Lots of saved links today. Here's the first batch.
* V is a hit. But is Obama an evil lizard for outer space? Acephalous reports.
* Michael Bérubé talks this year's terrible academic job market.
* North Carolina mayoral races in Charlotte and Chapel Hill are getting some national attention.
* Congratulations, Atlanta, America's most toxic city.
* What do kids call LEGO pieces? Via Kottke.
* Legal outrage of the day: The Supreme Court has indeed said that prosecutors are immune from suit for anything they do at trial. But in this case, Harrington and McGhee maintain that before anyone being charged, prosecutors gathered evidence alongside police, interviewed witnesses and knew the testimony they were assembling was false.
The prosecutors counter that there is "no freestanding constitutional right not to be framed." Stephen Sanders, the lawyer for the prosecutors, will tell the Supreme Court on Wednesday that there is no way to separate evidence gathered before trial from the trial itself. Even if a prosecutor files charges against a person knowing that there is no evidence of his guilt, says Sanders, "that's an absolutely immunized activity." These innocent men were in jail for twenty-five years; naturally, the Obama administration is backing the corrupt, lying prosecutors who put them there.
Wednesday, November 04, 2009
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
7:47 PM
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Labels: academia, aliens, Atlanta, Barack Obama, Chapel Hill, cities, corruption, crime, jobs, law, LEGO, lizard people, North Carolina, pollution, science fiction, Supreme Court, the Constitution, V, welcome to my future
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Saturday night.
* The first eight minutes of the ABC V remake. Some of this footage you've probably seen before.
* Canuxploitation!: your complete guide to Canadian B-film.
* Dollhouse ratings dip back down again after a week off. My thoughts on this week's episode here; in general I thought it was very good but not as good as everyone else seems to want to think. The show, never all that certain what it wanted to be about in the first place, is showing serious strain from being pulled in so many different directions at once. Is it a critically acclaimed loss leader or is it supposed to have high ratings? Is it an Eliza Dushku vehicle or an ensemble show? Is it serial or episodic? Are its characters tragic or villainous? Is it a feminist critique of late capitalism or a machine for generating sexy girls in miniskirts?
* Glenn Greenwald considers why debt matters for domestic spending but not for military spending.
Beltway elites have health insurance and thus the costs and suffering for those who don't are abstract, distant and irrelevant. Identically, with very rare exception, they and their families don't fight the wars they cheer on -- and don't even pay for them -- and thus get to enjoy all the pulsating benefits without any costs whatsoever.* And, via Vu, Žižek explains hipsters.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:51 PM
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Labels: a bunch of mindless jerks who'll be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes, Afghanistan, aliens, B-movies, Canada, debt, Dollhouse, Friday night death slot, health care, hipsters, politics, ratings, science fiction, the Village, V, Žižek
Sunday, October 11, 2009
We're off to sample Detroit today. While we're waiting for showers to finish here are a few links I never got around to yesterday.
* Dollhouse 2.3, which I haven't seen yet, ticked upwards in the ratings, managing this week to beat reruns on ABC. Related: Ten TV Spin-offs That Were Better Than the Original Shows includes Angel—I agree in the main—Daria, Xena, DS9, and, The Simpsons. Also related: Flashforward is falling fast, endorsing Bill's thesis that the show is blowing it. Related and ridiculous: "Is science fiction becoming feminized?" Mary Shelley will be heartbroken.
* Josh Marshall on the Nobel: [T]he unmistakable message of the award is one of the consequences of a period in which the most powerful country in the world, the 'hyper-power' as the French have it, became the focus of destabilization and in real if limited ways lawlessness. A harsh judgment, yes. But a dark period. And Obama has begun, if fitfully and very imperfectly to many of his supporters, to steer the ship of state in a different direction. If that seems like a meager accomplishment to many of the usual Washington types it's a profound reflection of their own enablement of the Bush era and how compromised they are by it, how much they perpetuated the belief that it was 'normal history' rather than dark aberration. More from Steve Benen.
