Pixel Scroll 9/7/19 Two Thousand Million Or So Years Ago Two Pixels Were Scrolling

(1) MOSLEY QUITS STAR TREK: DISCOVERY. Walter Mosley tells “Why I Quit the Writers’ Room” in an op-ed for the New York Times. His piece doesn’t name the show he quit. The Hollywood Reporter does: “Author Walter Mosley Quits ‘Star Trek: Discovery’ After Using N-Word in Writers Room”. Mosley writes —  

Earlier this year, I had just finished with the “Snowfall” writers’ room for the season when I took a similar job on a different show at a different network. I’d been in the new room for a few weeks when I got the call from Human Resources. A pleasant-sounding young man said, “Mr. Mosley, it has been reported that you used the N-word in the writers’ room.”

I replied, “I am the N-word in the writers’ room.”

He said, very nicely, that I could not use that word except in a script. I could write it but I could not say it. Me. A man whose people in America have been, among other things, slandered by many words. But I could no longer use that particular word to describe the environs of my experience.

…I do not believe that it should be the object of our political culture to silence those things said that make some people uncomfortable. Of course I’m not talking about verbal attacks or harassment. But if I have an opinion, a history, a word that explains better than anything how I feel, then I also have the right to express that feeling or that word without the threat of losing my job. And furthermore, I do not believe that it is the province of H.R. to make the decision to keep my accusers’ identities secret. If I’ve said or done something bad enough to cause people to fear me, they should call the police.

My answer to H.R. was to resign and move on. I was in a writers’ room trying to be creative while at the same time being surveilled by unknown critics who would snitch on me to a disembodied voice over the phone. My every word would be scrutinized. Sooner or later I’d be fired or worse — silenced….

The Hollywood Reporter solicited CBS’ take on Mosley’s departure –

CBS TV Studios responded to Mosley’s op-ed on Friday in a statement provided to The Hollywood Reporter: “We have the greatest admiration for Mr. Mosley’s writing talents and were excited to have him join Star Trek: Discovery. While we cannot comment on the specifics of confidential employee matters, we are committed to supporting a workplace where employees feel free to express concerns and where they feel comfortable performing their best work. We wish Mr. Mosley much continued success.”

(2) CHANDRAYAAN-2. The lander and rover apparently didn’t make it: “‘We Came Very Close:’ Indian Prime Minister Modi Lauds Chandrayaan-2 Team After Moon Lander Goes Silent”.

India’s space program will bounce back strong from the apparent failure of Friday’s (Sept. 6) lunar landing attempt, Prime Minister Narendra Modi stressed.

The nation’s Chandrayaan-2 moon orbiter dropped a lander called Vikram toward the lunar surface Friday afternoon. Everything went well for a while, but mission controllers lost contact with Vikram when the craft was just 1.3 miles (2.1 kilometers) above the gray dirt.

As of this writing, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) had still not officially declared Vikram lost; the latest ISRO update stated that descent data are still being analyzed. But Modi’s comments strongly suggest that Vikram and Pragyan, the rover that was supposed to deploy from the lander, are dead.

…Indeed, India plans to develop a Chandrayaan-3 moon mission in the coming years, and the nation also intends to put humans on the lunar surface at some point. ISRO is working to send a second orbiter to Mars in the mid-2020s as well. (The nation’s first Red Planet probe, Mangalyaan, has been studying Mars from orbit since September 2014.)

And there’s still the other half of Chandrayaan-2 to consider. The mission’s orbiter, which arrived at the moon last month, is scheduled to operate for at least a year. The spacecraft is using eight science instruments to study the moon in a variety of ways — creating detailed maps of the lunar surface, for example, and gauging the presence and abundance of water ice, especially in the south polar region.

(3) TIME FOR THE TESTAMENTS. NPR has the answer to “Why Margaret Atwood Said ‘No’ To A ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ Sequel — Until Now”.

