Pixel Scroll 3/14/24 I Am The Go-Captain Of The Pixelfore

(1) LIBBY BOOK AWARDS. Congratulations to Martha Wells and Rebecca Yarros, two of the 17 winners of the inaugural Libby Book Awards, chosen by a panel of 1700 librarians worldwide.

  • Fiction: The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store, by James McBride
  • Nonfiction: The Wager, by David Grann
  • Young Adult: Divine Rivals, by Rebecca Ross
  • Audiobook: I Have Some Questions for You, by Rebecca Makkai
  • Debut Author: The House in the Pines, by Ana Reyes
  • Diverse Author: Camp Zero, by Michelle Min Sterling
  • Comic Graphic Novel: The Talk, by Darrin Bell
  • Memoir & Autobiography: Pageboy, by Elliot Page
  • Cookbook: Start Here, by Sohla El-Waylly
  • Mystery: Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers, by Jesse Q. Sutanto
  • Thriller: Bright Young Women, by Jessica Knoll
  • Romance: Georgie, All Along, by Kate Clayborn
  • Fantasy: Fourth Wing, by Rebecca Yarros
  • Romantasy: Iron Flame, by Rebecca Yarros
  • Science Fiction: System Collapse, by Martha Wells
  • Historical Fiction: Let Us Descend, by Jesmyn Ward
  • Book Club Pick: Yellowface, by R. F. Kuang

(2) BOOK BANS SURGED IN 2023. “American Library Association reports record number of unique book titles challenged in 2023” at ALA.org.

Stack of books background. many books piles

The number of titles targeted for censorship surged 65 percent in 2023 compared to 2022, reaching the highest levels ever documented by the American Library Association (ALA). The new numbers released today show efforts to censor 4,240 unique book titles* in schools and libraries. This tops the previous high from 2022, when 2,571 unique titles were targeted for censorship. 

ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom documented 1,247 demands to censor library books, materials, and resources in 2023. Four key trends emerged from the data gathered from 2023 censorship reports: 

  • Pressure groups in 2023 focused on public libraries in addition to targeting school libraries. The number of titles targeted for censorship at public libraries increased by 92 percent over the previous year; school libraries saw an 11 percent increase.
  • Groups and individuals demanding the censorship of multiple titles, often dozens or hundreds at a time, drove this surge.  
  • Titles representing the voices and lived experiences of LGBTQIA+ and BIPOC individuals made up 47 percent of those targeted in censorship attempts. 
  • There were attempts to censor more than 100 titles in each of these 17 states: Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin.

“The reports from librarians and educators in the field make it clear that the organized campaigns to ban books aren’t over, and that we must all stand together to preserve our right to choose what we read,” said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, director of ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom. “Each demand to ban a book is a demand to deny each person’s constitutionally protected right to choose and read books that raise important issues and lift up the voices of those who are often silenced.  By joining initiatives like Unite Against Book Bans and other organizations that support libraries and schools, we can end this attack on essential community institutions and our civil liberties.”…

(3) PNH’S NEW POST AT TPG. “Patrick Nielsen Hayden to Become Editor-at-Large for TPG” reports Publishers Weekly.

Patrick Nielsen Hayden has assumed the title of editor-at-large for the Tor Publishing Group. Hayden has been with TPG for 35 years and most recently served as v-p, associate publisher, and editor-in-chief.

During his tenure, he has published the debut novels of authors such as Charlie Jane Anders, Corey Doctorow, John Scalzi, and Jo Walton, and has received three Hugo Awards and a World Fantasy Award for his editorial work. In 2020, he founded our Tor Essentials imprint, which highlights a new generation of SFF classics. 

As editor-at-large, he will continue to edit such authors as Scalzi, Doctorow, and Walton, and will continue to select and oversee the Tor Essentials. 

In announcing Hayden’s new role, TPG president and publisher Devi Pillai added that the company “will not be replacing Patrick in his previous position—he is one of a kind.”

Patrick Nielsen Hayden in 2013. Photo by Scott Edelman.

(4) WICKED WORLD’S FAIR FOLLOWUP. “Eventbrite Refutes Mach’s Claims About WWF Payouts, Hints at Possible ‘Actions’” at The Steampunk Explorer. The linked post adds a great deal more coverage after this introductory item:

Amid the fallout from the Wicked World’s Fair (WWF), show organizer Jeff Mach has repeatedly blamed Eventbrite, the online ticketing and event management platform, for his inability to cover the event’s expenses. But in a statement provided Wednesday to The Steampunk Explorer, Eventbrite refuted key aspects of his claims.

WWF was held Feb. 23-25 at the SureStay Plus hotel in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. Mach used Eventbrite to manage ticket sales, as well as sales of vendor spaces. During the event, as a sound crew was awaiting payment and vendors were requesting refunds, he told them that Eventbrite had frozen his account, preventing use of the platform’s payout features.

In the weeks that followed, Mach continued to blame Eventbrite for payment issues at WWF. “I had repeated assurances from Eventbrite that the money would be forthcoming,” he remarked in one statement to The Steampunk Explorer. “Why Eventbrite had the account locked down, but refused to tell us, I don’t know.”

This was the company’s response on Wednesday: “Eventbrite offers, but does not guarantee, multiple ways to request funds ahead of the event date. Due to an error on the organizer’s end, we can confirm that a few of these advance payouts were delayed. This was quickly remedied, and the organizer received much of his payout ahead of the event and has now been paid out in full.”…

(5) I NEVER WANTED TO GO DOWN THE STONEY END. [Item by Danny Sichel.] Last month, Doug Muir did a piece about the impending death of Voyager 1, originally launched in 1977. “Death, Lonely Death” at Crooked Timber.

…Voyager has grown old.  It was never designed for this!  Its original mission was supposed to last a bit over three years.  Voyager has turned out to be much tougher than anyone ever imagined, but time gets us all.  Its power source is a generator full of radioactive isotopes, and those are gradually decaying into inert lead.  Year by year, the energy declines, the power levels  relentlessly fall.  Year by year, NASA has been switching off Voyager’s instruments to conserve that dwindling flicker.  They turned off its internal heater a few years ago, and they thought that might be the end.  But those 1970s engineers built to last, and the circuitry and the valves kept working even as the temperature dropped down, down, colder than dry ice, colder than liquid nitrogen, falling towards absolute zero.  

(Voyager stored its internal data on a digital tape recorder.  Yes, a tape recorder, storing information on magnetic tape.  It wasn’t designed to function at a hundred degrees below zero.  It wasn’t designed to work for decades, winding and rewinding, endlessly re-writing data.  But it did.)…

… We thought we knew how Voyager would end.  The power would gradually, inevitably, run down.  The instruments would shut off, one by one.  The signal would get fainter.  Eventually either the last instrument would fail for lack of power, or the signal would be lost.

We didn’t expect that it would go mad.

In December 2023, Voyager started sending back gibberish instead of data.  A software glitch, though perhaps caused by an underlying hardware problem; a cosmic ray strike, or a side effect of the low temperatures, or just aging equipment randomly causing some bits to flip.

The problem was, the gibberish was coming from the flight direction software — something like an operating system.  And no copy of that operating system remained in existence on Earth….

But all is not lost. Well, probably. But not necessarily. At the link you can read the rest of the story about the people trying to put the smoke back in the system from fifteen billion kilometers away.

(6) WEIMER GUESTS ON WORLDBUILDING FOR MASOCHISTS. Paul Weimer joins hosts Marshall Ryan Maresca, Cass Morris, and Natania Barron for  episode 124 of the Worldbuilding for Masochists podcast, “Worldbuilding in Review”.

We spend a lot of time thinking about how to work with worldbuilding as writers — but how does a reviewer approach the topic when they’re reading works of sci-fi and fantasy? Guest Paul Weimer joins us to share his insights as a prolific consumer and critiquer of speculative fiction! Paul talks about the details that he pays attention to, the things he looks for, and the things that draw his attention, as well as discussing the purpose of reviews and who they’re for (hint: it’s not the authors!).

In this episode, we spin things around to look at how we approach worldbuilding and narrative construction as readers — since we are, of course, readers as well as writers! We explore of aspects of how a writer can set and, hopefully, meet expectations through worldbuilding — and where that can sometimes become challenging as a series goes on. What makes a world exciting to enter in the first place? What grips a reader and keeps them with it? And how can you use worldbuilding to make your wizard chase sequence a more cohesive part of your world?

(7) ENTRIES SOUGHT FOR BALTICON SHORT FILM FESTIVAL. Balticon Sunday Short Science Fiction Film Festival has been revised and is looking for talented filmmakers. Full guidelines here: “Short Film Festival”. Entries must be submitted by April 10 2024.

In 2024, the Balticon Sunday Short Science Fiction Film Festival (BSSSFFF) will take place on Sunday evening at 7:00pm. We will thrill festival attendees with independently produced short films from around the region and across the globe. BSSSFFF features live action and animated films in the science fiction, fantasy, and horror from some of the best independent filmmakers this side of the Crab Nebula.

Awards will be given in both the Live Action and Animation category based upon audience preferences. Some of the history of this film festival can be found on the BSFS website.

(8) TRY SUNDAY MORNING TRANSPORT. Mary Robinette Kowal has posted a link valid for a 60-day free trial of Sunday Morning Transport.

(9) ONE SUPERHERO ACTOR CONS ANOTHER. “Simu Liu was scammed by a Hollywood Boulevard Spider-Man” at Entertainment Weekly.

Simu Liu is reflecting on an enemy he made during his first visit to Los Angeles: a not-so-friendly neighborhood Spider-Man.

During an interview with Jesse Tyler Ferguson on Dinner’s On Me, the Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings actor recalled an unfortunate encounter with a swindling web-slinger on Hollywood Boulevard. “I remember I was taking photos of the Chinese Theater and a Spider-Man came up to me and was like, ‘I’ll help you!’” the actor remembered.

Alas, Liu’s spider-sense didn’t alert him to the insidious plot that was about to unfold. “And then he took a bunch of photos of me, and then he took some selfies of himself, and then he was like, ‘That’ll be $20!’” the actor said. “And that was mortifying for me, because I didn’t have $20 to give him. Core memory, clearly.”

(10) INTELLECTUAL (?) PROPERTY. Jon Del Arroz tagged me on X.com about this. I clicked through and was fascinated to learn he has declared Sad Puppies is a movement “owned and led by JDA!”

OFFICIAL Sad Puppies merch is now live on the store! Show your allegiance to this great movement which is owned and led by JDA!

(11) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Born March 14, 1933 Michael Caine, 91. On my list of favorite British performers of all time, Michael Caine is near the top of that list. Both his genre and non-genre performances are amazing. So let’s take a look at those performances.

Caine portrayed Alfred Pennyworth in Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy. He was quite stellar in this role. And he was in The Prestige, a truly great film, as John Cutter, in Inception as Stephen Miles, Professor John Brand in Interstellar and Sir Michael Crosby in Tenet.

Did you see him in as Ebenezer Scrooge in The Muppet Christmas Carol? If not, go see it now. He’s wonderful and The Muppet take on the Dickens story is, errr, well actually touching. Really it is.

Definitely not genre is The Man Who Would Be King, based off the Kipling story, which starred him with Sean Connery, Saeed Jaffrey and Christopher Plummer. The two primary characters were played by Sean Connery — Daniel Dravot — and Caine played the other, Peachy Carnehan. A truly fantastic film. 

Michael Caine and Sean Connery in The Man Who Would Be King.

In the Jekyll & Hyde miniseries, he’s got the usual dual role of Dr Henry Jekyll / Mr Edward Hyde. He was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – in a Miniseries. He did win a Globe for Best Actor for playing Chief Insp. Frederick Abberline in the Jack Ripper miniseries airing the same time.

Nearly thirty years ago, he was Captain Nemo in a 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea miniseries. 

He’s in Austin Powers in Goldmember, third film in the franchise. He’s Nigel Powers, a British agent and Austin and Dr. Evil’s father. Can someone explain to me the appeal of these films? 

In Children of Men, he plays Jasper Palmer, Theo’s dealer and friend, Theo being the primary character in this dystopian film. 

He’s Chester King in Kingsman: The Secret Service. That’s off the Millarworld graphic novel of Kingsman: The Secret Service by Mark Millar and Dave Gibbons.

I’m reasonably sure that’s all I need to mention about his career.

(12) COMICS SECTION.

  • Blondie anticipates tomorrow’s celebration of World Sleep Day.
  • Frazz figures out the anatomy involved in scientific advancement.
  • Does F Minus depict the dream of some File 770 commenters?
  • Non Sequitur imagines the earliest days of streaming.
  • Carpe Diem has a new origin story.

(13) OCTOTHORPE. In episode 105 of the Octothorpe podcast, John Coxon watches movies, Alison Scott walks on the Moon, and Liz Batty has special bonds. Listen here: “Scorching Hot Month-Old Takes”.

In this episode, we talk through your letters of comment with diversions into Zodiac podcasts, poetry collections, and Scientology. We discuss the BSFA Awards shortlist and return to the Hugo Awards for another round of head-scratching and bewilderment.

A famous photograph of Margaret Hamilton standing beside printed outputs of the code that took the Apollo spacecraft to the Moon, overlaid with the words “Octothorpe 105” and “Liz has finished reading the latest Hugo Award exposés”.

(14) OUTSIDE THE BOX — AND INSIDE THE SHELVES. Harlan Ellison’s Greatest Hits can already be found in some bookstores, ahead of the official release date.

(15) GLIMPSE OF BLACK MIRROR. “Black Mirror Season 7 Will Arrive in 2025 With a Sequel to One of Its Most Beloved Episodes”IGN has the story.

Netflix’s long-running bleak anthology series, Black Mirror, is coming back for Season 7 next year, and it’s bringing a sequel to fan-favorite episode USS Callister with it.

The streaming platform announced the news during its Next on Netflix event in London (via The Hollywood Reporter), later bringing public confirmation with a cryptic message on X/Twitter. The post contains a video teasing the six episodes, and judging by the familiar logo that appears, it sounds like the third will be the one to give us our USS Callister sequel.

(16) THE GANG’S ALL HERE. “Doctor Who’s Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat unite to support Chris Chibnall”Radio Times cheers the gesture.

Doctor Who writers past and present have shared a photo together after Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat attended a performance of Chris Chibnall’s new play.

Recently returned showrunner Davies posted the image to his Instagram page alongside the caption: “A marvellous night out in Salisbury to see Chris Chibnall’s wonderful new play, One Last Push.”

And he added: “Also, we plotted Zarbi vs Garms”, referencing two classic Doctor Who monsters…

(17) TRUE OR FALSE? Radio Times reviews evidence supporting story that “Doctor Who’s Steven Moffat ‘returns to write 2024 Christmas special’”.

More than six years after his final episode of Doctor Who aired, it appears that former showrunner Steven Moffat may be returning to write a new episode of the sci-fi.

While the news has not yet been confirmed, it was picked up on Tuesday 12th March that producer Alison Sterling’s CV had been updated to note she had worked on the show’s 2024 Christmas special.

Underneath this, it was noted that the director of the episode is Alex Pillai, while it was stated that the writer is one Steven Moffat. The notes regarding the writer and director of the episode have since been removed….

One factor which may throw doubt on the idea that Moffat has written the special, is that Russell T Davies previously said that he himself was writing it back in 2022.

(18) STARSHIP HITS SOME MARKS. “SpaceX celebrates major progress on the third flight of Starship”ArsTechnica has details.

… The successful launch builds on two Starship test flights last year that achieved some, but not all, of their objectives and appears to put the privately funded rocket program on course to begin launching satellites, allowing SpaceX to ramp up the already-blistering pace of Starlink deployments.

“Starship reached orbital velocity!” wrote Elon Musk, SpaceX’s founder and CEO, on his social media platform X. “Congratulations SpaceX team!!”

SpaceX scored several other milestones with Thursday’s test flight, including a test of Starship’s payload bay door, which would open and shut on future flights to release satellites into orbit. A preliminary report from SpaceX also indicated Starship transferred super-cold liquid oxygen propellant between two tanks inside the rocket, a precursor to more ambitious in-orbit refueling tests planned in the coming years. Future Starship flights into deep space, such as missions to land astronauts on the Moon for NASA, will require SpaceX to transfer hundreds of tons of cryogenic propellant between ships in orbit.

Starship left a few other boxes unchecked Thursday. While it made it closer to splashdown than before, the Super Heavy booster plummeted into the Gulf of Mexico in an uncontrolled manner. If everything went perfectly, the booster would have softly settled into the sea after reigniting its engines for a landing burn.

A restart of one of Starship’s Raptor engines in space—one of the three new test objectives on this flight—did not happen for reasons SpaceX officials did not immediately explain.

Part rocket and part spacecraft, Starship is designed to launch up to 150 metric tons (330,000 pounds) of cargo into low-Earth orbit when SpaceX sets aside enough propellant to recover the booster and the ship. Flown in expendable mode, Starship could launch almost double that amount of payload mass to orbit, according to Musk….

Space.com has a video at the link: “SpaceX launches giant Starship rocket into space on epic 3rd test flight (video)”.

(19) FAILURE TO LAUNCH. Elsewhere, some bad news from Japan: “Space One’s Kairos rocket explodes on inaugural flight” reports Reuters.

Kairos, a small, solid-fuel rocket made by Japan’s Space One, exploded shortly after its inaugural launch on Wednesday as the firm tried to become the first Japanese company to put a satellite in orbit…

(20) TALKING TO NUMBER ONE. In Gizmodo’s opinion, “This New Robot Is So Far Ahead of Elon Musk’s Optimus That It’s Almost Embarrassing”.

As if Elon Musk needed yet another reason to hate OpenAI. Figure, a startup that partnered with OpenAI to develop a humanoid robot, released a new video on Wednesday. And it’s truly heads above anything Tesla has demonstrated to date with the Optimus robot.

The video from Figure, which is available on YouTube, shows a human interacting with a robot dubbed Figure 01 (pronounced Figure One). The human has a natural-sounding conversation with the robot, asking it to first identify what it’s looking at….

(21) MILLION DAYS TRAILER. “A Million Days” is available on Digital Platforms 18 March.

The year is 2041 and the next step in the future of humankind is imminent. After decades of training and research, the mission to create the first lunar colony is about to launch with Anderson as lead astronaut. Jay, an AI purpose built for the mission, has simulated every possible outcome for the expedition. Tensions arise when the chilling motives of Jay become apparent, sowing the seeds of distrust between Anderson, and the group that had gathered to quietly celebrate the launch. As the night descends into chaos, the group’s faith in one another and their mission begins to crack, with the knowledge that the decisions they make before sunrise, will change humanity forever.

[Thanks to Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Lance Oszko, Daniel Dern, Kathy Sullivan, Scott Edelman, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Steven French, and Mike Kennedy for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel Dern.]


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59 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 3/14/24 I Am The Go-Captain Of The Pixelfore

  1. Wait, I’m first?

    (2) A friend in Orlando said he’d ask the library for a copy of my new novel, Becoming Terran. I’m hoping it’ll be banned in FL…
    (3) Congrats to Patrick.
    (5) It was built by NASA engineers, not by an outsourced company. They built it the absolute best they could, not built to fall apart 1 min after the warranty ends.
    (10) So, all the puppies are wholly owned by JDA? Excause me, I need to go lay down while laughing.
    (12) Well, since you ask….
    (18) So, short version: “I fired a rocket, and it blew up. I fired another rocket, and it launched, then blew up. I fired a third one, it launched, went up, then burned up and fell over into the swamp. But the fourth…

  2. Although Michael Caine never portrayed the character, Peter O’Donnell claimed that he was the template for Willie Garvin in O’Donnell’s Modesty Blaise comics and later novels. And while it isn’t genre, Caine is wonderful in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (and, for that matter, Miss Congeniality).

    @mark: stayed oop?

  3. (1) Divine Rivals by Rebecca Ross and Camp Zero by Michelle Min Sterling are genre, too. I’ve heard good things about the Ross.

    (3) Woot! Talk about a great track record with debuts.

    (4) Yikes! As the airship turns.

    (11) Has anyone else seen Michael Caine in the psychological horror story “The Hand”? I watched it multiple times just because he was in it. But I haven’t seen it in decades.

    Also, look for Ian McDiarmid (Palpatine) as the manservant in “Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.”

    (14) I spotted it in a B&N! I might get it next time…

  4. (5) They’re pretty sure it’s a problem with memory gone bad, and that they can work around it. But it’s a 45-hour round trip for signals…

    (18) It blew up. They didn’t succeed.

  5. #10 — Anybody want to try to get a statement from Larry or Brad? Or was Sarah the final “owner” of the IP?

  6. Modesty Blaise includes genuine psychic powers (that is, not something she or Willie faked) in at least one arc.

    (no, I don’t recall which one, sorry. There was something with a piece of jewelry.)

  7. So who first coined the Sad Puppie term? I’m sure it wasn’t him who hasn’t got a grasp of what a movement is unless it’s the type that happens after a very bad meal. And perhaps not even then.

  8. (2) Writers used to dream of their books being Banned in Boston. Now, they have to go to Florida for that kind of publicity. And, sorry, Florida, but I found the air there unbreathable on my one visit, so I can’t even picket your book bannings.

    (5) Brave and noble, Voyager. I hope they can restore your mind, but even if they can’t, you been a wonder and an example to us all.

    (18) It seems clear that Musk is now actually running SpaceX. Too bad.

  9. (18)
    @P J Evans it did blow up, but it blew up after completing all the non-optional parts of a rocket launch. Largest successful orbital rocket ever flown.

    The Falcon rockets had more than thirty commercial launches before they landed one. From the payload’s point of view, what happens to the rocket after separation is a moot point. I wouldn’t be surprised if the next launch carries an actual payload, probably Star Link satellites.

    Musk is a terrible person, but he did start some neat things before he completely went off the rails. Some of which continue to be neat, mostly due to being handed off to far more stable individuals

  10. @Ryan H–Musk didn’t start SpaceX, and isn’t responsible for any of the engineering. I probably shouldn’t even be casting aspersions on him regarding the exploding rockets. Good or bad, it’s unlikely he really has anything to do with it.

    He also didn’t start either Tesla or PayPal.

  11. (2) I was in Miami once for a month nearly forty years ago before going to southwest Asia for Uncle Sam. Miserable weather it was.

    The only thing I remember clearly was getting enough vaccinations to impress any epidemiologist which didn’t stop me from developing malaria when I returned stateside. You stop taking the anti-malaria meds a month or so after you get back, and there’s a fair chance that you’re already infected with malaria with the meds just keeping it at bay. I was. Hospital I came. A miserable month that was.

  12. @Cat Eldridge: “Sad Puppies” was originally a Larry Correia thing. A very cursory web search hasn’t turned up his exact post, but I’m quite sure it was him.

  13. (4) I have, as an event sponsor, used Eventbrite some years ago for a few small events and found them to offer high quality, responsive service.

  14. Larry started the first “Sad Puppy” appeal in 2013 to get his book on the Hugo ballot. He fell short. It went on from there.

  15. Caine had a subtle cameo in Dunkirk, yet another Nolan joint. I was pleased with myself for catching it.

  16. JuMike Glyer say Larry started the first “Sad Puppy” appeal in 2013 to get his book on the Hugo ballot. He fell short. It went on from there.

    Ok, so has anyone ever, errr, trademarked in essence the name of a movement? Could the Pre-Joycean Fellowship had it spread beyond its small initial group and its meeting in local bars become a movement and then trademarked its name with Shetterly as the claimant?

    I mean just claiming it isn’t enough, you need to vigorously defend it!

  17. Cat Eldridge: I just ran a search on the USPTO site and didn’t come up with anyone having registered a trademark for Sad Puppies. (There is one for Mad Puppies.)

    It’s much easier to do what Chuck Tingle did when he registered TheRabidPuppies.com and filled it with content trolling Vox Day. And once he had registered a domain and paid a hosting service his expenses were done — no lawyer bills.

  18. (20) An awful lot of people I know looked at that demo and immediately rolled a Disbelieve check. Lots of Mechanical Turking going on in these demos, historically.

  19. Modesty Blaise includes genuine psychic powers (that is, not something she or Willie faked) in at least one arc.

    I vote for genre. I can’t speak for the comic strip, since I still haven’t managed to read all of it, but in the novels, there are two that are completely plot-dependent on psychic powers: I, Lucifer and A Taste for Death. They are also critical in Last Day in Limbo. At one point Neil Gaiman was doing a screenplay for I, Lucifer, though nothing came of it. And Charlie Stross has used thinly-veiled versions of Modesty and Willie in his Laundry books.

  20. Note to self: never use a pronoun before the thing it refers to, or you’ll end up having to explain your sentences. The not-genre thing was intended to be Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. And I’ll have to take another look at that manserveant…

  21. ZULU (1964) is one of my favorite films. It was also Michael Caine’s first major film role.

    Another non-genre Caine film I particularly like is A SHOCK TO THE SYSTEM (1990), described as a “dark comedy.” (One might one-line it as “How To Succeed In Business By Murdering All Your Associates.”) Besides a fine performance from Caine, the script is very tightly written.

  22. Well, I’m not moving to New England. I don’t do well with blizzards or other cold-weather phenomena.

  23. Willie Garvin has psychic warning of danger all through the books, which might count. There are other psychic abilities here and there in the series.

  24. (11) Michael Caine was great in the 1970s movie “Sleuth” (haven’t watched the remake, which he’s also in, I think)

  25. Peter O’Donnell, who created Modesty Blaise, believed in psychic powers, ESP, and suchlike, so they figure in the stories. There are a few other genre touches in some of them – I remember one of the graphic stories featured a villain with a mechanical exoskeleton, for example.

    @Anne Marble: is “The Hand” the one where Caine plays a graphic artist who loses a hand in an accident, and it crawls around haunting him (or so he thinks, at least,) or am I mixing it up with something else? Whichever it is, that was a good movie – I think they got Barry Windsor-Smith to do the artwork for Caine’s character’s comic strip.

  26. 10) Oh, someone needs money. The market of people who buy books solely to own the libs, seems to be saturated by now.

  27. Modesty Blaise might have been a little forward on technology with Garvin recording some music for Modesty made out of found sounds. That kind of thing is easy now, but much harder (I’m assuming possible) then.

    O’Donnell believing in psychic powers gets into the interesting question of whether something is SFF if the author thinks the elements which look speculative to some people are actually true.

  28. @Steve Wright
    Yes, that’s the movie! That explains why the comic book art in that movie looked cool.

    The movie is based on “The Lizard’s Tail” by Marc Brandel. Today I learned that he also wrote four “The Three Investigators” tales, so that makes him super cool. And he was the fiancé of Patricia Highsmith for a time.

  29. 10) Just Darned Arrogant trying to be relevant. Sad, indeed!
    You know, there’s a vaccine for ignorance and hatred, but I’ll bet he’s anti-vax.

    17) Moffatt must need the money.

    ““I think I can confidently say I’m done showrunning Doctor Who,” Steven Moffat (who was in charge of Doctor Who from 2010 to 2017) told RadioTimes.com at the Radio Times Covers Party.”

    “Everyone can stop worrying. I did it for six seasons on the trot. And I cannot imagine going back into doing that. I cannot. I simply cannot picture it.”

    https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/sci-fi/steven-moffat-doctor-who-return-exclusive-newsupdate/

  30. 2) Banning books is both dumb and counter-productive. Being afraid of a book makes you look sad, petty, and weak. The marketplace of ideas should be like any other market, completely free and unfettered.

    5) And in three hundred years, it’ll come back as V’Ger and it’ll be Kirk and Spock’s problem.

    6) “What makes a world exciting to enter in the first place? What grips a reader and keeps them with it?” For sci-fi, you can never go wrong with explosions, titanic space battles and alien worlds. For fantasy, it’s explosions, epic land and/or sea battles, and fantasy races. Also, a little bit of sex. Sex in books in like hot sauce or cheese on food. Is it necessary? No. But it never hurts.

    10) Lord. Speaking of sad, petty, and weak, how desperate do you have to be to try and ride the coattails of a coat that’s been hung up and forgotten about for eight years?

    11) He was also Lt. Bromhead in Zulu, which is an absolute banger of a movie. If you haven’t seen it, you absolutely should.

    14) Still can’t believe that’s the cover they went with.

    18) Good for them, I saw someone on social media compare Musk to D.D. Harriman and that’s not a bad comparison.

    20) Nope. Don’t like that.

  31. (11) Michael Caine starred in the 1969 British caper comedy, “The Italian Job”. One of my favorites, although it’s probably not genre. Too bad he did not get a cameo in the 2003 remake.

  32. (10) A V for Vendetta reference? The puppy cause is immune to being stopped by attacking him, since it’s the ideals and the will to act upon them that lead the movement? At any rate he did successfully get you to attack him, so, mission accomplished.

  33. Brian Z: Jon made fun of my running chocolate reviews a couple months ago. Don’t you think I needed to post this item to regain the illusion of relevance in his eyes?

  34. (5) There has been some progress in decoding the transmissions from Voyager.
    I have read, and have no reason to disbelieve, that the computers on Voyager 1 and 2 are the longest continuously running computers in history.

    (18) The FAA has suspended (or possibly cancelled?) the Starship Launch License, and won’t issue a new one until they have completed a “mishap” investigation. This probably means that Musk’s plans for 6 more launches this year are unlikely to happen.

    (19) China also had a launch failure, on Wednesday.

    Am I the only filer who celebrated Pi Day yesterday? We enjoyed both pecan and chocolate fudge pies last night.

  35. You, JDA, and probably Chen Shi and McCarty and whoever else wants to consider themselves part of a Fannish War of the 21st Century should sit down and have a Bheer. Someone here recently told me to volunteer more, so I’ll do what I can to set it up.

  36. @bill: I had small slices of cherry, apple, chocolate and custard pies.

  37. Brian Z: Your devotion to peace and tranquility entitles you to a stool at any such gathering. Skol!

  38. I had a pizza pie yesterday. (Though I believe most people started dropping the “pie” from the name about 50 years ago.)

  39. @Carl writing an episode – even a special -for the show is different from being the showrunner. And the article you linked expressly pointed out that Moffat hadn’t said that he’d never write for the show again.

  40. Yeah, Larry invented the “Sad Puppy” term and has had a weird love-hate relationship with it ever since (he’s proud of his effort (since to admit it was short-sighted self-destructive idea would damage his ego), but he hates that it’s the only thing that he’ll be known for when someone else comes up with a more shooty-form of literature that eclipses his works) – I seem to recall that at one point, he and his fellows claimed that using the term was a slur. Tune in tomorrow for whatever his new Pravda is – or don’t if you have anything at all better to do.

  41. I had a pizza pie yesterday. (Though I believe most people started dropping the “pie” from the name about 50 years ago.)

    A local market chain here in Portland was advertising a sale on frozen pizzas yesterday for “Pie Day”, so some people remember the term.

  42. I had a pizza pie yesterday. (Though I believe most people started dropping the “pie” from the name about 50 years ago.)

    I don’t think I’d ever head “pizza pie” before, but pie alone to refer to pizza, yes. Like “I’ll have a large cheese pie, please.”

  43. (11) Jim Janney wrote: “Although Michael Caine never portrayed the character, Peter O’Donnell claimed that he was the template for Willie Garvin”

    Coincidentally, Caine’s former roommate Terence Stamp played Garvin in the 1966 movie adaptation of Modesty Blaise.

    (17) Carl quoted Steven Moffat: “I think I can confidently say I’m done showrunning Doctor Who.”

    Writing an episode isn’t quite the same as heading production.

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