Wednesday, May 1, 2019

My Top Three Moments of Star Wars Celebration Chicago

A little more time than I would like to think has passed now since Star Wars Celebration 2019 in Chicago, and while the excitement of the moment has moved on, I am still filled with the buzz that comes with such a convention.  Here are my the top three moments of Star Wars Celebration 2019.

1. The Episode IX panel and trailer Friday morning.  I feel this was the most anticipated moment for many Star Wars fans, and for my experience, it happened right away on Friday morning. I did not get the lottery to get into any of the stage presentations of the panel, so my friend Cory and I decided to try to get to the Star Wars show stage to experience this much anticipated panel.  We ran a little late getting there because we made our way through the show store before the panel was to begin.  As we headed to the stage, it became clear that we would not get anywhere close to be able to see or hear.  So we went to a clear area and hunkered down with our phones and earbuds.  We had about a 20-second delay from the show stage presentation to our phone stream, so we could hear the crowd react and we knew when something good was coming.  I will never forget the interplay of the cast.  The relationships they display are strong which have shown in the chemistry between characters in the Force Awakens and The Last Jedi.  I look forward to seeing how that has grown in the Rise of Skywalker.  I will never forget the cheers and gasps of the crowd, 20-seconds ahead of my own cheers and gasps.  Ian McDiarmid appearing on stage following his Emperor cackle to say, "Roll it again."  The hairs on my arm raised as each moment passed.  After the panel concluded, Cory and I wandered the show floor directionless for a bit as we let the moments of the trailer sink in.

2.  The Podcast Meetup in the Arc Bar on Saturday night.  This was an amazing get together of dozens
of podcasts and fans.  It was inspiring to meet the variety of podcasters to learn their angle on Star Wars fandom.  I enjoyed the respect that we all share for each others' work.  Then to meet the listeners of our show was such an honor.  So many of the fans I know through Twitter handles and the positive comments on social media, but to meet these fans face to face was an honor.  It took me until about midnight to wade my way through the crowd from one end of the room to the other.

3.  The Coffee with Kenobi podcast live recording on the podcast stage on Sunday afternoon.  It all started with greeting fans who were lined up in the hallway prior to the show.  Then before the show as we were setting up, our guest, James Arnold Taylor (voice of Obi-Wan Kenobi in the Clone Wars) showed up with a friend, Catherine Taber (voice of Padme Amidala in the Clone Wars).  This was a huge surprise!  As the show started, I made sure to ask JAT how Obi-Wan Kenobi likes his coffee.  I was so excited that I don't even remember what he said.  I just remember the voice and reactions. The show was great as we shared our four biggest moments of the Star Wars Saga from the films, books, animated series, or comics.  First, it is such an honor to be a part of Coffee with Kenobi, but to see the fans of the podcast and Star Wars in the crowd is the real honor.  I am so happy that we bring a fan supported show that people enjoy as much as I always have.

What were your favorite parts of the Star Wars Celebration Chicago?  Share your thoughts below.  If you missed Star Wars Celebration 2019 in Chicago, I am sorry.  It was a great time, and I suggest catching as many of the panels through the Star Wars Youtube channel.  It is well worth the viewing.  Also, you can catch our daily reactions, panels and live broadcast at coffeewithkenobi.com

Baseball Broadcast #1 Sunday, April 28

Minnesota Twins vs. Baltimore Orioles

This last weekend, I had the opportunity to listen to the Minnesota Twins radio broadcast for two parts of a couple games.  The first was Friday night April 26 and the other was Sunday, April 28.  The Twins were playing home at Target field against the Baltimore Orioles.  The Twins swept the three-game weekend series.

This is part one of a summer-long series where I will be sharing my experience and thoughts on different radio broadcasts of Major League teams.  So here are my supposedly interesting thoughts on the Minnesota Twins radio broadcast:

My first impression of the broadcast was that it has a professional delivery with a very soft tone.  There was nothing loud about this broadcast.  Cory Provus, the play-by-play announcer, delivers the description of the game in a conversational style that didn't have what I would consider significant highs or lows.  Any Cubs fan who has spent time listening to broadcasts on WGN radio, might recognize some a bit of this conversational tone from Pat Hughes the Cubs radio broadcaster.  Provus used to do the pre and post game shows for the Chicago Cubs on WGN and he also sat in for Hughes during the middle innings of many games.  While the dynamics of Pat Hughes are quite different from Provus, the description, respect for the game and professionalism on air are very similar.

Where Provus may have picked up his conversation and descriptive style from Hughes, he developed his own soft-spoken delivery.  At one point in the game Friday night, Nelson Cruz, Eddie Rosario and C.J. Cron jacked back-to-back-to-back home runs. This is an exciting and rare show of power from any team in the major league.  Provus gave a slightly elevated but overall level description of the event.  What surprised me even more was that broadcast analyst, Dan Gladden, who I remember to be a pretty energetic player on the field for the Twins from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, was as level in his analysis and description of the trio of home runs.  This is not a good or bad judgemental observation by me, because it is the style of the broadcast.  It is the environment they have created, and it works for the broadcast.  My enjoyment of the game was not hindered by any lack of dramatic description of the play.  Even the engineers of the game, choose the soft approach with a quiet crowd mic throughout the game.

That said, Provus does a nice play-by-play delivery with plenty of description for the listener to create the image of the game in his or her head, and Gladden adds good color commentary that compliments the description of the play on the field.

It seems from this weekend of listening, that Provus calls the game for innings 1-4, then Gladden goes solo to describe the events in innings 5 and 6, then Provus rejoins Gladden in inning 7 to do comment, finally, Provus retakes the captain's seat to finish the game with Gladded back on game analysis.  Gladded brings a contrasting play-by-play call to Provus with a short descriptive style of telling the listener just the facts.  While a vast difference from the conversational style of Provus, it is a nice contrast in the middle of the game.  I don't know that I would want an entire game called in the style Gladden uses, but it works for the middle inning as contrast.

This broadcast would be a perfect middle of the summer kind of broadcast where it is a nice Sunday afternoon settling into the hammock by one of the 10,000 Minnesota lakes.  The delivery style of this broadcast encourages that middle of the game nap where you might doze off in the third or fourth inning and wake up in the seventh or eighth inning to catch the end of the game.

Are you a Twins fan or do you listen to the Twins broadcast with Cory Provus and Dan Gladden?  What do you think?  Did I catch the feel of the broadcast or did I commit an error.  Leave a comment, keep it clean and constructive, and let me know.  Stay tuned for my next installment where I will listen to another MLB broadcast and give my supposedly interesting thoughts.