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Friday, May 16, 2008

Fast TV Downloads Review - Where Can I Download TV Shows?

Are you looking for a way to download all the TV shows you want to watch? You may have heard of the site called Fast TV Downloads. Having been a member of this download site, I will be writing about my experience with this site in this article, and comparing it against the other best methods for downloading TV shows on the internet.

What Are The 3 Different Options for Downloading TV Shows?

1. Signup for Amazon's Unbox Service

You can signup for this service and download episodes for around $1.99 per download. It is worth the fee if you are only looking to download a few episodes that you have missed. They also have a feature for you to rent movies for download. After you have downloaded your file, you will get a 24 hour time window where you have to finish watching the show, and then viewing will be disabled. You can also choose to download whole seasons of TV shows, but it is going to cost quite a lot of money, so always make sure that you know how much the total fee is.

2. Signup With iTunes

iTunes also offers a pay-per-download service. You can choose to get a subscription with them, which will enable new TV show episodes to be downloaded onto your PC when you start the iTunes program. Sometimes, I have been able to find random free shows for download too.

3. Join the Fast TV Downloads Unlimited Download Site

This is the method that I currently use since it is the most affordable and practical for me. Unlike the above 2 sites that work with a pay-per-download pricing structure, Fast TV Downloads allows unlimited download of TV shows and other media files for a one-time membership fee. With this service, I can download as many shows as I want without having to worry about increasing fees. After download, the files can be transferred to DVD and played on a DVD player easily.

Conclusion

The best option you choose should ultimately depend on your needs. If you are looking for only a few downloads, joining a pay-per-download site would be more affordable, whereas if you are looking to download entire seasons of files, you should definitely join Fast TV Downloads.

OLED Become A Major Player In The Display Industry 2009

The first OLED was Developed in Korea approximately around 1980's. They are made up of following parts:

1] Substrate

Its made up of Glass, foil and plastic and is used to support the OLED.

Anode It adds electron holes or in technical term it removes the electrons when a current flows through the device.

2] organic layers

These layers are made of organic polymers and

3] Cathode

It inserts electron when current flows through the device.

There are also various types of OLEDs:

1] Transparent OLEDs
2] Top-emitting OLEDs
3] Foldable OLEDs
4] White OLEDs

These are used in High defination tv, cell phones with color displays, advertisemnts and hoardings.

These devices are not much thick and they consume very less power. OLEDS can also provide bright display and consumes less power because it does not require back light function as in displays in Liquid crystal displays that is LCDs. Also, they react faster to changes in signal than in typical Plasma tv's and LCD's which are suited for motion pictures.

We have already seen that OLED displays are much thinner than LCD's and Plasmas, because they are made up of polymer films which make them flexible for motion pictures.

They are also much lighter in weight and more temperature range which makes it more durable. Also no backlight mean one less component to fail. Another advantage of OLED is that as its made up of plastic, they can me of larger sizes.

We have already discussed various advantages of OLED, but, it has its few disadvantages too. It being manufacturing process being too expensive right now resulting overall product to be costly. And secondly water can easily damage the OLEDs. Now that we know what is OLEDs, its types and its advantages & disadvanges lets see how the technology is growing or what future it holds.

Currently, OLEDs are used in cells, PDAs and other small screen displays. In 2004, sony corporation announced their plan to mass produce TVs with OLEDs. Kodak was the first in race in implementing OLED displays in its digital-camera's. Development in this field is growing tremendously and many digital companies are diving in this technologically lucrative pool.

Movie Review - "Hostel" Is The Set Up, "Hostel Part II" Is The Punchline

Is being scared the same thing as saying, "That looks really painful and I hope it never happens to me?"

I don't think so. And that's the whole problem both "Hostel" (2005) and "Hostel: Part II" (2007). There's nothing genuinely scary about them. No suspense, or mystery, or subtlety-- all essential elements in the horror genre. (Stand these movies next to, say, "The Shining" or the "Blair Witch Project" and you will see what the "Hostel" series is lacking.)

What they DO offer is plenty of gore, and lots of torture. Both films rehash the exact same story, with the sole exception being that the the batch of torture victims are men in the first film, and women in the second.

