Pixel Scroll 3/25/24 For A Short Time, They Were Amber Pixels, But All Cried NAY, And They Returned To True Green

(1) THE THOUGHT PANZER PROBLEM. [Item by Doctor Science.] “Netflix blockbuster ‘3 Body Problem’ divides opinion and sparks nationalist anger in China” reports CNN.

A Netflix adaptation of wildly popular Chinese sci-fi novel “The Three-Body Problem has split opinions in China and sparked online nationalist anger over scenes depicting a violent and tumultuous period in the country’s modern history. …

Author Liu said in an interview with the New York Times in 2019 that he had originally wanted to open the book with scenes from Mao’s Cultural Revolution, but his Chinese publisher worried they would never make it past government censors and buried them in the middle of the narrative.

The English version of the book, translated by Ken Liu, put the scenes at the novel’s beginning, with the author’s blessing.

Ye Wenjie’s disillusionment with the Cultural Revolution later proves pivotal in the sci-fi thriller’s plot, which jumps between the past and present day.

I learned of the CNN article via esteemed Sinologist Victor Mair at Language Log: “’The Three Body Problem’ as rendered by Netflix: vinegar and dumplings”.

All of this rancorous dissension surrounding the Netflix version of “The Three Body Problem” reminds me of what transpired after the airing of “River Elegy” (Héshāng 河殇), which was written during the latter part of the 80s.  This was a six-part documentary aired by China Central Television on June 16, 1988 that employed the Yellow River as a metaphor for the decline of Chinese civilization.  … I strongly believe that it was this artistic production created by Premier Zhao Ziyang’s (1919-2005) zhìnáng tuán 智囊团 (“think tank”) in an inclusive sense that precipitated the Tiananmen protests and massacre one year later …”

“The difference is that “River Elegy” was a documentary created in China by critical, progressive intellectuals, whereas the Netflix version of “Three Body” is a film adaptation of a Chinese sci-fi novel infused with Western ideas and standards by its American producers, making it a much more complicated proposition.

Let’s see if the chemistry is there in Netflix’s “Three Body” to cause the sort of ramifications that ensued from CNN’s “River elegy”.

(Dr. Mair’s history of the think tank, “River Elegy”, and the Tiananmen protests is here: “Thought Panzers”).

… As soon as I read the expression “sīxiǎng tǎnkè 思想坦克”, I had the exact same impression as Mark.  It sounded bièniu 彆扭 (“awkward”), weird, unnatural.  But I don’t think the person who translated the English term “think tank” into “sīxiǎng tǎnkè 思想坦克” was clever enough to add the extra military dimension consciously, though they may have done so sub/unconsciously ….

(2) NO AI RX FOR THE DOCTOR AFTER ALL. [Item by Ersatz Culture.] A couple of weeks ago, the March 7th Pixel Scroll covered the BBC’s plan to use AI to promote Doctor Who.  Today Deadline reports that this plan has been abandoned.

The BBC has “no plans” to use AI again to promote Doctor Who after receiving complaints from viewers.

The BBC’s marketing teams used the tech “as part of a small trial” to help draft some text for two promotional emails and mobile notifications, according to its complaints website, which was intended to highlight Doctor Who programming on the BBC.

But the corporation received complaints over the reports that it was using generative AI, it added.

“We followed all BBC editorial compliance processes and the final text was verified and signed-off by a member of the marketing team before it was sent,” the BBC said. “We have no plans to do this again to promote Doctor Who.”   

(3) AO3 VS. DDOS. Archive Of Our Own’s Systems volunteers have posted an account of last year’s DDoS attacks against the Archive. “The AO3 July/August DDoS Attacks: Behind the Scenes”.

…We later found out that the attack had actually peaked at 65 million requests per second. For context, the largest publicly announced HTTP DDoS attack by Cloudflare at the time was a 71 million request per second attack. Additionally, we received information that the attack originated from the Mirai botnet. However, Cloudflare did its job well and we saw very little, if any, impact….

