Outsiders — Try DC’s (More! New!) Planetary Adventures[1] Comic Book — (A Hopefully Spoiler-Free Overlong Info-Dump)

By Daniel Dern: Attention (Wildstorm) PLANETARY fans[2] — good (’nuff) news: DC Comics has been continuing the adventures of (some of) our favorite “archeologists of the impossible,” (now) in DC’s OUTSIDERS series/title.[3]

(Wikipedia’s PLANETARY entry says “The DC series…revived the premise of Planetary in the DC Universe,” which is also try, but there’s (some) character continuity, so I’d argue it’s not just a premise-revival.)

OUTSIDERS (“Unearthing the secrets of the DC Universe”) was/is part of DC’s 2023 “Dawn of DC” era/reboot/event/whatchamacallit, following DC’s ubergrim Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths and Lazarus Planet “events”). As of July 2024, OUTSIDERS is up to Issue #8.

THE SEMI-RETURN OF THE PLANETARYANS, WITHIN THE DCU[4]

Planetary-wise, DC OUTSIDER issues 1-6 are about the Planetary connection (with the focus largely on DC mysteries and secrets in the wakes of (DC’s) (perhaps overly) frequent “events,” reboots, and such. Oy and sigh.

In DC-ville, the core group of O’s consists of Batman/Gotham regulars Kate (Batwoman) Kane[5] and Wayne Enterprises CEO Lucius Fox…joined by Planetary’s Jakita Wagner, here going by the name “The Drummer.” (Yes, Planetary-savvy fans, this apparent mismatch gets explained, a few issues in.)

Bits/things I like so far include the explicit multiverse/event/continuity references, e.g., in Issue 7, page 12, seeing binders (or file boxes?) marked “52,” “Convergence,” and “Rebirth,” And elsewhere, the rooms where discontinued/non-“continuity” characters are hanging out… somewhat similar to Grant Morrison’s ANIMAL MAN and MULTIVERSITY, DC’s ZERO HOUR, possibly SANDMAN (I’d have to check). (And some Marvel stuff like Spider-Gwen, Deadpool, and, arguably, some of John Byrne’s early She-Hulk.)

(BTW, a new plot arc just started in Outsiders Issue #7, so far with Kate Kane, Virginia “Jinny” Hex (first seen in and a member of the current (2019, first dozen issues written by Brian Bendis) Young Justice series), and Jinny’s great-great-grandpappy Jonah Hex (or his ghost).

My personal opinion is that the DC re-instantiation/continuation of Planetary isn’t (yet) a match for the original Ellis/Cassady opus. But that’s a higher bar than I’d expect…and leaves a lot of room for “good enough” through “damn good.”

GETTING DC’S OUTSIDERS (TO OWN OR BORROW)

If you’ve read some of my other reviews, you know I like to make it easy to find what I’m recommending, in a mix of (legitimately) free or affordable, to spare you redigging some of the rabbit-holes I’d dug.

If you’re partial to reading comics, as in “those individual, often flimsier-papered, issues, sadly costing far more than a 1950’s dime,” particularly a full “arc” (plotline), you should be able to buy the (physical) issues from your local comic shop (or, if you aren’t near one, online). Or perhaps you have a friend who’s already bought ’em, and will let you read them, after you’ve washed and dried your hands.

If you like to read/own comics collected into a single physical book (“graphic novel”), you’ll have to wait until November 19, 2024, for Outsiders Vol. 1, Planet of the Bat, the 160-page paperback. (Or submit a “buy this” request to your library sooner.)

If you want it sooner (like today!), (legit) ways to get it digitally include via DC’s Universe Infinite digital streaming service (DC offers a one-week free trial, and like Marvel’s streaming comic offering, well worth the price if tis your jam), and Amazon/Kindle (full price). No issues are currently in HooplaDigital or Kindle Unlimited; odds are that Hoopla, at minimum, will have it around when the paperback comes out.

Curious/interested in the Wildstorm Ellis/Cassady PLANETARY? Keep reading (below). (Warning: snake’s-hands and Internet rabbit-holes). (Including where-to-get-it links.) (And feetnotes.)

SOME BACKSTORY ETC. FOR THOSE WHO AREN’T ALREADY PLANETARY-SAVVY

The original Wildstorm PLANETARY series was written by Warren Ellis (author of THE AUTHORITY, GLOBAL FREQUENCY, TRANSMETROPOLITAN, and bunches of Marvel and DC supes titles) and illustrated by John Cassady (my other favorite by him:, the art for Joss Whedon’s ASTONISHING X-MEN, Vol 3 2004 2013 (#1-24 and Giant-Size Astonishing X-Men #1, if I’ve sussed this out correctly — collected in Astonishing X-Men by Joss Whedon & John Cassaday Ultimate Collection Books 1 and 2 (Astonishing X-Men (2004-2013)).

PLANETARY takes place within the Wildstorm universe (Wildverse? Wildstormverse?) which also includes/included Wildstorm’s WildC.A.T.s, StormWatch, Henry Bendix (boo!), Apollo and Midnighter, The Authority, the Bleed, and Gen13.

(Most of these titles I discovered/read belatedly, not-in-orderly, and not all of, making it harder to fit the pieces together…IIRC, I started my IMAGE journey by seeing a large-format collection of THE AUTHORITY, in the Brookline (Mass) library’s Graphics Novels shelves.)

Rather than (for the most part) conventional superheroing, Jakita Wagner, The Drummer, and Elijah Snow (and other Planetary field agents and office staff) are investigating the secret history of the (world/20th century/etc). Many issues end with their possibly-catchphrase, “It’s a strange world, let’s keep it that way.” Each or near-each issue iterates through various sf/fantasy/comic tropes and artistic styles, including Doc Savage, the Baltimore Gun Club, Sherlock Holmes, Wonder Woman, the Fantastic Four, Thor, John Constantine… to name a few. (I haven’t gone looking for a comprehensive web list.) Also, monsters, dinos, supercomputers, alien spaceships, a lost city or two. And possibly robots, I lose track. Perhaps most impressively (to me, at least) is how disparate plot points build and come together. And the artwork. Sorry, words fail me; just read the (comic) book(s) and savor.

PLANETARY #1 debuted in 2009, after a “preview” appearance in IMAGE’s September 1998 issues of Gen13 (#33) and C-23 (#6); the series concluded in #27, thankfully bringing plotlines and character arcs to a definitive, satisfying, albeit open-ended, finale.

There are also three 50-ish page Planetary team-up/cross-over/”Elseworlds-like” one shots (all recommended by me) (and collected into the 160-ish page PLANETARY: CROSSING WORLDS book):

  • Planetary/Authority: Ruling the World (2000), with the Authority, and fitting into the Planetary plotline
  • Planetary/JLA: Terra Occulta is an Elseworlds-class (non-continuity) story, with lots of DC/JLA supes.
  • Planetary/The Batman: Night on Earth – I don’t think this is part of the Planetary storyline, but it fits within their continuity/canon. If you’ve read enough Batman over the years/decades (and watched at least a few of the Adam West TV episodes), you’ll get an even better kick out of this, but it’s not essential knowledge.

It also turns out (as in, web-searching for PLANETARY book links for below), there’s (at least?) one book about PLANETARY,  Keeping the World Strange: A Planetary Guide. At three bucks for the PDF (or $2.99 for Kindle, $11.99/paperback via Amazon), I’ve just e-purchased an e-copy.[6] (And the post-purchase process at that side shows a lot of other about-sf/comic-related books!)

FROM IMAGE/WILDSTORM TO DC: THE MIS-RULES OF CONTINUITY ACQUISITION

(Disclaimer: I’m seeing some minor-to-me differences in fact/phrasing on the Wildstorm-to-DC-today reporting and recaps. More informed people are welcome to correct in the comments.)

Wildstorm began as an independent company (or a part of Image, which was one); according to Wildstorm’s Wikipedia entry, with PLANETARY being one of Wildstorm’s titles.

