Shared posts

22 Sep 15:03

System Shock Is Now Available On GOG

by Adam Smith
Rodanof42

Gog is killing it with filling gaps I was thinking about downloading from abandonware sites lately. Super Impressed.

The original System Shock is now available on GOG. It’s no exaggeration to say that Looking Glass’ first-person sci-fi horror hybrid is one of the most influential games ever released and the new enhanced edition should lead to a re-evaluation of its precise place in the history and development of the immersive sim. Night Dive Studios are responsible for the re-release:

“With System Shock: Enhanced Edition, we’re implementing game-changing improvements, including mouselook, widescreen, and a high resolution display mode,” says Stephen Kick, CEO of Night Dive Studios. “The classic game has never been more accessible to a modern audience.”

Video and details below.

… [visit site to read more]

18 Sep 16:27

GOG Adds D&D Strategy, Genies And Douglas Adams’ Starship Titanic

by Adam Smith
Rodanof42

I had just been curious about Starship Titanic after reading the Salmon of Doubt, but found that it would be completely impractical to track down and get working. So this is rad!

GOG are still capable of serving up a dangerous dose of nostalgia from time to time. Three releases yesterday all gave me reason to reflect on sometimes misspent and sometimes well-spent youth. The game I remember as Stronghold, contained within SSI’s AD&D Masterpiece Collection, has been released as D&D Stronghold: Kingdom Simulator, presumably to avoid Firefly-related confusion. Then there’s Al-Qadim: The Genie’s Curse, a D&D-inflected Arabian Nights puzzle-adventure. And, last but not least, Starship Titanic, the game wot Douglas Adams did.

… [visit site to read more]

17 Sep 21:35

In a better world, where bullshit gets checked:

Rodanof42

For what it's worth, from what I can tell about the situation - they didn't think he made a bomb, they thought he made a fake bomb. Like they thought he designed the clock to look like a "movie bomb." Imitation contraband is banned along with contraband (I remember reading in high school about how I wasn't allowed to bring a bag of flour and say it's cocaine, for example).
Obviously the situation and what they did about it is still fucked, but that's why they only punished/intimidated him and didn't ensure safety. It's because safety was never (nor even thought to be) in jeopardy, it was only ever about enforcement/punishment/intimidation.

seekingwillow:

bankuei:

“Ok, so you thought the boy made a bomb.”

“Yes.”

“And instead of evacuating the school, you pulled him out of class, arrested in front of everyone, then interrogated him, on the premises without getting the children to safety?  So, we’re going to put you up for criminal endangerment of this entire school”

“Well, uh, maybe we didn’t really think it was a bomb”

“Oh, ok, so instead you lied to police and federal authorities in order to bring up false charges against a minor for… kicks? I mean, you’re basically picking between which charges you’d like to go up on here.   Let me know, so we can get the paperwork right.”

_ Thank you! When I first read about it, I was so confused about her ‘taking what she suspected was a bomb FROM him’. Like, what if she accidentally set it off? And then they waited until 6th period? And no one asked the engineering teacher anything, who’d seen it first? And the cops questioned him WITHOUT HIS PARENTS or GUARDIAN present? On premises? 

And the principal was trying to force him to confess and sign something?

And the cops LET the principal NEAR HIM?

I don’t know if he and his family are likely to do it. But that teacher, that principal, that school, that school system should all as a whole be sued. They had him paraded through school in handcuffs, over a clock.

Like, how those cops rolled up into that school WITHOUT a bomb sniffing dog, and that little bowl thing they use to intentionally set off devices - y’know, the one the BOMB SQUAD uses?

So when they paraded him, after pulling him out of class - shouldn’t all of that been done already?

So what were they really trying to do to this young brown boy, when they KNEW it wasn’t a bomb; cause no dog, no squad, no evacuation, no calling his parents, no nothing but shaming and bullying and SENDING HIM TO JUVIE. GETTING HIM FINGERPRINTED.

That boy’s in the system now. And is THAT what they wanted?

17 Sep 21:26

madamebadger: A story that may have relevance for others, or then again, maybe not: When I was in...

madamebadger:

A story that may have relevance for others, or then again, maybe not:

When I was in college, about ten or so years ago, I was a history major. I wanted to learn to dance, so I joined a swing dance club on campus. To my surprise, this club had about twice as many men as women (in high school, the last time I’d tried dancing, the ratio had gone the other way–lots of girls, and boys only that you could drag by their ears).

But apparently, there had been some kind of word spread specifically to the STEM guys that dance was a way that they could meet girls.

So anyway. I joined the swing dance club, and met a few guys. And at one point, when socializing with the guys outside of dance class, one of them asked me what my research was on. (I had already established that I was an honors history student doing a thesis, just as he had established that he was an honors… I’m not sure if he was CS or Math, but it was one of those.)

