Monday, May 31, 2010

Misc for the Day

What's Laura up to? Not a lot. I finished the 2000 piece puzzle that my sister gave me:

I can't tell you exactly how long it took, but I worked on it quite awhile. I only had one spot in the house to do it, since my puzzle board was too small to handle it, so it was in the way. Almost as soon as I finished it I had to pack it up again. I either need to get a much larger puzzle board or stick with smaller puzzles.

I've been trying a lot of recipes, lately. Mostly baking at the moment. I've got a killer fudge brownie recipe that I make and Eric and I use as the base for our desserts for a couple of weeks after. I also tried a brown sugar chocolate chip cookie that didn't quite work out correctly, though I chowed down through my "mistakes" quickly and gained a pound or so while I was at it. Most recently I made Cheesecake Cookies (recipe here) and they turned out ok:

Cheescake Cookie

Not pretty to look at, but they taste good. I've been using this recipe analysis tool to figure out the calories of the stuff I'm making. That way I can keep up with my calorie count while I'm baking all this stuff that's bad for me.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

A Sunday Review

No TV for this week, as I haven't watched the new Doctor Who yet, and the seasons for most of my shows are ended.



This week's movie was Iris. This is a movie about a serious and depressing topic, and managed to still be a love story despite the overriding terror inherent in the fact that Iris Murdoch was slowly succumbing to Alzheimer's. The movie explores her loose and fast youth, with Kate Winslet baring all, interspersed with Judi Dench's amazing performance as a writer slowly losing her most precious asset. I found this movie to be incredibly depressing, difficult to watch, and ultimately enlightening.



COMICS!
Here are reviews of the Free Comic Book Day comics of 2010 that I got and read:
  • DC Comics Mega Sampler 2010 - Not enough Aquaman, but a fair sampler that shows off the DC Kids books nicely.
  • Kizoic Presents: Shrek/Penguins of Madagascar FCBD 2010 - I liked this enough that I would consider getting the books. That's the goal of the book, so it worked.
  • FCBD: The Overstreet Guide to Collecting Comics - This isn't really a comic book, it's just a guide to making sure you have no fun reading your comic books.
  • Owly and Friends! 2010 FCBD - Another excellent book. I love Owly, and Korgi is cure as well. I wasn't sure what to make of Johnny Boo, I never am.
  • The Tick's FCBD Special Edition #1 - I've never been a big fan of The Tick, but I do enjoy his goofy origin, and this was fun to read again. Certainly something I'd give to someone who wants to know about The Tick.
  • Love and Capes #13 - Hubby-Eric loved this, I was slightly less impressed. It's a good book, but I didn't feel the love like Eric did. Maybe it'll grow on me if Eric gets it.
  • Fraggle Rock/Mouse Guard Spring 1153 FCBD 2010 - I was familiar with Mouse Guard, so no surprises there, but I doubt this sample will get many new readers. The Fraggle Rock sampler, on the other hand, was excellent and made me curious about the comic.



My library book this week was Coyote Frontier by Allen Steele. Saying that this book is more of the same doesn't really do justice to the imagination and twists of the book, but it's really a good way to describe it. If you didn't like the storytelling style of the first two books, you won't like this one. If you enjoyed the first two, you'll probably enjoy this one. This is the final book of the Coyote trilogy, but there are other books set in the same universe, and I'll be checking those out as I get the time. Count me as one who enjoys this style of storytelling.

On a side note, I think this post at Tor got me hooked on the Coyote books.



Agatha Christie this week was The Burden from 1956, written as Mary Westmacott. This is the last of her Westmacott novels, thank goodness. The title burden is the burden of being loved, which is apparent almost immediately. The story centers around a woman who craves love but because she's a plain second child she fails to attract her parents' attention. It's as depressing as all get out, like her other Westmacott books, and kind of makes you want no part of humanity by the time you're done with it. Still, it's not the worst of those books, I'd put it solidly in the middle. But I vastly prefer her mystery and even her supernatural works to these "romances".



Fortean Times #260, May 2010. The cover is disturbing, a skull with a cigarette. Ok, it's disturbing when it's sitting on the bedside table and it's the first thing I see when I wake up. The cover story is about a cult in Bolivia that uses skulls to influence life. It's practitioners are Catholic, and though the Church has denied any status to the skulls and frowns upon them, the practice lives on.