In 2008, DC acquired Wildstorm and, over time, merged/shuffled (some of) that universe, i.e., putting Apollo, Midnighter, the Bleed, etc. into the main DCU with they would interact with, team up with/argue with Justice League and others, and also, IIRC, bringing along bad guy Henry Bendix. I don’t agree with these decisions (and it looks like the fuller story is too complicated and messy to try to summarize — and get right — here), but Nobody Asked Me. (On the other hand, this let us get the Adam Hughes/Lee Bermejo four-issue (also collected Superman/Gen13 crossover miniseries (available as in book form — which I snagged a few years ago, easier to bookshelf-file than my copies of the four individual issues) , which remains one of my favorite comic re-reads. Great art!)

Here’s a short excerpt of the Wildstorm-to-DC twisty path, from Wikipedia’s Wildstorm entry:

DC shut down the Wildstorm imprint in December 2010. In September 2011, the company relaunched its entire superhero line with a rebooted continuity in an initiative known as The New 52, which included Wildstorm characters incorporated into that continuity with its long-standing DC characters.

In February 2017 Wildstorm was revived as a standalone universe with The Wild Storm, by writer Warren Ellis. However, the characters were reintroduced to DC continuity in 2021.

(If you want to simultaneously make your head hurt and eyes glaze over from the, um, crossover of business amateur wrestling and continuity contortion, read the full entry and/or other web-findable info.)

THE PLANETARY BUYER/BORROWER… [7]

If you haven’t yet had the pleasure of reading PLANETARY, here’s some of the obvious places to borrow/buy it (mostly in book/e-book forms).

The good news is that they’re all readily and affordably available (although there are a few tonier choices).

Here’s the things themselves:

Single-Issues: Planetary #1-27, and Planetary/Authority, Planetary/JLA, and Planetary/Batman are all available in their original single-issue format, in print (local comic shop back-issue stock, maybe, and online, I’m sure), and digitally (DCUniverse, Hoopla, and, cost-ineffectively, Amazon/Kindle).

Book (“graphic novel”) collections:

Issues #1-27 have been collected; first, into four Volumes:

  • Planetary Vol. 1: All Over The World And Other Stories (Issues #1-6, and the Gen13/C-23 “preview,” 160 pages)
  • Planetary Vol. 2: The Fourth Man (Issues #7-12, 144 pages)
  • Planetary Vol. 3: Leaving The 20th Century (Issues #13-18, 144 pages)
  • Planetary Vol. 4: Spacetime Archaeology (Issues #19-27, 224 pages)

and then (recollected/aggregated) into two Books:

  • Planetary Book One (Issues #1-14, 426 pages)
  • Planetary Book Two (Issues 15-27, 436 pages)

and then upscaled into ABSOLUTE editions of Books One and Two (higher quality and sometimes larger than the originals, and with some extras like introductions, alternate covers, preliminary art, script pages, etc)…

…and then all 27 issues and extras neutroniomly combined into an 864-page, five-and-a-half pound OMNIBUS…

…which has been upscaled and added to, into the 880-page, 9.75″x3″x15″, 10.2-pound ABSOLUTE PLANETARY, collecting Gen13 #33, Planetary #1-27, Planetary Vol. 1: All Over the World and Other Stories, Planetary/Batman: Night On Earth #1, Planetary Vol. 2: The Fourth Man, Planetary: All Over the World and Other Stories, Planetary: Crossing Worlds, Planetary Vol. 3: Leaving the 20th Century, Absolute Planetary Vol. 1 and Vol. 2, Planetary Vol. 4: Spacetime Archaeology, and (deep inhale!) Wildstorm: A Celebration of 25 Years.

(Feel free to hum or filk the last couplet of Prof. Tom Lehrer’s “The Elements.”)

(Note, a quick check, via my DCUniverse sub, shows that Planetary’s only appearance in Wildstorm/Celebration is a one-page illo.)

One quasi-cautionary note re the 10-pound Absolute edition: I was able to library-borrow a copy, and quickly discovered that (as someone who likes reading comics/iPadding while recumbent, it’s somewhat too heavy for comfort. If I wanted a 10-pound object on my ribcage, I’d have a cat.

Buying/Borrowing Print:

To read but not own, try your local library (and its network). (Mine has dead-tree copies of Vols. 1-4 and the Crossing Worlds collection.)

Wanna buy’n’own? Your local comic shop or bookstore (independent, if possible) either has or should be able to get pretty much everything (except possibly the OMNIBUS or some ABSOLUTE editions). If not, try the usual online suspects.

Consume digitally? (Assuming you have a device suitable for reading comics.) Good options here Hoopla (free — you’ll just need an account with a participating public library), DCUuniverse (you’ll need a paid account, but the price is right), or Amazon/Kindle.  Here’s some links (chosen for “fewest-clicks to read ‘em all):

Enjoy!

(It’s a strange comic book, let’s keep it that way.)


Feetnotes:

[1] Yes, that’s a Doc Smith/Lensmen title reference. There’s a Cordwainer Smith reference further down, did you catch it?

[2] I know there’s at least a few fellow Planetary fans among Filers, based on Scroll Items/Comments over the past few years.

[3] Not to be confused with DC’s BATMAN AND THE OUTSIDERS or THE OUTSIDERS titles/series, although there’s some character and concept overlaps.) Also no relation to S.E. Hinton’s book and now also musical, THE OUTSIDERS.

[4] Not their term for it; mine appears to be its first usage.

[5] As opposed to Kathy Kane, DC’s first Batwoman, which, in some of DC’s hiccupping continuity/reboots, there’s some generational/DNA relations/relationships. My friend Alan Brennert wrote one of the most memorable and moving Kathy Kane/Batwoman stories, “Interlude on Earth-Two,” The Brave and the Bold #182, Jan. 1982, art by Jim Aparo (collected in various anthology books, including DC’s 2016 all-Brennert collection, TALES OF THE BATMAN.

[6] I sprung for the $3 after not finding it on Hoopla, my local library network, or the Massachusetts library network. So of course, then searching OCLC’s WorldCat catalog, I see copies in eight non-Massachusetts libraries, ranging (in distance from me, thanks to one of WorldCat’s more engaging features) from Virginia to Israel.

[7] Cordwainer Smith reference, per [1].

Glasgow 2024 Holding Consultative Vote on Independent Film Hugo Awards Proposal

Glasgow 2024 has announced an innovative consultative vote on a proposed change to the Hugo Award categories.

The proposed change, initially passed by the 2023 WSFS Business Meeting in Chengdu, would create two new Hugo Award categories, the Best Independent Short Film Award and the Best Independent Feature Film Award. This change would have to be ratified by the 2024 WSFS Business Meeting in Glasgow to take effect, with the first Hugo Awards in these categories being given out at the 2024 Worldcon in Seattle, USA.
 
All individuals holding WSFS Memberships have been invited to express their views on this proposal. The results of the consultative vote are not binding but are expected to inform the 2024 Business Meeting’s debate and decision.
 
Details of the consultative vote can be found on the Glasgow 2024 website.
 
Announcing the vote, WSFS Division Head Nicholas Whyte said “Among the many potential reforms to WSFS Business Meeting procedures, putting proposals and other matters to a vote of WSFS members is an innovation that has often been mentioned, but has not previously made it beyond the idea stage. We therefore propose to test the operation of a consultative vote, to explore if and how such a procedure could become part of the permanent rules. Glasgow 2024’s core values are to be caring, inclusive and imaginative as a convention. The consultative vote is imaginative, in that it has not been done before; it demonstrates that we care about our members’ opinions; and it will be more inclusive than a physical meeting can ever be. We also note that we are not exercising the option of a special Hugo category this year; the consultative vote is our contribution to the ongoing development of the awards.”

[Based on a press release.]

2024 Eisner Awards

Comic-Con International announced the winners of the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards 2024 at a ceremony on July 26.

Named for acclaimed comics creator Will Eisner, the awards are celebrating their 36th year of bringing attention to and highlighting the best publications and creators in comics and graphic novels.

