Monday, September 30, 2013

Sept 2013

   Somehow somewhere along the line I came under the impression that the milk powder plant they're building here in Fallon would be up this month, September 2013. I'm fairly certain that's accurate, but it could be the expanded Perazzo Brothers dairy barn scheduled for September, or it could be the powder plant scheduled for September of '14, or it could be both, or even both of those things, or even vice versa.

   Either way, if everything went according to plan, according to the schedule of which I have knowledge-- if everything went according to plan then we should have a brand spanking new milk powder plant. Right here in Fallon. Very exciting for the local dairy industry, gonna be a lot of expansion. Milk powder sometimes explodes (!), so I hope everything is safe, and since I *prescheduled this I hope that doesn't strike as being horribly ironic because that actually happened.

   That'd suck.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Thespis Strip Dated Sunday, September 27, 2009

Click to embiggen.
TRANSCRIPT:
Marvin: 'Sup.
A lot of you out there are probably wondering about Collin's seemingly uncharacteristic behavior in last week's strip.
Well, according to...
...some dude's...
...theory of characterization, any character is capable of performing any action at any time.
No matter How uncharacteristic.
All the author need do is provide significant motive, so as to not abandon...
SUSPENSION -->OF<-- DISBELIEF.
or whatever.
For example:
(Man this hurts.)

Saturday, September 28, 2013

A... Cheesy... Commercial?? Dang these are hard

   Holy crud. The presidential candidate running for office who ruins his chances by declining a cheese plate in that old "power of cheese" commercial? Gregory Itzin, looking exactly like a younger Charles Logan of 24. Look, right there, on the microphone in the preview frame! It even has a little "24!"


   Also, that's not how you pronounce "Gouda." But it's all right, because it's not even technically cheese, I don't think, and the ADA would know that, so I always figure they're being subtly ironic when they make jokes like that.

   That is all.

Friday, September 27, 2013

SHADOW OF THE HEGEMON

   A direct sequel to Ender's Shadow, it establishes a very heavy tone of military intrigue throughout the entire series.

THE GOOD:
  1. Petra smuggling out a message in the dragon- that scene alone would make the film worth it
  2. Petra tearing the psychologist to shreds.
  3. Bean talking to Theresa Wiggin about Ender.

THE BAD:

  1. Sister Carlotta's death takes place by necessity offscreen.
  2. The stuff in captivity. Not much goes on there.


THE UGLY:

  1. Virlomi is introduced here (she wasn't in any books previous) and she plays a pretty big part.
  2. Aramis Knight, who plays Bean, will have grown just perfectly by this time to fit the Anton's Key he's-a-giant bits. That's not what concerns me. It really depends on how far after the other movies they start this.


Thursday, September 26, 2013

Feline Behavior

   Got the cat up on the desk, turned the desk light on behind it, and it turned around to look at the light. It can later be seen examining it. Suggesting that in some sense animals have got some idea of the concept of light- instead of seeing the shadow in front of himself as a novelty, the cat deduces that the shadow is cast by the novelty of the light behind him. And it was definitely the lightbulb, instead of the sound of it clicking on, that caught the cat's attention. It might have been the heat of the bulb, but I doubt the bulb would get hot as quickly as the cat reacted to it...

   Still haven't eliminated the possibility that the cat heard the click of it turning on, turned around for that, and saw that the light itself was on. That's not what it looked like, but that's a possibility. Nor have I eliminated the possibility of, like, ultraviolet sight or other sensory forms that we humans don't have but animals do (infrasound?) Cat's refusing to cooperate right now for further experimentation, so, sure, it's not so far fetched to assume that the cat just sees that the lightbulb is on- it's actually kind of downright silly to say anything else.

   So, yes, the cat saw that the light was on. What does this say? That the cat understands what light is? That's how it would appear. Anything else? Nope, nothing else. Why, then, you may ask, is this so important?

   Well, if the animal understands that light comes from a source, this certainly changes (or sheds new light on- no pun intended, but that still feels icky) the cat's relationship with laser pointers.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Pets

   Watching a kitten playing with tassels, it occurred to me that the aloofness cats take from you might be their own special kind of draw. There's the obvious always-eager-to-please nature of dogs, but cats, eh... I'm just doin' my own thing. Tassels, man. Tassels.

