Archive for September, 2009

A Good Cook

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

The news last Friday was brief, but BIG: Dick Cook was “stepping down” as chairman of The Walt Disney Studios. Mr. Cook officially stated:

I am stepping down from my role as chairman of The Walt Disney Studios, effective immediately. I have loved every minute of my 38 years that I have worked at Disney… from the beginning as a ride operator on Disneyland’s steam train and monorail to my position as chairman of The Walt Disney Studios. To wrap up my Disney experience in a neatly bundled statement is close to impossible. But what I will say is, during my time at the Studio, we have achieved many industry and Company milestones. Our talent roster is simply the best in the business. I believe our slate of upcoming motion pictures is the best in our history. But most of all, I love the people, my colleagues, my teammates, who are the most talented, dedicated and loyal folks in the world. I know that I leave the Studio in their exceptional hands. I have been contemplating this for some time now and feel it’s the right time for me to move on to new adventures…and in the words of one of my baseball heroes, Yogi Berra, “If you come to a fork in the road, take it.”

Disney CEO Bob Iger’s short eulogy read:

Throughout his distinguished 38-year Disney career, Dick Cook’s outstanding creative instincts and incomparable showmanship have truly enriched this company and significantly impacted Disney’s great legacy. We thank Dick for his tremendous passion for Disney, and his many accomplishments and contributions to The Walt Disney Studios, including a very promising upcoming film slate. On behalf of everyone at Disney, we wish him the best with all the future has to offer.

Of course, everyone knows that there is always more to an abrupt corporate departure of this magnitude, and within days the “untold” stories began to surface in the Los Angeles Times and elsewhere. Google “Dick Cook”, and you can triangulate a fascinating story.

I had the pleasure of breaking bread with Mr. Cook a few years ago in the rotunda of the Team Disney building. As a CG supervisor with Walt Disney Feature Animation, I must admit to being pleasantly surprised that someone like Dick Cook would accept an unsolicited lunch invitation from a “below the line” frame jockey. But he was as down to earth as you can imagine: from his order of spare ribs and fries, to the candid expression of his concerns and hopes for The Walt Disney Company. Given the content of that conversation years ago, it was with sadness but no surprise that I read of his departure last week.

Time will tell what lies in store for Dick Cook and the company that he loved and served so well. “It’s just business” is a pervasive rationale in Hollywood, but for Dick Cook it never was “just” that.

Farewell, Captain Cook!

So Simple, Even A Monkey Can Watch It

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

The days of theaters full of Poindexters are numbered as Alioscopy USA, a 3D visualization technology provider, will showcase autostereoscopic 3D content playing on a proprietary HD LCD display at IBC 2009 in Amsterdam, September 11-15, 2009.

Autostereoscopy is a technique for displaying three-dimensional images that can be viewed without glasses or other headgear. Depth perception is produced on a display using lenticular lenses or parallax barriers. The displays can have multiple viewing zones, allowing many users to watch the stereoscopic image at the same time. Other displays use eye tracking systems to automatically adjust the stereo pairs to follow viewers’ eyes as they move their heads. Although eyestrain and headaches are still a side effect of extended viewing exposure, the autostereoscopic market is taking flight - driven by the resurgence of stereoscopic films and the emerging stereoscopic broadcast market

A wide range of players are in the game with Alioscopy, including 3Dicon, Apple, Dimension Technologies, Fraunhofer HHI, Hitachi, Holografika , i-Art, Miracube, NewSight, Philips, SeeFront, SeeReal Technologies, Sharp, Spatial View, Tridelity, VisuMotion and Zero Creative. Philips has released the first 3D HDTV, with a 2160p resolution of 3840×2160 pixels and 46 viewing angles, while Hitachi has released the first 3D mobile phone for the Japanese market.

The Japanese get all the cool stuff first! ;-)