The only way I could have picked one is with a dartboard. #BasketballIsEvil #IRemainAnAmerican #HopeNoOneAsksMeIfEverOnThePanel
Category Archives: Popular Culture
Retirement Of Ye Asse-Hatte
Rowan Williams is no longer going to be Archbishop of Canterbury. In his honor, I offer up an Iowahawk classic.
The Rock
Lileks is unimpressed:
Time was a sculptor looked at a big slab of stone and saw the figure within he would liberate with hammer and chisel; time was, people gathered to see a monolith pass because it was a gift from Egypt, and stood for the power of another culture your culture had managed to subdue. Plus, it was cool; it was exotic. Time was, you valued something for what we could make of it, not the fact that you could just drag it somewhere else and say “now walk under it, and think things about big rocks.” Feh.
I have to confess, I couldn’t figure out what the big deal was, either, but if I had gone to watch, it would have been to see the vehicle, not the rock.
Incitement To Murder
The descent of Bruce Springsteen. I was never much of a fan.
Colliers
It’s coming back, after fifty-five years.
One of the many notable things it did was to introduce America to space, in collaboration with von Braun, before the Disney shorts. Maybe they’ll consider an update as part of their relaunch.
For Aging Gamers
The s3x scene from Zelda II. Click it. You know you want to.
The Government Can
It’s a real foot tapper.
Zombie Mitt Romney?
“Ishtar Lands On Mars”
This is a cruel headline at the Gray Lady.
I haven’t seen the movie (we were actually thinking about seeing it this weekend, but a combination of Patricia being under the weather and sticker shock at the prices for the 3D/Imax kept us away for now. But nowhere in the article does it really say, or at least support the notion, that it’s a bad movie (a Ishtar undeniably was, in addition to being a box-office flop) — it’s a business failure in that they spent too much in making it. The criticism that it “…was a bewildering mash-up, starting during the Civil War and moving to the Old West before leaping to a planet called Barsoom (Mars), home to tusked, four-armed creatures called Tharks,” sounds just like the book to me, which is an SF classic and the inspiration for much of the great SF in the twentieth century (including Star Wars, to the degree that it’s more than space opera). It seems as though perhaps the critics aren’t capable of handling complex story lines. Certainly, John Miller thinks differently.
Anyway, I hope that it does make its money back — I’d like to see it have sequels.
Oh, and speaking of SF, Sarah Hoyt has a review of (occasional commenter) Rick Locke’s new book, which looks like a good read.
[Late Sunday evening update]
Bruce Webster has a more extensive, mixed review.
An Ancient Air-Sea Battle
Fossilized. Pretty cool.