Naturally, the original "Hostel" is better. It's direction stands out thanks to Eli Roth, who knows his way around a camera. The sound effects are atmospheric and quite well done. The opening credits-- which depict dripping blood, soap suds, and the cleaning of metal tools-- combine sound and image with masterful technique. The credits alone would have made a genuinely great short film. Too bad it all goes downhill from there.

"Hostel: Part II" is just plain ridiculous. It tries to top the gore-factor of its predecessor, and in the process goes way, way overboard. Much of it is borderline comedic. The last scene features children playing soccer with a severed head. They kick it around in the woods, at night no less.

The Winners In Film Production

A creative mind is a low budget filmmaker's most valuable tool. The whole process of film making starts with an original thought. From there it is all about maintaining that thought until it grows to be a brilliant idea. After that it is a matter of getting that idea made into a movie using every ounce of energy and resources you can possibly muster up.

Most of the successful films that are shown at film festivals are movies that were made at a fraction of the cost that it takes to make a major Hollywood studio film. Hi tech equipment, mainly based on computer effects and possibilities in technology have made it so that just about anyone can make a movie. Film cameras, sound recording equipment, and just about any other kind of equipment that one needs to make a movie can be purchased at very affordable prices these days.

The film making equipment that is available these days can provide a very low budget movie with a production value and overall revenue, which might look like some famous director had something to do with the project. This professional appearance coupled with a unique story can help any film's chances at being accepted into film festivals like Cannes, Toronto Film Festival or even obtain the Oscar!

Try as they might, the major Hollywood film studios will never have a monopoly on creativity. They spend far more than one million US dollars not only on film production, but also on marketing research, intending to figure out just what it is that the film-going audiences of the world look for when they go to the movies.

Despite all of this effort, they still have not developed a formula of success. The intentions and tastes of people who go to the movies are as hard to predict as an earthquake is. Because of this fact, the door is left wide open for creative minds of the world to enter the game. All they need to do is come up with a genuine idea that they can transform into a spectacular movie, enter their film in festivals like Sundance and then let the judges decide. While the big studios have tried to take over the film festival sphere in recent years, it is still the little creative minds with the small, yet unique films that are the winners in that realm.

Why We Should All Stop Watching Superhero Movies

It might be common knowledge by now, but with the flood of superhero movies in Hollywood during the past five years I can't help but see it as a well constructed ploy by big time movie producers. It may have worked for some time, though after a dozen heroes resurrected onto the silver screen I'm just about ready to throw up.

I was watching an episode of Entourage the other day. Vinny, the main character, was being considered for the role of Aquaman. Everyone wanted him to take it. For one, he would make a ton of money, and also it would help boost his career. I thought about the second reason and how it rings true in Hollywood today. Superhero movies are a just a catalyst for a certain actor's or actresses' career. Producers choose a promising actor (without any thoughts for casting or auditions), inject them into a superhero movie, promote them like crazy, and then hope that they are nominated for an Oscar by their next movie. Ben Affleck might have won an Oscar before he did Daredevil, but his name was still attached to Matt Damon then. While in Halle Berry's case, doing Catwoman was just a terrible decision.

On the other hand, the producers aren't the only ones to blame. The other thing that bothers me is that people still flock to the theaters whenever a superhero movie comes out. We can consider some of them as old fans of the comic books. However, comic book fans are usually disappointed with movie renditions anyway. Sure a superhero movie looks cool. Even I have to admit that the production value is way up there, with hundreds of extras and really well done effects and scenes. But we get to see that in the preview. I don't have to watch the whole movie to see that nice chase scene between the Silver Surfer and the Human Torch.

My one advice, besides not watching any more superhero flicks, is to keep your children away from these kinds of movies. Not only will you save money from buying useless merchandise that your kid wants after watching the latest hero on screen (i.e. mediocre action figures and plastic lunch boxes), but it also helps filter their conventions for quality films. I could also argue that superhero movies are naturally violent, but I'll leave that for the soccer moms to point out.

It's annoying to think that Hollywood producers are simply making fun of us. It seems that they want us to fall into their trap of big budgeted marketing. They make us think that spending millions of dollars on a movie assures its quality. When all is said and done, they think of us (the audience) as fools who are all the more ready to eat up anything they put out as long as it looks cool.

Does Julia Roberts Smell?

To be honest, I have no idea if Julia Roberts smells or not, but I do know that she doesn't wear deodorant.

How do I know this?

Because she told us all on the Oprah Winfey Show!

