Le Reve at Wynn Las Vegas

Matching Nude ASCII Art Pieces with Playboy Centerfolds

I posted earlier this month the article ASCII Art Nudes versus Original Playboy Centerfolds where I show for several ASCII Nude pictures of my ASCII Nudes collection the original photograph that was used by the text artist.

I updated the original article, which showed the originals for 29 40 ASCII pieces, and added one more match that I found afterwards. Since then I even found two more matches, which I did not add to the article yet.

The obvious matches are taking care of and also the ones where the file name or content of the ASCII itself had useful and correct hints about the original photograph. I were also able to match a number of ASCII's to photographs where the ASCII had completely incorrect information, such as the wrong name of the girl.

Now it's tougher to find corresponding photographs and I could use some help with it. It is not such a bad job actually. You get to watch a lot of beautiful girls naked hehe.

I also ran into cases where I am not 100% sure, if I matched the ASCII with the right photograph. Like this one.

kelly kelly-Playmate_1960_08-portfolio-PM-A1-07-lrg

The arm position is right, the pose is the same. The breast size is about the same and the hair resembles also the photograph. I am pretty sure that I found the right photograph, but a second opinion would increase my confidence even more.

If you want to help matching ASCII pictures to Playboy photographs, then you will need in addition to the ASCII pictures from my gallery, also the Playboy Magazine photographs from all issues, right?

Guess what, I happen to have a collection of those :). I zipped the photographs up into one file for each decade of Magazine publications.

Playboy Magazine Centerfolds Photographs (Complete) and additional Photographs from the Mag:

Here is also a zip file with the collection of my work files. It includes PNG versions of all the ASCII art pictures and the already matched photographs. I also sorted the pictures where I did not find a match yet by the pose of the girl in the picture. I found out that this helps with finding a matching photograph. Poses like kneeling, sitting, lying and standing and "standing" broken down even further into "front", "behind", "left side" and "right side".

ASCII Nudes work Images
Zipped 38 MB* http://www.mediafire.com/?he22vyjndtj (Updated 04/2009)

*The 38 MB Zip file contains the photographs of the already matched pictures, the side by side pictures from my blog post, the original ASCII art pieces in text and PNG format, thumbnails and notes that might help with uncovering more original source photographs that were used by the text artists.

If you find matches, please post them in the comments section of this post. Post the PNG image file name of the ASCII picture and the image file name of the photograph that you believe to be the original.

Update: Including the picture above, I now have matched 40 ASCII art pieces and updated my original blog post with those matches. I matched "Anna", "Ingrid", "Kelly", "Susan", "nude330", "nude342", "nude353", "nude357", "nude1312" and "nude1317". I noticed that some of the originals used are not the Centerfolds itself, but other photographs from within the magazine as well (I am not surprised, but thought that I will mention it). My image collections contain some of those other images but by far not all of them. Also not included are the pictorials, which were also used for some of the ASCII art pieces.

Promo Video for ASCII Nude Collection

I also created a short promotional video for my ASCII Nudes collection and for my article about the match-up with Playboy Centerfolds. YouTube and MySpace made already a fuss out of it, because the video shows some nipples. It's not pornography for Christ's sake and the YouTube account warning for violation of their community guidelines was a bit too strong of a response for my taste.

 YouTube_CommunityGuidelinesViolation_ASCIINudesVideo_20090326_ScrShot-Notification

So I created a censored version for YouTube and MySpace where all nipples are covered, even the ASCII nipples.

That makes the stuff look even more funny than I wanted. You can see for yourself what I mean by that.

I put the uncensored version up on Vimeo.com, which I used to embed the video into this blog post as well. You can download the uncensored natural version of this video in 720x480 pixels resolution and .AVI format (XVID) at Mediafire.com as always. Backup link to video on Vimeo.com. Enjoy!

Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC

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Cirque du Soleil in Lecce, Italy - KA Show Videos

Cirque du Soleil gave a special acrobatic performance on December 5, 2008 during the Notte Bianca street festival in Lecce, Italy that consisted of multiple parts, involving dozens of artists.

Acts like Russian Bars, Spanish Web and other Aerial performances, Cyr Wheel, Wheel of Death and general dancers, singers and musicians as well as light projection and other special effects.

My 28 minutes video of these performances is based on the footage of several home made videos that I found on the web. The visual quality differs from good to poor, but I hope that I was able to capture the essence of the show. I replaced the audio almost entirely, but tried to be true to the actual music as good as possible. The original videos are still out there, if you want to see the true live recordings of the event.

Here is the 28 minutes video that I created about this special performance by Cirque du Soleil in Lecce, Italy.

 Backup Link to Video on Google Video

Cirque du Soleil - KA - Video Recording of the Entire Show

I was talking about the issue that non of the Vegas Cirque du Soleil shows are available on DVD and that video footage will leak out over time to cover the whole show, like in the case of Cirque du Soleil's epic show KA, which is performed live at the MGM Grand hotel and casino in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The raw videos of the show are available via torrent downloads, such as here (German Intro Narration, XVID, .AVI) and also here (French Intro Narration, MPEG-2 Format).

So I decided to lean myself a bit out of the window and sliced the video up into 9 pieces and put it up on my YouTube channel for Cirque du Soleil related videos of mine. Here is the link to part one. To find the remaining 8 videos, check out the play list that I created for this video series.

The Intro narration is in German (that's the version that I used for YouTube) and translates to:

On the way to a pageant to their honor, the imperial twins put their skills in the traditional art of sword fighting to the test. They have no idea on that day, about the real threats that lay ahead of them. About the great thunder that will soon put an end to the innocent lives that they were used to. About destruction and devastation that will drive an entire nation into exile and about the chaos of war that will soon separate the brave brother from his beloved sister. This is the story about the journey to self discovery of a young man and a young woman through their experiences with love, conflicts and the duality of KA, the fire that has the power to combine or to separate and the power to destroy or to enlighten.

Fast Facts about KA

  • Length of the show: about 90 minutes
  • Venue: The "KA Theatre" at the MGM Grand hotel & casino in Las Vegas, NV
  • Premiere(s): 26.November 2004/03.February 2005, in Las Vegas, Nevada
  • Official Show Homepage on the Web: http://www.cirquedusoleil.com/KA
  • People: 80 artists from around the world perform the show twice per day, 5 days per week and about 50 weeks per year
  • Show times: Tuesdays to Saturdays, one at 7:00 pm and a second show at 9:30 pm local time, No show performances on Mondays and Sundays
  • Over 100 crew members are working for the show in 8 or more technical and artist support departments, including wardrobe, make-up and wig personal.
  • The music is played live, by human-beings, every time, only about 2 minutes of pre-recorded audio is used throughout the whole performance
  • The total number of cast and crew for the show is about 266 people
  • The production cost for KA were higher than the combined cost of all Broadway productions that were released in the same year as KA
  • The custom build venue for the show inside the MGM has 1,951 seats
  • Every seat is equipped with its own loud speakers for optimal sound experience
  • The main stage of KA is called a "Gantry" made of 2 decks, one that can slide forward and backward and the other one which can be rotated and moved 360 degrees.
  • The main deck is 25x50 feet (8x16 meters) in diameter, weighs 300,000 lbs, which is more than a fully booked, loaded and gassed-up average-size jet airliner
  • If fully erected to its maximum height, artists perform their act 100 ft above the ground
  • Ticket prices for the show range from about $75 to $165 per seat and are available at the MGM box offices at MGM properties, via toll free phone # at (800) 929-1111 and on the web at http://mgm-cds.admission.com/ or http://www.cirquedusolei.com/CirqueDuSoleil/en/showtickets/ka/tickets/

The Creators of the Show KA

  • Show Director: Robert LePage
  • Director of Creation: Guy Caron
  • Music Composer: Rene Dupere
  • Set Designer: Mark Fisher
  • Costumes Designer: Marie-Chantale Vaillancourt
  • Props Designer: Patricia Ruel
  • Lighting Director: Luc Lafortune
  • Sound Designer: Jonathan Deans
  • Trainer for Aerial Performances: Andre Simard
  • Choreographer: Jacques Heim
  • Puppets Creation & Choreography: Michael Curry

For more Cirque du Soleil visit http://www.roysac.com/cirque

Regardless of the video, you should go and see it live, if you get to Vegas, because no video can substitute the live theatre experience. However, I do hope that this incident will cause MGM and Cirque du Soleil to rethink their policy about DVD releases of Vegas Cirque du Soleil shows and release those shows on DVD for people to buy legally. Not everybody can make it to Vegas and/or afford the ticket price to see the shows live. And also people like me, who saw the shows already, several of them even more than once, would like to have the DVD and watch it to refresh some of the good memories from the live experience.

Note: Cirque du Soleil had some of the 9 KA videos taken down by YouTube, so the play list is not complete anymore. However, the 9 segments can still be downloaded in AVI format from my file share at Mediafire.com

Part 1: http://www.mediafire.com/?znt5qzlwtdz
Part 2: http://www.mediafire.com/?wynyauglmzu
Part 3: http://www.mediafire.com/?jmomynjfzdk
Part 4: http://www.mediafire.com/?nzynximlmzt
Part 5: http://www.mediafire.com/?ymqyygvzy0t
Part 6: http://www.mediafire.com/?zdmzyynwymy
Part 7: http://www.mediafire.com/?mzjnjybytex
Part 8: http://www.mediafire.com/?molzthhyozw
Part 9: http://www.mediafire.com/?ojmlzummzyq

Enjoy and Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC

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ASCII Art Nudes versus Original Playboy Centerfolds

I put up last year a collection of 100 ASCII Art pictures that have nude girls as motive. Most of them originate from the pre-computer/ASCII art era, when teletype and its text art, RTTY art (pronounced "ritty"), where predominant and popular among hobby ham radio operators. Some of them are even older than that and might even date back to the time of keyboard art.

