Archive for March, 2010

31
Mar

Route 66: Season 1, Vol. 2

   Posted by: admin   in Route 66

  • ROUTE 66 is aic American TV series that only gets better with time. The first season alone boasts appearances by Lee Marvin, Leslie Nielsen, and E.G. Marshal as well as tough, thought provoking storylines penned by Academy Award-winner Sterling Silliphant. The series follows the experiences of the poor boy/rich boy duo of Buzz and Todd as they hit the road in the 1960s’ spirit of self-discover

Product Description
Now the second half of Route 66′s first season is available for the first time and has been digitally transferred from the original masters. The television series, which aired 1960-64, is one of the most brilliant dramas to emerge from the ’60s, famous for its catchy Nelson Riddle theme song, intriguing characters, top-drawer writing and stellar guest appearances. The original “road trip” drama, this classic television series was one of the most highly rated of the era, establishing the Corvette as an American icon.

Infinity Entertainment Group has been very excited to bring the iconic television program Route 66 to DVD for the first time. We have taken great care in restoring and packaging this beloved classic for collectors. However, it recently came to our attention that there is some confusion in the marketplace about some of the technical aspects of this restoration process.

A key decision in the digital restoration of the series was whether to retain the original full screen 4 x 3 aspect ratio (old tube televisions) or to update to a widescreen format with a 16 x 9 aspect ratio (new digital TVs). Since the restoration process utilized the original 35mm film assets, the goal was to do a high definition transfer, updating the aspect ratio for broadcast on new HD TVs. High Definition transfer which requires an update to the 16×9 aspect ratio for new HD TV Broadcast and future Digital Media delivery, i.e. Blu Ray DVD and HD Internet.

In this new widescreen format, without vertical cropping the program would appear distorted. During the film transfer, the post production house used a process called tilt and scan which allows a Telecine technician to examine each scene individually and center the frame on the action. Unfortunately, in extreme close-ups, the cropping may occasionally intrude on the original framing, sometimes cutting off a portion of the top of the head.

While we tried to remain as true as possible to the original programming, our overall goal is to not only make the program available once again on television, but to optimize it for the next generation of broadcast and television standards.

Infinity Entertainment Group is committed to bringing quality programming and relies on the support of our valued customers to do so.Amazon.com
The irresistible call of Route 66, the classic TV anthology series and the venerable Mother Road herself, is best summed up in a bit of dialogue in the episode, “Welcome to Amity,” one of the 15 episodes that concluded Season One contained on this four-disc set. Yet another stranger in distress urges self-proclaimed “searchers and look-arounders” Tod Stiles (Martin Milner) and Buz Murdoch (George Maharis) to help her. “Where are we going?” Tod asks, as she bids them to follow her. “Let’s find out,” Buzz replies. Viewers happily followed Tod and Buz for four seasons on their cross-country odyssey in search of roots. Each week brought a new location, a new job, and new personal dramas in which they found themselves involved. In the gripping “An Absence of Tears,” they unwittingly help a vengeful blind woman buy the exact brand of gun and bullets that thugs used to kill her husband during a botched gas station robbery. In “Most Vanquished, Most Victorious,” they have 24 hours to find the daughter of Tod’s dying aunt. In “The Newborn,” they help an expectant Pueblo woman escape the clutches of the wealthy and powerful rancher whose late son impregnated her. No wonder that in the more lighthearted “Eleven the Hard Way,” Tod suggests to Buz that they take “a 48 hour furlough from other people’s problems” (no such luck; they no sooner find themselves in Reno helping two men win enough at the crap tables to save their dying town). Compelling stories, a vivid sense of place, and literate scripts were signposts of Route 66. While Tod and Buz “give lumps to some well-deserving people” (a climactic encounter with a street gang in “Most Vanquished, Most Victorious” is a great rumble), the show (and the cast) truly shine in the more emotional and dramatic moments. In “Like a Motherless Child,” orphaned Buz bonds with a lonely woman who fronts as a shill. While Tod is the studied one, it is Buz who gets the bulk of the scripts’ great, glorious riffs, as in “The Opponent,” when he and Tod visit a once-legendary figure from Buz’s Hell Kitchen neighborhood (“Would you take a detour to see Caesar or Napoleon? Those are the big boys you met in books. I met my own kings, face to face, in the back alleys”). Along for the ride are some great character actors, many in their earliest screen appearances, including Robert Duvall as “a trigger-happy kook” in “The Newborn,” Darrin McGavin as a boxer on his last legs in “The Opponent,” featuring Ed Asner (with hair!) as his trainer and Al Lewis (Grandpa from The Munsters) as a gym owner, and Walter Matthau at his schlubby best as a disreputable gambler in “Eleven the Hard Way.” As in Volume 1 there are no commentaries or interviews, but vintage TV and classic car buffs will cruise through nearly 20 minutes of commercials for Chevrolet and Bayer Asprin. –Donald Liebenson