She claimed it was no the sort of thing she told everyone about, which doesn't quite ring true when you say it on the highest rated talk show in US TV history.

It's a bite of personal information I could have done without, I'll never look at a picture of her the same again!

Critics might say she's made some stinker movies too.Personally I like her stuff.

It was Pretty Woman that launched her into the big league, a comedy rom-com, and she starred with Richard Gere again in Runaway Bride, which tried to cash in on their chemistry.That got the critics shouting 'sell out', but it was nevertheless a well made feelgood film.

She showed the she could do thriller with Sleeping With the Enemy opposite Patrick Bergen, and in Erin Brokovich she showed a serious side in the true story, picking up a leading lady Oscar for her work.

Notting Hill is another hugely popular film of hers, another cash in type movie, but this time not from one of her previous films.

This time it was the Four Weddings and A Funeral film with Hugh Grant that was the clear template.

The remake of Ocean's 11 led to the sequel Ocean's 12, and her continued position at the top of the cinema tree.

Dangers Of HFCS

If you liked "Supersize Me" and "Fast Food Nation" then you will love "King Corn". Directed by Aaron Woolf, this documentary follows the journey of corn from kernel to corn syrup. It examines America's health as it spirals downward and how the end product of this unassuming vegetable is in virtually everything Americans consume. Co-Producers Ian Cheney and Curt Ellis discuss how corn fuels the majority of products consumed by Americans today. From products that are considered 'healthy" like breakfast cereals and whole wheat breads to not surprising, soft drinks and candy bars.

In this eye opening documentary the duo moves to the Midwest and plants and grows an acre of corn; the subsidized crop that drives our fast-food nation. With the help of a kind farmer willing to loan them an acre along with nitrogen fertilizers and herbicides, the corn that is produced from their single acre is enough to sweeten 57,000 cans of soda. Which sad but true, is only enough to feed 63 American teenagers in one year's time.

High Fructose Corn Syrup is one of the biggest contributors to obesity in the United States not to mention countless other diseases. So the question is this - How do you fight with a multi-billion dollar industry with a driving force the size of King Kong?. You do so one step at a time.

King Corn is a must see for anyone who wants to uncover the truth behind what's driving America's food industry. I hope it becomes a catalyst for change in this country. Its a battle that in my opinion must be fought.

Famous Movie Stars of the 90's - The Hidden Side

When the famous movie stars walk down that red carpet, thousands of photos are taken by hundreds of photographers. Many shots will be posed and still many more will be looking to make the star seem foolish or poorly dressed, but a very few will reach inside the star and show a side that is rarely seen.

These are the photos that turn those famous movie stars into real people. But these photos are rare and don't normally come from the paparazzi. The paparazzi shoot for the exploitive and outrageous images, that's what they get paid for. For the paparazzi the order of the day is shoot more, shoot often and see what you have shot once you download them to your computer.

During the 90s several technological changes took place, the biggest of which was the birth of the digital age. The digital age had its victims though, one of the biggest being film cameras, at least where still cameras were concerned. With digital photography the job of the paparazzi became that much easier, cheaper and faster.

The digital "new media" also became a concern for famous movie stars during the 90s as this new medium cut into the once gigantic actor salaries. Even though the 90s were another groundbreaking decade for films and filmmakers, actors had to begin a long battle for their share of this new digital pie.

All of these concerns can be seen on the faces of stars if you look very closely. But in the glitz and hurry of the red carpet scene, photos that show more than a dress or a hairdo are seldom seen. These photos must be mined like the gold they are. These actors are not famous movie stars for nothing, they have learned to play a part and that "part" is what the public most often sees. Even on the red carpet though, there are brief moments of clarity.

During those brief moments as the stars on the red carpet move down the gauntlet, the true photographers capture more than the facade of these famous movie stars. They photograph a piece of the true personality, the kind of photo that tells much more than a 1000 word story. A photo that shows some insight into what makes this person the star they have become.

Every decade has its share of famous movie stars, the 90s was no different. The 90s stars just had to learn to do it digitally. The same way every photographer had to face the digital age as well. But whether the photo was taken digitally or on film, it was still up to the man behind the camera to know when the moment was right. The stars just create the moments, the photographers have to catch them.

Peter Jackson, JRR Tolkien, Celebrity Death Match

Treebeard Moves!

