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Name: Private | Gender: M | Member Since August 16, 2006
Current Level: Superstar | Email: Private
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Dumb cnn articles

Posted on: August 4, 2008 1:38 pm

A few months ago a the new Indiana Jones movie was coming out, and CNN had an article about archeologists who say that real archeology is nothing like what you see in an Indiana Jones movie. Really? You mean you don't fight off Nazi's while destroying half of an ancient temple to get to a gold idol? Duh! Most people are quite aware that archeologists spend much of their time excavating a site, slowly, just to retrieve some fragments of an object. Which they then use to write up a paper about the site.  I don't think this article enlightened anyone. I'm not just picking on CNN, if you do a google search for "archeologist say Indiana Jones is not real" you will get quite a few hits on the subject.

Then about a month ago I saw an article where the FBI crime lab says the t.v. show CSI is unrealistic. Again, Really? You mean scientists working in a lab isn't as exciting as they make it out to be on t.v.? Huh, archeology is out as a career choice, now so is being a lab technician.

Todya on CNN if you go to the Health section, there is an article that has this headline. Study: Kids' fast-food meals not so healthy. No Freakin Way. Fast Food isn't good for you? Shocking. I thought cooking food in oil was the best way. Did someone really have to waste money by doing a study for figure this out.

I am beginning to think that Americans have completely lost Common Sense.

Reputation: 97
Level: Superstar
Since: Jan 26, 2008
Posted on: August 4, 2008 7:18 pm

Dumb cnn articles

Same can be said about disillusional Dale Jr. fans who think before every race that he's going to win. Sorry this Sunday Jr. will NOT win. It's a myth!

Here's a stupid article that never should have made the news... I mean of course Batman's voice is going to be deep and kinda scary.. to put fear in the criminals... and he doesn't want his voice to sound like Bruce Wayne... stupid news!!

What's with Batman's voice in 'Dark Knight'?

NEW YORK (AP) -- Though "The Dark Knight" has been a bona fide cultural event, boasting rave reviews and boffo box office, it hasn't been immune to criticism. Some have quibbled with its political undercurrents, and others have criticized a muddled theme.

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<!--===========CAPTION==========-->As Batman, Christian Bale's voice is deeper and raspier than his voice as Bruce Wayne.<!--===========/CAPTION=========-->

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But here's the critique most widely held: Why does Batman talk like the offspring of Clint Eastwood and a grizzly bear?

Donning the costume for the second time, Christian Bale has delved deeper into the lower registers. As Bruce Wayne, his voice is as smooth as his finely pressed suits. But once he puts the cape on, the transformation of his vocal chords is just as dramatic as his costume change.

Particularly when his rage boils over, Bale's Batman growls in an almost beastly fashion, reflecting how close he teeters between do-gooder and vengeance-crazed crusader.

"The Dark Knight" hauled in $43.8 million to rank as Hollywood's top movie for the third straight weekend, fending off "The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor," which opened a close second with $42.5 million. It has earned $394.9 million in just 17 days, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Though much of the voice effect is Bale's own doing, under the guidance of director Christopher Nolan and supervising sound editor Richard King, the frequency of his Batman voice was modulated to exaggerate the effect.

Critics and fans have noticed.

"His Batman rasps his lines in a voice that's deeper and hammier than ever," said NPR's David Edelstein.

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The New Yorker's David Denby praised the urgency of Bale's Batman, but lamented that he "delivers his lines in a hoarse voice with an unvarying inflection."

Reviewing the film for MSNBC, Alonso Duralde wrote that Bale's Batman in "Batman Begins" "sounded absurdly deep, like a 10-year-old putting on an 'adult' voice to make prank phone calls. This time, Bale affects an eerie rasp, somewhat akin to Brenda Vaccaro doing a Miles Davis impression."

Before the similes run too far afield, it's worth considering where the concept of a throaty Batman comes from.

In his portrayal on the '60s "Batman" TV series, Adam West didn't alter his voice between Bruce Wayne and Batman. Decades later when Tim Burton brought "Batman" to the big screen in a much darker incarnation, Michael Keaton's inflection was notably -- but not considerably -- different from one to the other.

But it was a lesser-known actor who, a few years after Burton's film, made perhaps the most distinct imprint on Batman's voice. Kevin Conroy, as the voice of the animated Batman in various projects from 1992's "Batman: The Animated Series" right up until this year's "Batman: Gotham Knight," brought a darker, raspier vocalization to Batman.

Conroy has inhabited the role longer than anyone else and though animated voice-over work doesn't have the same cachet as feature film acting, there are quarters where Conroy is viewed as the best Batman of them all -- certainly superior to Val Kilmer or George Clooney.

The animated series are notable because they drew on the DC Comics of Batman as envisioned by Frank Miller, whose work heavily informs "Batman Begins" and "The Dark Knight." (Bale and Nolan were unavailable to comment for this story.)

As Batman has gotten darker, his voice has gotten deeper. As some critics suggest, Bale and "The Dark Knight" may have reached a threshold, at least audibly.



Reputation: 99
Level: Superstar
Since: Aug 16, 2006
Posted on: August 4, 2008 8:57 pm

Dumb cnn articles

I saw that article too. Thought it was a waste of time as well.

How about this title for an article.

How cheaper oil can hurt you

I read the entire article, and I'm still not sure how cheaper oil is going to hurt me.

I think the funniest thing I read on cnn was last year. I was reading an article about home prices. The guy wrote "Half of the houses on the market sell for more than the median, and half sell for less" My first thought was a big, No effin Sh**. If you sort a list of numbers in order, whatever number is in the middle is the median. If there are two, it is the average of the two. So there is no way you could have more than half of any group being above or below the median, it is a statistical impossibility.