Route 66: Season 1, Vol. 2

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  • Photographic Print Title: Road Passing Through a Landscape, Kingman, Mohave County, Arizona, USA
  • Artist: Panoramic Images
  • Size: 12 x 36 inches

Product Description

Road Passing Through a Landscape, Kingman, Mohave County, Arizona, USA is digitally printed on archival photographic paper resulting in vivid, pure color and exceptional detail that is suitable for any museum or gallery display. Finding that perfect piece to match your interest and style is easy and within your budget!

Road Passing Through a Landscape, Kingman, Mohave County, Arizona, USA Photographic Poster Print by Panoramic Images , 12×36

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Filler video showing that the desert can get cold too. The song is “Wizards in Winter” by the Trans-Siberian Ochestra (thanks to Hellbird567 for telling me). If you don’t hear any sounds, it’s because fucking WMG muted it, yet they don’t own the song.

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“Zefiry”: Jacek Baran, Jurek Szostak, Rysiek Kowalski, Wacek Niebielecki. Rhythm & Blues Band from Poland “The Zephyrs”

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29
Mar

Route 66 Tour Part 1

   Posted by: admin   in Route 66


Part of of the tour of Route 66 affectionately known as “The Mother Road” main street USA.

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29
Mar

Library Pirates of Mohave County sing

   Posted by: admin   in Mohave County Az


2009 Mohave County Library Staff Training Day Team Pirate Song at the end of a long training day! There are 10 Libraries in Mohave County Library District and two Bookmobiles. Mohave County Library is in Mohave County Arizona

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29
Mar

US Flag – New Kingman-Butler, Arizona Mouse Pad

   Posted by: admin   in Kingman Az

Product Description
This is a brand new custom made high quality mouse pad imprinted using the latest sublimation technology. This process embeds the image permanently and gives it a smooth surface with a crisp and vivid image. It is 8 1/2″ x 7″ in size and 1/8 thick. It has a non skid backing to prevent slipping. It will work with any type of mouse: ball, optical, laser.

US Flag – New Kingman-Butler, Arizona Mouse Pad

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28
Mar

Nat King Cole quartet – Route 66 (1950 )

   Posted by: admin   in Route 66


Nat king Cole quartet with Irving Ashby(gt), Joe Comfort(bs) Jack Costanzo (bongos)

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Mohave County Minutemen Exposing the New World Order Global agenda and fighting back the Illegal Aliens invasion in Mohave County AZ mohaveminutemen.com prisonplanet.tv See their video here www.youtube.com iadtrinlw&feature=player_embedded also see their youtube channel- www.youtube.com veminutemen

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“If you ever plan to motor west, travel my way, take the highway that’s the best . . . Get your kicks on Route 66.” Bobby Troup

From space many places on Earth look pretty flat. From the surface more obstacles become apparent: Granite mountains loom in places where chasms divide neighboring areas. Both of these perspectives tell you something you need to know. The space view shows you the most direct route as the proverbial crow flies, while the close-up view shows you obstacles that are well worth avoiding where that’s possible. In this article, the broadest perspective, like that from space, is the focus. That perspective includes expanding your business model (the who, what, when, why, where, how, and how much of your offerings) in volume-improving ways.

