30 March 2007

Overkill

Of the 63 different shirts on sale at Snorg Tees, I count 9 10 with jokes referencing movies in which Will Ferrell has appeared, meaning that 14% 16% of their stock is based around his oeuvre. Now, without counting I’m certain I own at least a half dozen DVDs of his, so clearly I think the guy’s done some funny stuff, but I think it’s bizarre that a funny t-shirt company would lean that heavily on him. Then again, with my entire generation having grown up on The Simpsons, it shouldn’t be too surprising that you can cash in on reference-based humor.

See also: Why is Will Ferrell funny?, a video slideshow on Slate.

YouTube - WiigoBot: The Perfect Game

YouTube - WiigoBot: The Perfect Game

Lego robot designed to play Wii Sports Bowling

All (Known) Bodies in the Solar System Larger Than 200 Miles in Diameter

All (known) Bodies in the Solar System Larger than 200 Miles in Diameter

With pictures!

Q&A with Battlestar Galactica Season Finale Writer Mark Verheiden

Q&A with Battlestar Galactica season finale writer Mark Verheiden

Chock full of major, major spoilers.

29 March 2007

Interview with Allan Heinberg about Young Avengers

Interview with Allan Heinberg about Young Avengers

I only just read this series, and it’s one of my favorites new books of the past few years. Heinberg was a writer on Sex and the City and The O.C.

Kutaragi "Insisted" on Spider-Man Font for PS3

Kutaragi “insisted” on Spider-Man font for PS3

I’ve always felt the logotype gives the console a very cheap look to it. It’s so recognizable as “the Spider-Man font” that it just looks like they were too lazy to come up with something unique.

"Complete My Album" Now on iTunes, Credit for Already-Purchased Songs

“Complete My Album” now on iTunes, credit for already-purchased songs

This seems like an important feature for record labels that are upset at the a la cart purchasing of singles. Really, why not offer an incentive to buy the rest of the album after you’ve sampled a few songs?

28 March 2007

52 Covers Blog

I linked to this in October, and wrote about the covers in June, but I’m going to make a plug for a weekly weblog called J.G. Jones 52 Covers Blog. It’s hosted on Wizard Magazine’s website and doesn’t feature and RSS feed, but it’s worth manually loading up once a week. For the past year, DC Comics has been publishing a weekly comic called 52. J.G. Jones has drawn all of the covers for the series, and they’re spectacular. Each week he writes up a post about the week’s cover, how it ties into the main story, and shows off some of his early sketches. The series itself is interesting in that all the major characters come from DC’s c-list. It’s been a fun read, though as with 24 the real-time gimmick gets in the way (though at other times it pays off, like the New Year’s Eve cliffhanger), but reading about the amount of thought and talent that went into the covers is quite something even if you haven’t been reading the comic. Also it has one of the best mastheads around, with the giant “52” numbers integrated into the art.

How to Import All Your Archive Email Into Gmail

How to Import All Your Archive Email Into Gmail

Gmail recently added the ability to check POP mail, and just dropped the restriction that the feature wouldn’t work with other Gmail accounts, so you can now import your old non-Gmail mail. It’s not quite simple, but it works nicely.

27 March 2007

New UPS Feature Lets You Redirect Packages Over the Web

New UPS feature lets you redirect packages over the web

Neat. You can go onto UPS’s website and change where a package is going. Would be nice for Christmas when something doesn’t arrive on time.

New Zip for the Old Strip

New Zip for the Old Strip

Despite the lame headline, a nice Time article about web comics.

Stripe Generator - Diagonal Stripes Background Tiles

Stripe Generator - diagonal stripes background tiles

Could be a useful little tool if you’re too lazy to fire up Photoshop. Is the design and pitch of the site a joke on “Web 2.0” though?

26 March 2007

Futurespective: Grant Morrison #6: _Animal Man_: Part 1

Futurespective: Grant Morrison #6: Animal Man: Part 1

I’m re-reading Animal Man now. Here’s some commentary on it.