…Atwood says it just seemed like the time for a sequel. “People had been asking me to write a sequel for a long time, and I always said no, because I thought they meant the continuation of the story of Offred which I couldn’t do,” she says. “But then I thought, what if somebody else were telling the story? And what if it were 15 or 16 years later? And it was also time, because for a while we thought we were moving away from The Handmaid’s Tale. And then we turned around and started going back toward it, ominously close in many parts of the world. And I felt it was possibly time to revisit the question of, how do regimes like Gilead end? Because we know from The Handmaid’s Tale that it did end.”

(4) DANCING MARVELS. Popsugar features some amazingly skilled kids – who apparently are their high school’s counterparts to my daughter’s colorguard team. “Oh, Snap: This High School Dance Team’s Avengers Routine Is Pretty Freakin’ Marvelous”.

A year after their viral Harry Potter dance routine, the students of Arizona’s Walden Grove high school are at it again with some incredible Avengers-themed homecoming choreography. The talented PAC dance team put their own twist on Marvel’s Cinematic Universe and brought the beloved superheroes back to life — with some badass moves.

The full routine is an intergalatic trip through the Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame storylines. […]

(5) WITH RECEIPTS. Mimi Mondal is “Rewriting the history of science fantasy fiction” in the Hindustani Times.

…In 2016, a bust of HP Lovecraft was removed as the trophy for the World Fantasy Award, but the change had caused so much debate that a new trophy — a twisted tree girdling a full moon — wasn’t released till the next year. Last year, after the death of Harlan Ellison, obituaries from grieving fans were mixed with accounts of his serial sexual harassments, including of women author peers. Two months later, NK Jemisin made history by winning her third consecutive Hugo Award for the best novel. Veteran author Robert Silverberg denounced her acceptance speech as “graceless and vulgar” for having passionately spoken against the obstacles faced by black women writers in SFF, again to the thundering applause of the auditorium in San Jose, which I was present to witness. Jemisin’s speech was in more than one way a precursor to Ng’s.

The change in our genre is a reflection of the change that’s happening in the world. As a genre, SFF is fairly new — barely a century old — and, while science fiction in particular (less so fantasy and horror) has always worn a progressive veneer, the stories of progress have always belonged to a small, privileged group of people. But SFF is also a hugely popular and consumer-facing genre, which means trends are driven by those who consume the stories. Changes in SFF are a direct result of the changing reader and buyer demographic, which no longer simply constitutes white men in the West….

(6) YOU’RE GETTING COLDER. “Was Walt Disney Frozen?” Snopes says nope. Is there nothing left for us to believe in?

Half a century onwards, the rumor that Walt Disney’s body was put in cryonic storage remains one of the most enduring legends about the entertainment giant.

(7) LYNLEY OBIT. Actress Carol Lynley died September 3 of a heart attack reports the New York Times. She was 77. Her genre appearances included The Man From U.N.C.L.E., Night Gallery, and Tales of the Unexpected, She was in the feature films Beware! The Blob and Future Cop, and the TV movies that gave rise to series Kolchak: The Night Stalker and Fantasy Island.

(8) TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS.

[Compiled by Cat Eldridge.]