The editorial mentions the "magic wand" being sold to Iraqi security forces by a British scammer, and says that if the consequences weren't so tragic it would be funny. Agreed. Strangedays starts out with a UFO sighting and gets more odd. There's a bit on Dr Patel and the Maitreya, animals born with human-like faces, and strawberry crab and blobfish. I like the story of a greyhound race in England that had to be stopped when a real hare ran onto the track. The Science article was about nanobacteria, and was mostly new to me. Looks like something fun to look up sometime.

Continuing on, there was a note that the mysterious visitor of Poe's grave failed to show up this year, followed by a number of theories and claimants to the role of the Poe toaster. I really enjoyed the Archaeology article on El Dorado and the newest discoveries in the Amazon forests. A distressing article on the problems faced by albinos in many parts of Africa was disturbing. The UFO files were as fun as usual. I liked the Blasts From The Past article, about airships spotted in places that probably shouldn't have had airships at the time the ships were spotted. Another article covers sea serpents and the decline of spottings in the modern age.

Another article describes Berlin as the literal gateway to Hell, based on The Alter of Pergamon as mentioned in the Book of Revelations being moved to the city. I honestly have no response to that. The Forum explores the Voynich Manuscript, which made me want to look at the thing myself. I found it at the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, and I think it's a pretty cool mystery. The Reviews were great, as usual. I'm tempted to find a copy of Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford's Forgotten Jungle City. As usual, the Letters pages were a delight to read. And so, it was another great issue of a fun mag. I wonder when the next one will come?



Friday, May 28, 2010

More Muppet Music

Just in time for the Memorial Day weekend, the Muppets salute the American woman!

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Stepford Plants Update

Nothing to report this week. Everything seems to be growing except the one arborvitae and one of the tomatoes. Maybe I'll have more to report next week.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

CameraPhone Zen

It's a Cat!

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

A Linkdump

Comic Book Legends Revealed #261: Frank Miller's Wolverine, Odie, and Mort Weisinger on the many marriages of Superman and/or Lois Lane.

I don't usually link to this webcomic, but Comic Critics #118 was too good to pass up.

If I weren't going to be elsewhere during the filming, I'd volunteer for The Morgan Spurlock documentary on San Diego Comic Con.


Kevin Costner may be the hero of the oil spill with some new technology he's developed with his scientist brother that helps to clean oil-polluted water.

What Disney Princesses teach girls.

Inexpensive Home Safety Improvements.

Oops. Towing Company Loses Half Its Accounts After Suing Over Facebook Page. And from the sounds of it, they deserved to lose that business, too.

Monday, May 24, 2010

For Carolyn

They Attack In Packs To Bring Down Large Prey:

Attack on the Van

Sunday, May 23, 2010

When the Internet is Good...

...it can be very good.

If you read the MetaFilter thread about Russian students in possible danger from one of my previous postings, you'll know the story isn't quite over. But it's been taken up by Newsweek, Mother Jones, Gizmodo, and a Slate Blogger who doesn't believe the story. It's also hit Digg and been explained on Reddit.

Some people are wondering if the girls were really in danger. On another thread, Miko provides context.

Another MeFite created a MetaFilter Wiki entry that sums up the situation and provides links to media coverage of the tale.

In the meantime, the girls are on a summer work visa and have no work, so needed to find an immigration lawyer and good advice. And the heroic gal who met them at the bus station missed a job interview out of pure exhaustion after helping them out, then Paypal shut down her account because of the suspiciously large amounts pouring into it. Word is still pending on how that will all turn out, but the MetaFilter community is on the job, and displaying the best of humanity.

Something you may not know about MetaFilter: it costs $5 to join. So if this was some kind of hoax, someone put a lot of money into it. In addition, the people involved have been posting to MetaFilter for years, so that's a lot of set up time for a hoax. I've been following MetaFilter for a long time and recognize a lot of the names involved. As far as I could tell, these are genuine people who were worried about what appeared to be a very shady operation. And while it's certainly possible that their concern was overblown, the situation was familiar enough to officials who deal with human trafficking that law enforcement got involved.

So, yay internet! And yay MetaFilter!

A Sunday Review

TV this week:

  • Dinner Impossible: "Robert's Lost Mission" - Robert takes on Lost. I have hardly ever watched the show, maybe one or two episodes, so I'm not feeling much of a connection. The nice twist is having to buy "ingredients" to build a kitchen, instead of the food itself.
  • Doctor Who: "The Hungry Earth" - My problem with this episode stems from the fact that the "Silurians" look like Star Trek style Draconians. In short, I'm not impressed by the redesign... enough to say I actively hate it. That's not a Silurian. Silurians were interesting and truly alien. That's a bad Star Trek villain, complete with pathetic monologue. Otherwise, the story has a lot of potential. But the ill-conceived redesign and monologue brought the whole story down to make it my least favorite of this year so far. I think I actually hate the redesign more than I hate that stupid bow tie. Drinking game for this episode: any time you see a plot device that appeared in a Jon Pertwee story, take a drink.