After I watched once more the video of RaD Man/ACiD and his presentation at the Assembly 2004 demo party in Helsinki, Finland about the history of text  art where he showed an example of nude teletype text art and then the original centerfold photograph from Playboy Magazine, I started doing some digging myself. So credits for the initiator and cause of this must go to him :).

As of today (update 08/2009), I was able to find the original photograph for 29 30 40 50 of the 100 ASCII nude images from my collection. I wanted to integrate them somehow into that page, but could not figure out a good way to do it yet. Big thanks to Brian who helped identifying a number of the latest additions and posted his findings at my blog, where I am asking for help with this.


To avoid holding things back forever, I decided now to write a blog post about it and show my findings that way.

I will show the original photographs of the old Playboy Magazine Issues next to the Image of the ASCII art version of it. I converted the original text images to PNG, because it makes it easier for this purpose. You can still find the originals in my collection to verify that those pictures really originate from text and are not some kind of Photoshop trick or something like that. I also flipped some of the ASCII images, if the centerfold was in landscape format instead of the usual "letter" style format.

I also was concerned about copyright issues that this might cause with Playboy Magazine, but old school RTTY (teletype) enthusiast and collector of teletype text art, John Sheetz (K2AGI), mentioned in an interview for the BBS Documentary with Jason Scott Sadofsky that Playboy Magazine actually embraced this stuff and even published one of Don Royer's (WA6PIR) centerfold creations in text in one of their print issues.

I hope that Playboy still has this attitude today and will see this publication as free promotion and advertisement for their current print magazine.

I found out during my research that there are sometimes multiple ASCII art versions of the same photograph, which is pretty interesting, because it shows the different styles and quality of the text artists who created those ASCII images. Let's get started! Click the thumbnails to watch the larger versions of the images below.

The Link of the thumbnail version of the ASCII links to the PNG image version of the ASCII. I added links to the original ASCII text files below each ASCII thumbnail. I also added a link there to an image where it shows the photograph and the ASCII side by side (JPG). Please note that the “side by side” images are not proportional to the originals they are merely meant for illustration purposes.

The Centerfold Miss March 1964, Nancy Scott, for example was used for three ASCII images in my collection.

nude1315_1964-03_Nancy_Scott joan calgirl    nude1315_miss1964-03_Nancy_Scott

original ASCIIside by side

org ASCIIside-by-side

org ASCIIside-by-side

Miss May 1970, Jennifer Liano was used for two ASCII images. One of them used the wrong name for the girl and called it "Kathy" instead of "Jennifer".

nude365-7005 kathy   nude365-miss may1970

original ASCIIside by side

original ASCIIside by side

 

Miss January 1970, Jill Taylor

nude362-7001 nude362-miss beloil miss january1970 nude363-jill taylor-miss january1970

original ASCIIside by side

original ASCIIside by side

Miss February 1969, Lorrie Menconi

nude399-6902 nude399-miss-february1969   nude1319-miss-february1969

original ASCIIside by side

original ASCIIside by side

 

Miss October 1964 - Rosemarie Hillcrest

Noticed that the two ASCII images are a “mirror” of the photograph? This cannot be coincidence. I assume that there is another photograph that is virtually the same, but matching the pose in the ASCIIs. I had the same with the image of Marianne Gravatte. The used photograph was a mirror of the widely popular centerfold picture, but I was able to dig up the not so popular photograph. I hope that I will find the one for Rosemarie Hillcrest too. However, I decided to show them, even though it is not EXACTLY the source photograph, but it is coming close enough to it for all intents and purposes here :).

6410-Playmate_1964_10-RoseMarie_Hillcrest 6410-ingrid   6410-anna

original ASCIIside by side

original ASCIIside by side

 

Now the single match gallery for the cases where I only have one ASCII  matching one original photographs.

Miss January 1966, Judy Tyler
6601-nude1316-6601
6601-nude1316-another_playmate
original ASCIIside by side
Miss December 1966, Susan Bernard
6612-nude360-66126612-nude360-miss_nov1967
original ASCIIside by side
Miss November 1968, Paige Young
6811-nude304-6811
6811-nude304-paige
original ASCIIside by side
Miss December 1968, Cynthia Myers
6812-morgana-6812 6812-morgana
original ASCIIside by side
Miss October 1969, Jean Bell
6910-nude1320-6910 6910-nude1320-ms_black_is_beautyful_playmate_oct1969
original ASCIIside by side
Miss November 1969, Claudia Jennings
6911-nude361-6911 6911-nude361-muss_november_1969
original ASCIIside by side
Miss October 1970, Mary & Madeleine Collinson
7010-nude1321-7010 7010-nude1321-_the_7010-misses_october_1970
original ASCIIside by side
Miss October 1971, Claire Rambeau
7110-roxanne-7110 7110-roxanne
original ASCIIside by side
Miss March 1972, Ellen Michaels
7203-cloe-7203 7203-cloe
original ASCIIside by side
Miss January 1973, Miki Garcia
7301-nude306-7301 7301-Nude306-MissJanuary1973
original ASCIIside by side
Miss December 1973, Christine Maddox
7312-nude366-7312 7312-nude366-christine-miss_december1973
original ASCIIside by side
Miss April 1978, Pamela Jean Bryant
7804-nude388-7804 7804-nude388-pamela_bryant_miss_april_1978
original ASCIIside by side
Miss July 1978, Karen Morton
7807-nude303-7807 7807-Nude303-missjuly1978
original ASCIIside by side
Miss January 1980, Gig Gangel
8001-nude384_198001_Gig_Gangel_CF 8001-nude384-Gig_Gangel_Ms_January1980
original ASCIIside by side
Miss July 1980, Teri Peterson
8007-nude1313-8007 8007-nude1313-teri_peterson-ms_july1980
original ASCIIside by side
Miss August 1982, Cathy St. George
8208-nude394-8208 8208-nude394-miss_august1982
original ASCIIside by side
Miss July 1983, Ruth Guerri
8307-nude368--8307 8307-nude368-miss_july1983
original ASCIIside by side
Miss March 1984, Dona Speir
8403-nude372-8403 8403-nude372-dona-created_april1984
original ASCIIside by side
Miss April 1984, Lesa Ann Pedriana
8404-nude373-8404 8404-nude373-april-created_april1984
original ASCIIside by side
Miss June 1984, Tricia Lange
8406-nude374-8406 8406-nude374-miss_june1984
original ASCIIside by side
Miss March 1971, Cynthia Hall
Playmate_1971_03_Cynthia_Hall_CF MissMarch1971_WA6PIR
original ASCIIside by side
Miss August 1960 - Elaine Paul
 
6008-Org kelly
original ASCIIside by side
Miss October 1960 - Kathy Douglas
nude1317-ms october1967-Kathy Douglas-Miss Oct1960-28879_196010_122_136lo nude1317-ms october1967
original ASCIIside by side
Morganna Roberts - The Kissing Bandit
nude330-morganna the kissing bandit-3a82 - Morganna Roberts nude330-morgana the kissing bandit
original ASCIIside by side
Miss July 1972 Carol O'Neal
7207-Playmate_1972_07-Carol_O''Neal 7207-susan
original ASCIIside by side
Miss "Ape Girl" - Victoria Principal - 09/1973
nude342-ms victoria principal-ape girl-playboy sep1973-large-41869_210_123_248lo nude342-ms victoria principal-ape girl-playboy sep1973
original ASCIIside by side
Miss December 1976 - Karen Hafter
nude353-miss karen hafter-dec1978playmate-32540_jc-PB-197612-033_KarenHafter_123_237lo nude353-miss karen hafter-dec1978playmate
original ASCIIside by side
Miss January 1974 - Nancy Cameron
nude357-heads or tails-miss jan1974-50918_197401b_Nancy_Cameron_CF_AltSize_122_48lo nude357-heads or tails-miss jan1974
original ASCIIside by side
Miss June 1983 - Marianne Gravatte
nude1312-marianne gravatte-playmate of the year1983-88472_1983-06_Marianne_Gravatte_7145_123_557lo nude1312-marianne gravatte-playmate of the year1983
original ASCIIside by side
Alberto Vargas Girl "Topless Batgirl"
batgirl-org batgirl-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Playboy 12/1972 Cover Image
nude323-org nude323-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Alberto Vargas Girl from March 1968
nude324-org
nude324-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Miss September 1966 - Dianne Chandler
Nude328-org
nude328-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Alberto Vargas Girl from July 1972
nude329-org nude329-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Alberto Vargas Girl from April 1973
nude333-org nude333-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Alberto Vargas Girl from April 1972
nude336-org
nude336-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Alberto Vargas Girl from March 1968
nude375-org nude375-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Miss July 1983 - Ruth Guerri
nude389-org nude389-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side
Alberto Vargas Girl from February 1972
nude395-org nude395-ascii1
original ASCIIside by side

That's it and all that I got so far. I try to find more matches, but it's not that easy. The names and notes of the ASCII images is not always very detailed and some times even wrong. In some cases is the original also not the Playboy centerfold, but something else.