  • Born September 7, 1795 John William Polidori. His most remembered work was “The Vampyre”, the first published modern vampire story published in 1819. Although originally and erroneously accredited to Lord Byron, both Byron and Polidori affirmed that the story is his. Because of this work, he is credited by several as the creator of the vampire genre of fantasy fiction. (Died 1821.)
  • Born September 7, 1937 John Phillip Law. He’s probably best remembered as the blind angel Pygar in the cult  film Barbarella which featured Jane Fonda in that bikini. He shows up in Tarzan, the Ape Man as Harry Holt, and he’s in a South African SF film, Space Mutiny, as Flight Commander Elijah Kalgan, that’s set on a generation ship. Look actual SF! (Died 2008.)
  • Born September 7, 1955 Mira Furlan, 64. She’s best known for her role as the Minbari Ambassador Delenn on entire run of Babylon 5, and also as Danielle Rousseau on Lost, a series I did not watch. She’s reunited with Bill Mumy and Bruce Boxleitner at least briefly in Marc Zicree’s Space Command.
  • Born September 7, 1960 Christopher Villiers, 59. He was Professor Moorhouse in “Mummy on the Orient Express”, a Twelfth Doctor story. It’s one of the better tales of the very uneven Calpadi run. He’s also Sir Kay in First Knight and is an unnamed officer in From Time to Time which based on Lucy M. Boston’s The Chimneys of Green Knowe.
  • Born September 7, 1966 Toby Jones, 53. He appeared in “Amy’s Choice”, an Eleventh Doctor story, as the Dream Lord. In Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, he voiced Dobby the house elf. And in 
  • Finding Neverland, Mr. Smee, Captain Hook’s bo’sun. Guess what work that film was based on. Finally I’ll note that he was — using motion capture — Aristides Silk in The Adventures of Tintin. 
  • Born September 7, 1973 Alex Kurtzman, 46. Ok, a number of sites claim he destroyed Trek. Why the hatred for him? Mind you I’m more interested that he and Roberto Orci created the superb Fringe series, and that alone redeems them for me.
  • Born September 7, 1974 Noah Huntley, 45. He has appeared in films such as 28 Days Later, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (excellent film), Snow White and the Huntsman (great film), Event Horizon (surely you’ve something else to do) and Dracula Untold (woo, not so great). He’s Gawain in The Mists of Avalon series and shows up as Donovan Osborn in the CW series Pandora which, I’m not kidding, got a Rotten Tomatoes zero percent approval rating. Ouch. 
  • Born September 7, 1993 Taylor Gray, 26. He’s best known for voicing Ezra Bridger on the animated Star Wars Rebels which I highly recommend if you’re into Star Wars at all as it’s most excellent.  He also played Friz Freleng in Walt Before Mickey

(9) MIGNOGNA SUIT WHITTLED DOWN. A Texas state judge delivered a setback to Vic Mignogna, who has brought suit to stifle some of the public #MeToo charges voiced against him. The Dallas News has the story: “In anime’s #MeToo moment, Vic Mignogna a no-show at Tarrant County hearing and his case is mostly an unholy mess”.

State District Judge John Chupp dismissed a number of the claims by Mignogna’s attorney and promised to rule on the remainder in the next 30 days.

…Friday was a significant milestone in a civil lawsuit brought by local anime voice actor Vic Mignogna against two of his Dallas-area colleagues, the fiance of one of the women, and a company that cut ties with him. Mignogna says their statements about his inappropriate behavior with women amount to an unfair campaign to destroy his career. His accusers say his lawsuit is aimed at silencing them.

After three hours of arguments between a tightly scripted defense team and Mignogna’s astonishingly unorganized — and at times ill-prepared and illogical — attorney, Chupp dismissed a number of the claims and promised to rule on the remainder in the next 30 days.

…January’s record-breaking opening of Broly also set off another round of accusations and stories on social media about the 56-year-old actor’s long-rumored inappropriate behavior with women — which allegedly has included aggressive kisses, hugs and unwanted sexual advances.

Online, thousands of anime fans rushed to pick a side in the warfare hashtagged #kickvic and #IStandWithVic. Mignogna repeatedly, and sometimes in great detail, denied all the allegations.

Amid the outcry, Flower Mound-based Funimation Productions, which dubs and distributes anime shows, including much of the Dragon Ball franchise, announced in February that it had severed ties with Mignogna after an internal investigation.

Mignogna’s lawsuit, filed April 18, alleged defamation, tortious interference, conspiracy and other charges against Funimation, voice actors Jamie Marchi and Monica Rial, and Rial’s fiance, Ron Toye. The lawsuit painted the company and three individuals as a band of conspirators leading the charge to reduce Mignogna to ruins.

Friday the 141st District Court’s gallery was packed with interested parties, and many of them were there to support Rial and Marchi.  But Mignogna was nowhere to be found. Perhaps that was for the best, given the often befuddled oral arguments of his Tyler-based attorney, Ty Beard….

And the many worldwide Mignogna fans who have contributed to the massive GoFundMe for his legal fees, a war chest which now stands at more than $242,000,  might well have wanted their money back if they had been in the courtroom today.