2024 EISNER AWARDS

BEST SHORT STORY

  • “The Kelpie,” by Becky Cloonan, in Four Gathered on Christmas Eve (Dark Horse)

BEST SINGLE ISSUE/ONE-SHOT

  • Nightwing #105, by Tom Taylor and Bruno Redondo (DC)

BEST CONTINUING SERIES

  • Transformers, by Daniel Warren Johnson (Image Skybound)

BEST LIMITED SERIES

  • PeePee PooPoo, by Caroline Cash (Silver Sprocket)

BEST NEW SERIES

  • Somna: A Bedtime Story, by Becky Cloonan and Tula Lotay (DSTLRY)

BEST PUBLICATION FOR EARLY READERS

  • Bigfoot and Nessie: The Art of Getting Noticed, by Chelsea M. Campbell and Laura Knetzger (Penguin Workshop/Penguin Random House)

BEST PUBLICATION FOR KIDS

  • Mexikid: A Graphic Memoir, by Pedro Martín (Dial Books for Young Readers/Penguin Young Readers)

BEST PUBLICATION FOR TEENS

  • Danger and Other Unknown Risks, by Ryan North and Erica Henderson (Penguin Workshop/Penguin Random House)

BEST HUMOR PUBLICATION

  • It’s Jeff: The Jeff-Verse #1, by Kelly Thompson and Gurihiru (Marvel)

BEST ANTHOLOGY

  • Comics for Ukraine, edited by Scott Dunbier (Zoop)

BEST REALITY-BASED WORK

  • Three Rocks: The Story of Ernie Bushmiller: The Man Who Created Nancy, by Bill Griffith (Abrams ComicArts)

BEST GRAPHIC MEMOIR

  • Family Style: Memories of an American from Vietnam, by Thien Pham (First Second/Macmillan)

BEST GRAPHIC ALBUM – NEW

  • Roaming, by Mariko Tamaki and Jillian Tamaki (Drawn & Quarterly)

BEST GRAPHIC ALBUM – REPRINT

[Tie]

  • Hip Hop Family Tree: The Omnibus, by Ed Piskor (Fantagraphics)
  • Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons, by Kelly Sue DeConnick, Phil Jimenez, Gene Ha, and Nicola Scott (DC)

BEST ADAPTATION FROM ANOTHER MEDIUM

  • Watership Down, by Richard Adams, adapted by James Sturm and Joe Sutphin (Ten Speed Graphic)

BEST U.S. EDITION OF INTERNATIONAL MATERIAL

  • Blacksad, Vol 7: They All Fall Down, Part 2, byJuan Díaz Canales and Juanjo Guarnido, translation by Diana Schutz and Brandon Kander(Europe Comics)

BEST U.S. EDITION OF INTERNATIONAL MATERIAL – ASIA

  • My Picture Diary, by Fujiwara Maki, translation by Ryan Holmberg (Drawn & Quarterly)

BEST ARCHIVAL COLLECTION/PROJECT – STRIPS

  • Dauntless Dames: High-Heeled Heroes of the Comic Strips, edited by Peter Maresca and Trina Robbins (Fantagraphics)

BEST ARCHIVAL COLLECTION/PROJECT – COMIC BOOKS

  • All-Negro Comics 75th Anniversary Edition, edited by Chris Robinson (Very GOOD Books)

BEST WRITER

  • Mariko Tamaki, Roaming (Drawn & Quarterly)

BEST WRITER/ARTIST

  • Daniel Warren Johnson, Transformers (Image Skybound)

BEST PENCILLER/INKER OR PENCILLER/INKER TEAM

  • Jillian Tamaki, Roaming (Drawn & Quarterly)

BEST PAINTER/MULTIMEDIA ARTIST (INTERIOR ART)

  • Sana Takeda, The Night Eaters: Her Little Reapers (Abrams ComicArts); Monstress (Image)

BEST COVER ARTIST

  • Peach Momoko, Demon Wars: Scarlet Sin, various alternate covers (Marvel)

BEST COLORING

  • Jordie Bellaire, Batman, Birds of Prey (DC); Dark Spaces: Hollywood Special (IDW)

BEST LETTERING

  • Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou, The Unlikely Story of Felix and Macabber, The Witcher: Wild Animals, and others(Dark Horse); Batman: City of Madness, The Flash, Poison Ivy, and others (DC); Black Cat Social Club (Humanoids); Beneath the Trees Where Nobody Sees (IDW); The Cull, What’s the Furthest Place from Here? (Image);and others

BEST COMICS-RELATED PERIODICAL/JOURNALISM

  • The Comics Journal #309; edited by Gary Groth, Kristy Valenti, and Austin English (Fantagraphics)

BEST COMICS-RELATED BOOK

  • I Am the Law: How Judge Dredd Predicted Our Future, by Michael Molcher (Rebellion)

BEST ACADEMIC/SCHOLARLY WORK

  • The Claremont Run: Subverting Gender in the X- Men, byJ. Andrew Deman (University of Texas Press)

BEST PUBLICATION DESIGN

  • Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein boxed set, designed by Mike Kennedy (Magnetic)

BEST WEBCOMIC

BEST DIGITAL COMIC

  • Friday, by Ed Brubaker and Marcos Martin, vols. 7–8 (Panel Syndicate)

VOTERS CHOICE HALL OF FAME

  • Klaus Janson
  • Jim Lee
  • Mike Mognola
  • Jill Thompson

(These are in addition to the nineteen picked by the judging panel and announced in March.)

2024 WILL EISNER SPIRIT OF COMICS RETAILER AWARD

Blackbird Comics and Coffeehouse in Maitland, Florida

Pixel Scroll 7/26/24 With All These Scrolls, There Must Be A Pixel Here

(1) FIRST CONTACT — WITH SF. New Science Fiction & Fantasy Hall of Fame inductee Nicola Griffith tells how at the age of nine she started to work out the meanings of “Identity and SF”.

Scientific theory and fiction are both narrative, stories we tell to make sense of the world. Whether we’re talking equation or plot, the story is orderly and elegant and leads to a definite conclusion. Both can be terribly exciting. Both can change our lives.

I was nine was I realised I wanted to be a white-coated scientist who saved the world. I was nine when I read my first science fiction novel. I don’t think this is a coincidence, though it took me a long time to understand that.

For one thing, I had no idea that the book I’d just read, The Colors of Space, an American paperback, was science fiction: I had no idea that people divided books into something called genres. In my world, there were two kinds of books: ones I could reach on the library shelves, and ones I couldn’t. My reading was utterly indiscriminate. For example, another book I read at nine was Gibbon’s History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, dragged home volume by volume. (Obviously, at nine, much of it went over my head but it fascinated me nonetheless.) But my hands-down favourite at that time wasn’t a library book, it was an encyclopaedia sampler….

(2A) UNCANNY PERSEVERES. Lynne M. Thomas and Michael Damian Thomas explain to Black Gate readers, “The Space Unicorn Was Caitlin”.

…Now Caitlin’s adventures here are over. There is an unfillable hole in the center of our lives. Nobody we know would have faulted us for shutting down Uncanny Magazine under these circumstances (not to mention due to the issues over the last few years: the Large Online Retailer trying to destroy periodicals, AI nonsense, and the splintering of social media).

Except Caitlin wouldn’t have wanted that. She believed in the Space Unicorn community — the community that showed us and her so much love and support. She believed in the power of art and stories and beauty. Caitlin, like us, felt that Uncanny is important and needed in this magnificent community….

(2B) EATING THE FANTASTIC. Scott Edelman tells listeners “It’s time for tea and scones with Chuck Tingle” in Episode 231 of the Eating the Fantastic podcast.

Chuck Tingle

Chuck Tingle, who first came to prominence with such erotica of the fantastic as Pounded by President Bigfoot and Taken by the Gay Unicorn Biker, work which eventually led to two Hugo Award nominations. The USA Today bestselling novel Camp Damascus — his first traditionally published horror novel — was a Bram Stoker Award finalist this year, and his second horror novel, Bury Your Gays, was released earlier this month on July 9th. Both books were published by Tor Nightfire.

Here’s how he describes himself: “He is a mysterious force of energy behind sunglasses and a pink mask. He is also an anonymous author of romance, horror, and fantasy. Chuck was born in Home of Truth, Utah, and now splits time between Billings, Montana and Los Angeles, California. Chuck writes to prove love is real, because love is the most important tool we have when resisting the endless cosmic void. Not everything people say about Chuck is true, but the important parts are.”

We discussed how existing is an arrogant act against the forces of the infinite, why it’s horror rather than comedy which warms his heart, how he used social media to find a publisher for Camp Damascus (and why that technique probably won’t work for you), how to write horror about a gay conversion camp without retraumatizing in an already traumatizing world, the differences between cathartic horror and grueling horror (and why he’s more interested in the former), the intriguing comment his copyeditor made about a reference to Superman, which comics subgenre occupies the most space on his bookshelves, the five creators who’ve most influenced him (and my encounter with one of them during the ’70s), how art is more than what’s between the covers of a book or within the frame of a painting, what most people get wrong about the term “high concept,” and much more.