YOUR HELP IS NEEDED! There are still plenty of ASCII art pieces in my gallery that need to be matched to their reference photograph (Playboy Magazine Centerfolds, Pictorials and other Photo Sources). I wrote another blog post about this project, where I also provide some more information and several downloads that help with finding the original photos for the remaining ASCII art images. See details here. Hey, looking at beautiful nude girls is not a bad job at all :)

I hope that you liked my discoveries. Let me know in the comments below.

Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC

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Time for Another ASCII and More

It has only been two months, a bit less actually, since I created my last piece of ASCII text art.

Well, I did it again. Actually more than just a logo as I did the last time for CPI. I also design the NFO file body and more. I will show you the details further down below. I am pretty proud of myself, because I did not use any of my old styles for this new ASCII. I tried something different. I think that the result is very good, but it will be for others to decide if that is the case or not.

Roy-RoORSnfo.asc

I also created a FILE_ID.DIZ logo for them in oldskool ASCII (Amiga style), which I do not consider myself particular good at. I actually said always that oldskool ASCII's should stay where they belong, on the Amiga, where they look right and not on the PC, which displays them much different as you can see at my article about the different art styles in the underground text art scene.

Roy-RoORSDiz.asc

While I had the creative urge going, I also created VGA pixel logos for the same group. It must have been their lucky weekend I guess. hehe.  It could also be that the release that they announced where this artwork will be used was highly motivating for me :)

Roy-RoORS-Pixel-Logo1-notrans

The second VGA logo. Simple and much smaller than the first one. It can also be read much easier.

Roy-RoORS-PixelLogo2_Tiles-notrans

The VGA logos were used for a cracktro, together with an old pixel art font of mine, which I highlighted in a blog post last December. The font took me hours to create and I was a little bit disappointed that it was only used for one Genesis intro, coded by Synec, which was only used for one or two releases and that's it. That particular intro is also one of the few that I have problems with to capture and publish in video format :(

I am glad that it was now used again. The music is also cool. It was created by Paso from Berlin and Dytec (and Dynamix & Remedy, the Sysop of Ice Cream and the coder & musician of the Cebit1993 party winning Amiga 500 dentro called Vaginal Massacre).

The tune was also used on the PC once, also for a Genesis intro by Hetero, with graphics by Dream Design, together with a second song, which IMO sucked. A randomizer determined which of the two songs was played and it appeared to me that the shitty song was played much more often than this cool one by Paso. I am sure that he will be glad that one of his tunes was used again in a cracktro.

Okay, here is the screen capture video of the new cracktro:


RoORS Cracktro 2009 V2 from Carsten Cumbrowski on Vimeo.

You can download the video in AVI format (76 MB) here at Mediafire.com 

I hope that you like my new stuff. Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC

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Where is the Delirium DVD by Cirque du Soleil?

The Cirque du Soleil show Delirium, which was called a "music concert" rather than a traditional Cirque du Soleil show, was the first experiment by Cirque to transport the experience of a Cirque show from the Big Top into the arena environment to be able to reach a greater audience.

This experiment was obviously successful, because they converted their oldest touring show Saltimbanco to become an "Arena Show". Saltimbanco Arena re-launched in the year 2007.DeliriumDVDRelease

Delirium was only running between 2006 and 2008, 2 years.
I don't know why they stopped touring with it in 2008, but that is also not the reason why I am writing this blog post.
I watched Delirium in 2006 here in Fresno, California, the first time that a Cirque du Soleil production made it here. It was a good show, different, yes, but different does not mean bad.

The show was obviously filmed by a professional film crew at one time during the shows run, because in summer 2008 Cirque announced something unusual. I cannot recall that Cirque ever did something like it in the past.

Delirium Shown in Movie Theaters

They announced the screening of Delirium in movie theaters. It was only shown at selected movie theatres and only for a few days. I missed that and thought that it will be running longer, like a movie release. But I was lucky, they announced "Delirium Encore", another screening of the show at local theaters. There were only three screenings, the main one on Wednesday, October 15 at 7:00 PM and then two more, each at midnight on the following weekend on Saturday, October 18 at 12:00 AM and on Sunday, October 19 at 12:00 AM.

I saw it was my family on the Wednesday. We were the only ones in the theater, except for one other group of 3 or 4 people. I recorded a little bit of the show with my Flip Camera and used the material for a 7:24 minutes long promotional video, but lost by accident the raw recording (40-45 minutes) that I made shortly after. I was not too much upset about it, because I expected the DVD to be released by Christmas anyway.

I posted a 28 minutes video with the complete hula hoops and hand-balancing act included two months earlier in August, after the announcement of the release of the show in theaters, all in the expectation that the DVD release is not far in the future anyway. Now it is March 2009, five months after Delirium Encore and still no DVD release of the show in sight, what's up with that?

Where is the DVD?

An user with the name "funplyr69" posted a comment about one week ago at the video of the Delirium Encore trailer at YouTube.com that he contacted Cirque du Soleil to inquiry about the release of Delirium on DVD and got the response that

"there was currently no plan for a release but that there could be in the future." (video with comment at YouTube)

WHAT? Why the heck would they do that?

He stated correctly that Cirque released in the past all of their shows on VHS and/or DVD, except for their resident shows in Las Vegas.

I also created a video where I talked about this issue.

Backup link to video on YouTube.com
Download the video in AVI format and 720x480 pixels resolution at MediaFire.com

Spin Off to Las Vegas Shows

pirate

In the case of the Las Vegas shows, I believe that the reason for not publishing a DVD is MGM who owns all the Las Vegas properties where Cirque du Soleil shows are running.

But that changed now too. I know about a pirate release of the recording of show KA at the MGM Grand hotel and casino. I am not talking about a shaky recording by somebody sitting in the audience with a cheap digital video camera, no, a quality recording, fully edited and almost perfect DVD quality. More about this recording can be found here.

The NFO file of that pirate release states:

All Cirque du Soleil shows became eventually available on DVD, even while they are still running and touring around the world. The only exception is the Las Vegas shows, which all happen to run at MGM properties only.

Cirque must have signed an exclusivity agreement with MGM, from how it looks like. Franco Dragone, the famous former Cirque du Soleil director, who directed many of CDS shows, including Alegria, Mystere and "O", split from Cirque to found his own company. Franco Dragone created a Cirque du Soleil like show called "Le Reve" for Steve Wynn's latest Las Vegas property, the "Wynn Las Vegas".

The exclusivity agreement must be limited to Las Vegas only, because Cirque created and launched a show in Asian new "Las Vegas", Macao, China last year, called "Zaia" and that show runs at the Venetian Macao, which is owned by Sands Corp. and not MGM, who also operates casino and entertainment properties in Macao as well.

I am certain that the reason why no DVD release exists for any of the currently SIX and later this year SEVEN show productions is MGM and their old fashioned and paranoid management.

The oldest show launched almost 15 years ago and stills no DVD release of it in sight. A large amount of segments became public naturally through promotional ads, documentaries, news reports and other media releases, but never an entire show, with all consecutive pieces in place and consistent format of video and audio.

This is a first now. Cirque du Soleil shows (Circus a la carte) is a live experience that no canned version will ever be able to replace. For this reason I am convinced that this "pirate" release of the show will not hurt Cirque nor MGM ticket sales for the show in the years to come.

I dare to say that the opposite will be the case. The recording will only function as better advertisement for the show than anything that is currently out there already.

They probably will lose on DVD sales, but no, wait, they won't, because they do not sell any recording of the show on DVD, except for a behind the scenes/making of documentary, which might won't sell as good now anymore, since it is also part of this release as well.

If MGM does not like to miss out on revenue and profits, then they have to release their own official DVD version of the show.

People will eventually find this release, because nothing else like it exists at the moment... If the choice that people have includes only downloading a pirated show recording or no show at all, many will decide to choose the pirated version, with only little or no remorse, because MGM prevents people from being able to make the right choice and buy the legitimate version of it.

As long as we agree that the purpose of copyright laws is still to make sure that artists are being compensated for their work and creations and not as a tool to execute a real form of censorship, which I define as the prevention of access to content and/or information that are of interest for the general public and for the benefit of the society as a whole, if access would be possible), then nobody should ever feel the wrath of the Justicative arm of the government.

Most of the free world guarantees rights to its people to be able to access information without censorship via fundamental laws or constitutions, which means that nobody would have to fear, facing positional imprisonment or monetary penalties/fines for executing those rights in the real world.

List of Cirque du Soleil shows and the year the show was launched at MGM properties in Vegas:

- 1994 - Mystere at Treasure Island
- 1998 - "O" at the Bellagio
- 2003 - Zumanity at the New York, New York
- 2004 - KA at MGM Grand
- 2006 - The Beatles "Love" at the Mirage
- 2008 - Criss Angel's Believe at the Luxor

... And later this year in 2009 an "Elvis" themed show at the MGM City Center, which is currently under construction. MGM also owns the Mandalay Bay, Excalibur and Monte Carlo properties in Vegas (I hope that I didn't miss any).

and also

I hope that this release will function like a sticky note at the tip of a baseball bat that gets slammed into MGM Executive faces with the words:

"Release freaking DVDs of the Cirque shows at your properties in Vegas! Damn it!"

Amen to that. I hope that this will have the desired effect on MGM and/or Cirque du Soleil.

I also hope that Cirque du Soleil will change their opinion about the release of the Delirium DVD. I guess I will continue to gather up as much video material from the show I can get my hands on, to create another video of the show, which will be even longer than 28 minutes, like the last one.