…At the end of the proceedings — which went an hour longer than the court had allocated — Chupp dismissed all claims against Marchi, all except defamation against Funimation and all except defamation and conspiracy against Rial and Toye.

Those outstanding claims are weighty ones — Funimation, Rial and Toye are still on a sharp hook. I suspect Chupp needed to give more consideration and study to each before making his ruling. Or maybe the amateurish performance of the plaintiff’s legal team had just worn on his last nerve to the point that the extremely patient judge  needed a break.

(10) A TOAST GOODBYE. Food & Wine says “An Official ‘Mr. Robot’ Beer Will Premiere Along with the Final Season”. Doesn’t it make you wonder what alcoholic beverages should have accompanied the cancellation of The Original Star Trek (Saurian brandy!) or Agent Carter (Crown Russe Vodka?).

All good things come to an end. Including TV shows. (Except maybe The Simpsons.) But for fans of USA Network’s critically-acclaimed hacker drama Mr. Robot, at least they’ll have a beer to toast when the series premieres its fourth and final season on October 6.

In an official collaboration, USA Network has enlisted New York’s Coney Island Brewery to produce fsociety IPA — a hazy IPA inspired by Mr. Robot. Though the connection between television show and branded beer can often feel tenuous, working with the Coney Island-based brand is actually an inspired choice since the beachy New York City neighborhood serves as a significant setting in the show.

(11) THE VEGETARIAN GODZILLA. “Japanese scientists find new dinosaur species”: Yahoo! has photos.

Japanese scientists have identified a new species of dinosaur from a nearly complete skeleton that was the largest ever discovered in the country, measuring eight metres (26 feet) long.

After analysing hundreds of bones dating back 72 million years, the team led by Hokkaido University concluded the skeleton once belonged to a new species of hadrosaurid dinosaur, a herbivorous beast that roamed the Earth in the late Cretaceous period.

A partial tail was first found in northern Japan in 2013 and later excavations revealed the entire skeleton.

The team named the dinosaur “Kamuysaurus japonicus,” which means “Japanese dragon god,” according to a statement issued by the university.

(12) ANOTHER CON REPORT. Emily Stein in CrimeReads offers “An Ode To Podcasts:  Dispatches From Podcon 2019” as a report from a podcasting convention in Seattle that won’t be held again because of financial trouble.

…Earlier this year, I traveled to Seattle to attend PodCon, an annual conference celebrating all things podcasts. While many kinds of podcasts were represented, PodCon has always had a special fondness for audio dramas, or fiction podcasts, and the fervent fandom they inspire. (Have I stayed up until midnight to hear the mind-blowing 50th episode of The Bright Sessions the second it dropped? Maybe! Did I co-create a Facebook group for listeners of I Am In Eskew to trade their nerdy fan theories? Who’s to say? Might I have joined a Discord server just to talk about Debbie’s mysterious notebook in King Falls AM? Yes, I might have. I did.)…

Four months after PodCon 2 came to a close, conference co-founder Hank Green announced that PodCon would not be returning. A variety of financial and logistical challenges had converged to make the event unsustainable, though Green expressed optimism that another conference might develop solutions to the issues they’d found insurmountable. As beloved as many podcasts are, in many ways, the medium is still finding its footing in today’s entertainment landscape. For every My Favorite Murder or Reply All, there’s a multitude of indie podcasts fighting for a wider audience, even as some bask in the glow of a small but fiercely loyal following—a coven of people who’ve found the same secret, whose days all light up when a new episode hits their feed.

(13) ACROSS A SEA OF PAPER. Polygon’s Isabella Kapur acquaints readers with the historic role of the fanzine Futurian War Digest: “Fandom under fire: how fanzines helped sci-fi survive the Blitz and beyond”.

…For the past six months, as part of the exhibition As If: Alternative Histories from Then to Now at The Drawing Center, a small art museum in New York City, I have explored illustration, novels, and posters as well as fanzine materials from as far back as the 1940s. Zines were hard for fans to get their hands on, as they were printed and collated in school clubs or at the dining room table, sometimes mailed out to subscribers and contributors one by one. And yet, these publications formed the backbone of what would become modern fan culture, not just a reflection of media but a reimagining of reality.