Soon after its publication, JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings outgrew its popular fiction status. Lord of the Rings is a cultural event. With the motion picture, similar in genius, the meaning is further extricated from its origin. This phenomenon is hardly novel, but in respect to the profound cultural and philosophical significance of Lord of the Rings it is terribly useful to compare the movie with the book.

Of course from book to screen there is a revision. Deletions are especially obvious, but what is done to the overall meaning is less obvious. Also, in the change from literary to motion picture there are stylistic imprints.

The most significance difference is that not only did Tolkien take more time to construct the story, he also took more time within the story.

JRR Tolkien originated the work over decades, drawing it within a written tradition while favoring Anglo-Saxon and including invented languages. Peter Jackson's movie involves a huge amount of things. Innumerable items, such as buttons, were made to two different scales to accommodate the shift in scale from human to hobbits. Converse to the quotidian is the use of satellites to coordinate all the elements working in different parts of the globe. As film is a kind of language, the innovations in special effects can be likened to Tolkien's invention of language. But apart from those differences in form, we think most of "Why did that get put aside?" "Why was that added?" and then "Why keep that?".

Those questions conceal the most important revision of all: Jackson's portrayal on a smaller landscape, in a smaller scale in time.

Watching the DVD's, there are many contractions in space from the point of view of the characters. Frodo's view from Emyn Muil and Gandalfs view from Minas Tirith are not correct in proportion and proximity to Tolkien's map, but perhaps spatially accurate in respect to Jackon's requisite contraction of time and space. Overall, the space of middle earth seems contracted when it is compared to the landscapes and distances in Tolkien. These contractions in space automatically contract the story in time.

Tolkien scope of time is abnormally wide. Saving the world and global transformations are all cosmic events, but there is also a more humble, human scale in comparison with the motion picture as well.

Perhaps the first clue to this occurs at the beginning, in the discovery of the ring of power is in the hands of a Shire folk. Gandalf arrives, confirms that this hobbit does indeed possess the ring of power, and then this is put aside for weeks. In the movie they hustle out of the Shire. Is it just armchair, professorial pace here?

Tolkien goes on with interruptions not seeming essential to the plot. Or are they? The story's time is near half a year. In the movies the transitions in time seem unremarkable.

Chase scenes and fights and romantic chases: movie time is popular, and it is by it own nature set, for the most part, in real time. It seems merely customary to delete scenes that delay the action in order to streamline or tighten the story dramatically.

Maggot, Bombadil, The Scouring of the Shire: deleted. But not just for the streamlining, but for the nature of the storytelling, do we lose the starting and stopping and starting again, of a story within a story. These deletions eventually weaken in sequence the progression of the movies.

In that starting and stopping is a kind of charm, induced by a more comfortable use of time. At first glance, we develop care about the characters before the main event. It makes us identify strongly with the hobbits. But more important is the idea that is not so obvious, creating heterogeneous time.

Heterogenous time means a variety of different times, past, present, future, beginnings, middles and ends, stories within stories, backstory, fate, destiny, foreshadowing. This puts emphasis on character, or the character driven story.

This kind of time is very different in the movies. Not just that the movie must be shorter and in removing elements meanings change. Though there are a number of storytelling techniques within film narrative; flashbacks and 'flashforwards', dreams, parallel storylines, exposition with voice-over, repetitions, even fade outs and dissolves...the underlying aesthetic power of motion pictures is that the 'now' is overpowering.

The heterogenous time of disconnected or circumstantially connected events has been simulated in Jim Jarmusch's Stranger Than Paradise by the inclusion of black frames, simulating a kind of ambiguity to where in time and space each successive scene is, but such a technique would not be applicable to the Fellowship of the Ring.

Heterogenous time, in this case a kind of stumbling from event to event, is necessary to create an overall feeling of the time of innocence. Such is the world of the Shire, despite Sackville-Baggins's, and a ring of power stashed in a wooden chest. Such a world is necessary to contrast with the burden of contemplating one's destiny and the cosmos. Thus we feel a hobbit as something in our own experience, going from carelessness of Arcadia to the release of the Grey Havens.