DCBS
Here are reviews of the DCBS comic book shipment that arrived this week, of books originally released May 5th and 12th:
  • Brightest Day #1 - Manohman I was so pumped for this. Of course, plenty of people managed to spoil bits for me, but finally getting my hands on it so I could read it myself was very very nice. I'm really curious to see where this Aquaman plotline goes. Oh, and there were a couple of other characters in there too, but I wasn't much interested in them. I wish I could afford the alternate cover to this one.
  • JSA All-Stars #6 - This felt like it ended too abruptly. Like the whole thing wrapped up in an instant and boom!... on to the next.
  • Astro City: The Dark Age: Book Four #4 - I loved the bit at the end where the brothers decide what names they are going to use in the retelling of their tale. Good stuff.
  • Demo V2 #4 - Aquaboy done Demo-style. Wow. Powerful little tale, but I wonder where he'll go from there. If he stays where he's at, isn't he going to eventually be found? Hrm.
  • Doctor Who Classics Series 3 #3 - I think I may just have to sit down with this storyline once it's all been republished and try to read it through at once. As it is, it's just not working for me.

  • Birds of Prey #1 - Zinda rocks.
  • DMZ #53 - At this point I just wonder where Parco got himself off to, and what Matty's going to do about it.


My library book this week was Whittington by Alan Armstrong. A beat up cat finds a home in a barn of misfit animals, and tells them the story of his ancestor as life goes on. I have often heard the story of Dick Whittington and his cat, but this is a pleasant retelling designed for children. A great surprise was the endnote, which includes a lovely bibliography of books used to research both the history of the cat's tales and other specific events covered in the book. I'd give this or read this to a younger reader who is having trouble reading.



Saturday, May 22, 2010

A Moment of Silence

Mathematician and Oz fan Martin Gardner has died. The world has lost a genius.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Linkages

If you haven't played the Google logo today, go and do it quick before it goes away. Update: And if you missed it, you can still play it HERE.

Oh boy, something to look forward to! Yes, hubby-Eric and I live in one of the affected areas. And hey, we just had a tornado, too!

Paramount's Geographic Facsimile Map of 1927. Want to visit the Swiss Alps without leaving California? Here's the map for you!

Woman whose cash was refused when she tried to buy an iPad changes Apple's policy and gets a free iPad as an apology for the store's refusal to sell her one.

Step-by-step instructions on how to upgrade your toilet to a dual-flush system with a $20 kit. I think I want one (or rather, three, since we have three toilets in this house).

In honor of the 30th anniversary: The Empire Strikes Back links on MetaFilter.

One of the best takes on Pokemon ever.

For Doctor Who fans: New Torchwood Comic?

Ok, this one is special. In the middle of a cross-country trip, a man gets a call from a former student and friend from Russia. She and a traveling companion are in Washington DC, where they were promised a job when they arrived. Somehow the deal fell through, so she contacted someone she knows in the States for advice and help. Start reading at the top of this page, and just keep reading down. Seriously, read this. It will open your eyes, thrill and terrify you, and if you have a soul it'll probably make you cry before you get to the end.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Stepford Plants Update

The arborvitae are mostly growing ok, except for one. There was a barren area, the only spot that didn't have grass, that one of the arborvitae was planted in. This is the one that is having trouble. I'm beginning to think that the soil there isn't good. I'm going to try to give the plant a little more help with some extra fertilizer and potting soil, but I don't know if the poor little guy will survive.

Moving on, the One Dollar Tomatoes still weren't growing, so I gave in and repotted them today. I probably did it wrong, and I'm halfway certain I killed them in the process. The roots were tangled and woven throughout the little pot... they weren't growing because they had reached the limits of their resources. There wasn't anywhere left for them to stretch out! So I put them in the three larger pots I bought awhile ago, two each in two of the pots and one solo.

One Dollar Tomato Plants

We'll see if they survive until next week's update.

The plum stick continues to grow leaves. More leaves make me happy. It's not terribly impressive looking yet, but at least it seems to be growing. I have been trying to keep it watered and plan to stake it against our frequent windstorms soon, but at the moment I'm just happy it's alive.

Plum Stick with Leaves

On a slightly worrisome note, a friend came over and mentioned that her parents had planted a tree from a stick like mine, and it took over five years before it started to look like a tree at all. I'm hoping by the end of summer my plum stick will have some branches. I'll even settle for very small branches.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Not More Links? Wow...