The cost of a mimeograph machine may have been high, but the cost of not talking to each other was higher — even in some of the most dire moments of the 20th century. The oldest zine included in As If is also the longest running fanzine to remain in distribution in Britain throughout the course of the second World War: Futurian War Digest, or FIDO, which printed from October 1940 until March 1945.

FIDO reviewed science fiction works and reflected on the fragile state of the fan community in the United Kingdom during wartime. The first issue of the zine, which was published and distributed less than a month after the start of the London bombing raids known as The Blitz, made a point of announcing the conscription of fan William F. Temple and the death on active duty of sci-fi enthusiast Edward Wade. These sombre announcements ran alongside musings about John Carter of Mars.

In a time of great uncertainty, publisher J. Michael Rosenblum said in the pages of FIDO that his self-avowed goal was to “a) to give news of and to fandom, b) to keep burning those bright mental constellations possessed by all fans.” The publication was created just as much to be an archive and time capsule as a source of entertainment, news, and distraction. By publishing the fanzine, Rosenblum recorded the history of a subculture of science fiction enthusiasts, and helped to keep a community that was being actively ripped apart together.

… The physical evidence of this transatlantic fan solidarity can be seen in the unusual shape and size of Futurian War Digest Vol. 1 #9, which was printed on four packages of paper donated by U.S. fan Forrest J. Ackerman. Ackerman, who became a pioneer in his own right, helped fund publications and initiatives similar to FIDO in the United States, contributing to Le Zombie fanzine. Le Zombie, which began production in December 1938, likewise included a “War Department” section which organized to provide fanzines to American fans who had enlisted, in order to help them maintain some level of connection and normalcy under the pressures of war.

(14) THE HARRYHAUSEN WE MISSED. Episode 27 of the Ray Harryhausen Podcast celebrates “Ray Harryhausen’s ‘Lost Movies'” (Part I).

The first of two podcasts exploring Ray Harryhausen’s unmade films, this episode features interviews with contributors to upcoming Titan Books publication, ‘Harryhausen: The Lost Movies’. The book examines Harryhausen’s unrealised films, including unused ideas, projects he turned down and scenes that ended up on the cutting room floor. This book includes never-been-seen-before artwork, sketches, photos and test footage from the Harryhausen Foundation archives.

(15) FAMILIAR FACE. Hayley Atwood will be in the next Mission: Impossible film. More details in The Hollywood Reporter.

View this post on Instagram

@wellhayley Should you choose to accept…

A post shared by Christopher McQuarrie (@christophermcquarrie) on

[Thanks to John King Tarpinian, Andrew Porter, BravoLimaPoppa, Cat Eldridge, Mike Kennedy, JJ, Martin Morse Wooster, and Chip Hitchcock for some of these stories. Title credit goes to File 770 contributing editor of the day Jon Meltzer.]

33 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 9/7/19 Two Thousand Million Or So Years Ago Two Pixels Were Scrolling

  1. (13) A positive fan history story I’m happy to see.

    (6) Matt Ruff’s Sewer, Gas, Electric tells of the dark secret of which the freezing of Disney is merely the cover story.

  2. (1) I think I’m on Mosley’s side in this – he was telling someone about an incident some time in the past, where the person in the past used the n-word.

  3. 3: The serious Harry Potter level embargo on this book has me nervous. On one hand, it’s longlisted for prizes, on the other no rumbling at all from any corners about how much people with ARCs like or don’t like it. Gripping hand, I pre-ordered so I suppose it’s too late to worry.

    So, still hardly around because of personal stuff. Dropped in to say I just read This is How You Lose the Time War.

    Socks knocked off. Socks flew across the room announced they were leaving me and have since taken up with a younger, more-active paladin.

  4. Yaaaaaaaaaaawwwwwwnnnnnn…..

    I’ve been driving most of the day — just got home.

    Yes, there is now a wiggly doggie Dublin here with me.