So I gave him the thumbnail sketch of my research. Now, to be clear, an honors senior thesis, while nothing like what a graduate student would do, was still fairly in-depth. I had to translate primary sources from the original late-Classical Latin. (My professor said, basically, that while there were plenty of translations of my source material, that I’d only be able to comfortably trust them if I had at least made a stab at a translation of my own. And he was right.) And there was so much secondary material, often contradictory, that I had been carefully sorting through.

But I was able to sift it into a three-sentence summary of my senior thesis work, you know, as one does.

So I gave him that summary, and then asked–since he was also an undergraduate senior doing an honors thesis–what his research was on.

“Oh,” he said, “you wouldn’t understand it.”

Reader, I went home in a frothing rage. Because I had thought we were playing one game–a game of ‘let’s talk about what we’re passionate about!’– and he had been playing another game, which was, one-upsmanship. I had done my best to give a basically understandable brief of my research–and he had used that against me. As if my research, my painstaking translation, my digging through archives and ILLs of esoteric works, my reading of ten thousand articles in Speculum (yes, the pre-eminent medievalist journal in North America is called Speculum, I’m sorry, it’s hilarious/sad but also true), and then my effort to sum it up for him, was nothing. Because his research into some kind of algorithm or other was just too complex for my tiny brain to conceive of. Because I just couldn’t possibly understand his work.

Now, the important note here is that the person I went home to was my senior year roommate. She was a graduate student–normally undergrads and graduate students couldn’t be roommates, but we’d been friends for years, and the tenured faculty-in-residence used his powers for good and permitted us to be roommates that year. Anyway. My senior year roommate was basically… in retrospect I think possibly an avatar of Athena. She was six feet tall, blonde, attractive in a muscular athletic way, a rock climber and racquetball player, sweet but sharp, extremely socially awkward, exceptionally kind even when it cost her to be kind, and an incredibly brilliant computer science major who spent most of her time working on extremely complicated mathematical algorithms. (Yes, I was a little in love with her, why do you ask? But she was as straight as a length of rope, and is now happily married, and so am I, so it worked out.)

(Still, yes, she is my mental image of Athena, to this day.)

Anyway, I came home in a frothing rage to my roommate, the Athena avatar. And I said, “He made me feel like such an idiot, that I could sum up my research to him but his research was just too smart for stupid little me.”

And she shut her book, and smiled at me, with her dark eyes and her high cheekbones and her bright hair, and said, “If he can’t explain his research to you, then he’s not nearly as smart as he thinks he is.”

Now I hesitated, because I’d be in college long enough to have sort of bought into the ridiculous idea that if you couldn’t dazzle them with your brilliance, you should baffle them with your bullshit. But she said, “Look, I’ve been doing work on computer science algorithms that have significantly complicated mathematical underpinnings. What do I do?”

And I said, “Genetic algorithms–that is, self-optimizing algorithms–for prioritization, specifically for scheduling.”

“Right,” she said. “You couldn’t code them because you’re not a computer scientist or a mathematician. But you can understand what I do. If someone can’t explain it like that, it isn’t a problem with you as a person. It’s a problem with them. They either don’t understand it as well as they think they do–or they want to make you feel inferior. And neither is a positive thing.”

So. There.

If you are looking into something and have a question, and someone treats you like an idiot for not understanding right away… here is what I have to say: maybe it isn’t you who is the idiot.

14 Sep 01:02

queerts: againstthepuzzlepiece: america-wakiewakie: “[T]he...

Rodanof42

Hmm... you know, my conceptualization of high school being "slowly learning how to do homework," where "how to do homework" is... "just... do it? But in a way that's hard to describe where it's after something clicked and now it's not hard or painful to get yourself to do it and you can have confidence that it will happen eventually even if it takes a while" could conceivably be alternately conceptualized as "gaining the ability to apply executive function to things you don't care about." And that could conceivably have ramifications on the two problems with that - namely that I can't apply executive function for things I _do_ care about (or at least that aren't for institutional reasons), and the slow but steady degredation of that skill over time as I stop caring about college.



queerts:

againstthepuzzlepiece:

america-wakiewakie:

“[T]he interests of the oppressors lie in “changing the consciousness of the oppressed, not the situation which oppresses them,” for the more the oppressed can be led to adapt to that situation, the more easily they can be dominated.”

Paulo Freire | Pedagogy of the Oppressed 

Your value is not in anyway based on your grades or your academic intelligence. (I say academic intelligence because there are SO many types of intelligence. Just because you don’t do well in school doesn’t mean you aren’t talented in another area.)

Your value is based on who you are as a person. And you are wonderful and so deserving of love.

