Friday, September 13, 2024

House of Cards






The U.S. flag code states: “The flag should never be displayed with the union down, except as a signal of dire distress in instances of extreme danger to life or property.” But Americans have long had their own interpretation of “dire distress.” An inverted flag was used to protest slavery at a July 4, 1854, rally held ...6 Jun 2024


Of names and history 


In my world names mean everything. I am told that the majority of historians have a basis upon which their relationship to the past interpretation of it falls. Mine is names. Not civilizations, not cycles, not religions, not instruments of warfare just names. 


Reinveting ourselves


In this you might come to appreciate the quick transition that many make from acting to getting into producer roles a thing that came to my attention through the 24 Series as well as Prison Break. I mean you can only be an actor for a few episodes before you tire from being told what to do and maybe even chosing to play the role of director.


Give credit where credit is due


With this in mind therefore watch House of Cards not so much the content as much as the credits and see if you can identify some of the names that make up the line up and that feature in the show. 

I find it hard to idenify an episode that stands out, but i think i really like Episode 4. 


On Transitions


This is a transitory episode and one amplified with quite a lot of decision making. A wife having to chose between a former lover and a boring but calculating husband. A father having to select between more manipulation and the loss of a constituency he loves. A story juxtaposing one NGO building wells and marking them out in colors verses a two man team of strategists making choices for democratic votes and republican votes as it seeks to change the top four positions in the country, a son and daughter chosing between mother and girl friend in light of the need for pop tarts or better looking breakfast meals cooked by dad, an office romance who must chose between her seemingly negligent husband and his family in a decision she might end up regreting for being to harsh or a young lady drawn to the mystery of an older man who has made her career and an old firm whose toxic office politics threatens to ruin her.


Can this type of dialogue be matched by A.I? 


It is difficult to see this type of masterly work with dialoge and narration being replicated by a non human. Large Language Models (LLM) build off of systems that already exist. The generative AI tool writes based on a library that you and i have created of our works whose knowldege it then utioizes to create something similar in style to your work. So no. If i can rent some of powerful resources that are available with these supercomputers and use those services to store my works and maybe fish out ideas for future projects then i might succeed but at this point, most of the works thst writers have published exist in some form or another in digitized form. 


Tragedy Strikes 


The style utilized by the show of narrative and direct conversations with the soon to be VP makes it almost feel like a documentary or a journey into the life of a heroic man who is keen to teach us his trade. But this quickly changes when we watch him pounce on his enemies in later episodes with utmost ruthlessness. He is calculating, funny, witty but also quite cruel. After costing up to him as your guide into the complex world of American politics, you are drawn away in disgust that your leader and mentor is after all a man whose ambitions will drive him to a path where no obstacle will survive his rage. But it’s too late you have already taken notes and laughed at his jokes and taken a front row seat in his life and are now an accessory to his acts. While his more laid back wife shows more restraint, she too will stop at nothing to make a point to an appointee who decides to go back on a promise and sue her. Her calculating moves to corner her foe are legendary. But she is quick to calm down unlike her husband. That they make a great team is a fact we are left appreciating and the tolerance for each other’s infidelity is noteworthy. 

 

Billions




I am no where far into the series to develop an in-depth opinion of the shoe but I think that I like what I see so far. 

I did a search a few months ago on some must watch shows for those who want to understand 2008, 1989 and the 1930s Great Depression. The shows below made an appearance. 





Most of my thinking about movies and learning comes from a time I spent as part of the comms team for a mental health NGO in Uganda and part of our assignment was to review films that explored the subject of mental health and offered some insights into the same. I supposed as a result of that experience I have consequently developed a love for film and its capacity to shed light on different complex subjects. 


Billions therefore falls in this category of must watch series. It is a story about a wealthy young man who is and has made a healthy chunk of change from the. Markets and who is as things seem likely to continue making a lot more at least as long as he can wiggle his way around an attorney who is bent on bringing him down. 

The attorney has a story of his own and does his smart and kinky wife. This reminds me of another show that deals with the incredibly valuable and talented people in our lives who have strange sexual habits but who on the surface function at a rather effective level. 

Just two episodes into the show and there are a few scenes worth mentioning. The first is a relationship with the past. The show makes great effort to help us understand just how Important and sentimental wealthy people are and how these old relationships inform how they invest. There is a pizza shop that is about to close but the protagonist will have nothing of it. It has the best pizza in his city. Besides the owner of the shop was nice to him when he was a nosy kid struggling to find a safe place in the city. 

The second is an experience he had with a man and family for which he was a caddy during a rough patch in his life. The family for which he served fires him in an unfair incident and this experience stays with him. As fate would have it, he comes into a part of the city where a building bears the name of the infamous man that fired him from his low paying golf job. He decides to change the name replacing it with his own. It will cost the desperate family but instead of offering the full amount he offers them the same figure that he was paid…except of course a much lower offer than initially agreed. Then there is a lesson about why you should not mess with the wives of influential men. I think this part mirrors an episode of House of Cards in which the Vice President’s Wife, herself a tour de force takes on a staff member who decides to take her to court. In Billions though, it is an issue of respect and a threat that the Billionaire’s wife makes quite publicly to the hitherto clueless former friend. She find herself expelled from all her clubs and humiliated and her son barred from getting into an Ivy League university. 

The rest of the show is a conversation or a back and forth between the two major players as they eat away at their enemies one close friend at a time, often getting personal and involving unfaithful fathers.