    He and the only dog he’s met here so far are already pretty thrilled with each other. I will be very lucky if other introductions go so well!

    Going to bed now — hoping I’m not kept awake all night by doggie complaints!

    Oh, P.S., I finished Ancestral Night today — liked it but was not blown away. Felt like too many coincidences, too much head scratching about possible inconsistencies, and pacing I wasn’t fond of. More tomorrow, if anyone’s interested!

  5. Iphinome: So, still hardly around because of personal stuff. Dropped in to say I just read This is How You Lose the Time War.
    Socks knocked off. Socks flew across the room announced they were leaving me and have since taken up with a younger, more-active paladin.

    That’s a convincing recommendation. I’m sold.

  6. Just finished (literally minutes ago) Cherie Priest’s The Toll. Good, solid creepy ghost story with some interesting twists. Less my cup of tea than her Clockwork Century books, but still good entertainment.

    The team named the dinosaur “Kamuysaurus japonicus,” which means “Japanese dragon god,”

    I suspect that’s not quite 100% accurate, since “saurus” is lizard. But if “Kamuy” is a Japanese prefix (possibly related to “Kami”?), then I think Kamuysaurus may be the first word I’ve seen to mix Japanese and Latin. (Though “megatsunami” mixes Japanese and Greek.)

    Also interesting that they apparently used a Japanese prefix for the first part, but then went with a westernized “japonicus” for the second instead of “nipponicus” or “nihonicus”. I suppose it’s probably an existing convention. Scientific Latin is weird but fun. 🙂

  7. But if “Kamuy” is a Japanese prefix (possibly related to “Kami”?),

    ‘Kamuy’ is Ainu, meaning the same (spirit or god) and related to ‘kami’ in Japanese. Ainu is possibly the source of the word.

    The lizard/dragon confusion is probably because the Japanese for dinosaur means ‘terrible dragon’ instead of ‘terrible lizard’.

  8. (8) John Phillip Law also played the titular character in Harryhausen’s The Golden Voyage of Sinbad.

  9. I do not believe that it is the province of H.R. to make the decision to keep my accusers’ identities secret. If I’ve said or done something bad enough to cause people to fear me, they should call the police.

    Mosley has a curious idea about how HR operates in the workplace. They have no obligation to identify someone who brings them an allegation of misconduct, nor is there any expectation that a situation is only worth reporting if it’s serious enough to involve the police.

    This situation sounds like we’re only getting a small part of the story, so I can’t really judge Mosley’s situation. Having never heard of him before this, I looked him up. His screenwriting credits don’t have much science fiction, though he has four science fiction novels to his name per Wikipedia.

  10. @Contrarius–I demand pictures. Dora demands pictures.

    Of doggie Dublin, of course. For Ancestral Nights, additional words will be more useful than pictures.

  11. I’ve read only one of Walter Mosley’s science fiction novels. But it was really good. He is an excellent science fiction writer, one of the very best, without a doubt. He just happens to have published mostly mysteries.

  12. … This is How You Lose the Time War. Socks knocked off. Socks flew across the room announced they were leaving me and have since taken up with a younger, more-active paladin.

    Right??!! It is so good.

  13. With regards to John Philip Law Danger: Diabolik anyone. Finally managed to get hold of a copy this year.

  14. ‘Kamuy’ is Ainu, meaning the same (spirit or god) and related to ‘kami’ in Japanese. Ainu is possibly the source of the word

    Or ‘kamui,’ which would be better Romanji spelling for the Japanese. As you say, this would indicate a spirit, but if what they mean is just a biting lizard, then “kamu” is the root and the rest is tacked on.

  15. Regarding the esteemed Mr. Mosley…

    PJ, what is your source for that assertion? If it is solely from Mosley, we do not know it to be fact and should not be stated as such. Is there independent corroboration for it?

    Rcade, I’m with you. Furthermore, based on his own statements, Mosley sounds like a real Problem Child. He wasn’t sanctioned nor fired, he was nicely (his own word) instructed to refrain from using a certain word, that’s all.