* Something, something, something, Detroit.
* The big Moon bombing appears not to have gone so well. Did the aliens step in?
* Iceland, an epicenter of the last financial crisis, looks to recover with data centers that offer free air-side cooling.
* The L.A. Times discusses the Fantastic Mr. Fox directing controversy. (via)
* Some bad news: Universe To End Sooner Than Thought.
* And more bad news: time has not ceased its unrelenting march.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:41 AM
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Labels: 9/11, a bunch of mindless jerks who'll be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes, aliens, Angel, apocalypse, Barack Obama, Bush, Detroit, Dollhouse, entropy, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Frankenstein, Friday night death slot, i grow old, Iceland, Mary Shelley, Nobel Prize, ratings, science fiction, spin-offs, the cosmos, the Village, they say time is the fire in which we burn, Wes Anderson, xkcd
Monday, October 05, 2009
Late Sunday links.
* Rachel Maddow kicks ass on another visit to Meet the Press. They should just give Rachel Meet the Press; I hope eventually they do. It's the only version of the show I could imagine actually watching.
* The networks are apparently afraid of SF; Day One has apparently been downgraded to a miniseries and the V remake is rumored to be forbidden to use the world "alien."
* Octavia Butler's papers will go to the Huntington Library in San Marino, CA, joining Christopher Isherwood's, Charles Bukowski's, and Jack London's.
* Playgrounds of the 1970s. A version of the Officer Big Mac at right was active in Ledgewood, NJ, well into the 2000s. (Is it still there?)
* Judith Butler: Save California's universities. My only quibble is that she appears to be writing in the wrong country's newspaper.
* More Nate Silver: That the conservative intelligentsia reacted giddily to news of the Americans losing is telling. It's telling of a movement that was long ago knocked off its intellectual moorings and has lost the capacity to think about what people outside the room think about. Flagged by Bitter Laughter. More thoughts along the same lines from Cogitamus and Contrary Brin.
* My happiest time was after Mao came into power. Our social status improved. People were allowed to express their views. Before, people had no right to speak out. After the founding of new China, the first parade, I was on the front row during the first parade. Foreign journalists from America and the Soviet Union took lots pictures of me. I was carrying a flower basket, walking down Huaihai road, it was very festive, and there was much excitement. I went out during the parade every year for many years, rain or shine. Why the Chinese support the Communist party.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:34 AM
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Labels: 1970s, academia, aliens, California, China, communism, Judith Butler, Mao, McDonald's, Nate Silver, New Jersey, nostalgia, Octavia Butler, Olympics, playgrounds, politics, Rachel Maddow, science fiction, television, wingnuts, WTFRepublicans?
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Quote of the day.
Lenin told the British science fiction writer H.G. Wells, who interviewed him in the Kremlin in 1920, that if life were discovered on other planets, revolutionary violence would no longer be necessary: "Human ideas—he told Wells—are based on the scale of the planet we live in. They are based on the assumption that the technical potentialities, as they develop, will never overstep 'the earthly limit.' If we succeed in making contact with the other planets, all our philosophical, social and moral ideas will have to be revised, and in this event these potentialities will become limitless and will put an end to violence as a necessary means of progress."A bonus image, archived in the same book:
—Susan Buck-Morss, Dreamworld and Catastrophe: The Passing of Mass Utopia in East and West (2002)

Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
9:30 AM
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Labels: aliens, delicious Coca-Cola, H. G. Wells, Lenin, politics, revolution, science fiction, violence
Thursday, August 13, 2009
Thursday!
* The First Rule of J-School Is You Don't Talk About J-School Debt.
* Nowhere in Manhattan. Hard to believe it is Manhattan. Via MeFi.
* Nnedi Okorafor has a nice guest post at Nebula on Africa and science fiction.
* The CEO of Whole Foods doesn't want us to have health care. OpenLeft doesn't want us to shop at Whole Foods anymore. Everyone at MetaFilter is mad at everyone.