(4) WOMEN ARTISTS HARD HIT AS NEWSPAPER CHAINS SHED PRINT COMICS. [Item by Kristine Kathryn Rusch.] Cartoonist Georgia Dunn discovered that Gannett has gotten rid of most of its diverse and female cartoonists, even if they’re making money for the syndicate.

Michael Cavna’s article in the Washington Post explains why “Standardization at Gannett, other chains, leaves few women in print comics” [Google cache file; article is behind a paywall.].

The latest warning signs for some female artists began last fall. Suddenly, their work began disappearing from many American comics pages.

An announcement started hitting the pages of newspapers dotted around the country: the USA Today Network, owned by Gannett, was “standardizing” its comics across more than 200 publications. One of those newspapers, the Coloradoan, published a list of comics, batched in groups, that it said made up Gannett’s new lineup of options.

What began to concern some cartoonists and industry observers: None of the dozens of comics listed as print offerings for Gannett papers was actively being created by a woman artist.

Just three strips in Gannett’s list of print comics have a credited woman: “For Better or For Worse,” which creator Lynn Johnston says is in reruns; “Luann,” by writer-artist Greg Evans and his daughter, co-author Karen Evans; and “Shoe,” by artist Gary Brookins and Susie MacNelly.

As the changes rolled out at many Gannett papers between October and early this year, Hilary Price, creator of the long-running syndicated strip “Rhymes With Orange,” said she began to see a significant dip in her sales income.

Price said she is accustomed to encountering misogynistic reader responses to her work as an artist. What is becoming professionally demoralizing to her lately, though, is the sense that female artists are being removed from America’s comics pages as several newspaper chains have consolidated or contracted their print funnies in recent years.

Some female cartoonists say that as they endure double-digit percentage losses in their income from client papers, their representation in print, already historically unbalanced, is growing alarmingly, and disproportionately, small.

…Georgia Dunn, creator of the syndicated “Breaking Cat News,” said her income dropped substantially in recent months as a result.

“I don’t think it’s a Machiavellian plot — I don’t think it’s intentional,” Dunn said of the optics that female artists are being disproportionately affected by the industry’s changes. “But they overlook us a lot.”

…The “Breaking Cat News” creator shared with her readers the bad news that she might have to make some hard financial decisions as her client income dropped sharply. But “when I shared with them how this restructuring hit me, they made up my lost income overnight,” she said.

“I woke up and opened Patreon and started crying,” she continued. “I felt like George Bailey at the end of ‘It’s a Wonderful Life.’”…

And here’s Dunn’s follow-up post on GoComics. (Scroll beneath the cartoon itself) — Breaking Cat News – March 23.

(5) SAM I AM. John O’Neill’s “The Horrors of Sam Moskowitz” at Black Gate begins its discussion of a series of horror anthologies with this discussion of their fanhistoric editor:

…Moskowitz was an interesting character. A professional magazine editor, he edited the trade journals Quick Frozen Foods and Quick Frozen Foods International for many years, and he gradually put his professional skills to use in the genre, starting in 1953 with Science-Fiction Plus, Hugo Gernsback’s last science fiction magazine. He began editing anthologies with Editor’s Choice in Science Fiction, published by McBride in 1954, and produced two dozen more over the next 20 years.

Moskowitz (who sometimes published under the name “Sam Moscowitz,” maybe because the ‘k’ on his typewriter was worn out?), was just as well known as a critic and genre historian. While still a teenager, he was one of the key organizers of the first Worldcon, held in New York City in 1939 (where he famously barred several Futurians, including Donald A. Wollheim, Fred Pohl, Robert A. W. Lowndes, Cyril Kornbluth, and others).

His genre histories and biographies, including Explorers of the Infinite and Seekers of Tomorrow, are still well worth reading today — as is his legendary history of fannish feuds, The Immortal Storm, which fan historian Harry Warner Jr. summed up with,

“If read directly after a history of World War II, it does not seem like an anticlimax.”

First Fandom still presents an annual award in Moskowitz’s memory each year at Worldcon….

(6) IT’S NOW AN EX-CASE.  Deadline is on hand as “Judge Tosses X/Twitter Case Against Group That Produced Study On Proliferation Of Hate Speech On Platform”.