Notes to Copyright Laws and Implications

justice12 Stuff is easier to find on the Internet than it used to be in the past. We will get the content... slowly and with pain staking work and not over night, but eventually we will get there. All this only, because content produces hide content that is in demand in their vaults rather then making the content available FOR PAY that people can easily get access to the content without jumping through hoops and doing it "illegally". Illegal is too hard of a word in this case, because the only crime committed is a violation of "Copyright Laws" that is supposed to protect the creators of content from getting robbed of their intellectual property and not to prevent access to that content in general.

If the content has implication on people and society, this withholding of content would be called "censorship".

If I want to pay you for your work that you have already done and you don't make it available, but it gets out to become accessible anyway, then accessing this content should not be against the law, due to the fact that It is impossible to obey to the law and compensate the artist for his work. If the content is made available for pay (in a way that follows common sense business rules and pricing), then you might call it unlawful, if the same content is being acquired without paying, because it was possible for the person to obey to the law, he had a choice.

As a side note: I think that in some cases copyright protection should be removed, if the material is of great importance for history and society itself. I am referring to footage of events of historic significance, such as news images. In those cases copyright becomes willingly or not a tool for censorship that prevents people from educating themselves about the facts of historic events

Additional Links to Delirium Videos

  • Cirque du Soleil's Delirium, a 28 Minutes video (split up) on YouTube, including the complete Hula Hoops and Hand balancing Act: Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3
  • 7:27 minutes video on YouTube.com about my experiences from the Delirium Encore event on October 15, 2008. I split the video into 3 parts for some reasons: Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3.
  • Official Delirium trailer for movie theater release from August 2008. Video on YouTube.com

Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC

Labels: , , ,

How to Package a Scene Release?

Scene releases, particular the pirate or warez scene, publishes their releases in a certain way, which is done pretty much consistent and is done so for many years.

Back to ASCII Art Academy

File Format

The final release format is ZIP. This became the de-facto standard sometimes during the early 1990s. Back then programs were usually not that large and provided via floppy disks. Each floppy disk was usually compressed into one PkZip archive. If the program used multiple floppy disks, then the ZIP file names were numbered.

With the arrival of CD-ROM, release sizes increased. Also, a CD-ROM does not fit on a floppy disk and often the individual files on the CD-ROM were also too large to fit on a single floppy disk. ZIP did not offer the capability to break up archives into multiple files, with each file having a pre-set size to make sure that it fits on to the archive medium that you wanted to use (1.44 MB floppy disks for the most part).

To solve this problem, release groups utilized other packers like ARJ, RAR and later also ACE that were capable of splitting and then packed the individual ARJ/RAR/ACE archive files once more with ZIP.

Full CD-ROMS (ISO images) were not released at first, due to limitations in available bandwidth and HD sizes, but even the CD-RIP releases grew more and more in size over time. When a release had 10 disks, X was often used for the 10th disk to save precious characters in the file name, but it wasn't for long that number of disks for releases would be way bigger than 10 disks. 30, 40 and 50+ disks for a single release became more and more the norm than being the exception.

While release sizes grew, also the 3.5" floppy disks started to become more and more of a novelty and release groups talked with each other and agreed to allow the use of 2.88 MB size volumes for each "disk" or file of the release.

It was not for long that 2.88 MB would also not cut it anymore and the limitation of volume or file size was abolished entirely. Releases today are still split into volumes of different sizes (usually between 5 and 100 MB), but for other, practical, reasons. If for example the release would be 1 GB in size and be released as one file and you or the server where you are downloading the release from do not support "resume" in case the transfer gets interrupted, then you would probably get very mad, if the download of that 1 GB file breaks up after 990 MB, especially if you did this on dial-up or slow DSL, where it takes many hours or days to download that much data.

You would have to start the download all over again, even though only 10 MB are missing. There are also still a number of different storage media available and used that might have a smaller capacity than the full size of a release.

The practical reasons diminish more and more, but release group will probably continue splitting up releases into multiple files. This would be more out of tradition than anything else, but hey, if you have a major release, then you don't want to put it out there in one file only. Single file releases are usually only used for cracks/keygens only, trainers, patches, product updates, dox/manuals and small applications/tools. A release spanning multiple files usually indicates a full release of some sort.

File Names

Also in the early 1990s it became practice that the release filename starts with a file prefix to identify the release group that published the release. Old MS DOS file name restrictions caused the prefix used by groups to be no more than the first 2, 3 to max. 4 characters of the file name. If you had a release that spans multiple disks, with the DOS limit of 8 characters for the file name, only 3-5 characters remained to somewhat identify the name of the actual release itself. 

Some example of file name prefixes used by release groups:

cls = Class
gns = Genesis
pdx = Paradox
rzr = Razor 1911
tdu = TDU Jam
trsi = Tristar & Red Sector Inc.
x- = X-Force

NFO and File_ID.DIZ

The ZIP release file (and not the archive inside the ZIP) usually also contains two small text files. I won't say much  about the purpose of the file FILE_ID.DIZ. If you do not know what it is and what it was/is used for, see this older blog post of mine to learn more about it.

The NFO file name in the archive is usually called like the name of the group and in rare cases like the ZIP release file, with the file extension .NFO to indicate that it is an NFO file. NFO stands for Info or Information. MS Dos file name restrictions limited the length of a file extension to max. 3 characters length.

At the top of the NFO file is usually a logo with the name of the release group using ASCII art. The logo is usually made up of "block ASCII" characters in MS DOS, which some editors and text file viewers under MS Windows and other operating systems cannot display properly my default. The users only sees some garbage characters instead and unable to make out what those characters try to represent. For how to look at NFO files under Windows, see my article about the underground text art styles.

The NFO file contains information about the release itself, instructions for how to install it, information about the use and purpose of the software/application/program (something were release groups typically do a poor job or not include anything at all), latest news about the release group, greetings to other groups and people in the scene, a member list that shows who is currently part of the group and who is not and a  list of "sites" or "boards", in the pre-Internet past Bulletin Board Systems (BBS) and then FTP Servers on the Internet. Contact information might or might not be included in the NFO file as well, such as Email, a web address or an Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel where members of the group can be found.

Cracktros, Installers, KeyGens and Cracks

In many cases are those the only files in the release, but depending on the release itself and the group that released it, other files might be included as well. Software Key Generators (KeyGens) and Cracks.

KeyGens

KeyGens are simple programs to generate valid software registration information that you enter within the software itself to unlock any limitation that the unregistered version of the tool has. Those information are typically provided to users who actually paid for a license of the software. KeyGens provide the same, but without paying anything.

Cracks

Cracks are either a program that modifies the installed program to remove any copy protection, or modified files of the original software that the user has to replace after installing the original program on his machine (with the protection still being intact).

Installers

Installers were especially popular during the time when stripped down versions of CD-ROM releases were published by release groups. Those CD-RIPS did not include any original install or setup program that was part of the original software release. Also, archive tools like RAR, ARJ and ACE are not part of the operating system and many users do not have it installed on their computers. To this day, many users do not know and never heard about WinRAR or WinACE, let alone installed it on their system.

The Installer is a tool written by the release group to extract the split archives to the program files folder and might also adds any registry entries required by the software to run, if it was needed.

The installer interface never uses the standard Windows Installer SDK that you are used to from installing "normal" software. The scene installers are completely custom build, often using a flashy and colorful designed user interface with a logo of the group and more noticeable with background music, which can be surprising, if you never used a scene installer before.

Cracktros

Cracktro stands for Crack-Intro, the introduction for a cracked piece of software. A Cracktro does not serve any practical purpose that is required in order to distribute, install and use the release by the warez release group.

The sole purpose of a Cracktro is to showcase the release group itself. You can find a large number of video captures of crack intros at my YouTube channel "SACReleases".

The only reference to the release in a Cracktro is one or two lines of some sort of text within the Cracktro with the name and maybe credits for the supplier, cracker and/or packager. In some cases the Cracktro is used to transmit special messages and information to other people in the scene, but for the most part a cracktros purpose is purely promotional.

A cool Cracktro can be watched and enjoyed independently from the release itself. The Cracktro concept and idea dates back to the earliest widely used home computers like the Commodore 64, Atari 800 or Apple II.

Not surprisingly, cracktros evolved to larger productions, called demos, which spun off to become a huge scene by itself without having ties to the warez scene anymore. To learn more about the history of the demo scene, check out this article of mine.

Beyond All This

That's pretty much all that you can find in scene release files. Wait, there is more. It is more the exception today than it is the norm, but that used to be the other way around in the past.

Release ZIP archives can contain text files and executables (.EXE or .COM files) that are not related to the released software nor the release group itself. Those extra files in the ZIP are advertisements for Bulletin Board Systems, FTP Servers, Trading Groups or individuals that got in contact with the ZIP file before you downloaded it to your machine. BBS and FTP servers used to add to every file uploaded to them such an advertisement for themselves. By looking at those ads, you could tell, which board was among the best and fastest around, because if an ad for that board was in a release file when you downloaded it, then it meant that it passed through that other board before it got to where you downloaded it from.

Preparing a Scene Release

Preparing a scene release without any special tools or scripts is a pain in the neck. You first have to pack the to be released software itself with RAR (which is typically used today) and create multiple volumes, if the release is larger.

After that, you have to use WinZIP to pack each of the volumes ones more. You also have to include the NFO file and file_ID.diz in each of the ZIP archives as well.