IGN: Battlestar Galactica: Defending Baltar

IGN: Battlestar Galactica: Defending Baltar

Interview with Mark Sheppard, who played Romo Lampkin, Baltar’s lawyer, on the last few episodes of Battlestar Galactica.

25 March 2007

The man behind "Battlestar Galactica"

The man behind “Battlestar Galactica”

Interview with executive producer Ronald Moore. Contains spoilers for tonight’s episode.

23 March 2007

Sci-Fi From Page to Screen

Sci-Fi from page to screen

Article about why sci-fi isn’t respected as a serious genre by most of America. Not sure I’m with the author here, but it’s a good read. In a similar vein, I took a class in college about how Russian sci-fi never developed that stigma.

New Dairy Queen Logo

New Dairy Queen logo

swishes! Italics! Bold!

22 March 2007

21 March 2007

The Failure of Gødland, the Death of the Postmodern Superhero, and Why Grant Morrison Is Partly to Blame

The Failure of Gødland, the Death of the Postmodern Superhero, and Why Grant Morrison Is Partly to Blame

The other side of this coin, naturally, is that right now the good superhero comics are very damn good.

Plurals and Possessives of Compound Nouns

Current events drove me to a need to look something up today.

Plural: Attorneys General, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Brothers-in-Law, Editors-in-Chief

Possessive: Attorney General’s, Chief of Staff’s, Brother-in-Law’s, Editor-in-Chief’s

McDonald's Has Beef with the Oxford English Dictionary

McDonald’s Has Beef with the Oxford English Dictionary

I know the term, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard a single person use it. Seems like McDonald’s is just bringing the connotations to the foreground here.

Ambigram Doormat

Ambigram doormat

Reads “come in” one way and “go away” if turned the other way.

20 March 2007

Final Potter book: 784 'green' pages

Final Potter book: 784 ‘green’ pages

Publisher Scholastic is making an effort to use more recycled paper.

Twitter (kottke.org)

Twitter (kottke.org)

“Maybe that’s when you know how you’ve got a winner: when people use it like mad but can’t fully explain the appeal of it to others.”

Themes for Google Personalized Homepage

Themes for Google Personalized Homepage

If you go to your personalized homepage for Google (click the link at the top of google.com once you’re logged in), you can now pick from a few nice little themes from a link on the right side.

19 March 2007

Tumblr

Tumblr

Clever service. If use lots of different services, you can roll them all onto one page, somewhat like FeedBurner but for the web.

Twitterrific

Twitterrific

Nifty little Mac OS app. Saw it ages ago but I only just got around to setting it up to play around with it.

Threadless Kids - Designer Kids & Baby Clothing - Tees, Tshirts and T shirts!

Threadless Kids - Designer Kids & Baby Clothing - Tees, Tshirts and T shirts!

Sort Fields in iTunes 7.1

Sort Fields in iTunes 7.1

The new version adds the ability for you to specify how songs are sorted (Lennon, John for example instead of John Lennon), but the implementation is a bit sticky.

Carey, Schmidt Talk X-Men: Endangered Species

Carey, Schmidt Talk X-Men: Endangered Species

It occurs to me that the back up stories would be the perfect thing for Marvel to play with putting online. The short format would read well on the screen and it’d give people a chance to get excited about the book they’ll be leading into.

'Jeopardy!' Has Historic Game

‘Jeopardy!’ has historic game

First ever 3-way tie, though it seemed like the champion bet to match his opponents on purpose.

Friends Swap Twitters, and Frustration - WSJ.com

Friends Swap Twitters, and Frustration - WSJ.com

Twitter is a bizarre service. I have no idea if I like it or not but all the cool kids seem to be using it.

16 March 2007

The Long Way Home

So Buffy’s back. I find it feels wrong to be reading a TV show in comic book form, but I convince myself that it’s not a comic about a TV show, it’s a new, unfilmed season, which is how it’s been billed, anyway. It picks up the plot from the finale of the show, and Joss Whedon wrote it. Regardless, the “season premier” is good. If you know and like the characters, you’ll like this.