(3) TURF MEETS SURF IN SAN DIEGO. “Doctor Who spin-off ‘The War Between the Land and the Sea’ officially announced” reports Cultbox.

At Hall H at San Diego Comic Con on 26 July, showrunner Russell T Davies officially announced the five part Doctor Who spin-off The War Between the Land and the Sea….

…Leading the five-part series is Russell Tovey (FeudAmerican Horror Story: NYC) and Gugu Mbatha-Raw (SurfaceLokiDoctor Who). The series will also see the return of UNIT alumni Jemma Redgrave (Doctor WhoGrantchester) who will reprise her role as UNIT Chief Scientific Officer Kate Lethbridge-Stewart and Alexander Devrient (Doctor WhoTed Lasso) as Colonel Ibrahim….

…As rumoured, the spin-off will feature Sea Devils. When the fearsome and ancient species emerges from the ocean, dramatically revealing themselves to humanity, an international crisis is triggered. With the entire population at risk, UNIT step into action as the land and sea wage war.

(4) THE FIRST WORLDCON KERFUFFLE. It’s already sold, but for a brief and shining moment people had the opportunity to bid on the pamphlet that triggered the Exclusion Act at the first Worldcon in 1939: “A Warning! Important! Read This Immediately! –July 2, 1939”.

A Warning! Important! Read This Immediately! –July 2, 1939 [Rare Evidence of A Famous Science Fiction Worldcon Scandal, 1939]

6” x 4.5” Two stapled yellow leaves, creating a 4 pp. pamphlet + cover, stapled somewhat off center, faintly dust-soiled with a couple light dings and creases, still very good.

This is a rare copy of a pamphlet produced and smuggled into the 1939 Worldcon by Dave Kyle, but that was blamed on six members of the New York Futurian Society and led to them being barred from the convention. The Futurians were Donald A. Wollheim, Robert A. W. Lowndes, Cyril Kornbluth, Lois Gillespie, Frederik Pohl and John Michel (who co-wrote the pamphlet), and these are well-known names in the history of science fiction….

Here are a couple of sample pages:

(5) RWA NOT QUITE READY FOR AUTOPSY. The New York Times explains “The Collapse of Romance Writers of America” (link bypasses the Times paywall).

Romance novels are dominating best-seller lists. Romance bookstores are multiplying. And romance writers, who often self-publish and come with a devoted fan base, are changing long-entrenched dynamics in the publishing industry.

And yet, even as the genre is reaching new highs, the Romance Writers of America, a group that called itself “the voice” of romance writers, has suffered an enormous drop in membership — 80 percent over the past five years — and has filed for bankruptcy.

This year’s annual gala and awards ceremony, slated to begin on July 31 in Austin, Texas, was first canceled, then rescheduled for October.

The organization’s collapse comes after internal accusations of discrimination and exclusion — systemic problems that have divided the group for decades, said Christine Larson, author of “Love in the Time of Self-Publishing: How Romance Writers Changed the Rules of Writing and Success.”

“The group’s foundation was cracked,” Larson said. “When you’re catering to one dominant group, you don’t see, or maybe care, about the needs of the marginalized.”…

… The group has included some of the most popular writers in the industry, including founding member Nora Roberts (“Montana Sky”) and Julia Quinn (the “Bridgerton” series). At its peak, it had more than 10,000 members….

… When [LaQuette] Holmes joined the organization’s New York City chapter in 2015, however, she found herself “one of very few Black people in the room,” she said. “I was very welcomed. But even when people were welcoming, they still didn’t really understand my plight as a Black woman writing Black women in romance.”…

(6) ARK-OLOGY. From Paul Weimer: “Book Review: Suyi Davies Okungbowa’s Lost Ark Dreaming” at Nerds of a Feather.

Yekini has a problem. She is a midder, working and living on the middle levels of the Pinnacle, the last of the Fingers, the last of an ark/arcology built off of the Nigerian coast. She has by luck and dint of effort escaped her lower class origins. Or so she has thought, until an assignment sends her with the higher class administrator Ngozi down undersea, to the levels of the Pinnacle underneath the waves. There Ngozi and Yekini will confront a threat to the Pinnacle itself, a threat from outside the tower, in the deep waters that surround this last bastion of humanity. Something called the Children…

So one finds the narrative in Suyi Davies Okungbowa’s Lost Ark Dreaming

… Like Snowpiercer, the setting is evocative and memorable even if it probably does not hold up to strong “hard science fiction” scrutiny as a viable and complete ecosystem. A remnant of humanity stuck in a single building poking out of the ocean? The logistical problems of keeping this population alive are as insurmountable as the ones in Snowpiercer, but the novella successfully manages to deflect the reader thinking about that until well after the novella is done. And, honestly, a rigorous setting would be in the end be beside the point. This is not a novella about the realpolitik logistics of how an ark like this would work, it is about story, and people in that arcology and the story of these three characters and their pivotal roles in that story….

(7) UK READING REPORT. The Reading Agency’s statistics show “The British Reader is in Decline as The Reading Agency Reveals Half of UK Adults Don’t Read Regularly”.

…Half (50%) of UK adults don’t regularly read and almost one in four (24%) young people (16-24) say they’ve never been readers, according to research released by The Reading Agency today.

Findings from its groundbreaking ‘Reading State of the Nation’ nationwide survey on adult reading in the UK, reveal a stark drop in reading for pleasure among adults.

This means that more than 27 million UK adults are missing out on the physical, mental and financial benefits that have been proven to come from reading more. Evidence shows that per capita, incomes are higher in countries where more adults reach the highest levels of literacy proficiency. Studies also indicate clear wellbeing impacts, with those who read for pleasure reporting higher levels of self-esteem and ability to cope with difficult situations and non-readers being 28% more likely to report feelings of depression.

The new data from The Reading Agency reinforces this, with the nation’s regular readers experiencing a range of health benefits such as higher wellbeing and fewer feelings of loneliness than both lapsed and non-readers.

Other key findings include:

  • Only 50% of UK adults now read regularly for pleasure, down from 58% in 2015.
  • 15% of UK adults have never read regularly for pleasure, an 88% increase since 2015.
  • 35% of UK adults are “lapsed readers” who used to read but have stopped.
  • Young UK adults (16-24) face the most barriers to reading, with 24% saying they’ve never been regular readers.

The nationally representative survey of over 2,000 UK adults, the widest conducted since 2015, highlights several barriers to reading, with lack of time (33%) reported and the distraction of social media (20%) cited as the primary obstacles for many…

(8) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Paul Weimer.]

July 26, 1945 M John Harrison, 79.

By Paul Weimer: M John Harrison taught me about the joy of inconsistent and contradictory worldbuilding.

For most writers of fantasy, for most works of fantasy, I am always looking for the consistency and the power of the worldbuilding. Inconsistent and worse, lazy and weak worldbuilding can catapult me right out of a story or a novel, permanently. This has happened for me as a reader just this month with a brand-new novel.

M. John Harrison

M John Harrison is the exception to that for me. My reading of his work is almost exclusively Viriconium. But it is precisely in Viriconium, Harrison’s carved out territory in the Dying Earth subgenre, that I learned that worldbuilding is not the be all and end all of fantasy writing. The contradictions, the inconsistencies, the lack of cohesion is part of the point of the dying world of Viriconium. Not being able to rely on previous stories and novels in the sequence to understand what is happening in a particular work is something that Harrison relies on, and it is something that I learned to accept, and even expect in the Viriconium stories.

Really, Viriconium’s world building is beside the point, and that is why Harrison writes it in a way that you can’t rely on it. Instead, to use modern parlance, Viriconium is much more all about the “vibes”, and what vibes!  Vance and Wolfe may have perfected Dying Earth as a subgenre, but Harrison gives it a feel that few authors have managed to hit ever since. There are few authors I’ve read that have managed to embody the vibe of the subgenre they are writing in as well as M John Harrison has. And with such language and writing. On a sentence by sentence level, Harrison is one of the most talented writers I’ve ever read, of any genre.

A singular talent.