Today in History.

Ghostbusters visit New York Public Library. And they brought their own ghosts.

The Facts in the Case of Dr Andrew Wakefield.

I've always liked Velma.

LifeLock CEO's Identity Repeatedly Stolen. I think perhaps this is a problem with our whole identity system as well as LifeLock's crappy and ineffective product.

Basement Cat doesn't want your soul.

PugGnome for the in-laws.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Links for Folks Who Like Links

Thirty years ago: Mt St Helens dumped ash on Yakima, and created a new ecosystem around the mountain.

The Green Children of Woolpit, were they aliens? Or just a couple of lost and sick kids...?

Love, True Love.

Ah, the difference between toys for boys versus toys for girls. Any child of mine will grow up with LEGO.

I feel even less secure about flying after reading this article about a pilot who faked his license.

Teaching Math. I find the debate on MetaFilter to be surprisingly illuminating.

Basement Cat brainwashes Child.

And lastly, Aquaman has some serious explaining to do:

Aquaman Drills for Oil

Monday, May 17, 2010

Linkages for a Stormy Monday

Snopes Warning: Bottlebombs.

The Bert Locker.

Vampires are influencing baby names. I love the Social Security Online's Baby Names page linked in the article. My name was the 17th most popular the year I was born.

Cars can be hacked.

The Geek Alphabet. I particularly like "D" of course.

The Complete History of the Fallout Shelter Sign.

Busted for the possession of a forbidden substance, and only in third grade! Of course, once you ban something, smart people can make a lot of money selling it.

Yoga Master Pug for the in-laws.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

A Sunday Review

TV this week:

  • Ghost Hunters: "Norwich State" - A mental asylum that people could not legally investigate for ghosts is finally opened up to TAPS. The tour guide is a former groundskeeper of the place, and the place is HUGE. They emphasize at the beginning of the episode that they got permission and that the place is incredibly dangerous because it's falling apart. I'm sure the physical dangers were a big reason no one was allowed in before. Add in how open those buildings are, and animals could be a hazard as well. Ghost hunting without safety measures and permission is just stupidity. I mean more stupid than just hunting for ghosts. Anyway, this was a funhouse for the ghost hunters, and that door moving was fairly impressive evidence, although it could easily be the building settling. This is the last episode before the mid-season break, so this is my last dose of ghosts for awhile.
  • Battlestar Galactica: "Lay Down Your Burdens: Part 1" - Dean Stockwell rocks. Do I really need to say anything else about this episode?
  • Battlestar Galactica: "Lay Down Your Burdens: Part 2" - Oh boy. That really changes everything. I mean really, completely. It changes everything. And it's apparently not a dream. Wow.
  • Doctor Who: "Amy's Choice" - Not what I was expecting from this episode. But then, I'm not sure I knew what I was expecting anyway. Some very very good lines in this one which Doctor Who fans ought to be quoting for the next few years. And the villain was not who I thought it was.


This week's movie was Porco Rosso. An Italian WWI pilot cursed to be a pig fights pirates in the Adriatic. This was just beyond odd and into the way cool territory. I mean, it was strange enough of a plot, but everything that happens and the setting and everything... well. Depending on how you take the ending, this one certainly works out to be a sweet tale. Lots of Miyazaki's trademark flying, as you would expect in a movie about pilots.



This week's comic book related review is Amelia Rules! The Tweenage Guide to Not Being Unpopular by Jimmy Gownley. I've been following Amelia for a long time, and the move to trades was not a surprise. This is the first one, I think, that has entirely new material. I really enjoyed it. The longer format allowed for a slightly more complex story (not that the other stories weren't complex!) with a more complicated way of telling it. It takes quite awhile before we find out exactly what Amelia did to merit the mob chasing her up a tree. I liked this one a lot, particularly the coloring job on the kids during certain scenes. It was a powerful visual that helped to feel the emotions involved. Definitely a great book, well worth checking out.



My library book this week was Mennyms Under Siege by Sylvia Waugh. The Mennyms attract a bit of attention from neighbors, and have to hide away to protect themselves. This one had some unexpected events, enough to throw off what I thought was going to happen in this series. Looking forward to the next book. I'm not used to being shocked by events in a children's book, so this was nice.



Agatha Christie this week was Dead Man's Folly from 1956. Poirot is called into action by Agatha's MarySue character, and has a difficult time piecing together the mass of clues. I made several assumptions about this one based on the title alone, and so the twists were complete revelations to me and I was annoyed that I missed it so totally. Again, I look back and all the evidence is there, but I didn't come close to figuring it out while reading. On to the next!