Motion picture techniques with time: introductions, flashbacks, narratives within narratives, are too useful to not use frequently and liberally. This could be confused with heterogeneous time, but it is not. Such techniques, being used here and there for purposes of expediency, do not emphasize a contrast, or create larger scales of transitions from one kind of time to another, as occurs in the trilogy. In Tolkien's narrative, heterogeneous time changes into a quest that unravels into multiple storylines, whose threads then converge at the Crack of Doom. There is a compression of tense.The Grey Havens is not equal in poignancy between book and DVD. Jackson sought to include the world weary tone that ends Tokien's Lord of the Rings, but somehow, as the grinding pace of the Return of the King is ending there is more relief than a reluctance to let go.

Apart from the "necessary" deletions, weakening of the grip of the story can be attributed to Peter Jackson's film style: his camera work is kinetic. It jumps, hovers, jiggles, leans, kants. It follows arrow-flights. It makes the impression of being hasty. It undermines the overall tone of seriousness, but it does add a value of greater intimacy.

The camera moves more than most other directors. It is essential to have a distinctive style as a director. Directing a film is a negotiated form of authority: others contribute much and a director is pressured to show vision. It is part of the economics, for a signature style, if successful, will encourage audiences to buy tickets again!

Jackson's signature tendency is more controlled in Lord of the Rings, yet harkens to his hasty pace in a plethora of camera angles and in such gags as following the paths of arrows. Perhaps the weakest shots are the sweeping aerial landscapes: they occur too fast and are felt as secondary. The sense of Middle Earth as a place is impossible to duplicate, not just because Tolkien put stories within stories, but also because Tolkien describes nature and landscape with a particular genius.

Jackson's style can feel artificial, sometimes self- conscious. Moving the camera about excessively brings attention to the effort. Though...there is masterly sensitivity to the story and character as the cameras is used. It moves more than average, but just right for the scenes. Even though this kind of camera style detracts from the grandeur and seriousness of an epic spectacle, the mastery creates greater intimacy: our own view through our eyes is similar in dynamism. So it adds a personal touch that is lacking in the gap between film and fiction. Fiction talks to you, whispers in your ear, while film is presented to you on a screen somewhat distant. Jackson's style goes one step in closing this gap.

Jackson has other idiosyncrasies. He will go for a gag; the dwarf tossing and excessive hobbit antics, for instance. Of course, Hobbits as not-spectacular-people enables comic charm. These are cheap shots, akin to the vaudeville sequence at Kong's perch, with Ann Darrow attempting to amuse the great beast (Kong disapproves), but it also provides the audience with a sense that this is only a movie. There is a director who is to provide entertainment, not slavish imitation of a great author.

JRR Tolkien makes self-conscious references as well. However, his are really incidental, too subtle to really add to the structure of the narrative. The Lord of the Rings is 'written' by the characters. This is related after the adventures are over. Jackson dramatizes this, but its even more irrelevant in that the movie one sees is not made by the characters in the movie!

Such frames within frames is a self-conscious device, actually bringing the author closer by putting a person between themselves and the audience.

This is not an important element of Tolkien's work, but it in is Jackson's, as a cumulative effect of a distinctive, hasty camera style and a nod to the audience.

Tolkien makes uses his idiosyncrasies as well. For example there is the delay in the narrative with Farmer Maggot. These starts and stops tactically encapsulate the sense of a boy's adventure in tone, a tone which is to be destroyed, but strategically they contribute to the effect of heterogeneous time.

Like Farmer Maggot, Tom Bombadil serves the reader as reminder that this is just another story. Yet his peculiarities go beyond the boys adventure story to something more cosmic. This is the peak, or strongest event in the development of the heterogeneous time.

Why does Tolkien have Bombadil in the story? Bombadil is immune to the ring, and this would seem to undermine the risk. But Bombadil serves as subtle foreshadowing, as well as a sense of a local haven just around the corner. It is amusing to think that Doctor Tolkien is whispering 'this is not going to hurt very much at all', meaning, this is going to hurt, be prepared, but don't be frightened, it is just a fairy story.

Jackson hastiness, naturally in the transition from book to screen and by Art in his camera style, undermines the final movie. The Return of the King, has a clunky, rushing feeling.

The material suffers because each of these sequences; Pelannor Fields and Black Gate, Shelob, the Orc tower and the Crack of Doom, feel like a regular thirty minutes apiece, again and again. There is feeling that it is not an organic shape, but a mechanism. What is lacking?

