Publicity stunt of KITT being stolen down on Front Street? Or an act of brazen thievery?
Via BlogTO. A call to the cops say “they’ve got nuttin'”
Publicity stunt of KITT being stolen down on Front Street? Or an act of brazen thievery?
Via BlogTO. A call to the cops say “they’ve got nuttin'”
Robert, who has been coming around this here blog for a couple months now, recently started up Canada Blog Friends, a review site of Northern webzines (ha! when was the last time you heard that? Webzines! hmmm…) that:
…is a celebration of life in Canada, as manifest in many different blogs, across many different genres from every part of the nation.
The coolest Canadian blogs are profiled here, and sometimes extra passionate posts are condensed in compelling story briefs and further digested in comments.
Well I got featured yesterday and I have to tell you, I’ve never had a stranger say such nice things about my blog/hobby who didn’t want money or sex. Go read the review. I rarely toot my own horn on here but the post is so well written I feel like a proud parent at a grade 2 musical and my child just nailed “I Don’t Know How To Love Him”.
Thanks Robert!
Virtual Friend from Flickr, Huntter, got “detained and searched” over in England for taking pictures in a public space.
He’s not upset by it, and to this date, I thought it was only fodder for angry Boing Boing readers. But seeing how it happened to someone I know, I’m actually saddened and concerned.
I could say that “the terrorists have won”. But I think I’ll say that the Conservatives have gotten the upper hand. Not one of any of the terrorists caught in the US or UK were known to have photographs of their suspected targets. Read that again. Not one.
So why the harassment?
Plain and simple: pop culture has made us believe that they do. Movies show piles of photos of buildings as the FBI crashes through the doors of the evil terrorists’ hideout. So subsequently anyone with a camera is a terrorists.
I have to call bullshit.
If this is true, then Microsoft needs to rethink it’s Photosynth development, because the pictures they use to stitch together real time 3D views are, well… public shots.
Flickr is harboring potential evildoers.
Google Image Search is now banned.
You can see where I’m going with this. A policeman thinking he’s protecting us by deleting images off your camera is retarded. And I mean that in the non-political correct way. There is no logic in it.
I’m not advocating acting up or resisting unlawful searches, but it might be useful if you counter their argument with real facts. We’re still free. Let’s keep it that way.
Continuing on with my Summer’s End post, the movie Blindness caught my eye (oh the jokes just keep on coming at Dead Robot Heavy Industries).
I have to admit that Julianne Moore has been on my “oh my god I hope her career is tremendous and full of really great work!” radar since I first saw her in Safe, but in the last 5 years she’s made some questionable decisions (koff koff Next koff koff The Forgotten koff Laws of Attraction keff kuff hek) only to be replaced with amazing parts, like The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio (god who thought of that memorable title?) or like Julia in Children of Men (blink during the really fake ping pong ball trick just before her death – such a crappy cgi gimmick should not have been in there to distract from her death).
Curiously enough, the screenplay is by Canadian Don McKellar, mostly know for hipster projects like Road Kill, Childstar, and the Tony award winning The Drowsy Chaperone . I’m curious to see how he’s handled José Saramago’s novel since he’s been in apocalyptic territory before with his 1998 Sandra Oh sci-drama Last Night. Oh and he was in TV’s Robocop for an episode, but so was my brother so I won’t mention that one, but it’s nice to know he’s dabbled in respected science fiction, so there’s some promise there.
Combine all that with the director, Fernando Meirelles (City of Men, The Constant Gardener), I have a feeling it’s going to be a smart movie. Like Gattica, but without the nice clothes.
Epoch
By Timothy Carter
courtesy of Flux
Part of the MiniBook Expo for Bloggers (sign up now!)
Vincent is a worried pre-teen. He’s disqualified from the school science fair for helping with his best friend’s project as his devout brother hands out unsolicited religious pamphlets in front of his own display. Meanwhile the loathsome rich kid’s booth is rocking the fair with high end computer graphics and live actors. To top it all off, he’s just seen an apocalyptic elf hiding under a table.
Epoch accounts the last two days of life on earth and Vincent’s attempt to save as many souls as he can in the process. Ironically, hindering his challenge is his family, whose fundamentalists beliefs require that they spend their time shunning mostly everything. Carter has created an almost Pythonesque religion that, if it were real, I’d pay $1000 to see how it was created:
Vincent’s family were Triumvirities, a new branch of Christianity that had popped up fairly recently in the spiritual marketplace. Triumvirities believed that three characters from the bible – Jesus, Moses and Abraham – had banded together to produce a text that spelled out the definitive version of God’s divine plan for the universe.