(9) COMICS SECTION.

  • Bliss introduces a superhero who shouldn’t talk.
  • Broom Hilda learns not to copy.
  • F Minus demonstrates conflict for an author.
  • Reality Check compares super songs.
  • The Argyle Sweater inaugurates a monstrous religion.
  • Loose Parts adds an unnecessary scene.
  • B.C. shows somebody who’s either going to be late for the Paris Olympics, or early for the Mordor Olympics.

(10) TIME VARIANCE AUTHORITY RETURNING. Launching in December, Katharyn Blair and Pere Perez’s TVA assembles a new team of heroes to protect all timelines.

The Time Variance Authority is under new management! This December, behold the adventures of the agency tasked with upholding the timestream in TVA! Just announced by Marvel Studios’ President Kevin Feige and Marvel Comics Editor-in-Chief C.B. Cebulski at the Marvel Fanfare Panel at San Diego Comic-Con, TVA will be a five-issue limited comic book series written by Marvel Studios’ Loki writer Katharyn Blair and drawn by acclaimed Marvel artist Pere Perez (CarnageEdge of Spider-Verse).

 The series will represent an evolution for the Marvel Comics’ version of the TVA as its blended with its Marvel Cinematic Universe counterpart, as depicted in the Disney+ series Loki series and Deadpool & Wolverine. The series will mark the Marvel Comics debut of various MCU characters, including breakout Loki star Miss Minutes. The mysterious all-knowing entity who keeps the TVA ticking like clockwork will recruit a new band of heroes charged with monitoring and regulating all realities and timelines. Join Ghost-Spider and other universe-displaced entities including Captain Cater, a heartbroken Remy Lebeau, and more as they’re sent throughout the multiverse on vital missions to repair wild temporal anomalies and keep reality itself from shattering!

(11) POPCORN TIME. Variety is on hand when “Ryan Reynolds, Hugh Jackman Surprise Comic-Con With ‘Deadpool & Wolverine’ Screening”.

“Deadpool & Wolverine” may have finally been released in theaters, but stars Ryan Reynolds and Hugh Jackman saved their biggest press tour stop for last.

The pair rolled into San Diego Comic-Con, alongside co-star Emma Corrin, director Shawn Levy and Marvel chief Kevin Feige to present the Hall H audience with a surprise screening of the film on the same day that it hits the big screen around the world. Warning: spoiler-talk below.

The special event, dubbed “The Ultimate Deadpool & Wolverine Celebration of Life,” came at the end of a particularly busy day for Reynolds, Jackman and Levy, who jetted to San Diego from Los Angeles following Feige’s Walk of Fame Ceremony earlier in the day….

…Then, after conjuring up those happy memories, Reynolds cued up a clip of co-star Leslie Uggams (in character as Blind Al) saying, “Can we skip the bullshit and just show the damn movie?”

The crowd (a full house of 6,500) erupted at the announcement and suddenly the souvenirs they’d been awarded for lining up outside Hall H — those highly-coveted (and hilariously sexual) Wolverine-head popcorn buckets — made even more sense. As the lights went down in the auditorium-turned- makeshift movie theater, ushers passed around popcorn and Reynolds, Jackman, Feige and co. settled into the folding chairs in the audience.

Throughout the 2-hour runtime, the crowd reacted raucously to all the major moments, but especially the Easter eggs and in-jokes. However, nothing played more electrically than the movie’s surprise cameos. With each reveal, the audience erupted into cheers which painted a huge grin on Feige’s face as he took it all in….

(12) MUNCHING FOR DOLLARS. And speaking of Wolverine-head popcorn buckets, NPR has a report on the marketing phenomenon: “’The Indicator from Planet Money’: The curious rise of novelty popcorn buckets”.

…ADRIAN MA, BYLINE: Movie theaters want to sell you more than just the ticket and snacks these days, and in the last few years, that’s meant souvenir popcorn buckets as tie-ins with major releases.

WAILIN WONG, BYLINE: Nels Storm is vice president of food and beverage strategy for AMC Theaters. Nels says a lot of these vessels, as the industry calls them, are basically movie props that you can put popcorn in – well, maybe.

NELS STORM: Yes, it has to hold popcorn, but it’s not – we’re not designing around a tub.

MA: Nels says AMC aims to sell out of the buckets during the film’s first weekend. That maximizes the hype around the release, and it ensures theaters aren’t stuck with a whole inventory of unsold buckets when the next blockbuster lands.

STORM: We want to make sure to make every “Despicable Me 4” guest happy and then move on to “A Quiet Place: Day One” and then move on to “Twisters,” and then move on to “Deadpool & Wolverine,” and so we want to keep the wheels turning.

MA: Despite this trend, these novelty objects are still a small part of the movie theater business. In 2023, merchandise sales totaled $54 million for AMC, and that is just 3% of the total food and beverage revenues for the year. But these collectibles are increasingly an important part of the competition between movie theaters….

(13) PRIME VIDEO TIME. “’The Boys’ Prequel Series With Jensen Ackles Ordered By Prime Video”Deadline is on top of the story.

The Boys universe is expanding in a BIG way with its first spinoff featuring actors from the hugely popular Prime Video superhero series. Jensen Ackles and Aya Cash are set to headline and produce Vought Rising, a prequel to mothership series, in which they will reprise their characters from The Boys, Soldier Boy and Stormfront, respectively.

The news is about to be unveiled by Jensen (in person) and Cash (via video) at The Boys Comic-Con panel for what is certain to be one of the biggest TV announcements at the convention….

(14) NEW SEASON OF INVINCIBLE ANNOUNCED. “Invincible Renewed for Season 4 at Prime Video” says Variety.

Another season of Prime Video’s “Invincible” is on the way.

“Invincible” creator Robert Kirkman made the Season 4 announcement at San Diego Comic-Con on Friday at Prime Video’s adult animation panel. He was joined by “Hazbin Hotel” creator Vivienne Medrano, “The Legend of Vox Machina” executive producer and star Travis Willingham and “Sausage Party: Foodtopia” co-creator Kyle Hunter for the panel. Prime Video also renewed “Hazbin Hotel” and “Sausage Party: Foodtopia” for sophomore seasons.

During the panel, Kirkman revealed the new, blue-and-black costume for Steven Yeun’s Invincible coming in Season 3. In the comics, Mark Grayon, aka Invincible, enters a darker, more violent era in the middle issues of the superhero comic. The new costume, a stark shift from his yellow-and-blue spandex, is a fan-favorite from the comics….

(15) LOOKS FAMILIAR. “NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover finds possible signs of ancient Red Planet life” reports Space.com.

NASA’s Perseverance rover may have found signs of ancient life in a rock on Mars; the mission team’s scientists are ecstatic, but remain cautious as further analysis is needed to confirm the discovery. 

The rover has come across an intriguing, arrowhead-shaped rock that hosts chemical signatures and structures that could have been formed by microbial life billions of years ago, when Mars was significantly wetter than it is today. Inside the rock, which scientists have nicknamed “Cheyava Falls,” Perseverance’s instruments detected organic compounds, which are precursors to the chemistry of life as we know it. Wisping through the length of the rock are veins of calcium sulfate, which are mineral deposits that suggest water — also essential for life — once ran through the rock.The rover also found dozens of millimeter-sized splotches, each surrounded by a black ring and mimicking the appearance of leopard spots. These rings contain iron and phosphate, which are also seen on Earth as a result of microbe-led chemical reactions….

(16) SCIENCE OF SF FILM TWISTERS. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.]  This week’s Nature takes a look at the latest film in the Twisters franchise and how good (or not) the science is.  The first film, Twister (1996), got a lot of the science wrong, but it seems as if the makers have upped their game for Twisters especially in noting that climate change is intensifying tornadoes as well as increasing the area of ‘tornado alley’  in the US. “What Twisters gets right — and wrong — about tornado science” (open access).

…Meteorologists love to nitpick the original Twister film’s scientific errors. Although it drew inspiration from extreme-weather researchers at the Norman lab, it placed entertainment above scientific accuracy, scientists say. For instance, researchers often point sarcastically to scenes that used radar readings of clear skies, when audiences were supposed to be looking at data from a tornado’s swirling heart.