Saturday, May 15, 2010

What, Another Linkdump?

What women REALLY want.

Terry Pratchett says Doctor Who isn't Science Fiction. Well, duh. It's always been fantasy, maybe even science fantasy.

Toughs and Toffs and what happened to the boys snapped in that 1937 picture.

Cat and Wii Fit. *sigh*

Message in a bottle.

And yet more Comic Book Legends Revealed:

  • #249: Bruce Banner, Watchmen, and Mike Sekowsky.
  • #250: Suing for credit, Sentry, and Venom.
  • #251: X-Men vs. Avengers, Captain America, and Earth Day.
  • #252: Frank Frazetta, EC Comics, and Dreadknight.
  • #253: The Phantom, Sappho, and Jack Kirby's Thing.
  • #254: DC Comics Presents #97, Steve Gerber, Spectre, and Howard the Duck.
  • #255: Teddy bear, Translation Confusion, and Modesty Blaise.
  • #256: Black Panther, Kirby Horror, and Spider-Man.
  • #257: Robotman, Deadman, and Arnold Drake's Doom Patrol.
  • #258: Alias #1, Captain Wonder, and Barb Wire.
  • #259: Sid Greene, Sergio Aragones, and Renamed Characters.
  • #260: Doctor Droom, Magneto, and Gen13.
Incredible pictures of Iceland's Eyjafjallajokull volcano from Mid-April. Bonus Video, how to pronounce it (ay-uh-fyat-luh-yoe-kuut):


Be sure to watch until at least 2 minutes in! Eyja (ay-uh) = island, Fjalla (fyat-luh) = mountain, and Jokull (yu-kuut) = Glacier. Now you know.

Moron sues his neighbor because moron thinks Wi-Fi made him sick. Best comment: We had something similar happening here, where people started complaining about the electromagnetic field from a cell repeater tower. PR statement from the telco: "Gee, wonder what it'll be like when we turn it on in a few weeks..." Needless to say that the court tossed the suit without a hearing.

Animated Oil Spill, in case you didn't have a good enough sense of the disaster.

For the in-laws: Muppug, Sad Pug, Faked out Pug, Inflatable Pug?, and Pug with an alien problem.

LOLCat Theology: Basement Dog wishes to corrupt you, Ceiling Cat protects you from evil, Basement Kitten Infiltrates Heaven, Basement Cat disappoints Dog, Basement Cat doesn't taste evil, Basement Cat's Mom, High Calorie Souls, Baptism? Cat?, and a Basement Cat request.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Another Linkdump

Still trying to catch up on old links I have saved, and clean up my Google Reader...

Tim Gunn on Superhero costumes, and more here. I've liked Tim Gunn since I first saw him in a Late Late Show Aquaman sketch, but he doesn't criticize Aquaman's costume in these.

I'm trying out a program called f.lux, which changes your computer monitor colors based on the time of day. I'm hoping the more muted colors will maybe help me sleep better.

How to Encrypt Your USB Thumb Drive.

Set the Wayback Machine!

Doctor Who T-Shirts I want: Salvador Dalek. Don't miss the Venn Diagram.

More Comic Book Legends Revealed...

  • #240: Lynn Varley, Frank Quitely, and AJ Lieberman.
  • #241: WWII Slogans, Mariko, and Night Thrasher.
  • #242: Worst Boyfriend, Red Tornado, and more Red Tornado.
  • #243: Marvel Westerns, Beta Ray Bill, and J.T. Krul.
  • #244: Superman Musical, Power Rangers, and Spider-Man cartoon.
  • #245: Exclamation Points, Champions, and The Order.
  • #246: Adastra, Indiana Jones, and Howling Commandos.
  • #247: Wally Wood, Sauron, and Marvel movie adaptations.
  • #248: Seven Soldiers of Victory, Kamandi, and Captain America.
Heartbreaking, in more ways than one: I Should Have Read My Islamic Marriage Contract.

Darryl Cunningham on Electroconvulsive Therapy. I really really want a copy of his book, Psychiatric Tales, but it's not available in the United States yet.

For the in-laws: Pug Flower, Pup or Seal?, Krazy Glue, Pug meal, Oscar the Pug, Teen Wolf Pug, Bleh, and Pupal Stage of the Pug.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Stepford House Plants Update

First: arborvitae are still growing slowly, oh so slowly.

Second: and the one dollar tomato plants have not grown any significant amount since my last report.