That we do not have the same time stretching as in Tolkien's undermines this sequence of events in the movie. Wherein, in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, the battle after battle does not seem interminable, but to be picking up the unraveled threads of the story's multiple plots and spinning them into a final thread. This is the narrative payoff of having heterogeneous time earlier in the story.

Fran, Peter and Phillipa's revision takes us away from the serious tone of the literary Epic (although Jackson's dominant style takes us away from Epic to intimacy in a large way) while connecting the story to a wider tradition of fairy tales.

In fitting the earlier audience into a tradition, Tolkien takes us away from fairy tale, with Goblins and Elves and Dwarves, into Epic.

Clearly, one important thread is the story of rival people's, with a siege of a great city, all over a most precious thing, like the Iliad. And both stories charts a vast territory filled with monstrous beings, all in hope of returning home, like the Odyssey.

The comparisons go deeper, but the idea is in picking out where in our collective imagination the two works rest, for the film and the book make us experience a incredible and similar story through different medias.

This comparison is forced, but when considering the movie, the force goes too far. Why?The epic is literary, poetic in fact. While Tolkien synthesized fairy and epic, his concern went more to geopolitics, war and to devastated personalities. Included are dynastic successions and a simulation of history...something we enjoy about Epic for history is an epic.

But, to some degree he marginalized an important Fairy theme. This theme is terribly personal for Tolkien, inspired as he was by the story of the love between elf and man. Lord of the Rings does not develop that story at all. It is a brief appendix.

But this theme is the greatest revision of the story by Jackson, Fran and Phillipa. It changes the tone and characterization of Aragorn and Arwen.

And it is the great success of the film. It is more effective as story between the love of Elf and Man, which is a more pleasingly intimate enchantment. It redeems the movie in that it is not just a narrowing of the material for the convenience of the format, but enlarges the story into, and in a way, closer to its origins.

The story harkens back to earlier times, seeking to bolster the difficulty film will have in doing so; again, it is motion picture's nature to be immediate.

Gollum debating himself could not be as dramatic as a literary moment, and also punctuates the originality of the filmmakers. But it is an incident to the overall plot.

While the love story between Elf and Man is a great liberty taken by the filmmakers, Tolkien's greatest theme, the collusion of psychological and environmental devastation, is dropped. This is one reason why the aerial scenery falls so flat. We expect an epic landscape, but this kind of landscape is perhaps Tolkien's greatest effect. Tolkien's epic landscape excels in comparison to all of literature. It is perhaps unequalled, but that is another essay.

Most of all, this detracts from the characterization of Treebeard. That Treebeard moves is great drama in the books. In the film, it is expected, and not nearly so significant. It is not because our imaginations create a better Treebeard that can be simulated. It is because the long descriptive passages about Nature converge on the meaning of Treebeard's existence. Ents move only in regard to global events.

The meaning of Treebeard is further degraded in showing the destruction of Isengard as a spectacle of rampaging Ents. Jackson knew that the audience would demand to see such a spectacle.

But Tolkien did not dramatize the event. Tolkien is not inclined to dramatize mayhem, but more important to the overall structure of Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, dramatizing, or making a spectacle of the destruction of Isengard would celebrate the destruction of Saruman, ruining the delicate tone of a fallen, yet possibly redeemable hero.

The storyline of Saruman is directly connected as anti-thesis to the long intimate passages describing Nature. This is the most important cultural effect, lacking in the movie. One could say it is impossible to film, but it can be voiced.

If one were quick to dispute, the origination of an entire industry of epic fantasy is certainly a phenomenon. But this is not as far reaching as the global turning of industry to greater environmentally responsible. JRR Tolkien's story of the devastation of human personality is inextricably linked with environmental degradation. Tolkien's voice is at the forefront of this global issue.

Monuments? It is too neat to say that Jackson's innovations in special effects, enabling and excelling in the visualizing of Lord of the Rings in three dimensions, balances with Tolkien's own invention and care to tradition. But in way, it does.

These two works, Jackson's being the sub-sub creation, are works to which Art History will refer. For in both cases the mighty scale of conception and the excellence in execution are rarely equaled.

Lord of the Rings will be produced again. In departing from Jackson's Lord of the Rings, there should be a more faithful use of tense. Perhaps six movies, for whatever length of time needed (the standard two to three hours in length is diminishing as a convention) following the value of preservation and the tone sadness in the books with greater fidelity. It may not be so entertaining as Jackson's. However, what is Entertainment changes quite profoundly from generation to generation.

