Who knew that in 2008 there were still coffee shops without free wifi? Decaf mocha in hand, I sat down in my local Starbucks for some internet research only to find myself completely offline. Bummer. Fortunately, like a boyscout, I came prepared with a high resolution analog information storage device called a ‘book’. Older patrons smiled up at me from their papers while the younger crowd rolled their eyes dramatically between texting sessions on their Treo’s and jam sessions on their MP3 players.
I have noticed that the rituals of my youth are starting to loose meaning. We used to schedule our evenings around our favorite shows (Friday nights with reruns of the original Star Trek). Prep our tape recorders for radio countdown shows to grab our favorite music. Even go out on Saturday night to the movie theater. We had to earn or ad-laden entertainment through monastic dedications of commitment, and gosh darn we were thankful!
Well, not really. It came as a realization last night to how much of a pain those commitments were. I was on the site Hulu.com and having scheduled half a dozen shows to queue up episodes for me to watch whenever I want, I was drifting in and through old-geek nirvana. I felt liberated. I also felt I was somehow cheating. My friends tell me that I need to get over it, oh and to also get a DVR.
During the recent weeks of the financial crisis on Wall Street, I have tried to keep up with my Wall Street Journal. The desire was there, I only lacked the spare hour to really get through some of the denser articles. Old me would have given up. New me found Planet Money Podcast, an NPR production that has covered this historic event with an inch thick coating of modern journalistic audio goodness. Podcasts as a news feeds can fill those down minutes in your day when you are waiting in line at the bank or cleaning the kitchen. I like This American Life for yard work and cooking. Peter Sagal and Carl Kasell help with the dishes.
I’m not of the pirate persuasion, so movies still cost me money. I’m still awestruck, though, at the myriad ways I can legally get my occasional flix fix. October signals horror movie month in my brain so having choices like Comcast On Demand, Apple iTunes movie store, Amazon UnBox, Hulu.com and Netflix over Internet has been both a blessing and a curse. Sony won the next gen DVD war just in time for streaming content to come in and wash out their footings.
There are still holdouts in my life that are time-honored events that demand a commitment. Sitting in a college football stadium with a hot dog on a sunny, crisp fall day while the kids play down on the field will never be replaced by tape delay. Not in my lifetime, anyway.
Photo attributed to G & M @ Flickr CC