A federal judge tossed out a lawsuit brought by X/Twitter against a watching group that produced a study that examined the proliferation of hate speech on the platform.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer concluded that the platform, owned by Elon Musk, was attempting to chill the speech rights of the Center for Countering Digital Hate and other groups.

The judge wrote that X’s “motivation in bringing this case is evident. X Corp. has brought this case in order to punish [Center for Countering Digital Hate] for CCDH publications that criticized X Corp.—and perhaps in order to dissuade others who might wish to engage in such criticism.”

X/Twitter had sued the group, claiming that in doing their study, they unlawfully “scraped” the platform for its data that led to an exodus of advertisers.

“X disagrees with the court’s decision and plans to appeal,” the company said.

Read the judge’s decision in the X case….

(7) CHECKING IN ON THE COPYRIGHT CLAIMS BOARD. At Writer Beware, Michael Capobianco suspends judgment about the effectiveness of the relatively new Copyright Claims Board: “To CCB or Not to CCB: The Question is Still Out”.

It’s been more than a year since my last post about the now not-so-new Copyright Claims Board (CCB).

Victoria covered the CCB when it first started hearing claims in June 2022, and her post gives a good summary of how it operates and what it is supposed to accomplish. The short version:  The CCB was created as a judicial body under the US Copyright Office to administer small copyright claims that would be too expensive and/or time-consuming in federal court.

At the time I confess I was worried about an eventuality that fortunately hasn’t come true. There are vanishingly few copyright trolls trying to use the CCB to collect money from innocent or ignorant individuals by scaring them into paying settlements. On the other hand, it has worked for some business to business claims: Joe Hand Promotions, Inc., a company that “serves as the exclusive distributor of all Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) and select boxing pay-per-view programming” is by far the most frequent CCB claimant, with forty-five claims and counting, mainly against bars and restaurants, and many of those are withdrawn from consideration by the CCB and apparently settled privately.

What has happened in the intervening 20 months has been a disappointment for anyone hoping that the CCB would become a useful tool for writers seeking to get redress for infringement of their work. First of all, the number of “literary” claims is still very small, around 10% of total claims, and many of those, as we previously pointed out, are dismissed by the CCB because they weren’t filed correctly or have other flaws. Some are outright bizarre, and I may do a post about them in the future. With others the claimant doesn’t understand that a vendor selling used copies of their books is not a violation of their copyright….

…In short, even as its second birthday is only a few months away, it’s still too early to draw conclusions about the efficacy of the CCB when it comes to literary works, especially books. The majority of the claims that it has decided so far involve photographs and, in those cases, it generally is finding in favor of the photographer and awarding reasonable to low damages. But there are still only a handful of contested decisions and none of them involve the kinds of published material that Writer Beware usually deals with….

(8) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Born March 25, 1920 Patrick Troughton. (Died 1987.) So let’s talk about Patrick Troughton, the Second Doctor. 

(Digression: All of the classic Doctors are available on the BritBox streaming service. It’s $8.99 a month for a lot of British content including all of the Poirot mysteries. End of digression.) 

The first time that I watched his run I wasn’t at all fond of him as I thought his characterization wasn’t that serious. Rewatching them a few years ago on BritBox, I realized that he was a much better actor than I thought he was and that his Doctor was a much better, more nuanced persona that I realized. No, he’s still not anywhere near my favorite Doctor but now I can watch him without cringing. 

Patrick Troughton as the Second Doctor Who.

Ok I’m getting distracted…

Part of his problem, and yes of the first Doctor, and yes this is just my opinion, is that the scripts weren’t that good. It wasn’t until the Third Doctor that they started actually thinking about having decent scripts.

So what did he do? Well he had the distinct honor of being in The Gorgon, an early Sixties horror film with Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing.   

Horror films involving Dracula, Frankenstein, feathered serpents and demons would all see him make his appearance. He showed in a lot of mysteries including the Danger Man and The Saint series. And several Sherlock Holmes series as well. 