   And then there's weasels, the third most popular pet, which- I don't know, whatever weasels do. Be cute, and only occasionally rabid? Makes sense to me.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

And Here It Is

   Um, here it is, my first post from my mission. First, and only, actually. I knew that if worst came to worst I could always do this and send out posts via email like I’m doing with this one, but Cailin said if it’s causing me that much of a hassle just drop it, and I realized that in this instance her laziness is actually a good influence on me so I can focus on my work better and all that.

   My mission gets out for me on not the 7th of December (which is two years from when I got out) but the 21st of November- or as early as the 19th, if I understand correctly (my understanding is, there’s a final luncheon on the second-to-last Wednesday of the month and you can just leave whenever you want after that?) So I could get out on my birthday, even. That’d be rad. (I want a PS4. And some books. And we’ll talk later.) 


   I’ll be back, I guess. Yes, there are still going to be posts between then; it’s just going to be kind of intermittent from now on. There are if I’m calculating correctly, 124 days from here till 2015 that there won’t be any posts on; out of about 1 ¼ years (I don’t have the energy to do the exact calculation right now), that’s only about a quarter of the posts (I don’t have the energy to do the exact calculation right now), which I’d say considering the circumstances is pretty good. That means, on average (I don’t have the energy to do the exact calculation right now), 3/4ths of the time there still will be posts, so keep checking back and stuff. I’ll be back, I promise; till then, don’t be surprised if there are gaps (which, again I promise, I’ll fill up from the future as though they never existed. Orwellianism is a go.)

   Though I didn't get all of my posts scheduled, scheduling was still important somehow. A few explanations as to why that is:

  1. There’s a parable/object lesson that I think fits- you fill up the Mason jar with big things, which allows smaller things to trickle down through. I filled up the schedule with the big stuff first (comics, mostly), and then I could work on the littler stuff.
  1. Idle hands- Scheduling so many posts, though I didn't get through with 100% of it, gave me something to do at a crucial time. There were so many non-Kosher ways I could have diddled around online right before my mission. I don’t have the energy to do the math here either. Suffice it to say, many, many ways.
  1. Learning to review and organize. I categorized posts into levels of necessity, what was worth sharing and what was best to hold off on until later, to be expanded. I do have more than the needed number of posts in my “drafts” folder, but I’d rather put out 75% of my 100% than 100% of my 75%. I hope that that’s a good thing. Anyway, I learned to put up only quality posts at the expense of getting everything done. That probably won’t cut it in the real world, but by showing pride in my work, I hope I’m also showing integrity. I don’t think I’d do it again, but maybe I would. Not sure.


   If I had known that it’s not exactly two years, maybe I would have been a little better in my schedulings. Maybe even, a little more inspired. But, ah, oh well. With the 18-20 fewer days that need the pre-posts, maybe those could have been crunched together? I can do that when I get back, as a future-post thing. The world is kind of depressing. (Not the dark, horrible stuff, mind you, but the blazingly awesome stuff.) I think I’ll withdraw from it for a while.


   But I will be back! Have my terrible fan arts improved at all over the course of the mission? What will my thoughts be on that My Little Pony “Equestria Girls” feature (I’ve seen the DVDs at Wal Mart, chill out)? And, some other third hypothetical question? I guess we’ll see!

Monday, September 23, 2013

A New Tack

   Yeah, I was right. There won't be enough time to do it all. All of the posts. So either I drop it and the posts will only pop up sporadically based on the ones I have already in the past managed to schedule for the future, or this continues being daily but not posted by me. They can still be composed by me, I mean, there's email I'm allowed to send, but, somebody else is going to have to do the actual physical posting.

   From where I'm standing, As I write this, I have 591 of the 730 posts needed posted, (597 discounting the ones set to publish after my return but I scheduled them beforehand anyway because that'd be easier,) and about 70 minutes left to post the rest. I suppose I could spend less than one minute per post through the little more 100 posts I need to get up, but...

   When offered a choice, you're going to pick quality every time.

   I continue to stall in posting this, seeing how close I can get, until the last few minutes. This time tomorrow, if you see a post here it'll be from on an e-mail my mission. Not all future posts, of course. But some of them.