Fortunately for us, Vincent has been questioning that of late which allows him to see the aforementioned elf. This mystery gives him an excuse to go talk to his secret crush, Chanteuse, ex-babysitter and local hippie, about other belief systems, and is introduced to a world where elves, pixies, demons and other fantastic beings roam hidden from sight. It’s then he learns that humanity has reached it’s epoch and needs to be cleansed of the earth by indestructible demons. Unless he can get his old and new friends and unwilling family to a hidden Portal Site, all will be eaten in demon feeding frenzy.
This is my first YA (young adult) book I’ve read since cracking open Lemony Snicket book to read to my niece about 9 years ago, and before that, Heinlein’s Have Spacesuit Will Travel, back in the early 70s. I have to say, YA books have become a hell of a lot more sophisticated and pointed since I remember them. With nods to a certain coming of age boy-wizard, this is a streamlined, cartoony, less-subtle Golden Compass kind of adventure. Epoch races to the end of the world at a speed that post video game addicts can appreciate. It’s skillfully written with word plays, reversal phrasing and clear action that makes it a good read.
However (cue ominous organ music)…
The rebellious theme that makes teen writing enjoyable for it’s pubescent audience is there, but in Epoch it seems to be laughable contempt for organized religion, while maintaining that your own beliefs and the beliefs of the ones you love are to be preserved at any price. Ironic? Yup. Funny ironic? Sort of. It didn’t anger me, but it did make me wonder if I was too old to get it. I found I was cringing at how Carter uses the convictions of others as a joke: Vincent’s family are repeatedly seen as finger pointing zealots who spend their weekends praying and protesting. Amazingly, Vincent never loses his love and acceptance for his family’s behaviour (though not without mild grumbling) while they constantly berate him for his religious disobedience. It’s a device seen repeatedly in Harry Potter (there, I said it!) which I felt was used a bit too much in both books. I’d recommend Epoch to a kid who wasn’t at all religious or mildly agnostic, but I would do so with a disclaimer that it was satire. One other moment I found questionable was this bizarre slang choice (I realize I’m nitpicking a seat-of-their-pants teen fantasy/adventure novel that makes me sound like an old coot – get off my lawn) I wonder why Carter chose “bum” instead of “butt” or “rear end” whenever a character fell on their ass, yet allowed the slur “jerkwad”, a clear reference towards a villainous character equaling an unexpected masturbatory result.
That’s pretty much the only disputable stuff I would alert a parent to, within the book, if I felt the need to. But I’d probably not. At 14, kids are already using the word “shit” in reference to the chores you give them.
While researching this book I discovered a curious fact that Flux is owned by Llewellyn, a 100+ year old Midwest publishing company dedicated to “alternative health and healing, astrology, earth-based religions, shamanism, Gnostic Christianity and Kabbalah”, so the fact that they can publish a book that pokes fun at their own core beliefs, makes me like the book more.
I give it a mystical 4 out of 5.
Put on a play! And not just any play, but Hamlet 2, a Homer Simpson-esque sequel to the great tragedy featuring time travel, music and Staying Alive fog machine dancing.
Look, summer is winding down. You’ve seen the Bat Man, you’ve shopped at Buy N Large, you’ve met your Waterloo, you’ve ignored that X file on your desk, you wept like a child at their mother’s death bed as Indy watched the UFO leave South America (Why!!? WHY???). The excitement is winding down. What’s to do now?
The trailer alone had me laughing more than any trailer (or movie…?) I’ve seen so far this year. No surprise, really: it has Catherine Keener finally getting work; a cameo from Amy Poehler; a title card that proudly announces it’s from the writers of South Park (songs, hopefully!); Steve Coogan, who is poised to be the next indy Brit break out, Ed Broadbent-style, on US soil; The Gay Men’s Chorus of Tuscon; and a “needle across the record screech” moment: “reintroducing Elizabeth Shue as Elizabeth Shue”, who has actually been working, you just haven’t seen anything she’s done since Hollow Man.
Hell, any excuse to see Jesus dance and hopefully get SharkBoy to stop singing Hairspray songs around the house, and I’m there.
Oh great TV gods
Who have blessed us this day
With the eye bleedingly huge
HDTV
May we stand in your plasmatic heat
and thank the day you delivered
to us, your humbled and subservient
couch blobs
This heavenly eye that looks into our souls
and gives us the
2008 Olympics
in glorious 1080i (720dpi via CBC)
I thank you, the TV gods
That I am able to
Catch glimpse of the crotch sweat
on the inside thigh
of the Bolivian cyclist
My life for you.
My brother in SummerWork’s video “Interpretation”