Like I’m smart but I got the grades I did bc I’m good at following rules and living up to teacher’s expectations.

in hindsight school was where i first hit the limits of my executive function (which of course i had no better narrative for than “u smart but u lazy”)

in hindsight things i actually am just apathetic about don’t generally feel physically painful to try and focus on

in hindsight that feel is an indicator that something is seriously wrong with my approach, or my relationship to the task, or the surrounding context [e.g. you are clearly just measuring my compliance and i would therefore feel shitty if I got a good grade from you, you soulless fake-smiling dictator]

in hindsight lack of opportunities/skills/resources to self-soothe + de-escalate had way more crushing of an impact on my gpa than any lack of ~motivation~ in any sense

gosh i wonder if any of those lessons could be applied to my current life

gosh

12 Sep 04:33

They Pretend To Be Us While Pretending We Don't Exist

They Pretend To Be Us While Pretending We Don't Exist:

Go.

Read.

This.

It is so important. So important.

10 Sep 21:35

what is a folk etymology?

Not much, baby. What’s a folk etymology with you?

Okay, but seriously. A folk etymology is a cute/charming story someone makes up to explain how a word exists or why a word means what it does. Some of them probably started off as an honest jokes or kids on a playground (or adults in a bar) going, “I’ll bet it happened like this…”, but then they strike somebody as so perfect they ought to be true, and then it’s off to the races.

Some examples: have you ever heard the story that tips are called tips because we give them To Insure Prompt Service? 

There are only three problems with this explanation, of course. First, it would be ensure, not insure. Second, we tips are customarily given after service has been rendered. Third, the idea of an acronym in that sense is fairly modern, which is why most explanations that rely on it are bunk. 

For instance: the world didn’t get a new dirty word because manure was once packaged in boxes labeled Ship High In Transit to avoid dangerous methane build-up, and nobody ever had to hang a marriage license over their bed indicated that they were Fornicating Under Consent of the King.

if you study words even as a hobby, then a lot of folk etymologies are fairly easy to spot. They not only assume that people in Ye Olden Times were as fond of acronyms as we were, but that they didn’t have such a thing as figures of speech or commerce and communication with other languages.

The worst thing about folk etymologies is that in the pursuit of a charming story, they obscure a lot of awesome true stories.

For instance, a story goes that when Napoleon Bonaparte was in Germany, the locals offered him some bread which so offended his delicate French palate that he exclaimed, “Zut alors! This is pain pour Nicole”, because Nicole is his horse, and people feed bad bread to their horse and ever talk about it in that fashion. The ignorant German peasants, having never heard French or bothered to name their bread, found this description so euphonious they called their bread “pan-por-nicol”, or as we know it today, pumpernickel.

That story is not only 100% bogus, but it’s also 1000000% less awesome than the truth. It only exists because to English-trained ears, “pumpernickel” is such a funny name that there must be a funny story behind it. Nobody would just call something that.

The Germans would. Nickel is a diminutive form of Nicholas, used often in reference to the figure of Old Nick, an imp or goblin or devil. Pumpern refers to flatulence.

So as a culture, we would rather make up a story about a fussy emperor than learn that pumpernickel is the Devil’s Farts.

More fun with etymology: if “Nickel” is a devil, why do we have twenty of them to the dollar? Well, if I were a folk etymologist, I might tell you that we call the coins nickels because they’re easy to “nick”, i.e., steal. 

But it’s because nickel is also a metal. That only kicks the can down the road a bit, though. Why do we have called that?

Here we go back to German diabolism. Imagine you’re a copper miner, mining for copper. Now imagine you find what looks like a promising vein of copper ore, but when you go to refine the metal, instead of valuable copper you get some kind of junk metal and oh, yeah… DEADLY ARSENIC.

It’s like fool’s gold, only it also tries to kill you. German miners called this kupfernickel, or devil’s copper.

Another looks-like-precious-metal-but-oh-wait-it’s-something-else-and-deadly-arsenic is cobalt, from kobold; i..e, goblin. 

All of which is to say that there are two elements on the periodic table that are named because German miners conceptualized the risks of their profession as invisible imps going around turning copper into poison.

(I say “conceptualized” rather than “believed” because it’s risky to assume that what we call superstition today was always as literal as we make it out to be in retrospect. There isn’t really any more reason to believe that everyone who spoke of kobold ore or Nickel’s tricks believed these explanations to be literally true than there is to believe that someone who watches a TV show today believes it’s true.)

01 Sep 21:56

dustbeams: thelady-gofuckyourself: fleur-de-maladie: dreaming-moreorless: bustysaintclair: exegg...

dustbeams:

thelady-gofuckyourself:

fleur-de-maladie:

dreaming-moreorless:

bustysaintclair:

exeggcute:

california anti-drought measures are always like “take shorter showers! consider brushing your teeth with the sink turned off” and never mention the fact that nestle is bottling all of our fucking water and selling it to people who live in areas with plenty of water

It’s like the Irish potato “famine” I stg

In California, residential use only accounts for 4% of total water use. Industrial use is 80%. Source:
http://www.alternet.org/environment/california-fast-running-out-water-blame-it-big-ag

This is true of any resource. Yes turning your lights off will save you a but of money. But industry wastes far more electricity than you. Yes recycling your garbage is good. But companies, like the retail chain i work at produce far more garbage than you ever could and do not recycle it at all.

