cellio: (Default)
[personal profile] cellio
I bought tickets for Les Mis this afternoon. I've never seen the show (though I've heard the soundtrack, once, and enjoyed it). Dani has seen it. It's been a long time since we've been to a show (not counting last winter's semi-failed opera experiment), and I'm looking forward to this. Mind, at 50 bucks per ticket this isn't something we're going to do *often*, but...

The semi-failed opera experiment was that I couldn't read the running translation ("super-titles"?), not a failure in the play per se. It looked like it was a good show; I wish I could have followed it better. (Yes, I did read the synopsis before going; that's what allowed me to follow it at all.) Operas where you can't understand the words are kind of a bummer, which is why I also don't attempt Gilbert & Sullivan any more. Well, I'd consider a top-rated professional production, but no more ameteurs. It's hard material to do with suitable enunciation, especially if your theatre's sound system isn't top-notch.

Speaking of language issues, I find myself wondering about something in last week's Enterprise episode. This episode involved Our Heroes trying to infiltrate another culture, which of course posed a language barrier. They were carrying hand-held translators, which is fine for comprehension, but how would such a device permit them to *speak* in that language? Most of the time when we've seen the universal translator in action it's been over a comm channel, so inserting that step isn't hard, but it doesn't work for face-to-face interaction where you're trying to hide the existence of the gadget.

In general Enterprise seems to be mindful of language issues, so I'm kind of surprised they tripped up on this one.
From: [identity profile] sethcohen.livejournal.com
Yet logic is a discipline, while knowledge deficits can be resolved by hiring an expert (some of whom are quite cheap. Me, for example...I give away my knowledge for nothing!) the way many science based shows do. ER, for example, has more than one medical expert. They still get things wrong, of course, but if they didn't have the expert they'd look stupid all the time, rather than occasionally.

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags