(1) BSFA AWARDS LONGLIST. The British Science Fiction Association today put out the longlist for the BSFA Awards (see “Second Round of 2024 BSFA Awards Nominations Begins”.)
Chris M. Barkley and Jason Sanford’s “The 2023 Hugo Awards: A Report on Censorship and Exclusion” is a nominee in the Best Short Non-Fiction category.
(2) CLARKEWORLD’S BEST. Neil Clarke has released “Clarkesworld 2024 Reader’s Poll Finalists”. The public has until February 15 to vote on the winners at Surveymonkey.
(3) LOCUS RECOMMENDED READING LIST. The 2024 Locus Recommended Reading List has been posted by Locus Online.
Voting has opened in the Locus Awards Poll. The deadline to vote is April 15.
(4) JET CRASH IN NORTHEAST PHILADELPHIA LAST EVENING. [Item by Steve Vertlieb.] CNN: “Medevac jet crashes in northeast Philadelphia neighborhood”.
Northeast Airport lies on Grant Avenue in Philadelphia. I live on Grant Avenue, some five minutes from the site of the departure of a Lear Jet medical transport plane that took off at a few minutes past six last evening with a little girl being transported home following life-saving surgery.
I was enroute to my girlfriend Shelly’s home to go out to dinner at Tiffany’s Restaurant on the Boulevard. I had considered taking Roosevelt Boulevard North down to Oxford Circle, as it may have been a faster trip but, at the last second, decided to follow Bustleton Avenue down to Castor, instead.
I arrived at Shelly’s house at a few moments past six. We drove down Levick Street to the boulevard, and turned left into the middle lanes to continue our journey. Within seconds we were dodging police vehicles, fire trucks, and ambulances trying desperately to reach Cottman Avenue and Roosevelt Boulevard amidst screaming sirens where, thirty seconds after takeoff, the Lear Medical Jet had crashed into Cottman Avenue near the boulevard, across from the Roosevelt Mall where I had grown up.
Traffic was being re-routed from virtually every direction, and I found it difficult to keep from being hit by other oncoming busses and trucks while attempting to crossover onto nearby side streets. As I passed Cottman Avenue on the boulevard, I turned to my left and saw flashing lights, emergency vehicles, and bright flames bursting into the rainy night sky.
Had I decided to travel down Roosevelt Boulevard on my way to the Oxford Circle, as I had originally planned, I might have traveled past the outside lanes of Roosevelt Boulevard, at the corner of Cottman Avenue going South, just at the moment of impact of the small jet into the congested community adjoining the fatal crash.
It took us over an hour to finally reach our dinner destination on a trip that normally might have taken fifteen or twenty minutes. We didn’t know just what had occurred mere inches from our travels North on the boulevard until we reached Tiffany’s, and were told by the staff that a plane had fatally crashed into our tightknit community. We were shaken, but glad to be alive.
Our hearts go out to our neighbors in our surrounding community, and to the families of those who perished in this terrible, nightmarish tragedy. May God Rest Their Sweet Souls.
(5) BLACK HISTORY MONTH. Axios begins Black History Month by recounting “What Octavia Butler saw on Feb. 1, 2025, three decades ago”.
Science fiction writer Octavia Butler wrote in her 1993 novel “Parable of the Sower” that Feb. 1, 2025, would be a time of fires, violence, racism, addiction, climate change, social inequality and an authoritarian “President Donner.”
- That day is today.
The big picture: This Black History Month, which begins this year on a day of Butler’s dystopian vision, Axios will examine what the next 25 years may hold for Black Americans based on the progress in the first quarter of this century.
- Through her fiction, Butler foresaw U.S. society’s direction and the potential for civil societies to collapse thanks to the weight of economic disparities and climate change — with blueprints for hope.
- Afrofuturist writers today interpret Butler’s work as metaphorical warnings that appear to be coming true and a call to action….

(6) A CITY ON MARS REVIEW. [Item by Kyra.] Published in 2023.
A City On Mars, by Kelly Weinersmith and Zach Weinersmith
Nonfiction/Related
Can you make babies in space? Should corporations govern space settlements? What about space war? Are we headed for a housing crisis on the Moon’s Peaks of Eternal Light—and what happens if you’re left in the Craters of Eternal Darkness? Why do astronauts love taco sauce? Speaking of meals, what’s the legal status of space cannibalism? The Weinersmiths investigate perhaps the biggest questions humanity will ever ask itself—whether and how to become multiplanetary.
This is a clear-eyed look at the current barriers to settling space, including technological, physiological, sociological, and legal issues. This may be a must-read for anyone interested in the subject; it’s not the deepest possible examination (it is a pop-science book, after all), but it’s probably one of the broadest.
(7) GET READY FOR WASTED WEEKEND. Booktube luminary Criminolly has been hosting an event called Garbaugust, including the reading of some trashy books in August. Last year he added a mini-event, Wasted Weekend. It’s coming up again on February 15-16. Grammaticus Books wants viewers to pick their book: “I Need YOU to VOTE FOR….” But I don’t know – these are not names I associated with the word “trashy” —
Vote for your favorite trashy novel for this year’s Wasted Weekend. A reading event created by CriminOlly. Choose from a diverse selection of books by authors such as Samuel R. Delany, L. Sprague DeCamp, Terrence Dicks, Frederick Pohl, C.M. Kornbluth and of course…Lin Carter the King of Trash!
(8) JOHN ERWIN: CORA BUHLERT’S FAVORITE HE-MAN. [Item by Cora Buhlert.] John Erwin [who died December 20] was my He-Man. For most Germans, their He-Man is either Norbert Langer, who voiced him in the long-running German audio drama series, or Sasha Hehn or Heiko Liebig, who voiced him in the German dub of the Filmation He-Man and She-Ra cartoons.
But even though I first heard He-Man speak in the Filmation cartoon He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, I didn’t watch the German dub, but the English version via Sky Channel, when my Dad worked in the Netherlands in the 1980s. And in that cartoon, the voice of He-Man and his alter ego Prince Adam was none other than John Erwin.
If you rewatch the iconic opening narration of the cartoon – where John Erwin explains the entire premise of the series in one minute and ten seconds – you’ll notice the subtle difference between Prince Adam’s more youthful tones (Adam turned nineteen in the course of the series, while John Erwin was 47, when he first voiced him) and He-Man’s booming heroic voice.
However, John Erwin didn’t just voice He-Man and Prince Adam, but as was common with Filmation, he voiced multiple other characters in the He-Man and She-Ra cartoons as well, showcasing his amazing range. And so John Erwin lent his voice to Skeletor’s henchmen Beast-Man, Whiplash and Webstor. He was the delightfully dim-witted heroic warrior Ram-Man and the wise but grumpy dragon Granamyr as well as many one-of guest characters.
Beyond He-Man, John Erwin appeared in the western series Rawhide alongside Clint Eastwood, one of his comparatively few parts in front of the camera, and voiced Reggie in various Archie cartoons over the years. He was also the voice of Morris the Cat in the commercials for 9-Lives cat food. And if you ever needed proof that dragons are related to cats, just compare the snarky Morris to the equally snarky Granamyr.
Voice actors are unseen and often unsung. This is unfair, because their talent is what brings cartoon characters to life and turns them into icons. John Erwin’s voice played a big part in turning the Filmation He-Man cartoon into the runaway success that it was and in turning He-Man into the iconic hero he became.

(9) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.
[Written by Paul Weimer.]
February 1, 1954 — Bill Mumy, 71.
By Paul Weimer: Bill Mumy’s intersection with my genre show watching boils down to three properties, and they are the three ones that you think they are. I first saw him as the mutant overpowered psychic child Anthony in one of the most terrifying Twilight Zone episodes of all time, “It’s a Good Life”. What happens when a young boy develops psychic powers and takes control of the town. Nothing good…I mean, no wait, Anthony, I mean, it’s a good life. I swear, it’s a good life. The whole idea that he cuts off the town from the rest of the universe is terrifying in and of itself, isn’t it? You can’t escape him, you can’t escape his power. Mumy also appears in a few other Twilight Zone episodes in various roles, but they are nothing compared to the power and centrality of his performance in “It’s a Good Life”
His role as Will Robinson in Lost in Space couldn’t be any different. I stumbled across episodes of Lost in Space in reruns not long after seeing the Twilight Zone episode. As the naive, but well-meaning youngest child of the Robinson family, Will Robinson couldn’t be any different than the psychic Anthony. Whether with Robbie, or Dr. Smith (and it seemed he spent more time with either of them than the rest of his family), he showed the childlike wonder of being on alien planets. I was delighted he had a small role in the recent remake of Lost in Space, too, as the “real” Zachary Smith. (He gets his identity stolen by Parker Posey’s character). That was a neat bit of turnaround, and not at all stunt casting.
The other genre work I associate Mumy with is, of course, Babylon 5, and Lennier. As the assistant to Delenn, he stands with Vir (Stephen Furst) as one of the two maintained underlings in the diplomatic corps. While Vir feels like an everyman (as the Centauri as, outwardly very much human), Lennier could show, on occasion, through Mumy’s acting, just how alien and not-human the Minbari were. He was meek, mild and deferential…until he needed not to be, and then could be all too inhumanly dangerous and determined. And given that this story is ultimately a tragedy, Lennier’s story is one that hits me in the feels, from start to finish. Such great acting. I remember when watching “Midnight on the Firing Line” and seeing his name in the credits and wondering what the child actor had become. He had become a fine adult actor, that’s what.
Happy birthday!

(10) COMICS SECTION.
- Broom Hilda wonders if she has what it takes to be a writer.
- Heart of the City needs to know what version.
- Wumo suspects miraculous mischief.
- Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal reveals hidden thoughts.
- Ink Pen has a problem with changes.
- Rhymes with Orange might only be funny to some.
(11) THE TEST OF TIME. The Unofficial Hugo Book Club Blog analyzes the Best Dramatic Hugo finalists of 1984 as part of their continuing series: “Big Worldcon Is Watching (Hugo Cinema 1984)”.
L.A. Con II, the 42nd Worldcon, was the largest World Science Fiction Convention of all time up to that point, with more than 8,000 fans in attendance (to this day, only the 2023 Worldcon in Chengdu, China has eclipsed that number). Science fiction cinema was bigger than ever. The Hugo Awards were bigger than ever. But in 1984, the Hugo for Best Dramatic Presentation was still considered a second-tier award.
“We will now proceed with the minor awards: Best Dramatic Presentation,” Toastmaster Robert Bloch quipped as he introduced the nominees: Bradbury adaptation Something Wicked This Way Comes, special effects maestro Douglas Trumbull’s Brainstorm, early hacking movie Wargames, blockbuster Return of the Jedi, and Oscar Best Picture contender The Right Stuff.
It’s an uneven shortlist that reveals both a tension between the populism and the insularity to which the award was often prone….
(12) STAND BY FOR THE END OF THE WORLD. “OpenAI Strikes Deal With US Government to Use Its AI for Nuclear Weapon Security” – Futurism knows why this sounds familiar.
Remember the plot to the 1984 sci-fi blockbuster “The Terminator”?
“There was a nuclear war,” a character explains. “Defense network computers. New… powerful… hooked into everything, trusted to run it all. They say it got smart, a new order of intelligence. Then it saw all people as a threat, not just the ones on the other side. Decided our fate in a microsecond: extermination.”
It seems like either the execs at OpenAI have never seen it or they’re working overtime to make that premise a reality.
Don’t believe us? OpenAI has announced that the US National Laboratories will use its deeply flawed AI models to help with a “comprehensive program in nuclear security.”
As CNBC reports, up to 15,000 scientists working at the institutions will get access to OpenAI’s latest o1 series of AI models — the ones that Chinese startup DeepSeek embarrassed on the world stage earlier this month.
According to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who announced the partnership at an event in Washington, DC, the tech will be “focused on reducing the risk of nuclear war and securing nuclear materials and weapons worldwide,” as quoted by CNBC.
If any alarm bells are ringing by this point, you’re not alone. We’ve seen plenty of instances of OpenAI’s AI models leaking sensitive user data and hallucinating false claims with abandon….
(13) THIEVES LIKE US. Meanwhile, OpenAI apparently can’t keep its own work secure, earning a very loud raspberry from Guardian columnist Marina Hyde: “Oh, I’m sorry, tech bros – did DeepSeek copy your work? I can hardly imagine your distress”.
I once saw an episode of America’s Dumbest Criminals where a man called the cops to report his car stolen, only for it to turn out he’d stolen it from someone else in the first place. I couldn’t help thinking of him this week while watching OpenAI’s Sam Altman wet his pants about the fact that a Chinese hedge fund might have made unauthorised use of his own chatbot models, including ChatGPT, to train its new little side project. This is the cheaper, more open, extremely share-price-slashing DeepSeek.
As news of DeepSeek played havoc with the tech stock market, OpenAI pressed its hanky to its nose and released a statement: “We are aware of and reviewing indications that DeepSeek may have inappropriately distilled our models, and will share information as we know more,” this ran….
…So, to put it another way … wait, Sam – you’re not telling us that the Chinese hedge fund crawled all over your IP without asking and took it for themselves? Oh my God, IMAGINE?! You must feel used and abused. Financially violated. Like all your years of creativity were just grist to some other bastard’s mill. Like a host organism. Like a schmuck. Like Earth’s most screamingly preposterous hypocrite….
(14) SUPERHAMLET. From Christopher Reeve’s appearance on The Muppet Show long ago: “Brush Up Your Shakespeare”.
(15) VIDEO OF THE DAY. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] Moid Moidelhoff over at Media Death Cult considers the sense of place as a principal character in some SF/F… “When Location is the Main Character”.
[Thanks to Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Olav Rokne, Mark Roth-Whitworth, 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 Daniel Dern.]
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(4) Darrell Schweitzer and his wife Mattie Brahan, and Terri Sisk Graybill & spouse all live right near there. And if it wasn’t bad enough that the girl had come from Mexico for the lifesaving treatment, her mother was with her. Both dead.’
(5) If only she’d used that sword on Drumpf…
(7) I’m offended. Lin Carter’s fantasies were ok. But his editing was brilliant.
(11) “populism vs insularity”? I beg your pardon, it’s fen voting on what fen like, not what’s mainstream popular.
@mark
Fans can be amazingly insular. Think of fan wars….
(4) Steve, I’m glad you’re safe.
(7) I don’t know this CriminOlly at all. Are they known to have, let’s say an attitude toward sff?
(9) May I just say, yes, yes, YES? All excellent acting, but a child that young, delivering that performance, in that story, in “It’s a Good Life,” is just amazing.
Lis, well I will say I’m not at all impressed with him as he says this on his site: “This week saw me starting my Read What You Own challenge, where I’ll aim to get through 100 books I already own before I buy anything new.”
(12) Are you effing kidding me?
(13) Couldn’t have happened to a more deserving group of *-*****. And Marina Hyde is a (British) national treasure.
9) To me, Bill Mumy will always be Artie Barnes, of Barnes & Barnes. (I’ve never seen Lost in Space, so that helps.)
He and Art Barnes (Bill Haimer, who passed away a few years ago) were on the Dr. Demento show sporadically over the decades, and they always sounded like they were in their late 20’s. It’s hard for me to accept that Mumy is only a couple of years younger than I am.
PJEvans: you clearly misunderstood what I said. I expect us to be… well, insular has negative connotations, where what I think is that our taste are, ahhh, more refined than the mundanes, and thus our choices should be different.
Marinna Hyde – folks from the UK have problems with her, showing some TERF attitudes. I only see her in the Guardian via US, and when she gets on a tear… I’m pounding my desk laughing.
9) Just realized I’d flip-flopped Barnes & Barnes. Bill Mumy is “Art” and Robert Haimer was “Artie”.
(And, of course, it’s Robert Haimer, not Bill Haimer. I blame the mix-up on the fact we just watched Star Trek: Section 31, destroying my ability to think. What a horrendous film!)
@Cat Eldridge–So I’m probably not missing any important context or secret meaning for his choosing to list those particular books as “trash.” I can continue to ignore his existence.
9) I saw an episode of The Rockford Files where Mumy had a bit part. I didn’t recognize him as a human.
12) Scroll with me if you want to file.
Before he played Anthony on the Twilight Zone, Mumy appeared on an episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents entitled “Bang You’re Dead” where he played a young boy excited by the visit of his uncle who couldn’t wait for his uncle to give him the promised present and who went thru his uncles suitcase and found a loaded handgun which he mistook as a toy and who went off to play cowboy. His mother and uncle discover that he has the gun and franticly take off to find him before he hurts himself or someone else.
The 2002-2003 UPN Twilight Zone featured an episode, “It’s Still a Good Life” that is a sequel to “It’s A Good Life” starring Mumy as Anthony with Chloris Leachmen returning as Anthony’s mother and featuring Mumy’s own daughter Liliana as Anthony’s daughter, who it seems is even more powerful than her father.
12) Holy crap! I mean, McDonalds couldn’t even trust AI to take drive-thru orders.
13) It’s a delicious irony if true, but I’ve seen credible arguments that DeepSeek did in fact do it all themselves. The claim of plagiarism may very well just be Altman trying to save face.
@John Lorentz : I was going to mention Barnes and Barnes as well.
I am shocked (shocked!) to find out that the AI industry has been degraded by the use of plagiarism.
Lis Carey notes So I’m probably not missing any important context or secret meaning for his choosing to list those particular books as “trash.” I can continue to ignore his existence.
Precisely.
In a social media obsessed society, anyone can express an opinion. That doesn’t mean that opinion had any validity as that that would be contingent upon the knowledge of the individual. Here I doubt there’s much, if any, as this book reviewer has but a hundred books in his possession.
Even I who can’t now read novels has listened to some five hundred audiobooks in the past eight years since I lost that ability. And I just discovered the short stories set in Reynolds’ Revelation Space series! His short stories yea!
Cat Eldrige, The reviewer doesn’t seem worth attention given what he is willing to call “trash,” but in the interests of justice to the English language and elementary logic, I point out that the statement “I’ll aim to get through 100 books I already own before I buy anything new.” is easily, and perhaps most readily, open to the interpretation that, of the hundreds or thousands of books he owns, he plans to read or reread 100 before buying more. It easily could even mean that he has 100 or more bought but UNREAD books on his shelves. (Like many of us fen.) I suspect that I do own that many unread ones myself,and I’m not acceptingany such challenge!
Cliff: oh, no, the Chinese couldn’t do that all themselves, they had to have stolen it from us, I mean, there are only 1.2 billion of them, and 330M of us, but we’re the only smart ones…
Amusingly, CrimnOlly (I get 2-3 videos pushed to me every month on Youtube) posted a video today answering his audience’s question as to how many books he has. His answer is an estimate of about 2500 physical books and 3000 ebooks. Reading about 200-250 books a year, means he’s got about a decade’s worth of unread books. So one might see why reading 100 books before buying any more is a definite challenge for him.
The video posted in (12) is by someone else entirely and unknown to me, but to give some small credit to him he immediately declares that Delany is not a trashy author but then reads out jacket copy for Neveryon that does makes it sound like “Slaves of Gor”-trash. And let’s be honest about Lin Carter – from having read numerous interviews of successful 70s/80s writers – if Lin Carter was an inspiration to numerous young writers in the early 70s, it’s because they read one of his books and thought “Jesus, if that got published then there’s simply got to be a chance for me.”
There is probably a collective post worth making about a certain type of Book Youtuber, who omnivorously reads and comments on 20th century genre fiction. Three the algorithm regularly throws at me at are Bookpilled, The Outlaw Bookseller, and Scott Bradfield. There are a couple of even younger guys I can’t find at the moment and it was pleasing to watch reactions from people who weren’t even born when I was reading this stuff very belatedly in the mid-90s.
@ mark – indeed!
Matthew Davis, Thanks for the clarification. But if Lin Carter were the King of Trash, where would we put R.L. Fanthorpe? And many another?
(9) Just a nitpick. The robot wasn’t Robbie. That’s the “Forbidden Planet” robot, although the spelling of Robbie varies. In “Lost in Space”, the robot was B-9 (although sometimes just called “Robot”. They look similar in general outline but the details are quite different. (And Bill is a great guy. We’ve known each other since Junior High.)