As political discourse embraces its state as a shouting match between competing conspiracy theories and theorists, when faced with political chatter, linkbait headlines, paranoid articles, cable "news" shows and propaganda - I will now mentally replace all of them in my mind's narrative with The Dead Milkmen's "Stuart".
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
SuperMOOC Week 6 - wrapping it up with Gender Through Comics
Fortunately for me, my class extended it's timeline by a few days without adding any additional content, and so I was able to finish last night despite the fact that I'd basically missed a week thanks to work and other factors.
This is what I think about when I consider returning to grad school, by the way. I travel for work. Really, an online program would be ideal for me to get a masters at long last, as I can't match the attendance that comes with being a 23 year old with nothing else going on but growing facial hair and caring about what sort of beer I'm drinking. I'm seriously considering the need for an MA, but, man, the idea of walking into a classroom again at age 38 or 39 sounds like a nightmare.
Yes, I agree that the education system and how we deal with college degrees in the US is broken, but the trend to want to turn colleges into trade schools also isn't really an option (they have something for that. It's called Trade School). MOOCs are seen as a possible way to share courses across universities, and it sounds good on paper. But I was sitting through a presentation at my conference last week and one of the presenters pointed out that most parents paying for someone's degree really don't want to hear that their kid was in a class with 40,000 other students, only 10% of which completed the course. It's really opening the door for private schools and any university to stroke parents on college tours to promise a generation of helicopter parents that their kids will get special attention by sitting in a class with just 50-100 kids.
But I digress.
This is what I think about when I consider returning to grad school, by the way. I travel for work. Really, an online program would be ideal for me to get a masters at long last, as I can't match the attendance that comes with being a 23 year old with nothing else going on but growing facial hair and caring about what sort of beer I'm drinking. I'm seriously considering the need for an MA, but, man, the idea of walking into a classroom again at age 38 or 39 sounds like a nightmare.
Yes, I agree that the education system and how we deal with college degrees in the US is broken, but the trend to want to turn colleges into trade schools also isn't really an option (they have something for that. It's called Trade School). MOOCs are seen as a possible way to share courses across universities, and it sounds good on paper. But I was sitting through a presentation at my conference last week and one of the presenters pointed out that most parents paying for someone's degree really don't want to hear that their kid was in a class with 40,000 other students, only 10% of which completed the course. It's really opening the door for private schools and any university to stroke parents on college tours to promise a generation of helicopter parents that their kids will get special attention by sitting in a class with just 50-100 kids.
But I digress.
Ouch. A Little DC Comics Schadenfreude for your evening.
Immature? Yes.
Unnecessary? Yes.
Hilarious? Absolutely.
A functioning sign for keeping track of how often DC Comics has done something publicly very stupid.
All this as they cancel another slate of books, alienate another round of readers, and the publishing side erodes into a nu-metal album cover and licensing flails around, still making money but relying mostly on movie materials and pre-1986 images.
Thanks to CanadianSimon for the link.
Unnecessary? Yes.
Hilarious? Absolutely.
Read more about DC's PR goofs at The Outhouse.
A functioning sign for keeping track of how often DC Comics has done something publicly very stupid.
All this as they cancel another slate of books, alienate another round of readers, and the publishing side erodes into a nu-metal album cover and licensing flails around, still making money but relying mostly on movie materials and pre-1986 images.
Thanks to CanadianSimon for the link.
Happy Birthday, David Byrne
Happy Birthday to David Byrne. Writer, musician and artist.
Today, David Byrne is 61.
Byrne is best known for his tenure with The Talking Heads, the art-punk band that was part of the late-70's, early-80's scene out of CBGB's. He has written a few books, from The Bicycle Diaries to Strange Ritual. His lyrics are rarely about the usual topics of newfound love, love gone wrong or partying all night. Even in his most recent collaboration with St. Vincent, he's still singing about his relationship with television and mass media.
Today, David Byrne is 61.
Byrne is best known for his tenure with The Talking Heads, the art-punk band that was part of the late-70's, early-80's scene out of CBGB's. He has written a few books, from The Bicycle Diaries to Strange Ritual. His lyrics are rarely about the usual topics of newfound love, love gone wrong or partying all night. Even in his most recent collaboration with St. Vincent, he's still singing about his relationship with television and mass media.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Neverending Battle Fatigue
I recently attended a small Toy and Comic Expo here in Central Texas. I say small, but it had major cast members of The Walking Dead in attendance* (I don't watch the show, and I still recognized them), the event filled a few ballrooms, and had a Batmobile (you saw the pictures. No reason for me to show off further.).
But I also walked out without buying anything.
I've talked here before about how Cons are not my cup of tea, but at this Con, I felt like such an outside observer that I felt like I was at someone else's party.
I quit writing posts on how I was cutting back my DC Comics selections, and in short order, I will have stopped buying any new DC Comics. I just can't buy the new Superman stuff (Scott Lobdell on both main titles, really?) just to bridge my collection, just as I avoid the 90's mullet-era Superman for the convoluted contortions the writers were going through as they wrestled with the Post-Crisis rules imposed on Superman.
I don't understand the enthusiasm for most of today's comics from DC and Marvel, but I do get my fix from other books - like the stuff coming from MonkeyBrain, some from Dynamite and IDW, but my pull list has shrunk to about 3-4 comics on a good week. Last week I didn't pull anything, and I see about a week per month where that's true. Looking at the solicits for an upcoming month tells me that stepping away means it would be work to even try to get back into any of these comics, and at the cost and high likelyhood of a comic at DC getting the axe, it's not really worth it.
Walking around the con, I could identify only a fraction of the costumes on the attendees, and then, mostly from commercials I'd seen for video games while watching shows aimed at a younger demographic, like Archer.
But I also walked out without buying anything.
