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CBS, Mugar: Reality is so overrated

Next year's display? We can only hope. By Aughtomat, who also gives us this.Next year's display? By Aughtomat, who also gives us this.

The Globe talks to the guy who organizes the Esplanade fireworks, who basically goes, yeah, so we did some fake shots, big deal, David E. Kelley shoots his "Boston" shows in LA.

Prominently quoted is our own Kaz, who first noted the bogus shots.

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Why not superimpose Boston fireworks over Mount Rushmore, the Hollywood Sign, even God help us Yankee Stadium? Since they think - and I wish I could say that they're wrong - people care more about the spectacle then actually showing a live event the way it's going, why not get more people involved?

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When I mentioned this article was coming out on my Facebook page, a friend of mine said that next year they should do:

"Bill Russell slamming on Derek Jeter in front of Cheers with Belichick and Auerbach high-fiving while smoking cigars....and the fireworks in the background."

So...after work today, I'm gonna work on CBS's foregrounds for next year's fireworks for them and probably post them here so they can just come and get them.

Everyone else is free to join in with their own "Most Absurdly 'Boston' Foreground Shots" for next year's fireworks.

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1) Endless clip of Varitek shoving his glove in A-Rod's face

2) The A-Rod/Arroyo slap, with or without the handbag photoshopped in

3) A montage of execution scenes from the 4,300 Irish gangster movies of the last 5 years

4) For our would-be vice president, a clip of Paul Revere warnin' the British that the colonists were ready and willin' to exercise their 2nd Amendment rights

5) A montage of Norm's one-liners walking into the bar

6) The majestic Worcester skyline

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Each one of those is more brilliant than the last.

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Shaq in knee brace standing in front of the new Bill Russell statute next to the flying Bobby Orr statute in front of the OLD Boston Garden, which sits on the banks of the River Charles with Old Ironsides docked along the Longfellow bridge . . . and fireworks overhead.

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The whole Kennedy family, even the dead ones, in front of the Hancock Building with the fireworks in the background, with the fireworks also reflected on the front of the building's mirrored surface.

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The big finish:

John F. Kennedy, with arm draped over the shoulder of Tim Thomas, voice over: Ask not what you country can do for you...

[riff from Living Colour's "Cult of Personality", covered by Aerosmith or the Dropkick Murphys, plays, as visuals of Vinatieri's field goal, Dave Roberts' steal, Nicholson sneering in 'The Departed', Fisk waving the ball fair, Whitey's arraignment, Garnett screaming at the heavens, Mayor Menino, Boston Rob, Foulke flipping to first, and a shot of Matt Damon and Robin Williams play in rapid fire succession]

[12 minutes of fireworks]

[Bob's Furniture commercial]

[last 30 seconds of fireworks]

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Docked in view of Harvard Yard (as viewed from Mass Ave), with the fireworks behind.

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Raymond Burr sitting in a wheelchair with fireworks over his head.

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How about a display with the Stanley Cup, Lombardi Trophy and the (Baseball) Commissioner's Trophy sitting on a duck boat?

Or a moving truck stuck on a Storrow Drive on-ramp?

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Remember, the Stanley Cup is an NHL thing and that is strictly verboten on CBS.

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I want to see Willie Geist's disapproving glare.

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I didn't watch the show, but when I saw a still somewhere showing fireworks from behind Quincy Market, I could not for the life of me figure out the geometry - it made me think of those movies where people get off the streetcar at Haymarket and immediately run up Boylston Street.

Don't call it 'live' if it isn't.

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Ah yes. The infamous geographic skills of Jeff Bridges in Blown Away.

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I think you mean, "First to mention it on UH." Obv., plenty of us noticed it, but had other things to care about.

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"First noted" does not mean "first noticed".

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Varitek, splitting the uprights!

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I don't mind composite shots, as long as they're identified as composite shots, and thus, not reality. Yes, TV shows take liberties with filming places pretending to be the purported setting of the events, but you wouldn't do that for a reality-TV show, which I think the live broadcast of fireworks is.

I like pointing out impossible photographs involving the Moon. My favorite was in a gift shop in the formerly Sears Tower. There was a nice skyline panorama with the full Moon in the background. I said to my friend, "Unless Chicago moved to Antarctica, that view is impossible." Oh, and there are sunsets played in reverse to suggest sunrises.

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Do I think it is completely brainstrangling surreal to see a show set in Boston and filmed in Portland, OR? Yes, but I don't twist my knickers over it - that's make believe. The whole show is pretend.