Turning natural resource and environmental crises into individual responsibility is form of class warfare so fucking insidious

Honestly just burn every company to the ground or cut them off from electricity and water systems

Tax them heavily for their usage
Make recycling mandatory or theyre fined
Oh im sorry am i stepping all over your precious free market
I hope to choke it out

Word

“Part of the problem is that we’ve been victims of a campaign of systematic misdirection. Consumer culture and the capitalist mindset have taught us to substitute acts of personal consumption (or enlightenment) for organized political resistance. An Inconvenient Truth helped raise consciousness about global warming. But did you notice that all of the solutions presented had to do with personal consumption—changing light bulbs, inflating tires, driving half as much—and had nothing to do with shifting power away from corporations, or stopping the growth economy that is destroying the planet?

Or let’s talk water. We so often hear that the world is running out of water. People are dying from lack of water. Rivers are dewatered from lack of water. Because of this we need to take shorter showers. See the disconnect? Because I take showers, I’m responsible for drawing down aquifers? Well, no. More than 90 percent of the water used by humans is used by agriculture and industry. The remaining 10 percent is split between municipalities and actual living breathing individual humans….People (both human people and fish people) aren’t dying because the world is running out of water. They’re dying because the water is being stolen.” - Derrick Jensen (author & environmentalist)

01 Sep 21:55

"When you look at the crop of new directors being brought in to franchises like Marvel and Star Wars,..."

“When you look at the crop of new directors being brought in to franchises like Marvel and Star Wars, almost every one follows a similar trajectory: white men aged 30 to 45, recruited after making one or two low-budget genre films. In Colin Trevorrow’s case, this phenomenon is even more blatant. He was hired for Jurassic World after Brad Bird pulled out, and personally selected because as Bird put it, ‘there is this guy that reminds me of me.’
 
There is this guy that reminds me of me is the key problem looming over the geek movie industry today. In their reliance on a certain breed of director, studios are handing over power to a clone army.”

-

Why geek movie franchises have a director problem.

(via hellotailor)
01 Sep 21:51

Not much better, tea bags. Not. Much. Better.

Rodanof42

So like... a luxury yacht?



Not much better, tea bags. Not. Much. Better.

30 Aug 19:37

Last year for my birthday, theisb got me Showcase Presents The Great Disaster, which collects...

Last year for my birthday, theisb got me Showcase Presents The Great Disaster, which collects various DC Comics set in a post-apocalyptic future. (He also got three copies of it for whatever confused undergrad or low income family that lives in my old apartment, but that’s a whole other story.)

This book collects all of the Silver Age Atomic Knights stories drawn by Murphy Anderson, followed immediately by the issue of First Issue Special in which Kirby introduced Atlas the Great.

All respect to Murphy Anderson, but the immediate transition from the static, posed figures of the Atomic Knights to the fluid, dynamic shapes of Atlas hit me like a brick to the face.

While the comparison is slightly unfair because there is about a ten year gap between the Anderson art and the Kirby art, the point still stands: no wonder Kirby was the one that changed everything.

20 Aug 04:12

lierdumoa: lierdumoa: dirtydarwin: thentheysaidburnher: All men benefit from women’s reinforced...

lierdumoa:

lierdumoa:

dirtydarwin:

thentheysaidburnher:

All men benefit from women’s reinforced fear of being hurt for saying no.

read it again and again

Understand that this applies even to non-sexual situations. Women are more likely to be asked for favors from coworkers. Regular “can you file this for me” / “can you cover my shift” / “can you finish up this paperwork” workplace favors. Men are less likely to return those favors. Women are more likely to be seen as “difficult to work with” if they refuse to do favors when requested. Being viewed as ungenerous has negative social and professional consequences.

So yes, even gay men benefit. All men benefit from women’s reinforced fear of being hurt, not just physically, but also socially and professionally, for saying no to anything at all.

Re: above; just in case it looks like I’m just pulling facts out of my ass, here are my sources:

http://blogs.wsj.com/atwork/2013/10/29/women-work-and-the-girl-scout-tax/

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2013/10/30/2858091/women-workers-favors/

http://www.slate.com/blogs/moneybox/2013/01/06/women_do_favors_more_than_men.html

http://www.opposingviews.com/i/society/men-are-less-likely-be-asked-favors-workplace-get-more-appreciation-helping

This is important.

Thinking a lot lately about how this stuff plays out in two circles where I spend a lot of time–the comics community, and the development / implementation of CoCs and harassment policies; and how it intersects with both of those for freelancers in particular.