Third: but my plum stick has news! After planting it, I made a cage from leftover fencing material and staked it around the plum stick so it wouldn't get run over by local children, who have an annoying habit of racing through my yard screaming at the top of their lungs. Get off my lawn! *ahem* Anyway, here's a picture from today so you can see how I staked it out:

Plum Stick Cage

But of much more interest was what Eric told me when he came in after checking out my plum stick in order to water it. He asked me if I knew it was starting to grow leaves. LEAVES? REAL LEAVES? I had to rush out and look, and sure enough, my plum stick is growing some green!

Plum Stick Leaves

I'm so happy! I didn't actually expect anything to grow so quickly. It's only been a week since I planted it, and I don't feel like I did a good job with the planting. So seeing this growth makes me feel pretty darn good now. I don't know if it will last, but I can dream of having fruit on this tree in five or six years or so.

Plum Stick Leaves

I'll try to keep reporting on it every week or so. This is perhaps the most exciting thing happening around here lately. Ah, the joys of living in the middle of nowhere!

Linkdump

So far behind in linkblogging...

Let's start with Comic Book Legends Revealed!

  • #233: Rocky Joe, Moon Knight, and Al Feldstein's Corliss.
  • #234: Naked Storm, Debby Harry, and Masters of the Universe.
  • #235: Seduction of the Comics Code, Horror, and Wonder Woman.
  • #236: Tim Truman, Marvel pseudonyms, and Days of Future Past.
  • #237: Italian ban on comics, Star Wars, and Millie the Model.
  • #238: Havok, Tarzan Galactica, and Comic Book Tourists.
  • #239: Gozilla Dragon, Tom Swift Robin, and Cycle of the Werewolf.
I started using Chisenbop in elementary school, and I'm sure I picked it up from a book, but I never knew that you could do more than just count with it.

Norman Rockwell's reference photos.

Vat Meat: I'm still waiting for it, and I would not object to being one of the first to try it.

Overcoming Writer's Block.

A note about my Sunday Reviews of the Mennyms series, I started reading because of this review by Todd Klein. Thank you Todd!

Nova Scotia woman not dead yet.

Having fun at doctor appointments.

Young Men who Smoke have Lower IQs.

For the in-laws: Elvis Pug. Puppy Pug. Pug and Ice Cream. Pug Birthday. Pug in Trouble with Cats. Unlucky Pug. And lastly: A description of a Pug's Life.

LOLCat Theology: Basement Cat is Zombie? Basement Cat hates Santa. Basement Cat Movie Poster. Basement Cat Apprentice. Ceiling Puppy and Basement Dog. And lastly: Ceiling Cat decides your fate.

Current Spam Attack

I've been getting a lot of comments that have a very generic "I liked this post" type of comment, followed by a long series of periods ......... which are actually links to a spam site. Anyone else getting these right now? I've had to delete them from a bunch of my blogs.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Michael Brown - Defending Aquaman

Sunday, May 09, 2010

A Sunday Review

TV this week:

  • Battlestar Galactica: "The Captain's Hand" - Wow. A TV episode that tackles the issue of abortion. Although in a completely different situation than today's political world. The whole thing was pretty impressive, particularly Apollo's promotions.
  • Battlestar Galactica: "Downloaded" - And now we see the other side of the story. I find it both amusing and very interesting that Caprica-Six is having visions of Baltar just like Baltar is having visions of her. Wow. Definitely something strange going on there. Did they somehow link? And, in the meantime, the baby is born and ... not killed? Strange.
  • Ghost Hunters: "Spirits of the Night" - Bellingham Mass, a house disturbed by playful spirits that are scaring a child. The bits at the beginning of this one, about the medium wanting $300 to help the family, made me remember why I like this particular group. Their services are free. Their advice is solid, and they usually do a good job debunking. Again, the evidence they caught is inconclusive. The voices aren't convincing, and the toy could have been moved by a person just off camera. Ah well.
  • Who Do You Think You Are?: "Spike Lee" - Nice journey by Lee into a past that he regretted not learning when he had the chance. The comments about him filming his family history while he still had the chance were especially poignant.
  • Doctor Who: "Flesh and Stone" - Decent second part to the two-parter, with a handful of annoying flaws. First one: (SPOILER ALERT!)(END SPOILER) And a second one: (SPOILER ALERT!)(END SPOILER) Oh well. I enjoyed it anyway. River's hints disturbed me a lot, and make me wonder just what role she's going to take in future episodes. But worse was Amy's admission and then her actions toward the Doctor at the very end of the episode, which leads us into...
  • Doctor Who: "Vampires in Venice" - If I were Rory, having the Doctor appear that way at the stag party would NOT be my first choice of events. This was a pretty good episode all-in-all, but the silence thing is beginning to get on my nerves. There's a crack in the universe, and there's silence behind it, and it has something to do with Amy. Yes, yes, we get it. So, are we going to have to wait the rest of the season for the answer?



