M IF 0 w w I 0 S 9 9' Reach 40,000 readers after class, advertise in MAGAZINE Be a Daily Arts staffer... or just look like one. Cover Story Continued from Page 9 All the answers for a successful weekend party Cassette Recorder. In just 10 years, the VCR has invaded the homes of an entire television generation. "It has given viewers the ability to control the screen," says the Free Press' Duffy. In 1979, the VCR was a novelty. Less than 3 percent of American homes had a video cassette recorder or a similar device. Today, the VCRs are present in over 64 per- cent of homes. It took the television itself a generation longer than that to establish itself as an "important" and necessary luxury. But with videotape rental "supermarkets" on every street corner and the cost of VCRs becoming more affordable, a home without one is like a house without a refrigerator. Tape rentals, especially those of mo- tion pictures, have had a noticeable effect on the motion picture industry in the last decade. Studios now have an opportunity to re-release films in the home after their theater runs are complete. This translates into more profits for Hollywood, and more ac- cessibilit "The piece of Duffy ob Along also span infamous more stul lem with that you c television Betamax titles ava the domi VCRs. Despi technolo 1980's a early '8( home vid couple c found aft vaders o rooms. T market h by Ninten theater, If you'd i!ke to write for books, dance, visual arts, film, or music, call 763-0379. A Se " s " " " " " s " " " 0 -0 0 0 0 *0 0 SALE! ! ! " * 0 . 0 0 0 ** MC - VISA-" ! 0 0 An array of party kegs at Blue Front Mon-Sat 8:30-5:30 Fri 8:30-7:30 -I L By Alex Gordon Humans first gathered together for means of survival. Eventually complex societies arose throughout the land. Cities were built, the cotton gin was invented, and John Tesch landed a job on Entertainment Tonight. Today, however, human beings still need to gather en masse for sur- vival. No longer are the enemies a saber-toothed tiger or a nasty nomadic tribe of barbarians. Today's natural enemies are mid-terms, five- to-seven page, double-spaced papers, and job interviews. And, unless you're kind of pecu- liar, you probably don't sit around the fire recounting the day's hunt while making clay pots and atl-atils. No, today we gather on weekend nights around the keg recounting the week's tests while pouring beer down our throats. Today we hold a party. Now parties have been with us since Beowulf and his men sat around the Mead Hall celebrating Grendel's demise. Today's parties, however, have taken on much more complex dimensions and require more elaborate planning. Last weekend, I and my five housemates threw a party that we would like to think was a success. Unfortunately, in our cut-throat, dog-eat-dog, everyone-for- themselves, survival-of-the-fittest world, for every good party there are five bad parties you never hear about. "So Alex, what can I do to make Alex About Town my party a success?," you may ask. Before you look up my name in the phone book and pester me at odd hours, I think I'll tell you. Start with invitations. Remember your birthday party in third grade that was a huge hit? How did people find out about it? Word of mouth or a rumor there was a party on your block? No, they had an invitation. Invitations are not hard to make. Simply find a computer with many different fonts, throw them all to- gether, take the print out over to Kinko's, run off a hundred or so on some funky colored paper and hand them out. VIOLA! Instant empirical proof you are planning to throw a party. An invitation does not guarantee the invitee will show up, but if you hand out enough of them, you should get some kind of crowd. Even ants will leave a picnic if the potato salad runs out, so you need something to keep your guests at your place. Super Glue will do the trick, but I think a half-barrel of Busch is a much more reasonable way to keep them. Buying the keg, or kegs, is the quintessential activity in any party planning and maintaining. Although you can purchase a keg at any number of the the fine liquor stores in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area, The Blue Front on the corner of Packard and Arbor is the place to go. Prices are reasonable, they have over ten different beers in kegs in stock, and -best of all- you get to load up your car on Arbor St., see who else is buying, and size up your fellow party-throwing competition. The rules of beer-etiquette are fairly simple. Consider the following, put to the tune of