 7.5 million people using TV subtitles (closed captioning), 6 million have no hearing impairment [1].
Closed captions are also used in public environments, such as bars, and restaurants, where patrons may not be able to hear over the background noise, or where multiple televisions are displaying different programs.[2][3][4]
Some television sets can be set to automatically turn captioning on when the volume is muted.

Media monitoring services
In the United States especially, most media monitoring services capture and index closed captioning text from news and public affairs programs, allowing them to search the text for client references.
The use of closed captioning for television news monitoring was pioneered in 1993 by Tulsa-based NewsTrak of Oklahoma (later known as Broadcast News of Mid-America, acquired by video news release pioneer Medialink Worldwide Incorporated in 1997). US patent 7,009,657 describes a "method and system for the automatic collection and conditioning of closed caption text originating from multiple geographic locations" as used by news monitoring services.

Full-scale closed captioning
The National Captioning Institute was created in 1979 in order to get the cooperation of the commercial television networks.[3]
The first use of regularly scheduled uses of closed captioning on American television was on March 16, 1980. Sears had developed and sold the Telecaption adapter, a decoding unit that could be connected to a standard television set. The first programs seen with captioning were the ABC Sunday Night Movie, Disney's Wonderful World on NBC, and Masterpiece Theatre on PBS. The captioned Disney feature, showing at 7:00 pm EST, was the film Son of Flubber, while the movie at 9:00 EST was Semi-Tough.[11]
[edit] Legislative development in the U.S.
On January 23rd, 1990, the Television Decoder Circuitry Act of 1990 was passed by US Congress.[10] This Act gave the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) power to enact rules on the implementation of Closed Captioning. This Act required all analog television receivers with screens of at least 13 inches or greater, either sold or manufactured, to have the ability to display closed captioning in July 1, 1993.[12]
Also in 1990, The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was passed to ensure equal opportunity for persons with disabilities.[4] The ADA prohibits discrimination against persons with disabilities in public accommodations or commercial facilities. Title III of the ADA requires that public facilities, such as hospitals, bars, shopping centers and museums (but not movie theaters), provide access to verbal information on televisions, films or slide shows.
The Telecommunications Act of 1996 expanded on the Decoder Circuity Act to place the same requirements on digital television receivers by July 1, 2002.[13] All TV programming distributors in the U.S. must provide closed caption for Spanish language video programming by January 1, 2010.[14]
[edit] Legislative development in Australia
The government of Australia provided seed funding in 1981 for the establishment of the Australian Caption Centre (ACC) and the purchase of equipment. Captioning by the ACC commenced in 1982 and a further grant from the Australian government enabled the ACC to achieve and maintain financial self-sufficiency. The ACC, now known as Media Access Australia, sold its commercial captioning division to Red Bee Media in December 2005. Red Bee Media continues to provide captioning services to Australia today.[15][16][17]

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Insight into my programming

Tonight's programming:



7pm TMZ



8pm Hell's Kitchen - They have a kids challenge to see what they think about high end food. Kids make the comment cards. Chef ramsey's son and his classmates maybe? Very "Halloween candy" themed. Black girl had the most mistakes and the most complments and got eliminated...



9pm So You Think You Can Dance : They are still doing Auditions, last night they were in Salt Lake city, Utah. I wonder how many people watch the auditions and have no idea where these places are on a map?



Tomorrow I start a new schedule so it won't be necessary for me to watch my shows at the same time as their first air..... along with others....around the country and world......and that's weird, but so necessary. I don't ever wanna have to watch commercials...I really like being able to fastforwrd, or better yet, watching it online, fullscreen, where there just aren't commercials if you find the right sites......



Anyway Wanted to list my weekly programming:


Mondays 8-10 right now are tight, they try to squeeze everything in:

House

Heros

How i met your mother
Accidently on purpose

two and a half men

big bang theory

Tuesdays:

Hell's kitchen

So you think you can dance

CSI, I don't even have to change the channel........

Today is wednesday,but I started this blog last night and didn't finish it, so I'll probably write more about tonights programming tonight but here are some of the other "new" shows I look forward to in my daily media programming:

Smallville : We have always been, super hero, good guy, comic book kinda people so, we have been watching since episode 1 season one...they just moved it to friday nights so we don't sit and watch it together anymore, but we record it.

The secret life of the american teenager: This one suprised me, my 15 year old cousin watches it and it puts me in the mind of degrassi and some of the little teen drama teen actor shows i used to watch, but the storyline and the content is actually kinda thick......This season is over, but I prefer to watch it online than on ABCFamily anyway...Oh, and I probably watch cause molly ringwald is a BIG part of my programming, being an 80's baby and all.......

Amazing wedding cakes: I like that WE has shows like this. I have always wondered about elaborate cack construction and edible moldable materials, I like the characters and the fact that it's a creative process that isn't about micro management, it's about skill and art......

Eddie Griffin, Going for broke: I just watched his standup last week, freedom of speech and it was soooooo very funny and true and honest and real and raw and the TV's set up in the background said WAKE UP! in red and blue! I caught that eddie! Anyway, he respects his mama, loves his family and has 8 kids and 4 baby mamas.......It's better and classier than Flavor of love, but VH1 rules the reality shows.

Top Chef: I have been watching since day 1 episode 1. it makes me wanna know more about food. Teaches me about different customes and cultures and the inside world of chefs and resturaunts and food and wine magazine and all that...once again, art in motion....

Project Runway: Same as above...bravo knew that queer eye was a jackpot and so the fleshed it out to create some of my favorit shows, but project runway is on lifetime and not bravo anymore....

Tool Academy: 1st season 1st episode....I love the first revelation that you have been caught up and I love counciling! I love them going to therapy and people being able to see how therapy works. I was really digging wedlock or deadlock...it's not on anymore...I hope they bring it back, but the truth and being open about what works and what dosen't is priceless.....don't be scurred....

Army Wives: great concept, historical and present day, my acting teacher was on last weeks episode as an extra, but he got a really great speaking role, I can see him now adding that to his demo reel.

Desperate houswives: Watch it on and off but I really like marcia cross and eva longoria and their storylines...Love seeing gabby with this teenager...she's good and fistey and got her foot on this chicks neck. people could learn a lot from gabby solies

Grey's anatomy: watched first season...then it was spuratic....but now I back addicted to the drama.

The Simposns: still gettin clevererer and cleverer...lovin it

The Cleavland show: new show, just watched first episode on sunday, funny, enjoyed it.

The Soup: Weely recap of the stuff I didn't watch and just the parts worth seeing.....

Real Houswives of atlanta: Loyalty like watching a car crash

Toddlers and tiaras: I'm in the business, I deal with these parents

I have really been enjoying the history channel the past two three months or so and QVTV has some really great shows as well as discovery.

I only allow the kids to watch Spirit channel, animal planet and all the recordings of avitar the last airbender. No disney and spongebob and cartoon network round this peace.