If you have a release that spans more than a handful volumes, this job becomes somewhat tedious and time consuming, even if you are using the command line options of the packers and not their graphical interface.

Many release groups developed internally tools and scripts to prepare their releases. Depending on the sophistication of the group and the needs, release preparation tools can become quite a piece of software by itself, beyond just doing the final packaging of the release, including easy to perform updates of the content of the NFO and File_ID.DIZ files, text changes in the Cracktro and ability to recompile it with those changes included etc.

Well, I don't have any release preparation tools that I could or would give out to anybody, but I do have a script that does make the packaging at the end of the release preparation process very easy and automated.

Release Creation Script

Here is a MS DOS Batch Script called !ProcREL.bat. You can download the full script here (you have to rename the downloaded file from !ProcREL.bat.txt back to !ProcREL.bat) Script fixed and extended on March 13, 2009. See notes at the and of the post, after the code.

You require the tools WinZIP and WinRAR to be able to use this script. In the case of WinZIP do you require to have the separate command line version of the tool (WZZIP.EXE). In case of WinRAR, the command line version RAR.EXE is usually included in the general release version of the tool.

You have to make small changes to the script in any case. You can change some other settings there as well, if you like to, but that would not be necessary to make it work in general.

If you installed WinZIP and WinRAR to their typical default location on your C-Drive, changes to the lines 7 and 8 of the batch script won't be necessary. Line 9 however has to be changed in any case, unless your NFO file has the name NFOFILE.NFO, which I don't think to be the case. If you just provide the name of the file, make sure that the NFO file is located in the same directory where you execute the script itself. You could also provide the full path to the file and the file name, if you want to. Line 10 only needs to be changed, if you want to include a File_ID.DIZ file from a different location than the location where you run the batch script from.

The script only has to parameters which are both required. The first parameter is the base name of the file name for the release itself, without any extension. File numbers will be added by the script to the file name automatically. File numbers are always 2 characters, starting at 01 and supporting up to 99 files max.

The second parameter is the specification of the content that make up the release itself. This can be the name and path to an individual file or using the DOS Wildcards *, ? etc. to include multiple files. If your release contains sub folders that also have to be included, a change to line 27 of the script will be necessary.

Example:

!ProcREL.bat PRE-RELN C:\RELEASE\*.*


The script would create 98 MB RAR volumes with the Name PRE-RELNXX.RAR from all files in the folder C:\RELEASE, where XX stands for 01 to 99, then create a ZIP file PRE-RELNXX.ZIP for each RAR volume where it also includes the files FILE_ID.DIZ and the specified .NFO file  to each of the ZIP archives.


You have to add the switch "-r"  to the call of RAR.EXE to include sub-folders. Also, the current setting is to create volumes of 98 MB in size, which is pretty much the maximum used by release groups today. You can change that size in line 27 as well, just change the number for "-v98078k" to -vXXk where XX stands for the desired volume size in Kilobytes. If you forget the "k" at the end, the number will be interpreted as bytes instead, creating volumes that would be a bit too small I guess.


Here are the steps the script does perform:



  1. Calls RAR to create volumes from your input file or files.

  2. RAR automatically creates file with the name BASENAME.partXX.rar. I do not like the ".part"  in the name and prefer BASENAMEXX.RAR instead, where XX is a number between 01 and 99. So I rename all the files created by step 1. Note: The batch script is case sensitive. Make sure that the extension generated by RAR is ".rar" all lower-case. I then rename it to .RAR (all upper-case)

  3. Generate a list with all RAR files in the directory and create a ZIP file with the name BASENAMEXX.RAR.ZIP where the RAR archive is added to. Then I also add the NFO and FILE_ID.Diz to each of the new ZIP Files

  4. Rename the Files BASENAMEXX.RAR.ZIP to BASENAMEXX.ZIP

  5. Clean up (delete) temporary files that were created by the batch script.


   1:  @ECHO OFF
   2:  CLS
   3:   
   4:  REM =================================================
   5:  REM Please Change Name and Path for the Following Variables
   6:  REM =================================================
   7:  SET ZipExe=C:\PROGRA~1\WinZip\WZZIP.EXE
   8:  SET RARExe=C:\PROGRA~1\WinRAR\RAR.EXE
   9:  SET NFOFile=RoORS.NFO
  10:  SET FILEID=File_ID.DIZ
  11:   
  12:  REM =================================================
  13:   
  14:  IF NOT EXIST %NFOFile% goto NONFO
  15:  IF NOT EXIST %FILEID% goto NODIZ
  16:  IF "%1"=="" goto USAGEINFO
  17:  IF "%2"=="" goto USAGEINFO
  18:  set /a zipf=0
  19:  IF "%4"=="ABORT" (
  20:    FOR %%Z in (%1??.ZIP) DO (
  21:      GOTO ZIPSFOUND
  22:    )
  23:  ) ELSE (
  24:    Del /Q "%1??.zip"
  25:    Echo Delete "%1??.zip"
  26:  )
  27:   
  28:  Echo Delete "%1.part??.rar" (they should not be there though)
  29:  DEL /Q "%1.part??.rar"
  30:   
  31:  REM =================================================
  32:  REM use "rn" instead of "a" to move files into the archive
  33:  REM -v98078k creates volumes of a bit less than 100 MB 
  34:  REM to fit on a ZIP-100 disk
  35:  REM -m5 sets the compression level. 5 is maximum, 
  36:  REM you can also set it to 0,1 .. 4 which is faster
  37:   
  38:  Echo Create RAR Archives %1.partXX.RAR for Data Selection %2
  39:  %RARExe% a -v98078k -m5 "%1" "%2"
  40:   
  41:   
  42:  REM =================================================
  43:  Echo Rename %1.partXX.RAR to %1xx.RAR
  44:  set /a pos=0
  45:  For /f %%x in ('dir /on /b "%1.part*.rar"') do (
  46:   set /a pos+=1
  47:  )
  48:  if %pos%==0 goto NORAR
  49:  For /L %%n in (1,1,%pos%) do (
  50:    if %%n leq 9 (call :RenRAR %1 0%%n ) else (call :RenRAR %1 %%n )
  51:  )
  52:   
  53:  Echo.
  54:  Echo =================================================
  55:  Echo %pos% RAR volumes were created!
  56:  Echo Please make now the necessary adjustments to your
  57:  Echo NFO file and File_ID.DIZ files,
  58:  Echo When you are done with it and ready to create the 
  59:  Echo ZIP release files....
  60:  echo.
  61:  pause
  62:   
  63:   
  64:  REM =================================================
  65:  Echo Build List of RAR Archives in Folder...
  66:  dir /B /A:-D *.RAR >!RARFiles.txt
  67:   
  68:  REM =================================================
  69:  Echo Process RAR Archives...
  70:  FOR /F "delims=|" %%i IN (!RARFiles.txt) DO (
  71:     Echo Processing %%i
  72:     IF EXIST "%%i.ZIP" del "%%i.ZIP"
  73:     %ZipExe% -a "%%i.ZIP" "%%i"
  74:     IF EXIST "%NFOFile%" %ZipExe% -a "%%i.ZIP" "%NFOFile%"
  75:     IF EXIST "%FILEID%" %ZipExe% -a "%%i.ZIP" "%FILEID%"
  76:     IF NOT "%3" == "KEEPRAR" (DEL /Q "%%i")
  77:  )
  78:  REM =================================================
  79:  Echo Build List of TEMP ZIP Files...
  80:  Dir /b *.RAR.ZIP>!ZIPfiles.txt
  81:  REM =================================================
  82:  Echo Rename ZIP Files...
  83:  REM =================================================
  84:  FOR /F "delims=." %%i IN (!ZIPfiles.txt) DO (
  85:     Echo Rename %%i.RAR.ZIP to %%i.ZIP
  86:     IF EXIST "%%i.ZIP" del "%%i.ZIP"
  87:     REN "%%i.RAR.ZIP" "%%i.ZIP"
  88:  )
  89:  REM =================================================
  90:  Echo Deleting TEMP Files...
  91:  IF EXIST !ZIPfiles.txt Del /Q !ZIPfiles.txt
  92:  IF EXIST !RARfiles.txt Del /Q !RARfiles.txt
  93:   
  94:  ECHO =================================================
  95:  ECHO Done!
  96:  ECHO =================================================
  97:  Echo.
  98:  Pause
  99:  goto END
 100:   
 101:  REM =================================================
 102:  :USAGEINFO
 103:  Echo.
 104:  Echo Usage:
 105:  Echo !ProcRel.bat BASEFILENAME InputData (KEEPRAR/DELRAR) (ABORT/OVERWRITE)
 106:  Echo.
 107:  Echo The parameter pairs #3: KEEPRAR / DELRAR and #4: ABORT/OVERWRITE are optional.
 108:  Echo If you want to toggle parameter #4, parameter #3 must be specified as well 
 109:  Echo The default behavior is DELRAR, which means that the RAR archives will be deleted, 
 110:  Echo once they were copied into the release ZIP archive file and OVERWRITE, which means that
 111:  Echo the script deletes any ZIP files that exist in the directory with the same name 
 112:  Echo.
 113:  Echo If you want to keep the copy of the RAR archive in addition to the release ZIP's or if you 
 114:  Echo want the script to abort, if it detects an existing ZIP file with the same name 
 115:  Echo as the script intends to create then you have to set the parameters,
 116:  Echo.
 117:  Echo They are also case sensitive! If they are misspelled, the default behavior is triggered.
 118:  Echo Example:
 119:  Echo !ProcRel.bat X-RELN C:\RELN\*.*
 120:  Echo.
 121:  Echo !ProcRel.bat X-RELN C:\RELN\*.* KEEPRAR ABORT 
 122:  goto END
 123:   
 124:  REM =================================================
 125:  :NORAR
 126:  echo.
 127:  Echo Error!
 128:  echo Error! No RAR Archives with the file names
 129:  echo %1.partXX.RAR
 130:  echo were Created!
 131:  goto END
 132:   
 133:  REM =================================================
 134:  :NONFO
 135:  echo.
 136:  Echo Error!
 137:  echo NFO-File %NFOFile% not found!
 138:  goto END
 139:   
 140:  REM =================================================
 141:  :NODIZ
 142:  echo.
 143:  Echo Error!
 144:  echo File_ID.DIZ file at %FILEID% not found!
 145:  goto END
 146:   
 147:  REM =================================================
 148:  :ZIPSFOUND
 149:  echo.
 150:  Echo Error! (ABORT Parameter specified)
 151:  Echo Current directory contains already one or more ZIP files 
 152:  Echo with the name: %1??.ZIP 
 153:  goto END
 154:   
 155:  REM =================================================
 156:  :RenRAR
 157:   IF EXIST "%1.part%2.rar" ren "%1.part%2.rar" "%1%2.RAR"
 158:   echo ren "%1.part%2.rar" "%1%2.RAR"
 159:   
 160:  REM =================================================
 161:  :END
 162:  REM Finished!
 163:  Echo.
 164:  Goto :eof
 165:   