   (It's not poor planning on my part; the internet chose a very bad time to shut itself down last night so I had to drop my plans, and I knew that I always had the option of composing posts via e-mail anyway, which was actually my original plan.)

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Thespis Strip Dated Sunday, September 20, 2009

Click to embiggen.
TRANSCRIPT:
Collin: Stinking Doug. Thinks he's so great just 'cos his mouth is made out of cheese.
Doesn't even specify what kind of cheese... Sure sign that he's lying if he doesn't do that.
Marvin: Hey Collin, I was just wondering if I could borrow-
Collin: HEY! EVERYBODY COME OVER TO MY PLACE FOR A WINE AND CRACKERS PARTY!!!
YAAAAAA!
Marvin: ...
You know, I could really say anything at this point and it would drive the point home.

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Drawing Techniques: It's Okay to Trace

   It's okay to trace. As long as you're paying attention to what you're doing and what the original artist did. It's okay to trace.

   As a learning exercise, I mean. Trace a drawing right there in the center of the paper, and then around the edges; make sketches that demonstrate the techniques you learned. I'd post up some of my own art where I did this, but seeing how the entire center of the page would be occupied by a cheap copy of someone else's most-likely-copyrighted work of art, I think I'll skip that.

Friday, September 20, 2013

SHADOW PUPPETS

   This is probably going to be the most problematic to adapt to screen. It's got some of the best action in the series, romance, and a lot of tough decisions regarding which plot lines to place focus on. Since they more or less all come to a head in the next one, easier said than done. Aside from that, the film is liable to attract a great deal of controversy based on subject matter alone, which we'll delve into below.

THE GOOD:
  1. It more or less opens on Peter springing Achilles from Chinese captivity. If that's not an awesome promise for the rest of the film, I don't know what is.
  2. John and Theresa decoding the bizarre spam email they both received and realizing Achilles's plot.
  3. Storming the compound, and Bean shooting Achilles in the eye! Awesome!
  4. The Wiggins going back up into space, to what was once the Battle School. That's bittersweet, an awesome visitation of the first movie, and top that with all the intrigue that goes on there.
  5. Virlomi inspiring the Great Wall of India, the new flag of India.

THE BAD:
  1. There's a lot of military and political maneuvering. A book can take all the time it wants to explain these, but in a movie it flies right past you. Unless they want to make the movie longer or something, but there's already a lot going on.
  2. Having Vlad meet Petra and Bean in the park where Chopin is playing. It's a lovely scene, and wants to be turned into a movie, but it's going to be one of the first things to go.

THE UGLY:
  1. The Caliphate stuff, where Alai is Caliph, probably won't be all that controversial. But you never know, and the fact that you never know could also get controversial. This controversy may break the move. Hopefully not.
  2. Anton could either be a great or terrible character in this one, depending on how he's played. He was an awesome part of Ender's Shadow, a Hannibal Lecter figure where he had to speak in riddles out of necessity. Now he still does that out of habit, but now he, a geneticist, says he wants to have children even though he is not attracted to women. I had always seen that as an admission of asexuality, but others have seen this as OSC somehow making a dig against gay people. See how that could be controversial? Speaking of...
  3. This inspires Petra gets all chickified, wanting desperately to have babies with Bean. This is kind of important to the plot, and it pulls us through the entire thing, but it wouldn't be very good onscreen.
  4. And then, because Bean's got genes that would have his children lead miserable existences as genus freaks with life-threatening cases of the giantisms, there's some abortion! Granted, the destruction of the zygotes are faked by Achilles, who wants those genetically gifted children for himself, but still, you had us going...

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Talk Like Whatever

   Arrgh avast ye swabby scurves. Shiver my dead man's pieces of the black spot. Yo ho ho and a bottle of booty... mmm.

   You know what? Talk Like a Pirate Day kinda sucks. It really does. I don't care what the internet thinks. It's bad in concept and bad in execution. Instead, there should be a... Talk Like Ben Stein Day. Yesss. Okay, from now on, Talk Like a Pirate Day is now Talk Like Ben Stein Day.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Thumb War


   Ha ha, eat it, animals!