* Top 10 Superhero Comics 2000-2009. I've read more of these than I would have expected, and can plug a bunch: All-Star Superman, Monster Society of Evil, New Frontier, Omega the Unknown, and Planetary are all worth reading in their own ways, as are some of the sillier Big Two offerings (I'll admit to being fond of Booster Gold). Y: The Last Man is good, too, but of course it doesn't really count. Via NeilAlien.
* Language and time. I found this interesting.
David Hauser and colleagues first showed that people with an angrier temperament are more likely to think of themselves as moving through time, than to think of time as moving towards them. You can test this on yourself by considering which day of the week a meeting has changed to, if it was originally planned for Wednesday but has been moved forward two days. If you think it's now changed to Friday, then you're someone who thinks of themselves as moving through time, whilst if you think the meeting is now on Monday, then you're more passive, and you think about time passing you by.I'm a Monday person for sure. I see can see why Ezra thinks it would be Friday, but it seems very unnatural to me to spatialize the week that way.
* And you can now tweet @Gliese581d.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
11:20 AM
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Labels: Africa, aliens, Booster Gold, boycotts, comics, debt, health care, journalism, language, New York, Omega the Unknown, photographs, Planetary, politics, science fiction, superheroes, Superman, they say time is the fire in which we burn, Twitter, Whole Foods, Y: The Last Man
Monday, July 20, 2009
Monday night!
* On the 40th anniversary of the Moon landing, Kotte catches Moon Fever (and there's only no cure). The Nation celebrates the Gil-Scott Heron way.
* 21 artists who changed mainstream comics (for better or worse).
17. Chris Ware* Is Harry Potter no longer a ticket straight to Hell?
Though he’s philosophically more in line with the alt-comics community, Chris Ware draws so much media attention, and his books sell so well, that his work is arguably more mainstream than any current superhero title. Ware’s innovations in comic-page design—which include temporal shifts conveyed by complex diagrams and frames within frames—were inspired by Art Spiegelman’s ’70s experiments and by Richard McGuire’s seminal Raw story “Here.” But Ware marries his fetish for design with a singularly sardonic voice and a God’s-eye perspective on his characters, creating an overall tone that’s like a turn-of-the-century circus poster crossed with the post-war angst of literary lions like John Updike and Richard Yates. Ware’s influence is mostly seen among the younger alternative crowd and contemporary commercial artists, but his use of staccato pacing and visual repetition has popped up in a number of superhero comics over the past decade as well.
* Steve Benen remembers the day Medicare enslaved us all.
* Aliens in vintage postcards.

Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
5:23 PM
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Labels: aliens, Chris Ware, comics, freedom, Gil Scott-Heron, Harry Potter, Medicare, Reagan, religion, the Moon, whitey on the moon
Friday, July 03, 2009
Abstruse Goose has a very fun map of how far various television shows have gotten from Earth. Via Bad Astronomy.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
9:12 AM
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Labels: aliens, maps, outer space, television
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
A longtime reader sends this link to io9's coverage of disgusting alien slime monsters living underneath Raleigh, North Carolina. Note: I'm not kidding; the video is, in fact, disgusting. Stay safe, Raleigh.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
3:06 PM
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Labels: aliens, disgusting, North Carolina, Raleigh, science fiction, slime monsters
Tuesday, April 14, 2009
Fun: 137 uncomfortable plot summaries. Some highlights:
ALIENS: An unplanned pregnancy leads to complications.Via MeFi.
BATMAN: Wealthy man assaults the mentally ill.
BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER: Teenage serial killer destroys town in fit of semi-religious fervor.
FERRIS BUELLER’S DAY OFF: Amoral narcissist makes world dance for his amusement.
SERENITY: Men fight for possession of scantily clad mentally ill teenage girl.
GROUNDHOG DAY: Misanthropic creep exploits space/time anomaly to stalk coworker.
HARRY POTTER: Celebrity Jock thinks rules don’t apply to him, is right.
JFK: Family man wastes life for nothing in crusade against homosexuals.