I hope that you find this little BATCH script useful.


NOTE March 13, 2009:


I found a bug in my script, which I fixed in my blog post and in the version for download. While I was fixing the bug I also found another small issue and also thought about some options to give you control over a few behaviors of the batch. 


The first addition is the PAUSE of the script after it created the RAR archive volumes. It will tell you how many RAR files were created that you can make the necessary modifications to your prepared File_ID.diz and NFO file.


Once you did that, simply press enter in the DOS window and the script will continue.


I also added two optional parameters to the batch. The first one lets you specify that you would like to keep the copy of the RAR archive volumes in addition to the ZIP files where the volumes are included, instead of deleting them once zipped. The second parameter lets you specify what you want the batch to do, if it detects ZIP archives with the same file name as the script intends to create. The default is delete and re-create, but if you prefer that the script aborts, you can now specifty it via a command parameter.


Back to ASCII Art Academy



Cheers!



Carsten aka Roy/SAC


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Convert Video to ASCII Text Art

Uh, third post in 2 days... that surprises even me. Hehe

It was by coincidence actually, but somebody at Mahalo Answers made me aware of the feature of the free VLC (VideoLan) video player to convert video images to color ASCII art (some would call this ANSI hehe) in real-time.

I thought that this is a cool feature, just by hearing about it. I downloaded the player and was unable to find the option for the ASCII art output, so I asked the guy at Mahalo Answers about it and luckily for me, he answered this question as well (a bit delayed, which made me drop the ball on it as well).

The feature is buried deeply within the configuration options of the player and not that easy to find.

To help you with this problem, see my step by step guide to enable the feature in the VideoLan player. Every step is illustrated with a screen shot, so that there should not be any excuses for why you could not set it up yourself properly. Start with getting the latest version of the VideoLan video player at VideoLan.org (note: the latest version does not have this feature anymore. See note at the end of the post for details). The player is available across platform, over a dozen different Linux and Unix distributions and versions. Binaries for Windows, Macintosh Mac OS X, BeOS and Syllable are also available by the way. It's released under the GNU License.

Step by Step Guide to Enable the Color ASCII Art Output Module Configuration in the VLC Video Player

1. Start the VLC/VideoLan media player and open any supported video file.

01_start_vlc_and_open_any_supported_video_file

2. Click on "Settings" in the top menu navigation and select "Preferences"

02_stop the video and  click on settings and select preferences

3. Audio is selected by default at the left. Check out the bottom-right where you can find a check box labeled "Advanced Options", which should be unchecked (default). Check that box to enable the Advanced Options.

03_audio is selected by default_bottom right_check_advanced options checkbox

4. Back to the navigation to the left. Click on the plus sign next to "Video" in the preferences box to open the configuration tree node for the "Video" options.

04_click on the plus next to video in the preferences sel to open the config tree for video

5. Click on the "Output Modules" node

05_click on output modules node

6. Change the "default" in the drop down options for video output module to "Color ASCII Art Video output"

06_change default video output module to Color ASCII Art Video output

7. Click "Save" in the lower left of the window

8. Stop the video that you opened, if it isn't stopped already or if you stopped it after step 1.

9. Press "Play" to re-start the video again with the new video output module

07_click save 08_stop the video that you opened, if it isnt stopped already 09_press play to start the video again

Here are some results of me playing with that option for some videos of mine to give you an idea of how the real-time converted video images look in text mode with colors. I am not sure yet, if the module sticks to the 16 pre-set colors defined for PC MS DOS ANSI, which would be really cool. It may uses other colors instead. I have to do some more tests to find that out.

 
Playing Around with the VLC Color ANSI Art Video Output Module from Carsten Cumbrowski on Vimeo.

You can download this video in AVI format at Mediafile.com.

The player itself is worth checking out in general, beyond the ASCII output feature, which is kind of a "hidden treasure" within the features set of this open source video player. It supports virtually all major video formats, including Mpeg, AVI, QuickTime MOV/MP4, Windows Media WMV/ASF, Macromedia/Adobe Flash (FLV), the open source Matroska, Real Media (RealPlayer), OGG, FLAC and even Midi and raw DV video, WAV, MP3 audio etc.

It can play back streaming video UDP, TCP and DCCP/RTP Unicast or Multicast, HTTP/FTP and MMS in addition to traditional DVD video and audio, Audio CD, Video CD and SVCD, DVB from Satellite, Digital TV and cable television. A lot of stuff for NO BUCK at all. You cannot beat free, or can you?!

Also check out my previous posts about ASCII and ANSI Text Animation:

Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC



Update: I just learned that the current version of VLC (Version 0.9.8a, 16 MB) does not have the ASCII output feature anymore. I have VLC Player Version 0.8.6f Janus (wxWidget interface) from last year, where the feature is still there. You can download this older version here from my web site: vlc-0.8.6f-win32.zip (9.19 MB). I don't know why they would remove such a nice feature from their player. Mhhh.

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File Archiving - Collection Management and Organization

I am a collector! More correct would be to say that I hate to throw stuff and that I try to accumulate any data I can get my hands on about any subject of great interest to me.

This must be a trait that I inherited from my dad, who drives my mom nuts with his collector habits.

My Dad's Collecting Habit

The problem that my dad has is the fact that he collects only physical stuff, such as Coins (legal tender coins only), Stamps (West German and American only), Post cards from cities and towns with crest of that town on it (a shi*tload of towns in Europe have their own crest and are only happy to print them on post cards of their city, much to the dismay of my mother), post cards with only a single picture, which must be a true aerial photograph (no picture from a tall building, mountain or anything like that), Locomotives and box cars in model format, manufactured by the former East German company "TT-Eisenbahnen" (shut down a couple years after the wall fell, but still alive and supported by fans and model train owners). Collecting256

I think that is it... I hope that I did not miss any. As you can see, always very specific subjects, but then more than one subject, which created a slight inventory problem for my parents, which was only resolved when my sister and me moved out into our own places as soon as possible (I moved out with 19, but my parents paid for the basic rent hehe).

My Own Collection Habits from the Past

I used to collect stamps as a kid (only "Space" and "Astronomy" motives) and for a brief period of time "crown caps" where the product or company name was printed on the metal cap. This was rarely done in East Germany, but typical in the Western countries. I abandoned this collection around the time when the wall came down. Go figure. The only physical thing that I collected since 1982 until today are the print issues of the oldest and most popular (of only 3 or 4 or so) East German comic magazine called "Mosaik", which was published monthly since December 1955.

The other physical stuff is not really collecting, because if there is not much to collect, then I don't call it a real collection, even if I have everything (or most) of it. Into this category would be my Cirque du Soleil DVDs and CDs and my VNV Nation stuff and support as a fan of the band.

Digital Collections

However, my collector habit manifested itself in its full extend on the computer where the stuff that you collect is purely digital in nature and thus only uses very little storage space (compared to physical collections). It started when I did the Warez stuff and even more so, when I ran my own BBS. I automatically came across (and got a copy) the most recent software that mattered in those days (worthless junk remains worthless junk and is not worth stashing  up anywhere, even if it is digital junk). I never threw away or deleted any software that I had a copy (or original of), even if the software was too old for "trading" in Warez boards and I also never used the software myself ever. I had it, that was all that mattered.

My software collection was unfortunately destroyed by the German Police, who took away any data storage media that was not an original and they could find during the raid of my apartment (because of my BBS "Closed Society") back in spring 1997. That was the part that hurt me the most... they destroyed everything... it was not just stored somewhere else to still exist as a whole, but inaccessible to me.

Anyhow, things changed with the Internet. A lot of old and forgotten stuff by mainstream culture can now be found online. Not only software like games, but other things that were created as well. I was interested in computer art for example, specifically ANSI and ASCII text art and pixel art. I created stuff myself. I was also interested in the demoscene, that produced and still produces tons of new demos, created by folks like me for the pure sake of creating them and showing them off.

