Read the Cliff Notes, or Watch The Video? Why Not Both?

I suppose that, looked at from the right angle (and by that I mean “marketing”), this is genius. The Cliff’s Notes people are teaming up with AOL to create short video versions of the famously shortened classics.
Although they still clearly exist, I have to assume that the rise of Google pretty much killed the Cliff’s Notes market. Once upon a time you had to borrow it from a friend, get it out of the library, or heaven forbid go buy your copy at the store. Now you just google “Romeo and Juliet summary” or your own favorite variant thereof, and presto, 9 times out of 10 you’ve got a free answer to your questions.
All they’ve got left, really, is the brand. You can still get Cliff’s Notes, but why would you? Because something in your brain tells you that their quality is better than just googling the answer.
So, they’re hoping to carry that brand over into the video market. Just like with google, there’s plenty of video already out there for short, amusing versions of Shakespeare. First one that came to mind, 90 Second Macbeth:

See what I mean about quality? Do you want to sift through a YouTube’s worth of these? Or would you rather just fire up iTunes and pay 99 cents for something that’s professionally produced by the people that made their name summarizing classic literature? (Note, I have no idea if 99cent iTunes downloads are in their plans, it just seems like a logical distribution mechanism…)

Thy Week In Geek : January 23 – 29, 2011

Introducing a new feature that will hopefully go out every Monday, where I summarize last week’s most interesting posts for those folks who may not be stopping by on a regular enough basis, and missing out when they scroll off the main page.
Last week started out slow, with nothing to write about Sunday, and even Monday little more than a personal anecdote about my 4yr old doing Hamlet while he brushes his teeth.
Tuesday didn’t herald much else, other than a revisit with the Alaska Bard-a-thon, a project that I first wrote about back in 2007 that is still going strong.
Wednesday, things started to pick up. I though that Eddie Izzard doing Christopher Walken doing Shakespeare would have been the big hit, but Bardfilm dropped a new list on us – Shakespeare Internet Initialisms – that absolutely eclipsed Mr. izzard. (To be fair, Bardfilm and I promoted the holy heck out of his post on Twitter, and dear Eddie had little to stand on other than the drawing power of Christopher Walken :)). Right in the middle I dropped in a quick post about how to interpret Stephano’s band of would be murderers in The Tempest, but I think my single got lost between those two big home runs.
Thursday had nothing exciting for us.
And then came Friday, where I unknowingly opened up a serious can of Othello worms, first by asking what exactly an “ancient” was and what that means about Iago and Othello’s relationship. That then led to the big controversy of the week about whether Othello really did sleep with Emilia, as well as some side discussion about how the age of a character (when Shakespeare doesn’t tell us) determines how you play it, which in turn led to some stories about actors’ favorite backstories.
And last but not least, don’t miss the final story of the week (which I posted late on Friday) about All The World’s An Ape, the theatre review blog authored by a 14yr old who is trying to see every Shakespeare play in the span of 2 years. He’s seen 28 of them already, including Al Pacino’s Merchant and Christopher Plummer’s Tempest. I’m seriously jealous!
There you have it. If you missed any, feel free to go back an have a look! Comments remain open, and via that Recent Comments widget in the blog sidebar people will see what you write, so don’t feel like the post has scrolled off therefore there’s no more reason to comment.
Also, feedback always welcome. Like this feature? Want it to change in some way? Is Monday a good day? I picked Monday morning because the only other logical time would be either a weekend day, or Friday. Weekends are no good because I’m generally busy with family, plus traffic is very low anyway and nobody’s going to see the recap posts. Friday would be good, but Friday’s also often a very busy post day (see Ape post at 11pm!) so if I tried to summarize the week during the day I’d inevitably miss something.

Shakespeare Karaoke

This looks interesting.

Shakespeare in Action, a Toronto-based theatre company that has been performing in schools for more than 20 years, will launch its virtual lab of Bard-themed activities Thursday. It includes an interactive program in which students are inserted into the scene of a play by reading the lines for the role of Romeo, Juliet, Hamlet, and the like, as they scroll along a computer monitor. Students will also be able to play Shakespeare mad libs, inserting new verbs and nouns into the nearly 500-year-old scripts, or practise eloquent insults such as, ‘Thou churlish fat-kidneyed codpiece.’

Stay tuned. I’ll have to check that out!

Release The Gnomes!

With Gnomeo and Juliet just two weeks away, the press onslaught has begun. Today we have a quick video of Elton John and his partner David Furnish talking about how, by changing the ending, they turned a tragedy into the greatest love story ever told. Ummm… what? Do they think they’re the first ones to think of that?
“Hey David?”
“Yes, Elton?”
“You know, if they just didn’t die at the end, this would be a really romantic story.”
“Genius!”

What Antony Really Said

Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar paints such a perfect picture of what happened on March 15, 44 BC that we often confuse what really happened with what Shakespeare told us. Did Shakespeare really say “Et tu, Brute?” Did Antony really ask friends, Romans and countrymen to lend him their ears?
Well, apparently we do know the answer to that last part, as Antony’s funeral speech for Caesar was actually documented at the time?! Obviously this is old :), but I’ve never seen so it’s new to me. Apparently the historian Appian wrote down a report (not a direct account) of what was said.

‘It is not right, my fellow-citizens, for the funeral oration in praise of so great a man to be delivered by me, a single individual, instead of by his whole country. The honors that all of you alike, first Senate and then People, decreed for him in admiration of his qualities when he was still alive, these I shall read aloud and regard my voice as being not mine, but yours.’

He then read them out with a proud and thunderous expression on his face, emphasizing each with his voice and stressing particularly the terms with which they had sanctified him, calling him ‘sacrosanct’, ‘inviolate’, ‘father of his country’, ‘benefactor’, or ‘leader’, as they had done in no other case. As he came to each of these Antony turned and made a gesture with his hand towards the body of Caesar, comparing the deed with the word.   

Absolutely fascinating reading.