Parenting a Successful Child Actress - Keka Palmer

Born Lauren Keyana Palmer, you may remember Keke from her performance in the critically acclaimed, award-winning film Akeelah and the Bee, but Keke was far from wet behind the ears when she starred in her role as Akeelah Anderson.

As a small child growing up in Robbins, Illinois, Keke showed her parents Laurence and Sharon Palmer that her performance skills packed a lot of power when she belted out "Jesus Loves Me" in her church choir.

In their home recording studio, Keke's mother Sharon helped Keke harness her vocal abilities, and both parents were dedicated to taking her on auditions and helping her to perfect her acting skills. In 2004 Keke landed her first big role in Barbershop 2: Back in Business playing the part of Queen Latifah's niece. At this point, it was more than apparent that Keke had star-potential, so the family left behind their newly purchased home and their secure jobs to head to California.

Keke's accomplished resume includes a role on the CBS series Cold Case, a national K-Mart commercial, and even a Screen Actors Guild Award nomination for her role in Wool Cap. She is currently the youngest actress to ever receive a nomination in a Lead Actress category. She has also won the 2007 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture for her role in Akeelah and the Bee. She also co-starred in the highly-rated Disney Channel Original movie Jump In.

Though her acting career has blossomed, Keke considers music her first love and has signed with Atlantic Records. Her newest album "So Uncool" includes an ode to her Chicago roots. The Palmer's decision to leave the Chicago area in pursuit of Keke's dreams turned out to be a good one, but they were definitely challenging times. In his interview with Children In Film, Laurence Palmer talks about the challenges of being a Power Parent.

INTERVIEW WITH LAURENCE PALMER

On Education

CIF: How did you/do you school your children?

LP: We came to California in November of 2003 and home-schooled our children under the Illinois guidelines for a semester until we found out about the California program Options For Youth, which Keke still attends and our oldest daughter Loreal graduated from this past spring.

CIF: What are the challenges of dealing with a school-aged child who is also working?

LP: Keke is a very social kid. Our main challenge with her is finding time where she can socialize with other children. We make sure she gets to some birthday parties, skating parties and movie outings with her friends. My wife Sharon or our 18 year old daughter Loreal or I accompany her depending on the outing and the other parent's participation.

On Getting Started in Show Biz

CIF: What actors inspired your child (in her work) or you to get her into this field?

LP: Keke was inspired by Brandy, Rave, Tia and Timara Mowery and Kyla Pratt. My wife and I were professional theater actors in Chicago and I think that helps us in understanding her desire to do this and how she approaches this business.

CIF: How many auditions did you go on before the first job?

LP: Keke's first audition was for the Lion King in Chicago. She made the Saturday cut and on Sunday, out of 400 kids, she made it down to the last 15 before she got cut. For a kid who never had an acting lesson and only did a couple of school plays, we thought that was great. After that we got her an agent. Before we signed with the agent she auditioned for American Juniors where she won a trip to California and made it to the top 33. Her first audition with the agency was for Barbershop 2 and she got the part!

On Working in Entertainment

CIF: Does your child want to be in entertainment for her whole life or does she want to do something else as an adult?

LP: Keke has a desire to eventually produce and direct after she finishes college, but now she wants to do this, and as long as she keeps her grades up she can. She can also say at anytime that she's done with acting and doesn't want to do it anymore and we will take her out of the business.

On Parenting a Child Actor

CIF: What is the biggest mistake you've made as a parent in entertainment?

LP: Nothing comes to mind - Keke's only been in the business for four years and we are still learning the business. We usually try to adapt and adjust to the situations that come into our life. Years from now I'm sure it will be easy to answer that question.

CIF: Are you ever afraid that your child will fall inline with the negative image of child stars?

LP: I would have to say yes. We just continue to go to church, pray together and remain parents. She has to follow our rules and she has to respect her older sister and she has to be an example to her younger brother and sister.

CIF: What advice would you give other parents just starting out?

LP: I would advise them to always remain parents. Kids can not play on sports teams with bad grades or bad attitudes and they should not be allowed to act if they display those same qualities. As a child you don't have the right to act - it is a privilege. As parents we have to let our children know constantly what is right and what is wrong. We must teach them to respect themselves and others.