The copyright situation for most of this old stuff is unclear, not specified or simply not enforced by anybody who could make claims of the intellectual property created just for fun, without commercial background. In other cases is the content still officially "copyright protected", but the owner is long out of business or lost any interest in his own property, because he thinks that it does not have any commercial value anymore. I wrote about those things in the past already.

I have a bunch of collections of various kinds. Art, Pixel Art Fonts, Pixel Art Logos, Music, Software.... or using a  simple word that by the end of the day categorizes them all... ...Files.

I am not as bad as Jason Scott from textfiles.com who's collecting habits and urges dwarf mine in comparison.

Keeping Stuff Organized

Organizing these vast amount of items, which are in most cases ridiculous small in size for today's standards, is a pain in the neck and time consuming. I frequently stumble across collections created by others to the same subject that is of interest to me and sorting stuff out, is usually not that easy. Most of those collections are simply a dump of hundreds or thousands of files, each item packed with ZIP, RAR, LHA etc. and then packed together ones more to a multi-part RAR archive or ISO DVD/CD image.

The stuff I usually do with each of those "dumps" is the same, so I wrote myself some small scripts to make things easier for me and to speed up the archiving and sorting process.

The collection that I download are usually just dumps of many files all lumped into a single directory ones you unpacked the RAR archive or ISO image. I always break those up and sort them into individual sub directories by the first letter of the title of each item. The file names are in almost every case the title of the software, demo production, image, mod file, PDF document, text file etc. So I always have to create 27 directories (A-Z plus one for all titles that start with a number, titled 0-9) and then move the files to their respected directories.

An index of all the files is usually also missing to my script is generating one for me. A clean and simple index, which you could not achieve without manually tweaking it, with the standard DIR command in MS DOS.

My Free Helper Scripts

You can download the source scripts packed into a single ZIP archive: !archive_scripts_src_roysac.zip

This batch file creates sub directories "0-9", "A", "B" ... "Z", If they do not already exist (script: !folders.vbs) and then moves all files in the current directory to their corresponding sub folders (part of batch: !organize.bat). After the files were moved, an index file is created (script "!dirlist.vbs") with the name "!" + the current folder name + ".txt". The index file lists all files in the previously created directories. It ignores any other sub folder that might exists in the same dir.

All this is done by three scripts. You only have to run the main one. It calls the other two when needed. The script does not have or require any parameters or configuration options. Just copy the three files into the folder where you dumped all the files and run "!organize.bat".

!organize.bat Script

@echo off
REM      !organize.bat 
REM      Batch File by Carsten Cumbrowski, March 2009
REM       -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REM      Required support files used by this script:
REM       - !folders.vbs
REM       - !dirlist.vbs
REM      PURPOSE
REM       -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REM      This batch file creates sub directories "0-9", "A", "B" ... "Z"
REM      If they do not already exist and then copies all files in the 
REM      current directory to their corresponding sub folders
REM      (Yeah, that's why all of the script files start with a "!" in the file name)
REM      After the files were moved, an index file is created
REM      with the name "!" + the current folder name + ".txt"
REM      The index file lists all files in the previously created directories
REM      Note: the script ignores other sub directories that might
REM      exist in the current folder, also files that don't start with
REM      0-9 or A-Z (a-z) in the name are ignored
REM       -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REM      Copyright: NONE, Use it! Improve it! Share it!
 
cls
REM -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
REM Create Sub Directories 0-9, A, B ... Z If they not exist
REM -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
echo Creating Sub Directories 0-9, A, B ... Z ...
 
wscript !folders.vbs
 
REM -------------------------------------------------------------------
REM Move files into their respective sub directories
REM -------------------------------------------------------------------
echo Moving Files to Sub Directories ...
 
move 0*.* 0-9\
move 1*.* 0-9\
move 2*.* 0-9\
move 3*.* 0-9\
move 4*.* 0-9\
move 5*.* 0-9\
move 6*.* 0-9\
move 7*.* 0-9\
move 8*.* 0-9\
move 9*.* 0-9\
move a*.* a\
move b*.* b\
move c*.* c\
move d*.* d\
move e*.* e\
move f*.* f\
move g*.* g\
move h*.* h\
move i*.* i\
move j*.* j\
move k*.* k\
move l*.* l\
move m*.* m\
move n*.* n\
move o*.* o\
move p*.* p\
move q*.* q\
move r*.* r\
move s*.* s\
move t*.* t\
move u*.* u\
move v*.* v\
move w*.* w\
move x*.* x\
move y*.* y\
move z*.* z\
 
REM -------------------------------------------------------------------
REM Create !<FolderName>.txt Index File 
REM -------------------------------------------------------------------
echo Create !<FolderName>.txt Index File ...
 
wscript !dirlist.vbs
 
REM -------------------------------------------------------------------
REM Done!
REM -------------------------------------------------------------------
echo done! 
echo.
pause
 

!folders.vbs Script


'---------------------------------------------------------------
'Script Name: !folders.vbs
'---------------------------------------------------------------
'VBScript by Carsten Cumbrowski, written in March 2009
'---------------------------------------------------------------
'Purpose: Creates Sub Folders  "0-9", "A","B" ... "Z" 
'         in the current folder, if they do not exist already
'         The Script was created for the use with collection
'         of scripts and batch files for archiving and fileing
'         of software and file collections.
'---------------------------------------------------------------
'Parameters: No Parameters Required or Supported
'            Simply run the script from the DOS command prompt
'            in Windows by typing "wscript !folders.vbs" 
'---------------------------------------------------------------
'Copyright: NONE, F**k that shit! Use it! Improve it! Share it!
'---------------------------------------------------------------
 
Dim oFso, a
Set oFso = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
if NOT oFso.FolderExists("0-9") then
  oFso.CreateFolder("0-9")
end if
For a = 65 to 90
  if NOT oFso.FolderExists(chr(a)) then
    oFso.CreateFolder(chr(a))
  end if
Next
Set oFso = Nothing

!dirlist.vbs Script


'---------------------------------------------------------------
'Script Name: !dirlist.vbs
'---------------------------------------------------------------
'VBScript by Carsten Cumbrowski, written in March 2009
'---------------------------------------------------------------
'Purpose: Generates a .txt file with the name "!" + name of 
'         current folder. The text file contains a list of all
'         files in the sub directories with the names "0-9",
'         "A","B" ... "Z" and totals for the number of files
'         and size in bytes of each sub folder and in total.
'         The Script was created for the use with collection
'         of scripts and batch files for archiving and fileing
'         of software and file collections.
'---------------------------------------------------------------
'Parameters: No Parameters Required or Supported
'            Simply run the script from the DOS command prompt
'            in Windows by typing "wscript !dirlist.vbs" 
'---------------------------------------------------------------
'Copyright: NONE, F**k that shit! Use it! Improve it! Share it!
'---------------------------------------------------------------
 
'Declaration of Constants
Const ForAppending = 8
Const SeparatorLength = 70
 
'Declaration and Initialization of Work Variables and Objects at Runtime
Dim oFso: Set oFso= Wscript.createobject("scripting.fileSystemObject")
Dim sFolderPath: sFolderPath = oFso.getAbsolutePathName("")
Dim oFolder: Set oFolder = oFso.GetFolder(sFolderPath)
Dim sFilePath: sFilePath = oFso.GetAbsolutePathName("!" & oFolder.Name & ".txt")
 
'Declaration of Un-Initialized Work Variables
Dim oSubFolder, aFiles
 
'Declaration of Work Variables with Initial Values
Dim iFolderFileCount: iFolderFileCount = 0
Dim iFolderByteCount: iFolderByteCount = 0
Dim iFileCount: iFileCount = 0
Dim iByteCount: iByteCount = 0
Dim sFileList: sFileList = ""
 
'Check if an old Listings File Already Exists and Delete it
if oFso.FileExists(sFilePath) then
   oFso.DeleteFile sFilePath, true
end if
Dim oFile: Set oFile = oFso.OpenTextFile(sFilePath, ForAppending, true, -2)
 
oFile.WriteLine ""
oFile.WriteLine "Content of: " & oFolder.Name
oFile.WriteLine replace(space(SeparatorLength)," ","=")
oFile.WriteLine ""
 
'Process Sub Folders of Current Work Folder
For each oSubFolder in oFolder.SubFolders
 
   if oSubFolder.Name = "0-9" or _
      ( len(oSubFolder.Name) = 1 and asc(left(oSubFolder.Name,1))>= 65 and _
      asc(left(oSubFolder.Name,1))<= 90 ) then
   'Only process Sub Folders "0-9", "A","B" ..."Z" and ignore the rest
 
    Set oFolderFiles = oSubFolder.Files
      'Get Files in Sub Folder and Build List
    For each oFolderFile in oFolderFiles
         'oFso.GetFileName
       sFileList = sFileList & oFolderFile.Name & vbcrlf
         iFolderFileCount  = iFolderFileCount + 1
         iFolderByteCount = iFolderByteCount + oFolderFile.Size
       iFileCount = iFileCount + 1
         iByteCount = iByteCount + oFolderFile.Size
    Next
 
     oFile.WriteLine replace(space(SeparatorLength)," ","-")
     oFile.WriteLine "Folder: " &  oSubFolder.Name
     oFile.WriteLine replace(space(SeparatorLength)," ","-")
     oFile.WriteLine "Total: " &  formatnumber(iFolderFileCount,0) & " files"
     oFile.WriteLine "Total Size: " &  formatnumber(iFolderByteCount,0) & " bytes" & _
                     " (" & formatnumber(iFolderByteCount/1024,0) & " KB / " & _
                     formatnumber(iFolderByteCount/1024000,0) & " MB)" 
     oFile.WriteLine replace(space(SeparatorLength)," ","-")
     oFile.Write sFileList
     oFile.WriteLine ""
     sFileList = ""
     iFolderFileCount = 0
     iFolderByteCount = 0
   end if
 
Next
 
oFile.WriteLine replace(space(SeparatorLength)," ","=")
oFile.WriteLine oFolder.Name
oFile.WriteLine "Total: " &  formatnumber(iFileCount,0) & " files"
oFile.WriteLine "Total Size: " &  formatnumber(iByteCount,0) & " bytes" & _
                " (" & formatnumber(iByteCount/1024,0) & " KB / " & _
                formatnumber(iByteCount/1024000,0) & " MB)" 
oFile.WriteLine ""
 
oFile.Close
Set oFile = Nothing
 
Set oFolder = Nothing
Set oFso = Nothing

I hope that you might also find use for those little but helpful scripts. If not, I hope that you enjoyed my little personal trick back in time about my collecting habits. If you are a collector like me, then you can probably relate to those things without any problems. If you are not, then you might got a nice laugh out of it instead. hehe.