As the Newsarama blog points out, TV Squad is covering the series just like it were still on TV, and in their writeup of the first issue they make an interesting observation:

The pace of a small comic book is certainly going to be very different than a TV episode. In fact, from cover to cover, this issue’s pace to me felt very much like the cold open of a TV episode; I could almost hear the familiar wolf howl after the last page.

If you’ve been reading comics for the past few years, this isn’t a revelation (especially if you’re used to Marvel’s “decompressed” style where it took four issues of Ultimate Spider-Man to cover the one page origin from the original). What’s interesting is how easy the new Buffy comic makes it to compare the general amount of content you get in one TV episode versus one issue of a comic. An issue of a comic book takes about 15 minutes to read, depending on how wordy it is. Your typical story arc lasts 3-6 issues, meaning on average you get about an hour of content per story, the same as a TV show. But comics take a month to draw, so you do a lot of waiting for that story. On the other hand, as TV Squad points out, there’s no special effects budget to worry about, nor is there a limit to how many sets you can build, so there are fewer limitations on the storytelling.

The Three Rules of Effective Cut Scenes, as Taught by God of War 2

The three rules of effective cut scenes, as taught by God of War 2

Giant Pool of Water Ice at Mars' South Pole

Giant Pool of Water Ice at Mars’ South Pole

Holds enough water to cover the entire planet in 30 feet of water.

It's Time to Get Rid of the Dollar Bill

It’s time to get rid of the dollar bill

I haven’t seen the new dollar coin yet, but I’m pro coin.

15 March 2007

List of characters in the Spider-Ham Universe

List of characters in the Spider-Ham Universe

Marvel’s parody of its own characters is just so funny to me.

14 March 2007

FlickrBlog: Collections!

FlickrBlog: Collections!

Flickr now lets you make sets of sets, and lets you choose the layout of your photo page.

WILLIAM FUCKING SHATNER, Part II

WILLIAM FUCKING SHATNER, Part II

13 March 2007

The Future of OpenID (a slidecast)

The Future of OpenID (a slidecast)

A little tech-y at times depending on your level of interest, but a great presentation.

A List Apart: Articles: The Trouble With EM 'n EN (and Other Shady Characters)

A List Apart: Articles: The Trouble With EM ‘n EN (and Other Shady Characters)

Sparta, Spandex and Disturbing Distortions of '300'

Sparta, Spandex and Disturbing Distortions of ‘300’

There are many more bones you could pick with its accuracy, but accuracy isn’t its goal. (They didn’t have ogres, either.) The goal is to tell the mythologized version of the glory story, not to be a history.

OpenID: Too Many Providers, Not Enough Consumers

OpenID: Too many providers, not enough consumers

I’d especially like to be able to log in to forums and bulletin boards with my OpenID, because I hate having to make accounts all over the place and because I like knowing that any comments left by me are verifiable as having been left by me.

12 March 2007

Google Calculator Service

Google Calculator Service

Install for your Mac OS Services menu, highlight some text, and it’ll ask Google Calculator for the answer. (ex.: give it “four plus four”, it’ll replace the text with the solution)

One Last Post About Civil War

Novak and I were talking about the difficulties of due process in super hero worlds the other day. I’d imagine if you were a defense attorney in a comic book world, you’d have a pretty cushy job. You see Batman working with Commissioner Gordon from time to time, but it’s not like he gets warrants before breaking into someone’s house and hanging them from the ceiling by a bat-rope. In the Powers world there’s a whole group of detectives who specifically focus on supercrimes, so one would imagine their justice system has some laws about how vigilante justice is dealt with.

The more I think about Civil War, the more I end up on the pro-registration side of it, despite my rooting for Cap as it went along. Part of the reason for this is how unevenly the concept itself was presented during the course of the story. Basically it falls into to possibilities:

  1. Superhuman draft. All heroes must register their secret identities with the government, must be trained and certified, and will take orders from SHIELD like soldiers.

  2. Gun legislation analogue: all heroes must register their secret identities with the government, must be trained and certified, and will be expected to only use their powers responsibly, like a police officer would.