17 Aug 00:49

rachelandmiles: Dear greatherobattlefight, Congratulations on...







rachelandmiles:

Dear greatherobattlefight,

Congratulations on your new teammate!

So: Kitty’s code name in alternate universes is almost always either Shadowcat or an even more generic variation (i.e. Shadow). We briefly considered Kate–as a nod to Age of Apocalypse–but we get the impression that you’d like something that’s more specifically an X-Men reference.

However, there’s another option, which is our very favorite, and that’s Kitty’s unofficial title from All-New X-Men: Professor K. We are hella into Professor K as a cat name: it’s a clear reference for those already in the know but can be entirely stealth-nerd as necessary; the initial retains an air of mystery; the title leaves no question as to your cat’s professional qualifications; and, best of all, you’ll be prepared should a basket of time-displaced X-kittens appear on your doorstep!

Best,

R&M

P.S. You’re going to send us a ton of cat photos, right?

Pretty sure that getting to help name strangers’ pets has been the best unexpected perk of the show.

17 Aug 00:47

So that Conan quote about what is best in life has been bugging me, because it's THREE things. He's basically saying he can't pick a favorite. What's really best in life: to crush your enemies, see them driven before you, OR hear the lamentation of their women?

INCORRECT. Conan’s answer is a specific group of events; collectively, one thing. Crushing your enemies would not be the best in isolation, nor seeing them driven before you, nor hearing the lamentations of their women.

Which is to say: What is the best in life is MOTHERFUCKIN’ SEMANTICS.

17 Aug 00:47

lissabryan: deducecanoe: reesh: but actually tho There are...



lissabryan:

deducecanoe:

reesh:

but actually tho

There are very few pictures of my childhood. Film was expensive and I was an ugly child. Instagram that lunch and your dog doing the thing. Go for it.

    As a history buff, I approve of “selfie culture.” We are the most visually documented generation of all time. When a person takes a selfie, they’re telling the future a story about a moment in time. Their clothing, their makeup, their hairstyle, their accessories, their pose, their background environment… Even the weather on a particular day! Every bit of that information tells a rich tale about our world. 

    What I wouldn’t give to have an album of Anne Boleyn’s selfies, or even just candid shots of random courtiers. I would pore over every image, as scholars do with the few paintings we have, and make guesses about their world based on items in the background, little quirks of fashion, and the relationships of people in the image.

    Every day, we modern folks create a treasure-trove of information for future scholars. We never know what tiny, inconsequential detail captured by a lens will unlock a secret for a researcher. When we record ourselves, we record our culture. We write letters to the future every day. Our humor, our taboos, our social movements, even our memes. (Don’t think for a moment there won’t be a scholar one day who writes a very ponderous tome on Tumblr memes.) Anyone who scoffs and thinks they can determine what scholars of the future will find important is deluding themselves.

    I once saw a Victorian picture of a young woman. She was formally posed and unsmiling. But written on the back was a small verse. “Those in the future, look upon this, and know in this moment, I was happy.” That always haunted me. So, yes, I like looking upon your images today and knowing you’re happy in a particular moment. (After all, that’s what life is, a series of moments.) Capture them. Remember them. Smile when you look back on them. And know that someday, your message may touch someone you’ll never meet.

09 Aug 00:38

thechronologicalsuperman: Action Comics vol.1 No.116 - Cover...

Rodanof42

I should really actually follow The Chronological Superman, but I've always been vaguely irritated that they muscled into the "spotlight on interesting old Superman stuff on tumblr" space



thechronologicalsuperman:

Action Comics vol.1 No.116 - Cover date January 1948

J.Wilbur Wolfingham proves himself once again to be one of Superman’s most implacable foes. Incapable of learning either a lesson or even the basic empathy for his fellow man, this time around he leads the Man of Steel far up North to an Arctic valley. An optimistic land developer has been fooled into thinking the remote, bitterly cold location houses a potential tropical paradise, all of which Superman provides in an effort to upend Wolfingham’s schemes and see to it that everyone profits but him.

Wolfingham represents something of the antithesis of the typical Superman villain, at least as much as Siegel had established the character in his early years. Under his co-creator’s guiding hand, Superman converted more foes than he ever merely incarcerated or incapacitated. The Man of Tomorrow’s credo was epiphany, the result of which was an unbroken chain of redeemed con men and corrupt businessmen turning their back on greed.

Wolfingham, by contrast, being a creation of Don Cameron’s rather than Siegel’s, seems immune to rehabilitation. Superman is routinely left with little other choice than to punish the slippery devil and let him go. It seems to me that the Man of Steel uses Wolfingham as something of a truffle pig, leaving him free to root out devious scams and schemes which Superman can then resolve to the mutual profit of the victims. Perhaps J.Wilbur’s persistent state on non-incarceration is a matter of Superman preferring to deal with the devil he knows…

Bring back J Wilbur Wolfingham

27 Jul 18:34

elcomfortador: What people will dress like in 1950, as imagined...



elcomfortador:

What people will dress like in 1950, as imagined by the cover of Life magazine in 1914. By Otho Cushing. Via this blog post.