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Ocean's 25

What's up, you guys? I'm Matt Damon. I'm here
to tell you a tale about a dear
old friend of mine. His name, in case you have
not guessed, is George Clooney. Others in staff
include Nic Cage, Bruce Willis, Steve Carell,
and the entire cast of Ocean's Twelve.
(Plus that thirteenth guy in Ocean's Thirteen.
No wait, Bernie Mac's dead, add Charlie Sheen.)

So, now that Danny Ocean has his crack
team of thieves, he will go and he will hack
the code for getting past the doors of that
new Vegas casino, the Fancy Cat.
Along the way, he'll have to pull eight bank
heists, steal a helicopter, and a tank,
intercept all of the video feed,
impersonate several officials, weed
out the traitor, and deal with secrets from
his past. Can our hero do it? That's dumb.
He's George Clooney! He can do anything!
Now sush down, and I, Matt Damon, will sing
--or at least tell in verse-- how awesome it
is. Okay, so, one day, George and Brad Pitt
were sitting and talking about the good 
old golden thiefy days when you could
break into a bank or casino
whether it be in Vegas or Reno
and it would actually break the bank.
You have modern technology to thank
what with these ATMs and digital
transactions credit cards, original
ways to stack the odds are impossible.
The only way is through un-boss-able
teenage hacker punks. Then George realizes
that he may have a few more surprises
up his sleeve. He tracks where the Fancy Cat
gets its money, and then- imagine that!-
He writes a bunch of bouncing checks to the
eight banks, so they'll all crash, and then he
goes to check out the Fancy Cat's own vault,
past the security. He finds a fault
in the passcode system: anyone with
military I.D., and this is no myth,
could get past it. So he steals a tank and
helicopter before the code is scanned.

Voila, he's in. So! You've seen him steal
from eight banks, and the chopper and tank, and deal
with his past. He's impersonated dudes
and looped the video, breaking into
the vault. But, wasn't there this other thing?
It was on lines sixteen and seventeen.
Oh, yeah! He had to weed out the traitor!
Who could be this mysterious satyr?
I've got to admit it. The traitor is me.
I, Linus Caldwell, am the Bourne Identity.
But don't worry, it's safe, everything's cool:
I lost my memory and now clean the school.
(Good Will Hunting, in case you couldn't tell.)
"What's up with these film mashups?" you ask. Well,
Let me say this: I've moved to Bollywood to break a leg.
Oh crap! I just got shot by Daniel freaking Craig!

So, what's the moral of this tale, where Bond... James Bond,
assassinates Jason Bourne? What's the deal? Where's the magic wand?

The moral, children, is something you can bear to face:
Sometimes Hollywood is a pretty messed-up place.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Dead Tropes

   They should bring back deathtraps, gosh darn it! I've haven't seen a good deathtrap since... sheesh... I don't think I've ever seen a good death trap. Is it one of those things that people make fun of despite the fact that it was never played straight to begin with? Superman, for example, only ever changed in a phone booth twice, both in the Max Fleischer cartoons, both times stating outright that it was an unusual thing to be doing, but that he was in a hurry.

   But death traps should be played straight. There ain't nothing funny about them.

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Thespis Strip Dated Sunday, September 13, 2009

Click to embiggen.
TRANSCRIPT:
Offstage Voice 1: Yeah! Tang!
Offstage Voice 2: Woo-hoo!
Offstage Voice 3: Go! Go!
Offstage Voice 1: Yeah! Coke!
Offstage Voice 2: Rock on!
Offstage Voice 3: Yeah! Out of sight!
Offstage Voice 1: Alright! Ovaltine!
Offstage Voice 2: Choc-o-late milk!
Offstage Voice 3: Woot! Woot!
Offstage Voice 1: Hawaiian Punch!
Offstage Voice 2: Yeah!
Offstage Voice 3: Go! Go! Go!
Offstage Voice 1: ...
Offstage Voice 2: ...
Offstage Voice 3: ...
(Remember, Kids... Don't drink the Kool-Aid.)

Saturday, September 14, 2013

But Will It Work?

   Conception versus execution- how to tell how it will work. You get an idea and you get to write it, and it sounds so cool in your head, but you know that they say there's a difference between how something looks on paper and how something looks in reality. Costume designers for superhero films can attest to this.