If the registration act were more in line with number one, I’d see a very big reason for Cap and friends to fight it. Most people with superpowers come across them by accident, and they have secret identities because they want to be able to live normal lives. Mutants are just born with them and some of them have to go to a special school just to learn how to handle them without killing people. If the act is a forced draft for those people, requiring them to become specialized soldiers and take orders, while no other citizens in the US are subject to an active draft, that’s pretty damn unjust. Many civil war tie-in issues suggest this is exactly how the registration act is going to work.

Marvel Editor-in-Chief Joe Quesada has said numerous times that the Marvel Universe is mostly like the real world. George Bush is president, real world events like the September 11 attacks happened in the Marvel Universe, and so on. That being true, you have to assume that citizens of the Marvel 616 have the same civil liberties we do, chief among those being habeas corpus, protections against unlawful search and seizure, Miranda rights, and so forth. In the real world most arrests are made by police officers, but in a comic book world you’ve got lots of superheroes bringing people in, and you’d have to think that their rights are being violated all over the place. Imagine a police officer in court saying, “well, he had a note on him saying ‘drug pusher, courtesy your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man’, so we figured we’d arrest him for selling drugs.” One of the most important foundations of our society is that people who are accused of crimes are allowed to have the evidence against them presented and questioned in court. If you have vigilantes running around nabbing lots of people, there’s no way to make sure that they’re not trampling all over that foundation. Granted, in comic book worlds there’s a strong “ends justify the means” mentality, and when you have very, very bad villains out there maybe you want someone who can bring them in and not have to follow the rules to do it, but that’s a dangerous road. With SHIELD able to look over the heroes’ shoulders, they can make sure that the alleged criminals’ rights aren’t being violated even though it’s She-Hulk making the arrest instead of a cop (though being a lawyer I’d imagine She-Hulk knows all of this, anyway). Now, I’m not arguing that everyone X-Men story begin with Cyclops filling out paperwork for a search warrant to check if a guy has been keeping mutant slaves in his basement, but it’d be good to know that when they do apprehend him it won’t just get thrown out of court.

The question, then, is what the ramifications for registering are. If it means you get drafted or thrown in jail, and at times Iron Man specifically says that’s the case, then the anti-reg heroes had every reason to protest it. But if it’s there just to ensure due process, then not having someone looking out for the rights of the accused is wholly irresponsible. It makes the protest into one on grounds of tradition alone. “We always used to be able to beat up anyone we wanted, why should that stop?”

In this fan Q&A, Civil War editor Tom Brevoort provides the answer:

[The Superhuman Registration Act] requires anybody possessing superhuman abilities to register themselves and those abilities with duly-appointed agents of the government. Additionally, if an individual intends to use those super-normal abilities as an independent peace officer, they must qualify on a training evaluation, be licensed and submit to some level of oversight in terms of their activities. The closest equivalent, although it’s not quite the same thing, is gun legislation. If you want to own a firearm in this country, you need to register that weapon. If you want to use that weapon and carry it, as a private detective or a bodyguard or in any other legal way, you need to be licensed and cleared on a firing range, demonstrating that you have the necessary knowledge, skill and responsibility to use that firearm responsibly. And if you discharge that weapon outside of an authorized firing range, or in the course of one of those jobs, there’s going to be paperwork that needs to be filled out.

Sounds very reasonable, doesn’t it? You’d think if someone had just spelled that out from the beginning, there wouldn’t have been a need for a whole lot of fighting and death. In fact, the text of the bill itself would say all that, though it’s possible it’s way too nebulous like the Patriot Act and gives the government lots of powers it may or may not use. The point being, it’s sloppy storytelling. The main conflict only holds up if the registration act has bite to it, if you the reader believes it to be a real danger to heroes being able to protect people and from the government not being able to use heroes as political tools. But as soon as the story ends, it turns out to be something very sensible that lets heroes keep doing their jobs but protects the American public from a Marvel equivalent of the Santa robot on Futurama who puts everyone on the naughty list and then maims them.