I've talked here before about how Cons are not my cup of tea, but at this Con, I felt like such an outside observer that I felt like I was at someone else's party.
how your comics blogger feels on the inside |
I quit writing posts on how I was cutting back my DC Comics selections, and in short order, I will have stopped buying any new DC Comics. I just can't buy the new Superman stuff (Scott Lobdell on both main titles, really?) just to bridge my collection, just as I avoid the 90's mullet-era Superman for the convoluted contortions the writers were going through as they wrestled with the Post-Crisis rules imposed on Superman.
I don't understand the enthusiasm for most of today's comics from DC and Marvel, but I do get my fix from other books - like the stuff coming from MonkeyBrain, some from Dynamite and IDW, but my pull list has shrunk to about 3-4 comics on a good week. Last week I didn't pull anything, and I see about a week per month where that's true. Looking at the solicits for an upcoming month tells me that stepping away means it would be work to even try to get back into any of these comics, and at the cost and high likelyhood of a comic at DC getting the axe, it's not really worth it.
Walking around the con, I could identify only a fraction of the costumes on the attendees, and then, mostly from commercials I'd seen for video games while watching shows aimed at a younger demographic, like Archer.
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Canadian Astronaut aboard ISS covers Bowie's "Space Oddity"
Commander Chris Hadfield, Canadian Astronaut, is aboard the ISS and covered some Bowie - mixing it up a bit to reflect his experience. Really, after this cover, not sure there's any point in anyone else every trying their hand at this tune again.
We've all seen Earth from space a hundred times before, privileged as we are to live in an era when people travel into space. But, man...
Here's to Commander Hadfield and all aboard the ISS.
Thanks to Slicing Up Eyeballs for the link.
Let's hope Commander Hadfield gets to cover "Life on Mars".
We've all seen Earth from space a hundred times before, privileged as we are to live in an era when people travel into space. But, man...
Here's to Commander Hadfield and all aboard the ISS.
Thanks to Slicing Up Eyeballs for the link.
Let's hope Commander Hadfield gets to cover "Life on Mars".
Saturday, May 11, 2013
Finally saw Iron Man 3
In Robert Downey Jr.'s fourth turn as Ol' Shell Head, we see what Marvel is going to need to wrestle with as its franchises become as familiar as James Bond or Santa Claus. What now? What's next? What superhero trope are we going to check out from the library and use for this movie?
Well, this was the "strip him of everything he has" story/ "what is the hero without his powers?" angle. And it works better than you'd think. Sure, you get limited armor action, but writer/ director Shane Black makes sure to resolve any deficits you might be feeling with a big, explosive conclusion that should make you forget that for 90% of the movie, Tony Stark is not in the suit.
Like the first Iron Man film, this one reflects back the headlines of the modern era, with a mix of politics, elusive terrorists, media management, and a few other bits that I don't want to get into for spoilery reasons. The gang is back together, from Paltrow as Pepper Potts, to Don Cheadle as Rhodey. Tony might not be doing so well in the wake of the Avengers' first team-up as he wrestles with PTSD, meanwhile continuing to explore the limits of the man-machine combination he's become and continues to explore as he seeks to build a better suit of armor.
I'm not telling you kids anything you don't already know.
Well, this was the "strip him of everything he has" story/ "what is the hero without his powers?" angle. And it works better than you'd think. Sure, you get limited armor action, but writer/ director Shane Black makes sure to resolve any deficits you might be feeling with a big, explosive conclusion that should make you forget that for 90% of the movie, Tony Stark is not in the suit.
Like the first Iron Man film, this one reflects back the headlines of the modern era, with a mix of politics, elusive terrorists, media management, and a few other bits that I don't want to get into for spoilery reasons. The gang is back together, from Paltrow as Pepper Potts, to Don Cheadle as Rhodey. Tony might not be doing so well in the wake of the Avengers' first team-up as he wrestles with PTSD, meanwhile continuing to explore the limits of the man-machine combination he's become and continues to explore as he seeks to build a better suit of armor.
I'm not telling you kids anything you don't already know.
Supermarathon: Superman II - Theatrical Cut
Common wisdom states that Superman II is the better of the first two Superman movies starring Christopher Reeve, and I'd posit that wisdom is based mostly upon half-remembered screenings by kids who last saw the movies sometime during the Reagan administration. It's not that I don't like the movie, but I think from a storytelling and filmmaking perspective, the first of the two is vastly stronger.
Yes, Superman II is the Superman film where he fights Zod, Ursa and Non. Yes, it is exciting, and a decent movie, but it back-pedals the Superman films into campy territory and gave the producers license to engage in the slow decline of the Superman franchise that would ultimately end in the half-assed Superboy TV show that was the capstone on the Salkind era of Superman filmed media.
I like Superman II, but knowing the history of the film explains so much about the uneven texture of the movie that watching the original theatrical cut - the post-Donner version - that you sort of want to cringe during many parts of the movie, and watching them in quick succession very much highlights the weaknesses in the sequel.
Friday, May 10, 2013
Your Humble Blogger and His Next Ride
from the Central Texas Toy and Comic Expo
Jason and I went to San Marcos on Saturday. I don't collect much Batman stuff as there's so much stuff out there with the Bat logo on it. But I have always been fascinated with the various iterations of the Batmobile, largely because of the Batman '66 version, the 1989 version and the various looks from Norm Breyfogle when I started reading comics.
You will never not get me to get excited over a well manufactured replica.
Jason and I went to San Marcos on Saturday. I don't collect much Batman stuff as there's so much stuff out there with the Bat logo on it. But I have always been fascinated with the various iterations of the Batmobile, largely because of the Batman '66 version, the 1989 version and the various looks from Norm Breyfogle when I started reading comics.
You will never not get me to get excited over a well manufactured replica.
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