This week's movie was Singles from 1992. Set in Seattle, this movie talks about the Grunge movement, as well as Seattle's resistance to mass transit. This movie was apparently a part of the inspiration for "Friends", and it shows. Hubby-Eric saw this movie while we were in our early dating phase, and it had a bit of an impact on him. For me it was a fun snapshot of the city in the earliest 1990s: Sonics, Pay 'n Save, Food Giant, Wayne Cody. Things that are gone now from the scene. Fun little movie. It really catches the feel of the city during that time.



DCBS
Here are reviews of the DCBS comic book shipment that arrived this week, of books originally released April 21st and 28th:
  • Green Lantern #53 - What is Guy up to?
  • Justice League of America #44 - Ok, this is clearly meant to be set after the storyline that's still ongoing in JSA. How very frustrating. Not sure I like the new team yet.
  • Power Girl #11 - I don't know exactly what to say about this one. Lots of set-up for future conflict, while at the same time a powerful little story about friendship. Wow.
  • Tiny Titans #27 - Yay, more appearances of Aqua-Ohs! Oh, yeah, and some stuff about Raven and her dad, too.
  • The Tick: New Series #3 - The Tick: Plumber! I love the sewer mimes. Lovely touch.
  • Marvelous Land of Oz #5 - Ah, the Queen of the Field Mice! The smartest creature in all of Oz. I find it revealing how tired the men of the Emerald City are after doing all the women's chores.

  • Green Lantern Corps #47 - Repair the city, release the rings, punch a Guardian. Ok, that was a little bit unexpected. Otherwise, just more of the same.
  • Justice Society of America #38 - The events planned last issue happen. Ok. Nifty. Next?
  • Batman: The Brave and the Bold #16 - ENOUGH WITH THE EGG PUNS! Argh! Despite what the Wogglebug says in the Oz book, puns are the lowest form of humor.
  • Super Friends #26 - As soon as I saw the aquarium in the bank I just thought, "oh dear". And I was right.
  • Northlanders #27 - Wow. I expected vengeance and such, but not like this with one more issue to go. Whew.
  • Doctor Who Ongoing #10 - That's a confusing mess of a story, isn't it?
  • Incredibles #8 - Huh. That's a strange one. I like it. It'll be fun to see where this one goes.
  • Usagi Yojimbo #128 - That last page is going to give me nightmares. Yikes.



My library book this week was The Monstrumologist by Rick Yancey. A young orphan boy is taken in by a monster hunter who employed his father. The framing for the story is an excellent little mystery, while the story itself is told in a nicely Victorian style, almost like another Dracula or Frankenstein. It's an excellent horror tale, worth picking up. And it's apparently the first in a series, with the next book to be published later this year.



Agatha Christie this week was Hickory Dickory Dock from 1955, also published as Hickory, Dickory, Death. Strange thefts at a Youth Hostel disrupt Poirot's routine enough for him to look into the mystery. I'm so glad my library got this one in finally. I was beginning to go through Christie withdrawal! Once again, she twists and turns and finds new and different angles to mystery. This time I never felt like I even had a chance at figuring it out, and just enjoyed the ride. And it was good. I'm already looking forward to reading the next one.



Fortean Times #259, April 2010. I'm well behind on reviewing this mag, which is fine since the next issue came very late, possibly due to shipping problems related to a certain volcano. Who knows? In any case, I suppose it's time to review this one. The cover is great, a Robin Hood theme with a question about linking him to the Templars. Excellent! Something fun to sink my teeth into. The cover story goes back to the original Robin Hood ballads, in particular A Gest of Robyn Hode, to posit the theory that Robin was actually a Templar during the reign of Edward II, when Pope Clement V excommunicated the Templars and destroyed the order. It's a good theory from the facts presented, and makes for a fun read.

Strangedays has the usual roundup of great stories, including poltergeist activity, strange animals (with photos), the roaming rocks of Death Valley, a Buddhist temple made of beer bottles, early dentistry (shudder), underwater enigmata, and mistaken dead. Lots of good stuff to make you think and wonder about this world of ours. Ghostwatch has yet another haunted pub (yeah yeah, lots of "spirits" in pubs, I know). I enjoyed the archaeology section, as usual, which reported on discoveries in Syria. Classical Corner is about people with amazing memories. The UFO files reports on... well, the writers of the Fortean Times UFO Files as being MI5 agents, according to a UFO buff's website. Whee! Blasts from the Past talks about giant stone men.