   With writing things down, there's just no way to tell how that's going to work out on the paper. Some ideas your thoughts rambled on about, but are easily compressed into a few short sentences on the page, though you spent so much time thinking about it. And other thoughts, the thoughts you think aren't much and won't be much on paper, turn out to be extremely expandable, with new points to go off of and to expound upon. How to tell which thought is which? Beats me. But if I do figure it out, then I've already got this here to expand off of. So that's a win.

Friday, September 13, 2013

SHADOW OF THE GIANT

   Achilles is dead, but Bean, Petra, and Peter all have to deal with the effects of his actions.

THE GOOD:
  1. Opening up in a diner with Hot Soup. Bam, it's Ben Kingsley. He hands Hot Soup a pen, which he reveals to be actually a dart gun by calling it the Mandate of Heaven. There is just so much awesome with that.
  2. Find the embryos! 
  3. The ending sequel hook with Randi.
  4. Virlomi, after proving how crazy awesome and dangerous she can be in the last one, gradually succumbs to her own propaganda, and goes insane.
  5. The jeesh stuff is also cool.
  6. The adorable scene with the letter tucked into the diaper, and the addition of "I love you" to it.

THE BAD:

  1. Achilles is dead, which is sad because he was rad. All Peter has to go up against now is the entire Asian theater. Speaking of...
  2. Some have argued that revealing how Peter came into power takes away some of the excitement and mystery of just knowing he became Hegemon of Earth as Locke.


THE UGLY:

  1. Virlomi dreaming of her old friend Sayagi, who didn't make it out of rebelling against Achilles alive in Shadow of the Hegemon. I'm not sure how big a part he's going to play in that movie, which is what concerns me.
  2. How much to connect the ending of this to Shadows in Flight and Ender in Exile. Do we just focus on its own story, or delve further into that?


Thursday, September 12, 2013

Cap'n Dog

   ...That's not his name. Cap'n Dog, it's, not hit name. He is a dog, but he's... he's not even a captain. Just, he's a dog, and he's from Cap'n Patches. So I called it, Cap'n Dog. More, descriptive, than anything else.


   Once again I exhibit a pretty keen eye for textiles, but a somewhat two-dimensional conception of  anatomy... Check out that face! The right arm also kind of feels forced, but it's just tangencies in weird places, cancelling out the depth illusion... If I ever do a more polished version, with inking and coloring and everything, that'll get tidied up... it's kind of a minor piece, though, I'm not sure if it would be worth it...

   I think I will do that, actually; this one's got just too good of a base to let those three or four surface missteps utterly mar it...

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Antz

   Noticed something heartbreaking on the Antz poster. Antz came out more than a month before a Bug's Life, but they were different enough to avoid any questions of being cheap-knock offs of one another. Maybe? Either way, Bug's Life is a terrible movie anyway.

   But, look, right there, behind Z.


   Yeah, they both came out in 1998. At least it didn't take place in the future, like X-Men or A.I.. It's not like anyone knew what would happen.

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Thusly a Deviant

   For those of you as impressed with Cailin's art as I am, you can check out some of her stuff on deviantART here, where she goes by the name of Avvaeccus (Ah-vay-shus.) She hasn't been on in years, at press time, which is more than a year ago when I scheduled this so maybe that's changed. http://avaeccus.deviantart.com/

   I'm kind of toying with the idea of getting a deviantART (or something) myself. I've got a blog because it's more solitary, and so you're kind of separated from everything so there's more emphasis on yourself, but, as part of a group, there's actually a greater chance of being found because people know to look.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Lampy's Adventures in Political Correctness

 

   That poor lamp can't do anything right. He deserves it, though, is the thing. He got what was coming to him.