    Furthermore his notion that he should be able to confront his accuser, while sound doctrine in a court of law, is unworkable in any HR/harassment/code-of-conduct environment. If your objective is to make sure that people don’t ever file complaints, then by all means give the person they’re complaining about the means to accost them!

    The only complaints worth considering are the ones that should be taken to the police? Really?!

    Wow, I bet he just loves the MeToo movement and anti-harassment policies in general.

    Based on his own words, I think he was right about one thing — sooner or later he would do something to get himself fired, and with good cause because, oh man, what a sense of self-righteous entitlement.

    And that line, “… I’d be fired or worst — silenced…” because absolutely, positively, not getting to shoot one’s mouth off is vastly worse than losing one’s job.

    You may not have heard of Mosley, but he is a major author, that’s unquestionable. What I think is also unquestionable is that he reeks of unreasonable privilege and entitlement and is badly in need of a major attitude adjustment.

    pax / Ctein
    [ Please excuse any word-salad. Dragon Dictate in training! ]
    — Ctein’s Online Gallery. http://ctein.com 
    — Digital Restorations. http://photo-repair.com

  16. I’ve read as much of Mosley as I can find. His detective/mysteries are great. The SF (and SF-adjacent/magical realism?), less so and less consistent.

    He’s known to be an SF fan. For example, he did a reading at Millennial Philcon… and somewhere I’ve got a photo I took there of him and Orson Scott Card meeting, and both more-or-less-simultaneously exclaiming “I’m a huge fan!”

  17. Dear PJ,

    Thanks! That article is only reporting Mosley’s account of what he said and did. It could be accurate … or not. Since his account is self-serving, I wouldn’t treat it as Gospel.

    pax / Ctein

  18. @iphinome, right, apparently I have too many socks, so I just bought This Is How You Lose The Time War in hopes of rectifying that situation….

  19. @Tom Becker: the one Mosley SF novel I read, a few years ago, did not impress me — it seemed like somebody outside the genre venturing in and saying “Look how original I am” while being decades behind the field.

  20. I assume the name of the kamuysaurus is a nod to the fact that the discoverers are from Hokkaido University, Hokkaido being the home of the Ainu. But I, too, have only seen the Ainu word for god spelled “kamui.” Perhaps they spelled it with the y in the hope of getting it pronounced more or less correctly by non-Japanese; IME that is often the reason for non-standard romanizations.

  21. That scroll title has me humming:

    Five hundred twenty-five thousand six hundred pixels
    Five hundred twenty-five thousand comments so droll
    Five hundred twenty-five thousand six hundred pixels
    How do you measure, measure a scroll?

  22. Or ‘kamui,’ which would be better Romanji spelling for the Japanese

    ‘Kamuy’ seems to be the preferred rendering when Ainu is written in a Latin alphabet, ‘kamui’ is the result of going via Japanese.

  23. (9) I’ve been following the Vic Mignogna defamation case since Law Twitter first found out about the original demand letters from Vic’s lawyer, Ty Beard. Which, among other things, said:
    “On February 19, 2019 at 8:31 a.m. you stated, “She [Monica] did nothing wrong. That Fucking piece of shit did.” This statement is defamatory and false because Mr. Mignogna is not a piece of shit (that is another name for feces, thus it is impossible for him to be a “piece of shit”) nor did he commit any crime as alleged.”
    (Entire letter here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/zhp4ocqgfd9ld6p/2019%2004%2012%20-%20TDMA%20Letter%20-%20Toye.pdf?dl=0)

    It’s been a bit disorienting to have my Law Twitter stream cross my Convention running stream but Oh. My. God.

    There is a lot of information on Twitter under the #Threadnaught, #IStandWithVic, and #KickVic hashtags. I was following the live tweet and later tweets from notes from several Law Tweeters who attended the hearing. Many people have contributed to crowdsource a copy of the transcript. It’s like watching a train wreck with one train driven by someone who does not know what either a wheel or a rail is.

  24. I didn’t know Ty Beard was Mignogna’s lawyer. Beard’s been active in The Fantasy Trip RPG fandom for a bazillion years.

Comments are closed.