I think Space: 1999 is the only other genre series he appeared in besides a lot of Robin Hood work in the Fifties, mostly on The Adventures of Robin Hood

(9) COMICS SECTION.

(10) A CHANCE TO START AT THE BEGINNING. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] The weekly 2000AD British anthology SF/F comic has its landmark 2,375 issue coming out next week. “New readers start here: jump on board with 2000 AD #2375”.

First up, it’s a little longer at 48 pages.  Second, all the current stories ended this week, so the next, 2,375 prog will see the start of all new stories: so, no jumping into the middle of something. In short this is an ideal place for newcomers to give it a try. 2000AD is perhaps most noted for its Judge Dredd strip. But there is a Rogue Trooper film in the works….

The new issue of 2000 AD has been precision-tooled for those hungry to discover why it’s called the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic – with bitingly good stories from top comics talent!

2000 AD Prog 2375 is a 48-page special on sale from 27 March, with a bold new cover by Hitman artist John McCrea and colourist Jack Davies.

This latest issue is designed to make it easy for new readers to pick up 2000 AD, with a mix of brand new stories and ongoing series that showcase the best the GGC has to offer!

(11) SHATNER ON JIMMY KIMMEL. The Captain celebrated his birthday on late night TV a few days ago with a flaming cake and a mulligan on Captain Kirk’s final moments: “William Shatner on Turning 93, Going to Space & He Gets a Do-Over of His Star Trek Death Scene”.

(12) A LAUGHING MATTER. Bob Byrne’s enjoyment is contagious in his article “Terry Pratchett – A Modern-Day Fantasy Voltaire” for Black Gate.

…Rincewind isn’t Conan, or Elric, or Gandalf (I’ve met Gandalf, and you sir, are no Gandalf). But while we love reading about the great heroes (or villains), we ‘get’ Rincewind….

(13) FUNNY VIDEO. [Item by Jennifer Hawthorne.] This clip showed up on Reddit. It’s apparently from the shooting set of Ford’s TV show, Shrinking. “Harrison Ford is too old for this shit”.

(14) CARGO CULTISTS. “Astronauts’ mementos packed on Boeing Starliner for crew flight test”Space.com has the story.

A NASA astronaut who had the honor of naming her spacecraft will fly items inspired by that name when she launches to the International Space Station next month.

Sunita “Suni” Williams, who is set to fly with fellow NASA astronaut Barry “Butch” Wilmore on Boeing’s first Crew Flight Test (CFT) of its CST-100 Starliner capsule, will reveal the “Calypso”-related items once she is in orbit.

“A little homage to other explorers and the ships they rode on, I think we are going to call her ‘Calypso,'” said Williams in 2019, when she announced the ship’s name just after it returned to Earth from flying its first uncrewed mission.

Boeing announced Williams’ intentions as it completed packing Calypso for the CFT launch, which is currently targeted for April 22. All that remains to be added to the vehicle are some late stow items and the astronauts, themselves.

The CFT Starliner will carry 759 pounds (344 kilograms) of cargo, including 452 pounds (205 kilograms) from Boeing and 307 pounds (139 kilograms) from NASA. Boeing will have 25 bags and NASA will have 11 bags stored in the cabin where Wilmore and Williams will be seated….

(15) MARK WATNEY’S HOME AWAY FROM HOME. View NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day at the link – a photo of a place you’ve probably read about already.

Ares 3 Landing Site: The Martian Revisited. Explanation: This close-up from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter’s HiRISE camera shows weathered craters and windblown deposits in southern Acidalia Planitia. A striking shade of blue in standard HiRISE image colors, to the human eye the area would probably look grey or a little reddish. But human eyes have not gazed across this terrain, unless you count the eyes of NASA astronauts in the scifi novel The Martian by Andy Weir. The novel chronicles the adventures of Mark Watney, an astronaut stranded at the fictional Mars mission Ares 3 landing site corresponding to the coordinates of this cropped HiRISE frame. For scale Watney’s 6-meter-diameter habitat at the site would be about 1/10th the diameter of the large crater. Of course, the Ares 3 landing coordinates are only about 800 kilometers north of the (real life) Carl Sagan Memorial Station, the 1997 Pathfinder landing site.