   I just love the idea of a lamp being told that lamps can't have a sexual orientation.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Thespis Strip Dated Sunday, September 6, 2009

Click to embiggen.
TRANSCRIPT: 
Collin: In 
(Meanwhile, in an alternate universe in which "the Shubdubs" is the coolest name for a band ever...)
Collin: fact, the "boy" in the name El Niño refers to baby Jesus, as the phenomenon was first reported around Christmastime by Peruvian fisherman in the late 1800s.
La Niña, El Niño's counterpart,  (associated with colder-than-normal sea surface levels rather than warmer-than-normal ones) was discovered and named as recently as 1985.
ENSO, (El Niño-Southern Ocillation [sic]), while called simply "El Niño" in popular usage, actually refers to not only the El Niño-La Niña cycle, but also the cycle of Southern Ocillation, [sic] an ocillation [sic] in air pressure between the tropical Eastern & the Western Pacific Ocean waters.
Low atmospheric pressure tends to occur over warm and high pressure occurs over cold water, in part because deep convection over the warm water acts to transport air.
Also, the Shubdubs is the coolest band name ever.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Crab Ponies

   I am so sorry. Just, in keeping up with all the bizarre minutiae on the internet, I'd be remiss if I did not report this.

   It's like the absolute overcute big-headed stylization of Generation 3.5, taken far beyond its logical conclusion and transplanted into Generation 4. Crab Ponies. So far I've only seen Apple Jack and Twilight Sparkle crab ponies, but I think that's enough, right? The following video has been described as a succinct summation of the internet: 


   And crab Twilight marching, in .GIF format (because .GIFs rule):

inkbunny.net
   As far as I can tell, the phenomenon has nothing whatever to do with this, headcrab ponies:

blackrathmar.deviantart.com
   I hope you're happy, internet. I hope you're happy.

Friday, September 6, 2013

The Countdown

   In honor of the Ender's Game film coming out November 1 of this year, I've decided to do a series of posts leading up to the big event, once every Friday for all the Shadow books and the Ender Quartet, breaking down what a big-screen adaptation could look like. All the books in the series (okay, not like the Earth Unaware stuff, and I've yet to read Shadows in Flight, and if they were to adapt Ender in Exile I'm pretty sure it'd be as a television series (ooh, how cool would that be?) and plus I've got no place to fit those into the schema so I'm not going to bother.)

   Using my hip insider's knowledge of the film industry (and by that I mean that one time I interned at that indie movie) I'm going to offer up speculations about what would be good, bad, or ugly to translate to screen. Counting down from the Shadow books, starting next week, all the way to Ender's Game which I'm timing to coincide with the film's release.

   I just hope they don't change the release date on me. Man, would I look foolish then.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

George Clooney!

   George Clooney. Awesome, right? Handsome, charming, good actor. Except... Except his name is George Clooney. Think about that for a second. It just occurred to me. First of all, his name is George. George. We tend to overlook a celebrity's name, as some celebrities fit their names perfectly (there ain't nobody Meryl Streep-ier than Meryl Streep) but we've just sort of lived with George Clooney long enough to think that his name fits him, when really it doesn't. We're accustomed to associate a celebrity's name with that celebrity. Bill Murray. Clooney! That's not a name! Cloooooney. But, when combined with George, there's some magic there that makes him this sexy white tiger.

   Brad Pitt! There's a sexy exiting name for a sexy exiting celebrity. Tom Cruise. Tom Cruise. Yes. Matt Damon, okay. Matt, definitely, Damon, sure.You know who doesn't fit this? Hugh Grant. I guess I just sort of see him as being this Cary Grant sort of figure, but then I actually see him on screen and I think oh. He's so young. Shouldn't he be in his 80s or something? Hugh Grant is a terrible name for a celebrity. Hyoo. Grrrant.

   Does this only work with males? I couldn't tell you the difference between Penelope Cruz and Penelope Lopez (there is a Penelope Lopez, correctly? Yes? Alright.) Well, there's the aforementioned Ms. Streep, as well as the whole "complete the sentence" thing with Megan Fox. (Complete the sentence: Megan...)

   (See, you said "is a fox," didn't you?) So there's that. And men get to star in thrillers while females are stuck with interchangeable romcoms. But for females, for the most part their names aren't part of their identity. More of a handy label more than anything, that allows us to know which one we're talking about. "Oh! She was in that one with Johnny Depp that no one went to go see, and she was Fox in Wanted, and she was married to that d-bag a few years back. Yeah. Major hottie." See? The only reason I knew of the existence of Penelope Cruz is because she's somehow not related to Tom Cruise and they were in a relationship previously.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Colsen


   Agent Phil Colsen was set up heavily in Iron Man 2 in a part that didn't contribute to the story much at all but paid off in Avengers. Watch Avengers, then in Iron Man 2 it makes us glad to see more of him in retrospect. Since he died. And also, hey look it's the guy from that TV show! So, in conjunction with those, his part in Iron Man 2 is pretty major. But, in the film itself? Not much. His part didn't advance the plot forward. Very much, if at all- there's certainly not anything he does that couldn't have been done by a character we didn't have to take the pains to introduce. He was just more baggage in a (however long this movie was; I'm too lazy to look it up) movie. But, it foreshadowed. So all in all it was well done.