The new film is much more accurate, says Kevin Kelleher, a meteorologist who is retired from the Norman lab and consulted on both Twister films. For the 2024 version, “if they could change things and make it a bit more scientifically correct, they did”, he says. Kelleher credits that accuracy to the director of Twisters, Lee Isaac Chung, who has been fascinated by thunderstorms ever since growing up on a farm near the Oklahoma border…

Twisters stars with director.

[Thanks to Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Paul Weimer, Chris Garcia, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, and Teddy Harvia for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Jon Meltzer.]

Glasgow 2024 Launches Online Member Portal

Glasgow 2024 has launched its Member Portal providing a single gateway to all online elements of the convention. The Member Portal is available to both in-person and online attendees aged 16 and over. The Portal is packed full of links to useful resources, as well as the link to join the convention Discord and to RingCentral Events where members will be able to stream a large proportion of the programme. Additional elements will be made available as the convention approaches, including the full convention schedule and the convention Newsletter.
 
The Member Portal is open to all Attending Members aged 16 or over, as well as all Online Members and Online Ticket holders. New joiners aged 16 or over can access the online convention by purchasing an Online Ticket at a cost of £40. Existing WSFS Members can upgrade to Online Membership at a reduced cost of £35.
 
Their Discord server is already open, offering a place to meet and chat with other attendees about the convention, programme items, and fandom in general, as well as coordinate plans, arrange ad hoc meetups, and play games together.
 
Starting on Saturday, July 27 they will be running pre-convention activities in the Discord server, including a scavenger hunt and a choose-your-own style adventure “If I Ran the Zoo Con” where the Discord members will run their own convention and see how “easy” it is. (We’ll be taking our chair, Esther MacCallum-Stewart, through the same questions at a future point and discovering whether she can do as well!).
 
We will be streaming many of our special events during the convention. These will include the Opening & Closing Ceremonies, the Masquerade, the Ian Sorensen play Nothing Nowhere, Never, Again, the Opera, the Worldcon Philharmonic Orchestra and of course the Hugo Awards Ceremony. (The Hugo Ceremony will also be broadcast publicly; the other events will only be streamed to members).
 
During the convention they will have up to 10 in-person rooms streaming at any given time, including purely in-person items and hybrid items with a mix of in-person and virtual participants. In addition, they will be hosting up to 4 purely online programme items at a time in peak hours.
 
For more information and to access the Member Portal, see the Glasgow 2024 website.

[Based on a press release.]

Nnedi Okorafor and Nicola Griffith Inducted to SF&F Hall of Fame

Seattle’s Museum of Pop Culture has announced the first two MoPOP Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame Inductees of 2024: The Creators.

  • Nnedi Okorafor, bestselling Nigerian American writer of Africanfuturist science fiction and fantasy for both children and adults. Best known for her Binti Series and the novels Who Fears Death, Zahrah the Windseeker, Akata Witch, and Remote Control, she has also written for comics and film and is the recipient of numerous awards including the Hugo Award, Nebula Award, Eisner Award, and World Fantasy Award.  
  • Nicola Griffith, celebrated British American speculative fiction writer and activist, author of the Hild Sequence, Ammonite, So Lucky, Slow River, Spear, and more. Winner of the Nebula Award, Otherwise/Tiptree Award, World Fantasy Award, Los Angeles Times Book Prize, two Washington State Book Awards, and six Lambda Literary Awards.

Nicola Griffith has an acceptance statement here: “2024 Inductee to the SFF Hall of Fame”.

Two “Creations” are also expected to be inducted this year.

For reasons known only to MoPOP, their call for nominations in May included a slam at the fans who originated the SFFHOF: “MoPOP’s Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame: You Decide Who’s Next”:

Once upon a time, new SFFHoF inductees were picked by a cabal of industry insiders with fountain pens and agendas—and the results confirmed that. These days, it’s up to you!

The Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame was founded in 1996 by the Kansas City Science Fiction and Fantasy Society (KCSFFS) in conjunction with the J. Wayne and Elsie M. Gunn Center for the Study of Science Fiction at the University of Kansas. 

Glass Bell Award 2024 Shortlist

The six titles shortlisted for the 2024 Goldsboro Books Glass Bell Award announced July 25 includes two works of genre interest: 

  • Clytemnestra by Costanza Casati (Michael Joseph)
  • Lady Macbethad by Isabelle Schuler (Raven Books)

The award, judged by a team at Goldsboro Books in London, is called “the only prize that rewards storytelling in all genres – from romance, thrillers and ghost stories, to historical, speculative and literary fiction.” It is given annually to “a compelling novel with brilliant characterization and a distinct voice that is confidently written and assuredly realized”.

The complete shortlist is at the link. The winner, who will receive £2,000 and a beautiful, handmade glass bell, will be named on September 26.

Pixel Scroll 7/25/24 Dentist Savage, The Man Of Fluoride, By Les Doctor

(1) CHRIS GARCIA ANALYZES THE AGENDA. In Claims Department 74 – “2024 Business Meeting”, Chris Garcia will be happy to tell you what he thinks about every proposal or amendment up for ratification at Glasgow 2024.

Welcome to another Claims Department, and this one is hella SMoFish, so if you got loins, you might wanna gird them….

There are things Chris is for, things he’s against, even one thing “I’m all the damn hell crap balls of the way for!” There’s another he disapproves of because “It’s clear to me that some people just hate fun”. And one piece of business he writes down with, “It’s garbage.”

However, all the commentary is substantial and well-informed.

The issue also includes a six-page Q&A session with Business Meeting Presiding Officer Jesi Lipp. For example, Lipp says about the items which are going to be confined in an Executive Session:

…I want to clarify a few misunderstandings that I’ve seen. First, if you are an attending member of WSFS, you don’t have to leave the room. Second, the rules around divulging what happens in executive session only apply to non-members. Any member at the meeting is free to discuss what happened with other WSFS members (so long as they do so in a way that does not also divulge the proceedings to non-members) because they also have an interest in the happenings of the society. Third, minutes are still recorded in executive session, they just don’t become a part of the publicly available minutes, but they will be retained and could be read at a future meeting (if that meeting was itself in executive session)…

There is no misunderstanding that the idea is to keep the transactions of the Executive Session from becoming known to the general public.

(2) HUGO BALLOT STORY HAS LEGS.  The Worldcon’s announcement covered here as “Glasgow 2024 Disqualifies Fraudulent Hugo Ballots” has been picked up by some mainstream news and popular culture sites:

(3) VINTAGE SAFETY. “Can a flight safety video be hilarious?” asks Abigail Reynolds. “Yup, especially if you like Bridgerton, Outlander, Pride & Prejudice, or Downton Abbey!” Will some of you be seeing this en route to the UK and Glasgow? “British Airways | Safety Video 2024 | May We Haveth One’s Attention”.

(4) TOXIC SPINES. “Old books can be loaded with poison. Some collectors love the thrill”Yahoo! finds literary tastes can be a hazard.

As a graduate student in Laramie, Wyo., in the 1990s, Sarah Mentock spent many weekends hunting for bargains at neighborhood yard sales. On one of those weekends, she spotted “The Lord of the Isles,” a narrative poem set in 14th-century Scotland. Brilliant green with a flowery red and blue design, the clothbound cover of the book – written by “Ivanhoe” author Walter Scott and published in 1815 – intrigued Mentock more than the story.

“It was just so beautiful,” she says. “I had to have it.”

For the next 30 years, “The Lord of the Isles” occupied a conspicuous place on Mentock’s bookshelf, the vivid green sliver of its spine adding a shock of color to her home. Sometimes she’d handle the old book when she dusted or repainted, but mostly she didn’t think too much about it.

Until, that is, she stumbled upon a news article in 2022 about the University of Delaware’s Poison Book Project, which aimed to identify books still in circulation that had been produced using toxic pigments common in Victorian bookbinding. Those include lead, chromium, mercury – and especially arsenic, often used in books with dazzling green covers.

“Huh,” Mentock thought, staring at a photo of one of the toxic green books in the article. “I have a book like that.”

Mentock shipped the book – tripled-wrapped in plastic – to Delaware. It wasn’t long before she heard back. The red contained mercury; the blue contained lead. And the green cover that captivated Mentock all those years ago? Full of arsenic.