Oblique Shout-Out to William & Mary on Scrubs

Oblique shout-out to William & Mary on Scrubs

Scrubs creator Bill Lawrence is a W&M alumnus. Could this mean the characters went to the WaMmer? It doesn’t have a medical school, but they could have gone there for undergrad.

Twitter / Chewbacca

Twitter / Chewbacca

Twitter / darthvader

Twitter / darthvader

Splendid.

09 March 2007

300

Growing up during the rise of violent video games like Mortal Kombat, in a post A Clockwork Orange era, with such movies getting critical acclaim and enjoying commercial success as Pulp Fiction and Silence of the Lambs there was much talk of the media desensitizing today’s youth to violent images. Watching 300, I realize this was not at all the case. We were not being desensitized. We were being prepared. Without those movies under our belts, without The Matrix readying our visual pallets and The Lord of the Rings teaching us how to discern frenzied melees, we would not have been ready. This is a violent, bloody movie, but you don’t notice it. The violence and the blood are the mere setting required to frame a moving painting of glory and sacrifice such as this. I’ve never seen slow-motion decapitation done in such an artful way before that somehow doesn’t come off as gross. Without the proper level of desensitization, 300 would have just been a sickening, incomprehensible mess. But seen with the eyes of our generation, we can understand it as the glorious battle it was.

The History Channel ran a special last night that I recommend as a prerequisite to the film. Here is the setting, as I understand it: Persia is on the warpath and, after a defeat years before at Marathon, intends to invade and crush Greece. At the time, Greece was not a united land but a confederacy of separate city-states. King Leonidas leads an army of 300 of his Spartans, along with a coalition of other Greeks, to hold off the Persian army at the mountain pass of Thermopylae, the only way into Greece by land and a huge bottleneck through which Xerxes needed to get hundreds of thousands of soldiers. Leonidas is able to hold off the vastly superior force for days, eventually falling in battle but sending a message to the rest of his people that a united Greece can stand against even the vast Persian Empire.

What’s not in the movie is a big naval battle going on at the same time. The navy is able to hold off Persia’s ships for a few days before falling back and convincing Athens to retreat. Persia burns Athens to the ground, but the Greeks are able to regroup and defeat the Persian navy at a later battle, causing Persia to stop. After winning the war, Philip II of Macedon is able to unite Greece and father Alexander the Great with Angelina Jolie. Alexander the Great spreads western culture to across the known world. And that is how 300 Spartans’s last stand leads directly to the rise of all of western civilization.

Captain America Killed | The Onion - America's Finest News Source

Captain America Killed | The Onion - America’s Finest News Source

“But who will avenge him? If only there were a group of ‘avengers,’ if you will, organized for that purpose.”

08 March 2007

More on Cap

I went to the comic book store last night to get my books. I usually go every 2-3 weeks and was planning to go last night before the big news broke. I’ve been reading Captain America as it gets collected in paperback format, and it’s honestly one of the best single character books Marvel is publishing right now, if you like the character. Anyway, the man at the store said that he’d had quite a day, and that the phone had been ringing off the hook. This was about 5:45 or so, and he already didn’t have any copies of Captain America 25 left on the shelves. He said if I really wanted one he had a stack of about 10 left, but they were otherwise being held for people who’d called in earlier that day. I said I’d wait, as I’ll end up buying the trade, anyway and I already knew what happened. (In addition, this week’s Civil War: The Initiative reprints a portion of the issue, but I wouldn’t recommend buying it overall.) He said that Marvel had overprinted this issue, but at 9:00 that morning had announced they would not be doing a second printing. By 3:00 they’d changed that to “probably not” be doing a second printing, so it’s quite possible that they’ll have more on the shelves but not until the hype has already blown over.