21 Jul 04:52

"After leaving where we were before we left for here, not knowing we were coming here from there, we..."

“After leaving where we were before we left for here, not knowing we were coming here from there, we couldn’t tell whether we had arrived here or not. Nevertheless, we now are here and not there. The weather here is just as it always is at this season. The people here are just as they look.”

- An inadvertent modernist masterpiece via “An Army at Dawn,” from a letter an American GI wrote to his parents about the invasion of North Africa, where censorship was so strict that a censor scribbled on this letter, “Amen.” (via mattdpearce)
21 Jul 04:52

Spectrum X

Spectrum X:

rachelandmiles:

image

In Episode 61, we answered a listener’s question about Autistic characters and neurodiversity in X-canon, and I want to take a moment to elaborate on a couple things I brought up there. Nothing formal, mind: this is both a bit of a ramble and significantly more personal than I generally get here. Consider yourselves warned.

There are–as far as I recall–two named, explicitly Autistic-labeled characters in X-Men. Neither provides a particularly accurate or sympathetic representation of autism; and in Legion’s case, that label has been quietly dropped in more recent appearances.

Click through to read the rest at rachelandmiles.com.

Is there a stage of Professional Writer where you can post personal essays (or essays that veer in deeply personal directions) without like 24 hours of nauseous panic? Is that a thing? I would really like that to be a thing.

…Anyway, I wrote some stuff about the X-Men and autism.

21 Jul 04:52

This is actually a pretty solid practical lesson in ways SFX can...



This is actually a pretty solid practical lesson in ways SFX can support or undercut tone.

Also hilarious.

29 Jun 02:04

Eating a bookThese three objects can hardly be called books. Yet...







Eating a book

These three objects can hardly be called books. Yet they are, although they are not what you’d expect from such objects. These so-called “hornbooks” were used to teach children to read, roughly from the fourteenth to the eighteenth centuries. To this end they presented some “light” reading, such as the alphabet, the Lord’s Prayer and other short texts. Some of these hornbooks were particularly clever. The one in the middle, dating from the eighteenth century, features an abacus and supports simple calculations. The one at the bottom, also the eighteenth century, is a particularly delicious specimen: the wooden slab could be used to bake a gingerbread. It is the ultimate “book” to get children to do their schoolwork: when you’ve shown to be able to read a word, you can bite it off and eat it.

Pics: Washington, Folger Library, Stc 138136 (top, 17th century); Washington, Library of Congress, 102.3 (middle, 18th century); New York, Columbia University, Plimpton Hornbook 6 (bottom, 18th century). More on hornbooks in this longer blog post I wrote a while back.

01 May 03:43

mediamattersforamerica: You need to watch this full...

29 Apr 16:43

Who created Caitlin Snow on #TheFlash? According to @DCComics, nobody

gerryconway:

Who created Caitlin Snow, the alter ego of Firestorm super-villain Killer Frost, who appears regularly on The Flash?

According to DC Entertainment, nobody.

That’s right. Caitlin Snow, the brilliant scientist working for Harrison Wells, fiancée of Ronnie Raymond and friend of Barry Allen, aka The Flash, sprang fully formed into existence without a creator or creators.

But that’s okay, because, by the logic employed by DC Entertainment, nobody created Barry Allen either.

Let me explain. See if you can follow me here.

As I’ve described elsewhere (http://comicsequity.blogspot.com), many years ago DC Comics established the first program to provide comic book creators with a share in the revenues generated by their creations in other media. This concept became known as “creator equity participation” and it was a small but significant step toward compensating creators for their work beyond a simple page rate. For me, personally, it’s been moderately lucrative (thank you, Bruce Timm, for putting Killer Croc in the animated Batman) but in recent years it’s also become an increasingly frustrating and, lately, infuriating process.

The reason, I believe, is the shift of corporate culture at DC Comics that occurred around the time Paul Levitz left his position as publisher.

As a comic book creator himself, Paul displayed a protective empathy for creators. Once the creator equity concept became policy, Paul applied it liberally and proactively– often notifying writers and artists their creations were due to receive equity participation when creators would otherwise have no idea. For thirty plus years, under Paul, creators were valued and supported as equity partners. (We can argue about the level of support, whether the percentage creators received was commensurate with their contributions, but we can’t deny that the support was there, and it was consistent.)

All of that changed when Paul left, and DC Comics became, officially, DC Entertainment, a fully subsumed cog in the Warners Entertainment wheel.

I first learned how this change would effect DC’s approach to creators equity when I received a letter from DC Entertainment’s new president, Diane Nelson, informing me I would no longer receive equity payments for Power Girl because she was now considered a “derivative” character. To soften the blow and show “appreciation” for my “contribution” she enclosed a check for $1000.