“Congratulations,” the email she received said, “you have the dubious honor of sending us the most toxic book yet.”…

(5) ACTORS UNION STRIKES AGAINST TOP VIDEO GAME PUBLISHERS. “SAG-AFTRA Calls Strike Against Major Video Game Publishers” Variety tells why.

SAG-AFTRA will go on strike against major video game publishers, the actors union announced Thursday, following more than a year and half of negotiations, with the main sticking being protections against the use of artificial intelligence.

“Although agreements have been reached on many issues important to SAG-AFTRA members, the employers refuse to plainly affirm, in clear and enforceable language, that they will protect all performers covered by this contract in their A.I. language,” SAG-AFTRA said.

The strike was called by SAG-AFTRA national executive director and chief negotiator Duncan Crabtree-Ireland and the Interactive Media Agreement Negotiating Committee. It will go into effect July 26 at 12:01 a.m….

The video game companies included in the strike are: Activision Productions Inc., Blindlight LLC, Disney Character Voices Inc., Electronic Arts Productions Inc., Formosa Interactive LLC, Insomniac Games Inc., Llama Productions LLC, Take 2 Productions Inc., VoiceWorks Productions Inc., and WB Games Inc….

“We’re not going to consent to a contract that allows companies to abuse A.I. to the detriment of our members,” SAG-AFTRA president Fran Drescher said. “Enough is enough. When these companies get serious about offering an agreement our members can live — and work — with, we will be here, ready to negotiate.”…

(6) WE ARE NOT AT THE SINGULARITY. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] Nature’s cover story this week “Garbage Out” looks at artificial intelligence.  Apparently artificial intelligences (AIs) are really easy to induce to hallucinate if the AIs are trained by computer-generated data. One definition of a Singularity is that it is the point in time in which technology itself creates technology: such as robots building the computers and the computers programming the robots and themselves.  Such a singularity was popularized by the  mathematician and SF author Vernor Vinge….  The good news from this research is that humans are still key… (For now.)

The explosion in generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools such as large language models has been powered by the vast sets of human-generated data used to train them. As these tools continue to proliferate and their output becomes increasingly available online, it is conceivable that the source of training data could switch to content generated by computers. In this week’s issue, Ilia Shumailov and colleagues investigate the likely consequences of such a shift. The results are not promising. The researchers found that feeding AI-generated data to a model caused subsequent generations of the model to degrade to the point of collapse. In one test, text about medieval architecture was used as the starting point, but by the ninth generation the model output was a list of jackrabbits. The team suggests that training models using AI-generated data is not impossible but that great care must be taken over filtering those data — and that human-generated data will probably still have the edge.

The open access research is here.

(I do warn folk that the machines are taking over, but nobody ever listens…)

(7) DONATE TO DEB GEISLER AWARD. In honor of the late Deb Geisler, who died in March, her husband Mike Benveniste has established the Deb Geisler Award for Journalistic Excellence Fund at Suffolk University (where she taught) “to provide an annual stipend to a deserving student in the Communication, Journalism, & Media Department.”

Donations to the fund can be made online or by check: Link to give online: https://Suffolk.edu/Summa. By mail: Suffolk University, Office of Advancement, 73 Tremont Street, Boston, MA 02108. Attn: Kathy Tricca

(8) TOGETHER FOR A LUNCH “TREK” WITH THE FABULOUS NICK MEYER! [Item by Steve Vertlieb.] Together with the wondrous Nicholas Meyer on July 24, 2024. In addition to having directed the definitive “Star Trek” film … Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan, as well as the last motion picture with the original television crew, Star Trek: The Undiscovered Country, Nick also directed the unforgettable romantic sci-fi fantasy, Time After Time, directed The Day After, the controversial telefilm predicting the devastating consequences of nuclear war, composed the screenplay for Star Trek: The Voyage Home, the teleplay for The Night That Panicked America (concerning Orson Welles radio production of “The War of the Worlds”) and authored The Seven Percent Solution.

He is a brilliant raconteur and conversationalist, as well as a charming and most delightful lunch companion. His newest Sherlock Holmes novel, Sherlock Holmes and the Telegram from Hell, from the Reminiscences of John H. Watson, M.D. is enjoying critical success and brisk sales.

Had the pleasure of chatting with Nick once more on Sunday afternoon following a screening of Star Trek: The Undiscovered Country at the Aero Theater, and spent an absolutely delightful two hours over lunch this afternoon, enjoying more quality time with this sublimely gifted artist who I’m honored to think of as my friend.

Nicholas Meyer and Steve Vertlieb

(9) SHINING MEMORIES. IndieWire cues up the trailer for Shine On — The Forgotten ‘Shining’ Location”, a new Kubrick documentary.

Few movie sets in Hollywood history have generated more interest than the Overlook Hotel from Stanley Kubrick‘s “The Shining.” The fictional Colorado hotel provides the backdrop for Jack Torrance’s (Jack Nicholson) descent into madness, and Kubrick devotees have spent countless hours analyzing symbolism in the production design and the disorienting effects created by the hotel’s impossible floor plan. The hotel sets, hailed by many as some of the defining craftsmanship of Kubrick’s filmmaking career, now get their moment in the spotlight in a new documentary set to be released on the late director’s birthday.

…The film will see the collaborators revisiting some of the last remaining studio sets from “The Shining,” which were thought to have been destroyed years ago….

“There have been so many rumors about some of the sets from ‘The Shining’ still existing at Elstree Studios, but to actually find them and walk around them was like discovering a holy grail of film history,” [Paul] King said in a statement announcing the film…

(10) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Paul Weimer.]

July 25, 1973 Mur Lafferty, 51.

By Paul Weimer: The Mighty Mur Lafferty, to be truthful. Back in the early days of the modern SFFnal internet, when before even blogs were quite a thing, there was Mur Lafferty, doing audio versions of stories, doing her podcast (I should be writing) and being one of the early adopters and early heralds of the SFFnal internet. I came into the SFFNal internet not long after, and thus discovered her work, and her podcast, just when I was getting my own start in writing reviews and such (this was in 2008 or so).  I started with her Afterlife series and followed her career along. In those days, self-published work “didn’t count” for publication, which is why she managed to be a 2013 John C. Campbell  Award nominee and then winner (now the Astounding Award) for Best New Writer, which was odd, because I’d been reading her for half a decade.

Mur Lafferty in 2017.

And it is heartwarming that she remembers me from those early halcyon days.

But besides the Afterlife novellas, and the Shambling Guides, and her fun twitter threads of pretending to watch minor league Baseball in the guise of a lady of Westeros come to North Carolina, I’ve been listening to her podcast, interacting with her on social media, meeting her at cons for a good long time. She’s played the long game in honing her skills, craft and writing abilities. Mur Laffery is simply the embodiment of the “10,000 hours” school of writing, getting better by writing and writing and writing. Mur proves the grind can work.

I think her Midsolar Murders novels (starting with Station Eternity) are probably the best place to begin with her work. I find her voice as a writer quirky, comfortable, and relentlessly entertaining, Although Six Wakes, which really marks the start of her more recent career (and a Hugo finalist) is a good single novel to take the measure of Mur’s work, if you want to try it.

And yes, Mur, yes, as you say, I should be writing. Happy birthday my friend.

(11) COMICS SECTION.

(12) POEM BY ROB THORNTON.

Greenwish

The city blooms
Solar flowers drink life
Unwood towers soar

The city glistens
Buffalo browse in
shade Commuters
step carefully

The city works
Nests of mage-makers
shape great info-dreams

The city pauses
Crowds shimmer
rainbow
Talk lazily in siesta

The city eats
Trini-Hunan tofu
and gorgeous greens

The city sleeps
Inhales waste
Exhales air and water

The city awakes and sighs

“Christ, what an imagination I’ve got.”

(13) WHO’S WATCHING? The BBC says they like the numbers the show is pulling: “Doctor Who praised by BBC in annual report as ratings continue to grow” at Radio Times.

The BBC’s annual report has praised the impact of Doctor Who – as ratings for the recently concluded season 14 continue to grow on BBC iPlayer.

The beloved sci-fi series was mentioned several times throughout the report, which spotlighted it as one of the shows driving the corporation’s “huge audiences”, while also mentioning its “economic impact” in Wales and across the UK….

… The 60th anniversary specials were also mentioned as one of the year’s “content highlights” alongside Eurovision coverage and the third season of Planet Earth.