   Compare that to Jean Gray, who didn't have to sacrifice herself at the end of X2. She could have stayed inside the plane. But she didn't. If you look closely, though, there's a glow there. It foreshadowed her transformation into Phoenix. This was thrown out the window for X-Men 3.

   Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch, twin mutants who are also Avengers, can appear as Avengers as long as they're not explicitly mentioned as mutants (X-Men films being a Fox property.) I'm not sure why I'm bringing this up now, but I spent hours of research just to get that kernel of fact, so I'm using it, darn it! I guess to connect the two franchises?

   At least they've got the rights to the other Avengers.



Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Einstein's Riddle

   Albert Einstein is said to have given a riddle. He who solves it, it is said, proves an IQ in the top two percent, and is thus fit to join Mensa. Well, okay, entirely anecdotal Einstein. Let's say we've got five houses, all in a row. I guess there are people living in those houses. This much is known of them.
  1. The British person lives in the red house.
  2. The Swede keeps dogs as pets.
  3. The Dane drinks tea.
  4. The green house is on the left of the white house.
  5. The green homeowner drinks coffee.
  6. The man who smokes Pall Mall keeps birds.
  7. The owner of the yellow house smokes Dunhill.
  8. The man living in the center house drinks milk.
  9. The Norwegian lives in the first house.
  10. The man who smokes Blend lives next to the one who keeps cats.
  11. The man who keeps the horse lives next to the man who smokes Dunhill.
  12. The man who smokes Bluemaster drinks beer.
  13. The German smokes Prince.
  14. The Norwegian lives next to the blue house.
  15. The man who smokes Blend has a neighbor who drinks water.
Question: Who owns the fish?

   All right. We can immediately rule out the cat owner, since fish in a home with cats in it would not last long. Nor dogs, for that matter. They'd probably just knock that fishbowl over. We know that it's neither of the bird owner nor the horse owner, so the fish owner must be the one remaining. Answer: the fish owner is the one who does not own birds, cats, dogs, or a horse. Elementary.

   Gee, what a stupid question. Mensa can suck it.

Monday, September 2, 2013

Déjà Vu (Film)

   Déjà Vu is a really really good movie, you guys. Forget all of the other time travel movies. None of those others have got a car chase IN TIME, meaning he's chasing a car in the past so he can track it while he's still in the present!

   There's kind of a problem with the timelines, though. The time travel science can't seem to make up its mind. (And most of the criticism levied against the film was in its portrayal of post-Katrina New Orleans...!)

   The explanation: multiple trips through time, by multiple Dougs. There's a really neat diagram on Wikipedia that explains all of this, but it's kind of too big to fit here, so I'll just link it. Link. I hope you get that. It may or may not be in danger of coming down, since it may or may not be original research on the part of... hold on... User:Wildonrio. Citation needed, and all that. But, hey, it's a good theory, and I'm saying so now, all of that is how I think it went down, so you can cite this!

   But Eric, you may say to yourself, wouldn't that be a paradox, Wikipedia citing you citing Wikipedia which itself cites you? To which I say: yes it would. But there sure aren't any paradoxes in Déjà Vu.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

“…A DIFFERENT AIR, A KIND OF COUNTRY LOVE-SONG THAT HE MUST HAVE LEARNED IN HIS YOUTH BEFORE HE HAD BEGUN TO FOLLOW THE SEA.”





And I would climb up o’er the mountains
And I would die a violent death
If I could fly up above these city walls
I’d love you with my final breath

But I understand
That there are people out there
Please try and understand
That there are people out there

Trying to stay alive.
Trying to find some love,
Sweet love.
And all we can do to survive
Is try and stay alive,
Try to find some love.

And all we can do to survive
Is try and stay alive
Try to find some love.
Oh-oh.