HOWEVER, seeing the fireworks over Quincy Market in a supposed "live shot" is, well, just wrong. For starters, where were the people who would be hanging around if you could see them there? This is supposed to be "live" - not make believe drama. It makes me wonder what else they show that isn't real but pretends to be news.

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Yeah! It's like in 2008 when NBC broadcast the ceremony at the Beijing Olympics.

I was watching with my kids saying those were the most remarkable fireworks I'd ever seen (shape of footprints walking through the city).

My daughter asked my how do they do that?

I told her they must just have some amazing fireworks technology, special licenses to set off fireworks all through the city.

Turns out it was CGI!

I'm still furious.

Those twisters! Why are they twisting us like that?

Weird that this again is fake pictures of fireworks, broadcast as though they were real.

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Damn!

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No offense to Kaz, but I actually was the one who noticed them on Monday night, and email tipped the Boston Globe about this story on Tuesday. As far as I am concerned it really doesn't matter who noticed this first though. It matters that the story has finally been told. Maybe CBS and others can be held accountable for this disgrace.

Thanks,
David Perry

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Did you tip the Globe before 2 AM Tuesday? Because that's when I posted about it here on UHub...how do we know you didn't write to the Globe after seeing my comment late at night? ;)

But seriously, I have no idea how I became the point man for all of this other than being the first to comment on it here on UHub. I'm pretty sure if you check the subReddit for Boston, you'd find people who commented on it first. I'm just the face...you all (points to the crowd), you all are the true movement.

Viva la reality!!

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Kaz,

No way I want to get into this with you. We BOTH did a good thing. I noticed it on my own and was explaining to my wife as it was happening. Never saw your post or any others, before I told the Globe during the day on Tuesday (Sorry I actually had to go to bed, and get to work early the next day and so I didn't have any time to be sending late night emails.) I don't begrudge whatever publicity you have gotten, but I guess it would have been nice if Channel 5 called you AND me to do a TV news segment. I guess it would be nice to know that my "15 minutes of fame" was as bright as yours.

However, you are indeed correct. This is about the "movement". Hopefully CBS will get "spanked" enough over this that it won't happen again!!

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Couldn't just let it go, jealous of the attention someone else got? Ever think that maybe 10, 50 100 people emailed them but they thought Kaz's comments were most interesting?

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Letting it go as of...now!! Good job everyone!!!

:) David Perry

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I tweeted about it live!

(Checks her timeline.) Um. I thought about tweeting about it live!

Could have sworn I mentioned something about fireworks having to be over Brookline for that Fenway shot. Guess I was too busy laughing at the tv to hit the return key.

You win, Kaz! :)

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Didn't think it was newsworthy to report to the press. But I posted it to my facebook page. And no, I don't blog or tweet. I concede nothing, Kaz and it's even still on my profile page.

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Hey Kaz,
Again I'm sorry about that bs. That was petty and I've since had a needed attitude adjustment. I apologize.

Anyway I had an idea that I was hoping we could collaborate on so we can get some real changes to happen. I was hoping we could talk. Can you pls email me at:
d a p - p e rr y at c o m c a s t dotnet?

thanks and hope to hear from you soon,

:) David Perry

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The whole thing is a moot point, as watching fireworks on TV is akin to watching a TV test pattern. Fireworks cannot be experienced on TV and therefore it matters very little what false setting they are placed in (as obviously concurred by the producers of the event), although as a stickler for accuracy it does bother me.

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Gee, how . . . intellectual of you. What about the fact that they are lying to the public? Don't you think maybe even a little bit that they have a moral obligation not to lie to the public.

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James Kane begs David Mugar to stop destroying the tradition he once helped save.

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I hadn't known the deeper history behind the "Spectacular" until I read Kane's accounting of it.

I feel bad for Mugar because maybe he doesn't get enough credit for what he did to save the 4th from what it was in the early 70s, but I also feel that he's probably being manipulated by CBS to ruin some of the best parts (like 1812 right into Stars'n'Stripes & fireworks) in order to satisfy their commercial/corporate demands on the "show".

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Face it, events that were once very charmingly Bostonian such as the July 4th Pops Concert and First Night have morphed all out of proportion into bloated spectacle largely devoid of the original personality and color that once made them so charming. All the amateurs come out, the TV networks move in, and suddenly you've got half a million or more people at events that were not designed for such. It is no surprise that CBS falsely gave the national audience the "Cheers" images that they think Boston is.

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rendering of the fireworks!! Nice work.

