Monday, Monday.
* The Criterion Collection Bottle Rocket is out tomorrow. Here's the Amazon link.
* Nate Silver projects Al Franken will win by 27 votes.
* The World's Best Colleges and Universities. Duke clocks in at #13, but more important, longtime domestic loser Case Western (#90) beats Tufts (#156) in the far more important world rankings, finally giving Neil the humiliation he deserves.
* Amanda Marcotte had the bright idea of reading Mad Men alongside some of the literary texts it makes allusions to, most notably the Frank O'Hara poem that bookends the season, "Meditations in an Emergency."
* Longtime reader Eli Glasner has a great new film blog.
* 10 Stories Behind Dr. Seuss stories. Thanks, Lindsay!
* "Who Stole My Volcano? Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Dematerialisation of Supervillain Architecture." Via Neilalien.
* A school in New York has already been renamed for Barack Obama. Students initiated the renaming.
* The things you learn from Poli-Sci-Fi Radio: Val Kilmer is mulling a run for governor of New Mexico. Kilmer's only the second-worst Batman, but the one I think I'd want least in elected office.
* Top 25 Comic Book Battles. #1: Batman vs. Superman from The Dark Knight Returns.
* Heroes creator Tim Kring has apologized for calling his fans dipshits. Remember, a gaffe is when you accidentally tell the truth...
Monday, November 24, 2008
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
8:43 AM
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Labels: academia, Al Franken, architecture, Barack Obama, Batman, blogs, Bond villains, cartoonish supervillainy, Case, children's literature, comics, dipshits, Dr. Seuss, Duke, film, Frank O'Hara, gaffes, Heroes, James Bond, literature, Mad Men, Minnesota, Nate Silver, Neil, New Mexico, poetry, Poli-Sci-Fi Radio, politics, science fiction, Superman, television, The Dark Knight Returns, the Senate, Tufts, Val Kilmer, Won't somebody think of the children?
Monday, March 24, 2008
Role model or Bond villain? "At island retreat, Branson and friends seek to save a world 'on fire.'"
What he wanted to know was whether his high-powered visitors, among them Larry Page of Google, Jimmy Wales of Wikipedia and Tony Blair, the former British prime minister, thought global warming threatened the planet.Sounds like a little from Column A and a little from Column B...
Branson does - and so did most of his guests. So on this recent weekend on his private hideaway in the crystalline waters between the islands of Tortola and Anegada, they tried to figure out what to do about it and perhaps get richer in the process.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
9:22 AM
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Labels: a little from Column A and a little from Column B, Bond villains, climate change, environmental capitalism, Richard Branson