Another article discusses the significance of Templar graffitti in prisons where excommunicated Templars awaited their deaths. A lot of speculation on the meaning of some of the symbols, and a nice tie-in to the Robin Hood as Templar article. Then we get an article about werewolves that focuses on the lack of reports of them in modern times. The Forum has four strong reader-submitted articles. The reviews are as usual, interesting reads. None of them made me want to seek out the original material this time, which is rare. The Letters were fun to read, and this was just an all-around strong issue.



Saturday, May 08, 2010

Lion Cubs. 'Nuff Said.

Friday, May 07, 2010

Ah, Audio

So I wanted to be able to play my Clippy in my car, which has a stock stereo with a CD player and no inputs for external audio. After much checking, I found that the only way short of getting a new stereo was to buy an FM Transmitter for the car. So when I got a few bucks of Amazon.com credit (thank you to anyone who buys stuff at Amazon.com after following my links!) I went and found the Soundfly SD WMA/MP3 Player Car Fm Transmitter for SD Card, USB Stick, and Mp3 Players and ordered it.

It arrived after a suitably long wait, and I got my first chance to really use it when I drove down to pick up my plum stick.

Initial thoughts: It works very well with my system, and I was able to get a very good signal in for most of my trip. However, as I approached another town, an exterior signal caused a bit of static and I was driving so I couldn't switch to another frequency. Add in that this transmitter only stores seven frequencies, and we may have a tiny problem when we go on our long road trip this summer. However, while on the road we will have a passenger who can do the frequency shifting.

The location of my lighter on my dashboard is massively inconvenient for plugging things in, but this transmitter is small enough that it doesn't interfere with my driving at all. The 2.5mm to 3.5mm stereo cord is way too short, and there is a small possibility of the Clippy getting into the driver's lap if I don't get a longer cord before a longer trip. As it is now, the passenger would not be able to safely change the settings on the Clippy while it is plugged into the transmitter. If my car had a lighter socket under the stereo like most cars instead of next to the steering wheel this would not be an issue at all.

I used the Sirius Channel Finder to get a good frequency for my town, but it didn't work as well after I'd gone twenty miles down the road. I fear that Eric and I are going to have to plot what Zip Codes we are going to travel through to try to find the best selection of frequencies for the trip! If anyone has any suggestions for that, I'd love to hear them.

I haven't tried the USB or SD slots yet, but having them opens up a variety of neat possibilities. We don't have to plug a Clippy in to listen to something, as long as we've got it on a thumb drive or an SD card. I need to look a little more closely at the formatting requirements, but I imagine that we can fill up a thumb drive with some Doctor Who audios and be good to go. The remote works with either of those two methods, and means that the passenger can control the audio.

We'll see if this works. But I love technology!

Thursday, May 06, 2010

Stepford House Plants Update

First: The arborvitae in the back are growing slowly. I wanted them to grow really fast and block out the neighbor's view of our yard, but I didn't expect magic and I'm not getting it. They do, however, appear to be digging in and establishing themselves.

Second: The one dollar tomatoes are still growing, but haven't reached the 3 inches that the instructions say to transplant them at. They are about 2 1/4 right now. I'm keeping the soil moist, and hoping for the best. Here's a picture:

One Dollar Tomato

Third: I went and got my Italian Prune tree today. Well, more like Italian Prune Stick. My plum tree is little more than a stick. I'm told it will have branches before the end of summer, but I don't know. I probably need to stake it, and I want to put a bit of a cage around it, but after I went and got it today, I immediately planted it in the yard.

Plum Stick

You can possibly make it out in that picture, the little stick with the tag still on it. I paid $15.05 with all the taxes etc to get it. It rode in the passenger seat home in my little car. And it's now planted where I hope it will grow. Only time will tell, but if it does, I'll have the pictures to show what happened.

Tuesday, May 04, 2010

Want

I think I pre-ordered the regular cover for Brightest Day, but if this is the alternate cover, I really want it:

Brightest Day #1

Monday, May 03, 2010

Apologies

Apparently the weekend over the mountains combined with some sort of weather-induced fibro attack has rendered me both brainless and blogless for now. I'll try to post when I don't hurt anymore.

Saturday, May 01, 2010

Free Comic Book Day!


I think you'll note that I find Free Comic Book Day to be "Excellent!"