JUNO: Teen fails to get abortion, ruins lives.
JURASSIC PARK: Theme park’s grand opening pushed back.
KILL BILL: Irresponsible mother wants custody of her child.
LORD OF THE RINGS: Midget destroys stolen property.
RAMBO III: The United States provides arms, equipment and training to the terrorists behind 9/11.
RED DAWN: Despite shock-and-awe tactics, a superior occupying force is no match for a tenacious sect of terrorist insurgents.
STAR TREK: Over-sexed officer routinely places crew in danger.
STAR WARS: A NEW HOPE - Religious extremist terrorists destroy government installation, killing thousands.
SUPERMAN RETURNS: Illegal immigrant is deadbeat dad.
TERMINATOR: An unplanned pregnancy leads to complications.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:51 PM
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Labels: aliens, Batman, Buffy, Ferris Bueller, film, Firefly, Groundhog Day, Harry Potter, JFK, Juno, Kill Bill, Red Dawn, Star Trek, Star Wars, Superman, Terminator
Thursday, March 05, 2009
Whoops, missed a day somehow. (Even grad students get busy sometimes.) Here's a few links I've been saving; scroll all the way to the bottom for your daily dose of Watchmen panic.
* One of our most beloved blog denizens has started up a March Madness blog. Add it to your feeds immediately.
* Executing someone on their birthday may seem hilarious, but actually it's sort of cold. (via Srinivas)
* Same goes for trading your minor-league pitcher for ten bats. Via MeFi.
* All about experimental philosophy.
* The Daily Show's evisceration of CNBC was amazing last night. Also, incredibly well-deserved.
* Forget man-on-dog: will gay marriage start us down the slippery slope to human/robot marriages? It could happen right here in North Carolina. Only Steve Benen sees where this really leads: man/dog/robot/robot-dog polygamy.
* Two games: Linear RPG and Exploit, the second from amateur-game-creator of the moment, Gregory Weir, (The Majesty of Colors, Bars of Black and White).
* “You have to understand,” he told me, “Iceland is no longer a country. It is a hedge fund.” Vanity Fair has a huge feature on the Icelandic financial collapse that really makes for fascinating reading. More discussion at MetaFilter. (via my dad)
Global financial ambition turned out to have a downside. When their three brand-new global-size banks collapsed, last October, Iceland’s 300,000 citizens found that they bore some kind of responsibility for $100 billion of banking losses—which works out to roughly $330,000 for every Icelandic man, woman, and child. On top of that they had tens of billions of dollars in personal losses from their own bizarre private foreign-currency speculations, and even more from the 85 percent collapse in the Icelandic stock market. The exact dollar amount of Iceland’s financial hole was essentially unknowable, as it depended on the value of the generally stable Icelandic krona, which had also crashed and was removed from the market by the Icelandic government. But it was a lot.* When will voters start blaming Obama for the economy? Nate Silver has the numbers suggesting that will start in 18 or so months, though I bet that timeline could halve or worse that as people grow frustrated with prolonged economic hardship.
Iceland instantly became the only nation on earth that Americans could point to and say, “Well, at least we didn’t do that.” In the end, Icelanders amassed debts amounting to 850 percent of their G.D.P. (The debt-drowned United States has reached just 350 percent.) As absurdly big and important as Wall Street became in the U.S. economy, it never grew so large that the rest of the population could not, in a pinch, bail it out. Any one of the three Icelandic banks suffered losses too large for the nation to bear; taken together they were so ridiculously out of proportion that, within weeks of the collapse, a third of the population told pollsters that they were considering emigration.
* What Obama could learn from Watchmen: Matt Yglesias reports on Ronald Reagan's own Ozymandian scheme for global unity.
* And Jacob sends along your hope-crushing Watchmen reviews for the day.