Thank you, Diane.

The next thing I learned about DC Entertainment’s new approach to their comic creators equity program was just as distressing, given how many characters I created for DC over the decade-plus I wrote for the company: if I wanted to receive an equity participation contract for a character I created, I had to request one, in writing, for each character, before that character appeared in another media, because DC would refuse to make equity payments retroactively.

By a rough guesstimate, I probably created over five hundred characters for DC between 1969 and 1985. Most of them were minor one-shot creations, and some of them, like Felicity Smoak (now a regular on Arrow) were minor supporting characters who’ve taken on a new life in other media. Unless I’m willing to commit a large chunk of my life to tracking down each character and filing a separate equity request in anticipation that somehow, some day, one of these characters might end up on a TV show, I risk being cut off from any share in the fruits DC enjoys from the product of my labor. A share which DC acknowledges I’m due– but which DC refuses to assist me in receiving.

Thank you, DC.

But now we come to the catch-22 of DC’s new approach to creator equity agreements. Assuming I perform my due diligence (which should really be DC’s due diligence) and dig up references to characters I’ve created that might soon be appearing in other media (maybe as a chess piece, or a Heroclix figure, or a recurring character on The Flash), and assuming I file the necessary request form in a timely fashion– DC can still decide, unilaterally, that my creation is “derivative” and they don’t owe me a dime.

What, exactly, is DC’s definition of a “derivative” character?

It’s a character that DC decides was “derived” from some other previously existing character.

For example, Power Girl– “derived” from Superman, because, like Supergirl, she’s a relative of Superman. Which means I can’t claim to be her co-creator because Superman is a pre-existing character. Fair enough, I suppose. The logic here is that Superman is the original creation, so Power Girl is derived from that original creation, so in effect, Power Girl is an extension of Superman, which means, by this tortured logic, that Power Girl was more or less created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster.

Uh, no.

This was the tortured logic National Periodical Publications tried to use back in the 1940s when Siegel and Shuster sued National for the rights to Superboy. National (the company that preceded DC) argued that Superman was the original creation, which Siegel and Shuster sold to National, and that Superboy was just a “derivative” creation. A court-appointed legal referee found that Superboy was in fact a unique creation and that National was guilty of copyright infringement. Sadly for Siegel and Shuster (and for creators everywhere), legal expenses forced the creators to sell National the rights to Superboy in a consent decree that obscured this fundamental finding. But the finding is pretty clear:

Characters “derived” from other characters are legally unique, and DC’s claim that “derivation” deprives creators of any equity participation rights in those characters is nothing more than an immoral, unethical, deceitful and despicable money grab.

Yet, it gets worse.

Let’s say DC agrees you created a character, like, for example, Killer Frost. In your original creation, Killer Frost had a secret identity named Crystal Frost. Later, a “new” Killer Frost is created for the New 52, and this new Killer Frost has a secret identity named Caitlin Snow.

You’ll be pleased to hear (I hope) that DC agrees I and Al Milgrom are the co-creators of all manifestations of “Killer Frost.” We are also considered the co-creators of Crystal Frost. And, of course, by the twisted logic that credits Power Girl as a derivation of Superman, Al and I must also be the creators of Killer Frost’s New 52 secret identity, Caitlin Snow.

Right?

No. We’re not. And DC insists we are not. And I agree with DC.

Caitlin Snow was created by Sterling Gates and Derlis Santacruz.

Except, according to DC Entertainment, she wasn’t. Because she was “derived” from the original creation of Killer Frost.

Which means Al Milgrom and I created her.

Except, according to DC Entertainment, we didn’t.

Nobody created her.

Or, rather, nobody gets credit and creator equity participation for creating her.

And that, my friends, is truly obnoxious and despicable.

DC Entertainment has created a marvelous catch-22 that allows them to cheat creators by using both sides of an argument to serve DC’s interests.

According to DC, Sterling Gates and Derlis Santacruz didn’t create Caitlin Snow. Don Newton and I didn’t create Jason Todd. Ric Estrada and I didn’t create Power Girl. Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster didn’t create Superboy. Bob Kanigher and Carmine Infantino didn’t create Barry Allen.

These characters just appeared out of nowhere.

But the money for their exploitation goes directly into DC’s bank account.

As a cartoonist, I find this stuff depressing as hell. :C

28 Apr 15:19

"When nonviolence is preached as an attempt to evade the repercussions of political brutality, it..."

“When nonviolence is preached as an attempt to evade the repercussions of political brutality, it betrays itself. When nonviolence begins halfway through the war with the aggressor calling time out, it exposes itself as a ruse. When nonviolence is preached by the representatives of the state, while the state doles out heaps of violence to its citizens, it reveals itself to be a con. And none of this can mean that rioting or violence is ‘correct’ or ‘wise,’ any more than a forest fire can be ‘correct’ or 'wise.’ Wisdom isn’t the point tonight. Disrespect is. In this case, disrespect for the hollow law and failed order that so regularly disrespects the rioters themselves.”