The latest figures for the new season, as reported by The Times, now make it the highest-rated drama for young viewers (under 35s) across the BBC this year.

Overnight ratings for the season had been lower than is typically the case due to the show’s new release strategy – which saw each episode debut on BBC iPlayer at midnight on Fridays, several hours before the BBC One broadcast on Saturday evening.

But a spokesperson for the show explained that this had always been the expectation, saying: “Overnight ratings no longer provide an accurate picture of all those who watch drama in an on-demand world.

“This season of Doctor Who premiered on iPlayer nearly 24 hours before broadcast, and episode 1 has already been viewed by nearly 6 million viewers and continues to grow.”

(14) BY NO MEANS A DREAD PIRATE. “SpongeBob SquarePants Rings in 25 Years; Mark Hamill Joins Next Movie” and Variety is there for the announcement.

To celebrate a quarter century of “SpongeBob SquarePants,” Nickelodeon pulled out all the stops at this year’s San Diego Comic-Con, starting with an epic Hall H panel.

Mark Hamill made a surprise appearance to reveal that he’d be voicing The Flying Dutchman in the upcoming fourth SpongeBob film, “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants,” out in 2025. “He’s the most fearsome goofball pirate you’ve ever seen. The movie is more cerebral. It’s more thoughtful, intellectually challenging. No, I’m just yanking your chain. It’s inspired silliness from start to finish.”…

(15) NOT EXACTLY AN EXTENDED VACATION. “NASA says no return date yet for astronauts and troubled Boeing capsule at space station”Yahoo! has the update.

Already more than a month late getting back, two NASA astronauts will remain at the International Space Station until engineers finish working on problems plaguing their Boeing capsule, officials said Thursday.

Test pilots Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams were supposed to visit the orbiting lab for about a week and return in mid-June, but thruster failures and helium leaks on Boeing’s new Starliner capsule prompted NASA and Boeing to keep them up longer.

NASA’s commercial crew program manager Steve Stich said mission managers are not ready to announce a return date. The goal is to bring Wilmore and Williams back aboard Starliner, he added.

“We’ll come home when we’re ready,” Stich said.

Stich acknowledged that backup options are under review. SpaceX’s Dragon capsule is another means of getting NASA astronauts to and from the space station.

(16) IN SPACE, NO ONE CAN HEAR YOU. [Item by Steven French.] Maybe aliens are already nearby — they’re just small and quiet! “The Fermi Paradox May Have a Very Simple Explanation” according to Scientific American.

… The absence of evidence for aliens could be because they don’t exist or because our sampling depth is inadequate to detect them—a bit like declaring the entire ocean free of fish when none appear in a scooped-up bucket of seawater. Sampling depth refers to how thoroughly and keenly we can conduct a search. Fermi’s question is valuable because it narrows the possibilities down to two: either aliens are not present near Earth, or our current search methods are insufficient….

…From our privileged position in history, we know that advances in energy use often come with increases in efficiency, not simply increases in size or expansiveness. Think of the modern miniaturization of smartphones versus the mid-20th-century trend of computers that filled up whole rooms. Perhaps we should be looking for sophisticated and compact alien spacecraft, rather than motherships spewing misused energy….

(17) EYE ON AN EXOPLANET. “Webb images nearest super-Jupiter, opening a new window to exoplanet research” from Max-Planck-Gesellschaft.

Using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), a team of astronomers led by the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy imaged a new exoplanet that orbits a star in the nearby triple system Epsilon Indi. The planet is a cold super-Jupiter exhibiting a temperature of around 0 degrees Celsius and a wide orbit comparable to that of Neptune around the Sun. This measurement was only possible thanks to JWST’s unprecedented imaging capabilities in the thermal infrared. It exemplifies the potential of finding many more such planets similar to Jupiter in mass, temperature, and orbit. Studying them will improve our knowledge of how gas giants form and evolve in time….

What do we know about Eps Ind Ab?

“We discovered a signal in our data that did not match the expected exoplanet,” says Matthews. The point of light in the image was not in the predicted location. “But the planet still appeared to be a giant planet,” adds Matthews. However, before being able to make such an assessment, the astronomers had to exclude the signal was coming from a background source unrelated to Eps Ind A.

“It is always hard to be certain, but from the data, it seemed quite unlikely the signal was coming from an extragalactic background source,” explains Leindert Boogaard, another MPIA scientist and a co-author of the research article. Indeed, while browsing astronomical databases for other observations of Eps Ind, the team came across imaging data from 2019 obtained with the VISIR infrared camera attached to the European Southern Observatory’s (ESO) Very Large Telescope (VLT). After re-analysing the images, the team found a faint object precisely at the position where it should be if the source imaged with JWST belonged to the star Eps Ind A.

The scientists also attempted to understand the exoplanet atmosphere based on the available images of the planet in three colours: two from JWST/MIRI and one from VLT/VISIR. Eps Ind Ab is fainter than expected at short wavelengths. This could indicate substantial amounts of heavy elements, particularly carbon, which builds molecules such as methane, carbon dioxide, and carbon monoxide, commonly found in gas-giant planets. Alternatively, it might indicate that the planet has a cloudy atmosphere. However, more work is needed to reach a final conclusion.

(18) ATOMIC CLUBHOUSE. [Item by Steven French.] “‘Every 14-year-old boy’s dream’: Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction” in the Guardian. A must-have for the budding tech billionaire:

…It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh…

(19) VIDEO OF THE DAY The YouTube channel Grammaticus Books has released another vintage SF video as part of the multi-YouTube-channel, Rocket Summer, event. This time his 9-minute review looks at the Robert Heinlein novel Tunnel in the Sky.

Tunnel in the Sky (1955).  Arguably not his best book – it is a young adult coming of age story – it does though reveal some of the themes that recur in a number of his works including societal structure.  This one has a bit of a Lord of the Flies feel: that novel came out the previous year. Grammaticus does pick up on something Heinlein does not openly convey but does hint at in a few places, is that the main protagonist is from an ethnic minority: remember, this novel was published in 1955 USA.

[Thanks to Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, Paul Weimer, Rob Thornton, Steve Vertlieb, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Steven French, and Kathy Sullivan for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel “DD Not DDS” Dern.]

2024 WSFA Small Press Award for Short Fiction Finalists

The Washington (DC) Science Fiction Association (WSFA) has announced the finalists for the 2024 WSFA Small Press Award for Short Fiction:

  • “Baby Golem” by Barbara Krasnoff, Jewish Futures: Science Fiction from the World’s Oldest Diaspora, ed. by Michael A Burstein,  Fantastic Books (2023); and
  • “Better Living Through Algorithms” by Naomi Kritzer, Clarkesworld Magazine, Issue 200 (May 2023) ed. by Neil Clarke
  • “A Bowl of Soup on the 87th Floor” by Kai Holmwood, Dreamforge Magazine, Issue 10 (March 2023) ed. by Scot Noel
  • “By the Works of Her Hands” by LaShawn M Wanak,Never Too Old to Save the World: A Midlife Calling Anthology, ed. by Alana Joli Abbott & Addie King, Outland Entertainment (February 2023)
  • “Interstate Mohinis” by M. L. Krishnan, Diaboloical Plots, Issue 100B (June 2023) ed. by Kel Coleman
  • “Machines” by Jennifer R. Povey, Game On!ed. by Stephen Kotowych & Tony Pi, Zombies Need Brains (July 2023)
  • “Nothing But the Gods on Their Backs” by Alex T. Singer,Metaphorosis, (June 2023) ed. by B. Morris Allen
  • “Six Meals at Fanelli’s” by Annika Barranti Klein, Fusion Fragment, Issue 16 (April 2023) ed. by Cavan Terrill.

The award honors the efforts of small press publishers in providing a critical venue for short fiction in the area of speculative fiction, and showcases the best original short fiction published by small presses in the previous year (2023). An unusual feature of the selection process is that the voting is done with the identity of the author and publisher hidden so that the final choice is based solely on the quality of the story.

The winner is chosen by members of the Washington Science Fiction Association (www.wsfa.org), and the award will be presented at their annual convention, Capclave (www.capclave.org), held this year on September 27 – September 29 at the Rockville Hilton & Executive Meeting Center, 1750 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD.

[Based on a press release.]