Brian Hibbs, comic retailed blogger, has this to say about it:

I wish Marvel had laid out the score for us a lot better — certainly when Superman was killed, we knew MONTHS in advance, and it resulted in millions of copies ordered. Even with the supposed generous overprint, I’ll be surprised if we end up with even the same number of copies of CAP #25 on the market as CIVIL WAR (ie, nowhere near enough). The REAL problem is, because (I’m guessing) the reorders are going to fill from newstand copies, and because of the way that Diamond and Marvel work with OSDs (over-short-damage), it seems likely that reorders won’t arrive for 2 more weeks. That’s going to be way too late, I think.

A slow news day meant that the book got lots of media coverage, and Captain America’s an old school wartime hero, so interest seems to be higher than it would otherwise be. Still, I like to see how these things look to people who don’t read comics. For one, it’s common knowledge that characters don’t stay dead. All of the major media coverage of Steve Rogers’ death include comments about how characters come back from the dead frequently, and Joe Quesada remains flippant about it in each story. I’d say it’s quite possible he will stay dead, but it’s also possible in the very next issue we’ll see that the assassination was a cover to get him back into the field and escape trial.

Also, it’s interesting to see which characters in each publisher’s stables are big enough for people to even know who they are. In terms of public consciousness, DC Comics has Batman and Superman, then Wonder Woman, and that’s about it. Some people know a few more from Superfriends or more recently Justice League. For Marvel, you’ve got Spider-man and the X-Men on the top tier, then the Hulk and, I guess the Fantastic Four. Iron Man’s getting a movie next summer (which might actually be good), but Captain America hasn’t had any film coverage in years, excluding a few direct-to-DVD cartoons, which is odd because, in my opinion, he’s really their third-best property after Spider-Man and the X-Men.

COMIC URBAN LEGEND: Fiorello LaGuardia Personally Promised Protection to Jack Kirby and Joe Simon From Death Threats

COMIC URBAN LEGEND: Fiorello LaGuardia personally promised protection to Jack Kirby and Joe Simon from death threats

Status: True. Before the US got into the war, Captain America’s debut against Hitler rankled Nazi sympathizers.

The Four Unspeakable Truths About Iraq

The four unspeakable truths about Iraq

Why Apple is the best retailer in America

Why Apple is the best retailer in America

Wow. Apple Stores earn over four times as much per square foot as Best Buy. I guess that makes sense, given that for every $5000 TV Best Buy sells they sell tons of $15 movies, but still, that’s a lot of money.

Talking Captain America #25 with Ed Brubaker

Talking Captain America #25 with Ed Brubaker

Interview with the writer.

Mac Buyer's Guide: Know When to Buy Your Mac

Mac Buyer’s Guide: Know When to Buy Your Mac

The general rule is that if it’s been over a year since they released the last version of a Mac, wait until they release a new one unless you need a new computer right now.

07 March 2007

Spoiler of the Week: Captain America

Pick up your copy of Captain America 25 fast. The New York Daily News has already spoiled the ending, and I’d suspect some other news sources to follow suit. If you really want to know what happens, here’s the article.

Edit: CNN has the story now, too.

It should be noted that Marvel intentionally seeds these stories to hit the day they hit stores to draw people into retail stores. Naturally they want to sell books, but it sucks that surprise endings are often ruined. The problem is that most retailers are small independent stores that have to manage their inventory very tightly. They’ll order enough copies for their regular customers, and then a few extra for walk-ins. Marvel’s been hyping this issue as an important one, so it’s probable that stores knew to over-order it, but chances are it’ll sell out and take a few weeks to restock, ruining the buzz.

Twitter / johnedwards

Twitter / johnedwards

Great use for Twitter.

Aura of Inevitability (or: When a Technology's Time has Come)

Aura of Inevitability (or: When a Technology’s Time has Come)

Why is it that sometimes you can think of a product but it takes years for someone to actually put it on the market?

WILLIAM FUCKING SHATNER, Part I

WILLIAM FUCKING SHATNER, Part I

I’ve read this story before, and it’s a good one. Story about the first time Wil Wheaton met William Shatner, back when TNG was first on the air.

06 March 2007

Apple Unveils New Product-Unveiling Product | The Onion - America's Finest News Source

Apple Unveils New Product-Unveiling Product | The Onion - America’s Finest News Source

“iLaunch is powered by Intel dual-core processors optimized to calculate a product’s gravitas.”