Crosby, Stills, and Nash's "Teach Your Children": Tap your keg well, or your party's health will slowly go by. And fill their cups with beer, the one's they'll drink, the one's they'll want re-filled. Don't you ever ask why, if you run out of beer go out and buy, just hand out more money and sigh, and know your party-goers will love you. Of course you may want to serve punch. Punch usually doesn't have to taste good. If it's potent, punch is inherently consumed by the merits of being punch. For a variation, buy some dry ice from the Washtenaw Dairy on West Madison (or the Chemistry Stores in the Chemistry Building if you can convince them that you need it for a class) and add it to the punch for way-cool effects. You may want to have a theme for your party like "toga, "Halloween," "sock hop," or, my personal fave, "humans are inherently evil." All have worked See Alex, Page 13 Rows of televisions for sale. gain the momentary attention span of millions of viewers. Television commercials have changed their "look" as well in the 1980's. As our fascination with television has diminished since its birth in the late 1940's, so has our attention span. "Commercials (in the 1980's) re- flect our short attention spans," Duffy said, "Whereas 10 or 15 years ago, commercials may have averaged a minute, today they are now 30, even 15 seconds." In order to get our very valuable attention, advertisers have glossed, slicked, polished and modernized their roles. Entertaining and even en- joyable commercials are an advertis- ing phenomenon that has only really emerged in the last decade. As advertisers grope for every possible way to make their products attractive to the public, product wars, not surprisingly, have devel- oped. Burger King put its "flame broiled" image up against Wendy's "Where's the beef?", Chevy took on Ford, Tide took on Cheer, and AT&T took on MCI. Television has become a natural theater for ad wars in the 1980's as manufacturers attempt to produce better, more controversial commer- cials that will translate into more dollars in the marketplace. Over 20 percent of the television we watch consists of commercials. The con- stant commercial bombardment of comedy, (Miller Light), statistics (Dentyne), and yuppies (Nissan) have effected our viewing habits as well as our images of the products we use. As the look of advertising has changed in the 1980's, so has the cost. TV advertising is by far the most expensive of any other popular media. The Super Bowl is often used as a barometer to measure the chang- ing costs of network advertising prices. Ten years ago, a 30-second commercial during the Super Bowl would cost a mere $180,000. Today, it's nearly $600,000. Advertising cost in prime time is generally comparable to this, depend- ing upon the popularity of a show, said Charren and Sandler. The price-tag is only one aspect of the radical change television ad- vertising has endured in the '80s. Whether James Coburn is paid $250,000 a word for saying "Schlitz Light" or Michael Jackson gets $3 million for having his claymation likeness sell California raisins, the look and feel of advertising have changed because of the changes to television as a whole. We live in an MTV/Miami Vice culture, and commercials reflect that. VCR and the Cultural Love Affair (The VCR) has been a lifesaver with our son, Jeremy, who is seven- teen months old. I taped 'The Mup- pets,' and every time he's crying I put it on. It does wonders. -A young mother Any list of appliances in the his- tory of technological achievement which have so completely dominated their eras must include the Video- -J + PACKAGING AND SHIPPING I.P.S Packages items; we use Foam-in-Places for fragile items, custom crating available. We ship via: UPS, Airborne, Profit, Emery, DHL, USPS, and others. + COMPLETE SUPPLIES Packing envelopes, boxes, tapes, tubes, bubble wrap, U.S. Postage Stamps, labels, and much more. +*MAI 24 h mail mailF + FAX Send chea Lowe 9 INDEPENDENT P051 Faculty and Student Ever need Packagin< Packing Supplies, M Rental, or Fax? 1756 Plymouth Rd. 747-7900 FAX 747-8519 M-F: Sat: Presents Coupon S .OW r Six-Paks: =- St Pauli Girl $4.99 +dep Budweiser $2.99 +dep Busch $1.99 +dep - - --mm-- -" (I- Voortman Cookies11 Na I $1.19/ lb. I 79 I with coupon II limit3tbs. expires11/17/89 ) reg Liter bottles fCh Pepsi, Coke, 7-up and assorted other flavors $1. (i with cop on 1 (limit 1) exires-11/17- - Page 6 Weekend/November 3,1989 VCRs have become a vital part of today's entertainment systems. * Weekend/November 31989