- Ta-Nehisi Coates, “Nonviolence as Compliance”
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/04/nonviolence-as-compliance/391640/ (via dynamofire)
24 Apr 22:16

genderoftheday: Today’s Gender of the day is: a glockenspiel I...

Rodanof42

Sound like a time to listen to Sunday Morning.



genderoftheday:

Today’s Gender of the day is: a glockenspiel

I feel this. I am having Glockenspiel Feels.

….

23 Apr 02:22

One of the Original X-Men is Gay – And It Matters More Than You Think | Playboy

One of the Original X-Men is Gay – And It Matters More Than You Think | Playboy:

kyl33t:

rachelandmiles:

postcardsfromspace:

Here’s the thing: There is no one-size-fits-all coming-out narrative. We don’t often talk about this, the same way we don’t often talk about the fluidity of identity.
There is no one-size-fits-all coming-out narrative because there is no one-size-fits-all experience of sexual orientation. Or friendship. Because different people have different social needs and part of being a good friend is recognizing that. But there are kids — and adults — for whom hearing a frightening truth from a trusted friend is a huge and welcome relief: a signpost to a revelation; permission to acknowledge and articulate a secret they’ve been running from.
It’s possible to follow the best-practices list to a T and screw up. It’s possible to deviate from it and do just fine. Once more, with feeling: There is no one-size-fits-all coming-out narrative.

I wrote a very long and unusually (for me, anyway) personal op-ed about queer identity, coming-out narratives, and All-New X-Men #40, for playboy.com. (For those uncomfortable clicking through–this will also be up at rachelandmiles.com come Saturday.)

For everyone who’s asked for our thoughts on this: Here’s Rachel’s take.

Absolutely fantastic. Thank you postcardsfromspace for this! Ps: my coming out to my mom was EXACTLY the same. Highway, at night, just her and me in the car. Totally awkward as hades.

Did she then lecture you about how it might not seem like it but it’s important to use protection with girls, too? Because that’s what my mom did, because she is the absolute goddamn best.

14 Apr 23:43

Remembering Herb Trimpe, Legendary Artist on 'Hulk', 'G.I. Joe' and 'Godzilla'

by Patrick A. Reed

Herb Trimpe, the prolific and talented penciller perhaps best known for his work on Hulk and G.I. Joe, and for being the first artist to draw Wolverine, has passed at the age of 75. With a career that spanned seven decades, he built a reputation as one of the medium's most dependable and distinctive creative voices.

Continue reading…

09 Apr 02:13

How do you feel about the the High Evolutionary? I feel like he should be more central villain in the Marvel universe than he seems to be, but that could just be me.

Rodanof42

This is the perfect summation of my experience with the High Evolutionary.

I’ve been thinking about this question since I got it yesterday, and it turns out I do not have strong feelings either way about the High Evolutionary

08 Apr 23:05

During the “Being Non-Compliant” panel it was said "our toys won't be taken away". But isn't that already happening? We lost Thor. We lost Cap. Sooner or later Miles will replace Peter. Avengers goes all female. I mean, it feels like all my favorites are being slowly chipped away and replaced. What comics am I supposed to read soon?

Rodanof42

click through because rss and tumblr don't blend well.

I literally can’t tell if you’re kidding. 

You know you can still read those books, right? 

Let’s look at movies: women comprise 50% (some put it higher, actually) of the ticket-buying public but we’re only 12% of the protagonists. You’re about as likely (4%) to see a woman FROM ANOTHER PLANET onscreen as you are a Latina or an Asian woman. Have women stopped going to movies?  Nope. 

You too can learn to cross-identify.  The rest of us have.  And don’t make the slippery slope argument to me because we’ve made *progress* over the last two years when we are still nowhere near parity.  

(Moreover, if you think the changes you lamented above are permanent, Zelda Fitzgerald would love to have you for a son.)

It’s gonna be okay, man.  Let yourself enjoy Miles Morales.  It’s a hell of a fine book. 

And when you get sad, remember you still have the United States Congress. And 43 US Presidents. And Wal-Mart. 

16 Mar 00:06

charlesoberonn:bluhstrider:djpaige:But srsly thoughIf you ever find yourself in a Disney movieAnd...

Rodanof42

Bobbin Threadbare was right all along

charlesoberonn:

bluhstrider:

djpaige:

But srsly though

image

If you ever find yourself in a Disney movie

image

And someone or something starts being mysteriously surrounded by lime green

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Stay away from the thing

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Everything lime green is evil

image

Just remember that.

image

Everything lime green is evil.

Every Villain ILime 

image