Nothin' but the Rain

Sunday’s episode of Battlestar Galactica (don’t worry, no spoilers) brought back a nice little cadence between Adama and Starbuck that goes back I think all the way to the mini-series:

Adama: Mornin’ Starbuck, whadya hear?
Starbuck: Nothin’ but the rain.
Adama: Then grab your gun and bring the cat in.

It’s a little thing, but it always just displays a nice moment between the two characters who have a very deep mentor/mentee (mento/manatee) father/daughter warden/prisoner history together. It’s used particularly well in the most recent episode as it’s something that connects the character to who she was when we first met her. How much has she changed? Has she grown, or is she still just as frakked up (or more so) as she was from the start? From executive producer Ron Moore’s blog:

I came up with this in the miniseries, and it’s essentially a riff on contemporary marching chants or cadences used in the military called, “jodies.” You’ve seen them in films: the platoon is marching or jogging along and the drill instructor sings out something like, “Up in the morning in the rising sun/Gonna run all day ‘til the running’s done,” and the platoon either repeats the lines or adds the next line in the jodie. They range from the funny to the deeply profane and I remembered several of them from my NROTC days while I was writing the mini. In that opening scene, Kara is jogging through the corridors of Galactica and Adama greets her with a line that is a reference to an old jodie that presumably each of them remembers from their own training. So it’s kind of an in-joke reference that they share with each other which probably in turn has some even deeper private joke between the two of them. I never wrote out the entire jodie, but I liked the nonsensical nature of the lines and thought it was more effective to suggest the cadences without spelling them out.

This sort of thing is what makes that show so great. The characters have real lives that existed before the show started and continue to go on after the camera stops rolling.

Laugh Tracks

Watched the pilot episode of The Winner last night. Rob Corddry is a funny man, but I just couldn’t get past the laugh track. After a sitcom diet consisting of Arrested Development, Scrubs, The Office, and 30 Rock, it feels almost insulting to have a laugh track tell me where the jokes were. The laugh track just seemed so out-dated, I very briefly couldn’t figure out which characters were laughing until remembering, “oh yeah, this is what sitcoms used to be like.”

George Lucas Gives Details on the Star Wars TV Shows

George Lucas Gives Details on the Star Wars TV Shows

Clone Wars series is in development, though it’ll be computer animated so presumably not based on the fantastic Genndy Tartakovsky series.

05 March 2007

In Canada, the New Rush Is for Diamonds

In Canada, the New Rush Is for Diamonds

Article about the new diamond mines in Canada that are supplying a much more ethical diamond trade than Africa can provide. If you’re buying a diamond now, until artificial ones are more available, buy Canadian.

04 March 2007

The Must-Do List - New York Times

The Must-Do List - New York Times

Letter to Congress from the New York Times on the practices of the Bush administration that need to be repealed.

02 March 2007

IGN: Interview: Joss Whedon

IGN: Interview: Joss Whedon

About the new Buffy comic, along with a few comments at the end about writing for Marvel and the now dead Wonder Woman movie.

AP: We Ignored Paris Hilton

AP: We ignored Paris Hilton

A few weeks ago the Associated Press decided to simply not run any stories about Paris Hilton for a week and see if anyone would notice her absence.

Slay Ride

Slay Ride

Brief interviews with Joss Whedon, Brian K. Vaughan, and Jeph Loeb about Buffy and their upcoming stints on the comic.

Logo Design History - Famous Logos A

Logo Design History - Famous Logos A

Lots of famous company logos and some info about them.

Buffy New Reader's Guide

Buffy New Reader’s Guide

The “season eight” comic comes out soon. Here’s a good refresher on the series and characters.

01 March 2007

Berners-Lee: Congress Should Consider Net Neutrality

Berners-Lee: Congress should consider net neutrality

“Timothy Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, advocated that the U.S. Congress protect net neutrality and questioned the value of digital rights management Thursday.”