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HAHAHA! Love the graphic

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was a hyperactive mindless mess. We were stuck at home and tried to watch it, but it was pretty unbearable -- cameras swooning in every direction, the inexplicable "Fireworks Over [insert Boston Landmark]" shots, and no 1812 Overture. We finally gave up. That's the last time I'm tuning in to this "live" program.

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on the local WBZ-TV-4 broadcast, around 9:30? (I would not know because I was standing on Memorial Drive by that time)

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I tuned in to WBZ specifically to watch that. I did not watch the rest of the show so I missed the controversial fireworks coverage.

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...oh, and the fireworks.

IMAGE(http://i.imgur.com/Dltwc.jpg)

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Hey at least you have a more plausible viewing angle in this entertainment-enhanced rendition than CBS's versions.

Kaz on the news? This is like when you finally see pictures of NPR people you've been listening to on your morning commute every day....better off left with the disembodied voices. I prefer to think of you Kaz as just some black on white electrons dancing before my eyes...

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There was a time, not so many years ago, when the July 4th concert was just one of a series of Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra concerts, presented over the course of a week or two from late June through mid-July.

A typical season would feature an Arthur Fiedler memorial concert, a show conducted by Harry Ellis Dickson (usually seated), an awesome Gospel Night, an Opera Night, several complete symphonies, some show tunes, and a liberal scattering of Leroy Anderson favorites. Each night ending with Stars & Stripes Forever.

This tradition gradually eroded, so that by 2003 there was only one Esplanade concert other than July 4 and the July 3 rehearsal. Since 2004, there have been none.

Fortunately, WCRB and the Boston Landmarks Orchestra have stepped into the vacuum in recent years; otherwise there would be no classical music at all on the Esplanade any more.

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Check out this Richard Dyer review from the Boston Globe of July 18, 2004 (you'll need to scroll about halfway down the page):

The problem is that the show doesn't really represent what the institution does and what it stands for; it's been years since the concert has been played by members of the Boston Symphony, who are otherwise occupied at Tanglewood. And the national telecast doesn't even adequately represent the event on the Esplanade, since it presents only the last quarter of the concert. At the same time, the presence of television has distorted the Esplanade experience out of all recognition; everything is timed to the requirements of the network and of commercials, destroying the rhythm and momentum of the live concert experience.
...
Still, for nearly three decades the most famous part of the Fourth of July program has been a performance of Tchaikovsky's "1812" Overture with the Tanglewood Festival Chorus, cannon fire, and an explosion of fireworks; local television host Lisa Hughes called it "the Pops' signature song."
 
Until a couple of years ago the overture came at the end, as the climax of the program. Now the overture begins before the network -- apparently terrified at the idea of 11 consecutive minutes of Tchaikovsky -- joins in; the last minute or so of the performance becomes part of CBS's opening credits, and there's a half-hour of concert still to go.

2004 was the second year CBS broadcast the event. I'm going to keep looking in the Globe archives to see what they said in 2003.

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Richard Dyer, on July 5, 2003:

The Pops's signature Fourth of July piece, Tchaikovsky's "1812" Overture, with chorus and a red-and gold burst of cannon fire at the end, was displaced from its usual position of honor at the close of the program; it was decreed that Tchaikovsky was too long-winded for network television. The much-invoked CBS "national audience" joined in after the overture was over but heard the last minute or so in a replay.

and on July 11, 2003:

The name of Arthur Fiedler is not invoked as often as it ought to be in the constant commentary by television personalities, and what has been happening on the Esplanade in recent years bears little relationship to his noble vision of high-quality concerts offered free to a mass audience. Since the first Fourth of July extravaganza, in 1974, Fiedler's vision has been steadily diluted. And because it has become such an expensive event, the number of other Boston Pops concerts on the Esplanade has dwindled.
...
Television has been a mixed blessing. Of course, it makes the event even more accessible and promotes the image of the city and the Pops to a nationwide audience. But TV's rhythm, driven by station breaks and commercials, is not the same as music's rhythm, and it was impossible for Lockhart, the Pops, and the soloists to develop any momentum for the live audience. And nobody, on the Esplanade or in the living room, wants to hear music surrounded by so much idle and empty chatter about what a fabulous time everyone is having.
 
And while CBS's presentation of the final half-hour of the concert brought a vastly enlarged audience, it disappointed - and angered - many fans outside the local area who are used to seeing the full show on the cable network A&E.
 
Two of the event's signature elements took place before CBS joined in - the patriotic singalong and Tchaikovsky's "1812" Overture (which was reduced to a brief recap to introduce the network part of the show, with talking over the music).
...
Lockhart and the Pops do not shortchange the public, but CBS did.
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