Cheers!


Carsten aka Roy/SAC 

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Cirque du Soleil - Complaints and Suggestions Revisited

In my blog post and video from January about some issues with Cirque du Soleil, I was complaining about three things. 1.) about the hard to impossible to find Wintuk show soundtrack 2.) the unavailability of merchandize, especially the media content (DVDs, CDs etc.) outside the United States and 3.) about the missing tracks on many of the so called official soundtracks of Cirque du Soleil shows.

It is two months later now and I decided to check once more to see if anything changed this my last "rant".

If you rather watch and listen than reading my blog post, watch my 9 minutes video below, which covers pretty much the same content as I do in my writing below.

Issue 1 Reviewed - Where to Buy the Official Wintuk Soundtrack CD

Okay, first to the positive things (bitter sweet actually, because it is not all positive, only partially).

cds-boutique-cd-section_for_usa-page1-03012009

When I checked the CD section of the Cirque online shop (Cirque Boutique), I couldn't believe my eyes at first.

There it was (see screen shot image to your right), the  official soundtrack CD for the show "Wintuk" is now finally also available in the general Cirque du Soleil merchandise online store and not only in that special micro online shop on another web site that they created, just for that one lonely show.

You have to have "United States" selected as ship-to country to get that listing.

You can still buy the official Wintuk soundtrack CD at that special store. Regarding the listing. Also note that the United States version has even a second listing page for music cd releases (see second image on the left). I will get back to that one in a moment.

Okay, so far so good. But Icds-boutique-cd-section_for_usa-page2-03012009 also tried Google again, to see, if I would be able now to find the sound track cd, if I would still be looking for it, like I was last year.

So I typed "buy official Wintuk soundtrack cd" into the Google search box and checked the results that I got back on my screen. You can look at the screen shot of the Google.com search results page with my comments below.

The number one results is still a torrent with the pirated version of the soundtrack CD. mmmh.

The number two result is an eBay auction listing for the CD. Also not so great, because folks are sometimes abusing the lack of availability or easy access to things to make a quick buck by purchasing the stuff for the original price from the original source that nobody can find and then turn around to sell the same product with hefty profit margins added to it at a place that people are actually able to find.

The number three listing is finally the official special mini store for the Wintuk show, where you can buy the CD without any problems or artificial mark-ups etc. Hallelujah.

google search buy wintuk

This is funny. The number four listing is my blog post from January where I complained about the inability to find the soundtrack hehe. Well, that post has also (just like this one) a link to the CD at the official store. I wonder if my nice and descriptive text links from my Cirque du Soleil 101 primer article and my other blog post had enough "Google Juice" to push the product listing of the CD out of the supplemental search index hell of Google and up into the top of the SERP's for the terms where it actually should rank number one?

Possible. My blog is getting older and older, more and more traffic and more and more authority and Google PageRank as a consequence of it.

The Cirque Boutique is nowhere to be found at all, but that does not surprise me a bit. I couldn't even help them with a link to the item there, because last time I checked, deep linking into the Cirque Boutique eShop did not work at all (unless you had a cookie set from a previous visit to the same online shop already, where you selected the correct shipping destination (country), which makes no sense whatsoever). Why would I want to refer people who visited the store already back to the same place again. If they wanted to buy something, then they probably did so already.

Well, until now, the few okay to good listings are surrounded by junk or unrelated  stuff, like promo videos on YouTube, Torrents, Torrents, Torrents, a Wikipedia article, the old out of stock Amazon.com marketplace listing of the CD, some forum posts and more Torrents to download the pirated version of the CD in MP3 format.

Issue 2 Reviewed - Cirque du Soleil Merchandise outside the U.S.

If you read the first segment of this post, then you already saw the CD listings for customers from the United States at the Cirque Boutique online store.

cds-boutique-dvd-section_for_usa-03012009

The listing shows 20 Music CD releases on two pages, available for purchase.

To your left is a screen shot of the DVD section of the store, also for customers in the United States only. Not too bad, 16 DVDs listed in total, 2 of them unfortunately out of stock, which makes it 14 DVDs available for purchase.

Now I went back, erased my cookie for the store that set the U.S. location and selected India as shipping destination instead.

The prices of the store are still shown in U.S. dollars, but the look and feel of the store changed (different site) and most importantly, the listings of available products changed as well. I did not embed the screen shots. I only linked to them via plain text link. Here they are:

The results were bad, really bad.

The DVD selection is worse that it was last year in September, when I checked the last time. Instead of 5 DVDs available back then, only 4 DVDs were available 7 months later. Nothing compared to the 16 (or 14) DVD releases available for U.S. customers.

The Music CD selection is almost as bad, but just not as bad as the DVD section. It lists 11 CDs, but shows 4 of them as being out of stock = 7 CDs actually available. Not convincing, if you consider that for U.S. customers are 20 CDs available to choose from at the same category.

Cirque du Soleil - Fix This!

Oddities in Cirque Boutique U.S. Listings

1. Mystère CD or Mystère Live CD or Mystère What?

504452_3 506776_3

Have a look at the product detail pages screen shots for the two CDs.

I will keep this one short. Look at the screen shots and tell me, if you notice something?

Okay, I am just kidding. They are the same, except for the Image and the Catalog numbers. The real product pages even link to the same music sample files. The CDs are virtually identical, except for the cover and booklet.

So don't waste your money on both of them.. buy only one of them, unless you are a collector.

2. No Thrilling Ride to Kooza Show DVD

The Cirque Boutique lists the latest show DVD release for "Kooza", but unfortunately it is out of stock. The release contains two DVDs and the item is sold exclusively through the Cirque du Soleil Boutique. It is not made (officially) available anywhere else.

I purchased the DVD (2 discs) already a while ago and even blogged about it, when I got it. Before the show DVD was released, a "making of" documentary about Kooza was released earlier. The DVD release called "A Thrilling Ride Through Kooza"  is only 47 minutes in length.

See screen shot of product detail page for the documentary DVD "A Thrilling Ride Through Kooza".

509941_3 509122_3

The documentary DVD is available for $19 for, which is a not so good price for a rather short making of documentary feature. Like KA Extreme, about the show KA, which is also short like this. They did a better job with "Flow" about the show "O" and "The Mystery of Mystère", which are each 80 minutes in length or "Lovesick" about the show "Zumanity", which is 99 minutes in length.

Anyhow, the thing is that the whole 47 minutes documentary that they sell for $19 dollars is included on the second DVD discs with bonus features of the show DVD release for only $10 more. That CD, where you get a lot more bang for your buck is out of stock. Not very good for their own latest DVD show release, which they did not make available for purchase at other large retailers like Amazon.com etc.

If you do not happen to walk by a physical Cirque Store location (in Vegas, Orlando, Tokyo or Macao) where they might have a copy of it left (if you are lucky), your options to get the DVD legally are thinning out quickly.

Guess what, the whole disc set is available for download in ISO format via warez torrents or on Usenet. It will probably not for long that pirated versions will be the only versions that can be found in Google, unless I write a few more blog posts about the DVD release to out-rank them.

Not good. FIX THAT!

Kooza_DVD_prod_detail

That Cirque cannot do much that quickly about missing tracks on soundtrack CD releases is clear.

However, I hope that the OST CD releases for the shows that launched last year in Asia and Las Vegas will become available for purchase soon. The music for the show "Criss Angel - Believe", which premiered in October in Las Vegas, Nevada, the show "Zaia", which premiered in Macao, China last August and the show "Zed", which launched also last October at the Disneyland Tokyo in its custom build theatre.

I hope that Cirque will not show the same attitude that it shows to U.S. content for non-U.S. customers in reverse. I mean that the merchandise for the Asian shows will not become available for purchase to customers outside of Asia (e.G. the United States). It would not surprise me too much, if this happens, but I try to remain optimistic and hope that Cirque will get their act together and fix this problem.

I also hope that the sound tracks will be complete. I will get them, one way or another, if not via purchase from a store officially, then via MP3 download from the Internet, where they will become available with absolute certainty.

Oh Boy, this post became longer than I originally intended. It also contains more stuff than my 10 minutes video. So if you read this post instead of just watching the video, them you got rewarded for hanging in with me :).

But now it is enough! Seriously!

Cheers!

Carsten aka Roy/SAC

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