J. Hoberman in Village Voice: The philosopher Iain Thomson (who valiantly brought Heidegger's Being and Time to bear on his reading of Watchmen) maintained that Moore not only deconstructed the idea of comic book super-heroism but pulverized the very notion of the hero—and the hero-worship that comics traditionally sell. For all its superficial fidelity, Snyder's movie stands Moore's novel on its head, trying to reconstruct a conventional blockbuster out of those empty capes and scattered shards.
David Edelstein, New York Magazine: ...this kind of reverence kills what it seeks to preserve. The movie is embalmed.
Meanwhile, Steve Benen and Adam Serwer take a stand against Anthony Lane on behalf of geeks everywhere.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
9:56 AM
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Labels: actually existing media bias, Alan Moore, aliens, bad news for nerds, banking, Barack Obama, baseball, Big Ups to Shankar, birthdays, blogs, CNBC, college basketball, comics, Daily Show, death penalty, debt, games, How did we survive the 1980s?, Iceland, liquidity crisis, man/dog/robot/robot-dog polygamy, March Madness, marriage equality, North Carolina, philosophy, politics, polls, Reagan, robots, Texas, the economy, the everyday cruelty of the culture, Watchmen, X-Phi
Saturday, February 21, 2009
Where the UFOs at? Popular Mechanics has your map of UFO hotspots, and so much more. Via io9.
Tuesday, January 06, 2009
The headline reads, "Police Puzzled By Strange Lights Over Morris County."
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
6:58 PM
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Labels: aliens, Morris County, New Jersey, Randolph, UFOs
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Polite Dissent has some links about the Great Moon Hoax of 1835, subject of a cool-seeming new book from Matthew Goodman.
The article continued on and offered an elaborate account of the fantastic sights viewed by Herschel during his telescopic observation of the moon. It described a lunar topography that included vast forests, inland seas, and lilac-hued quartz pyramids. Readers learned that herds of bison wandered across the plains of the moon; that blue unicorns perched on its hilltops; and that spherical, amphibious creatures rolled across its beaches. The highpoint of the narrative came when it revealed that Herschel had found evidence of intelligent life on the moon: he had discovered both a primitive tribe of hut-dwelling, fire-wielding biped beavers, and a race of winged humans living in pastoral harmony around a mysterious, golden-roofed temple. Herschel dubbed these latter creatures the Vespertilio-homo, or "man-bat"...

Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
9:57 AM
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Labels: aliens, Great Moon Hoax, hoaxes, the Moon
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
John Hodgman talks about his long history of contact with the aliens. Via Biology in Science Fiction.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:20 PM
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Labels: aliens, Fermi paradox, John Hodgman, science fiction, TED, UFOs
Monday, November 24, 2008
Progress, of a sort: More people believe in aliens and ghosts than God.
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Michael Socolow takes aim in the Chronicle at the conventional wisdom surrounding Orson Welles's famous War of the Worlds radio broadcast, arguing that the well-known reports of mass hysteria are wildly overblown. Via A&L Daily.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
12:11 AM
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Labels: aliens, mass hysteria, Orson Welles, radio, science fiction, War of the Worlds
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
MetaFilter has word on the October Surprise: the Galactic Federation of Light, a fraternity of extraterrestrial beings, will visit our planet today.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:06 AM
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Labels: aliens, October Surprise
Friday, July 25, 2008
Boing Boing is shocked to discover Tomes & Talismans, a educational series about how to use the library set in a bleak post-apocalyptic future in which Earth has been evacuated in the face of overpopulation, environmental degradation, and alien invasion.
We watched this one, too, way back in Ironia Elementary School. (And another piece of my psychological profile falls into place.)
Here's the first episode on YouTube.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
10:39 AM
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Labels: aliens, apocalypse, Ironia Elementary School, libraries, overpopulation, pollution, science fiction, Tomes and Talismans
Thursday, July 24, 2008
Edgar Mitchell, the sixth man on the moon, says the aliens are real. Via Boing Boing.
Posted by
Gerry Canavan
at
6:37 PM
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Labels: 100% credible testimony, aliens, I want to believe, NASA, the Moon, The truth is out there