In evaluating how to expand your business model’s delivery of offerings and benefits, you should be guided by what will be easily understandable and desirable by your stakeholders (those who are affected by what you offer) . . . and where the adjustments will provide more profit for businesses and more effectiveness for nonprofit organizations. Business model innovation is something that many organizations struggle with. In this article, I’ve broken out the elements and added continuing examples to make innovative business model thinking and analysis easier to do. This article’s material will, however, be clearest to those who have already read about continuing business model innovation and are successfully doing it.

Expand What You Do Now

Unless you are providing a very small percentage of the needs of each customer or beneficiary, growing by 21-fold requires adding customers or beneficiaries. Because so many organizations can expand to provide 21 times the number of customers or beneficiaries, that’s a great place to begin. You should start by considering who you will serve as these added customers and beneficiaries and where those benefits will be delivered to make the expansion more practical.

Let me share a story with you that I first examined in an earlier book to help make that point about who and where clearer. A young married couple, Mr. William and Ms. Dorothy Hustead, bought a small store in a tiny town near the South Dakota Badlands. From 1931 to 1936, they struggled through the Depression serving the town’s 326 impoverished residents. One day in 1936, Ms. Hustead, bothered by the noise from cars on the nearby highway heading for Mount Rushmore, persuaded her husband to expand their business to serve these travelers. Mr. Hustead put up signs on the highway to draw visitors to their store, making a unique appeal. These signs said, “Free Ice Water . . . Wall Drug.” In those days before automobile air conditioning was common, that offer was a powerful appeal. Beginning from this humble expansion of its customer base, Wall Drug now serves more than 20,000 visitors a day during the summer in its Wall, South Dakota, store and many more on its Web site.

Who Is Served and Where

Let’s begin considering volume-expanding business models by looking at “who” is served. The lesson is to keep it simple. Change as little as possible while becoming more efficient and effective as an organization for your customers and beneficiaries. The simplest way to do this is to put more volume through an existing organizational structure without adding fixed costs or increasing the ratio of variable costs to sales.

In a business you will naturally first want to attract the most profitable potential customers. If current customers buy a very small percentage (say 1 to 2 percent) of their needs from you, such a profitable expansion may simply be possible by selling 40 to 50 times more to selected current customers. You are already spending time and money to gather a small part of these customers’ total requirements. In many cases you could avoid increasing your overhead costs to provide more products and services.

Let’s assume your current pretax profits are 10 percent of sales and your contribution to profits before overhead costs is 30 percent of sales. This circumstance means that selling more of the same offerings at the same price to an existing customer would almost triple the profit contribution margin on the increased sales. Were that to occur, a 20 times increase in volume would lead to a 60 times increase in profits!

See Example 1 if you want to explore how this could happen.

Example 1: Adding 20 Times More Revenues Without Increasing Overhead Costs Speeds Profit Growth

If corporate overhead cost remains constant while profit contribution grows to $6.3 million from $0.3 million, pretax profits expand by $6.0 million (60-fold) while earning the same profit contribution as a percentage of revenues.

Annual Pro Forma Financials Before Volume Expands

Revenues $1,000,000

Cost of providing offerings $700,000

Profit contribution $300,000

Corporate overhead cost $200,000

Pretax profit $100,000

20 Times Volume Increase with No Additional Overhead Expenses

Revenues $21,000,000

Cost of providing offerings $14,700,000

Profit contribution $6,300,000

Corporate overhead cost $200,000

Pretax profit $6,100,000

Copyright 2007 Donald W. Mitchell, All Rights Reserved

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