(16) VIDEO OF THE DAY. Black Nerd Problems tees up the Studio Ghibli Fest for 2024.

Studio Ghibli Fest is back in theaters in its biggest year yet! Now, coming off the triumphant Oscar® win for Hayao Miyazaki’s latest feature The Boy and the Heron, celebrate this iconic studio with an all-new selection of fan favorites and iconic titles alike.

This year’s lineup highlights the works of studio co-founders Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata, as well as directors Yoshifumi Kondo, Hiroyuki Morita, and Hiromasa Yonebayashi. In celebration of Hayao Miyazaki’s recent Oscar win, Studio Ghibli Fest 2024 kicks off with the acclaimed director’s previous Academy Award-winning feature, Spirited Away, which took home the Oscar in 2001.

The lineup also includes special celebrations for the Howl’s Moving Castle 20th Anniversary, Kiki’s Delivery Service 25th Anniversary, and Pom Poko 30th Anniversary.

[Thanks to SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Kathy Sullivan, Jennifer Hawthorne, JJ, Doctor Science, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, and Cat Eldridge for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Mark.]


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24 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 3/25/24 For A Short Time, They Were Amber Pixels, But All Cried NAY, And They Returned To True Green

  1. First!!

    The Classic Doctor Who episodes are also available on TUBI which is a Free Ad Supported Television Service (FAST). Tubi also has Babylon 5

    Troughton also appeared in “The Omen” as the priest who tries to warn the family and is killed by the little boy.
    He died while attending a Dr Who Convention here in the US.

  2. (4) “Shoe” is a good comic, or was last time I saw it.(I had a copy of one in my cube at work. Shoe in a confessional booth, “I hate these annual reviews”)

  3. (0) Yes, PLEASE! (I had an amber monitor for a month or two long, long ago. NO.
    (4) Of course its misogyny. Given who’s buying the big media, women cartoonists might say naughty things about the owners, or their “heroes”.
    (5) Musk Watz, God of Winds…
    Birthday: my biggest problem with him was that he looked like Moe, of the Three Stooges. The one, and only episode I saw with him (was it the Three Doctors), he wasn’t bad at all, but…
    (9) Non-sequitur. Um, no. Fantasy, yes. Go look at the beginning of the short arc….
    (11) That was… impressive. He’s not the jerk who looked down on the fans any more.
    (14) Starliner, next month?! They got it fixed, after all the freakin’ flammable insulation!

  4. (2) They backed down good.

    (4) I hope more of the artists can also find their footing away from the newspapers. Ideally, successfully enough that the newspaper devourers realize they’ve made a mistake.

    And yes, of course it’s misogyny.

  5. (5) Minor correction to what Black Gate described: It was the entire triumvirate, not Moskowitz alone, who banned the six Futurians from attending the 1939 Worldcon. The other two were James Taurasi and William Sykora. And I think there’s enough in what’s been recorded about the event to believe that Taurasi was the real perpetrator of the ban and that Moskowitz was essentially steered into agreeing with it.

  6. 8) Patrick Troughton was also in two Ray Harryhausen movies (Jason & the Argonauts, and Sinbad & the Eye of the Tiger) and I only recently noticed that he had a small role in the Disney Treasure Island.

  7. (2) Phew!

    (4) So many comics sections these days are just … meh. They’ve taken out the interesting stuff — like comics by women.

    (6) The words “A federal judge tossed out a lawsuit brought by X/Twitter…” are lovely. (Also, that particular lawsuit was nuts.)

    (8) Troughton didn’t get the most gruesome death in “The Omen.” He was merely impaled by a lightning rod. 🙁

  8. 1) I mostly liked it. It’ll get harder to adapt as the story goes on of course, so let’s see how they handle season two

  9. 8) Troughton also played Cole Hawlings in ‘The Box of Delights’. And an inventor who builds a time machine in the children’s film ‘A Hitch in Time’.

  10. Adding to the Patrick Troughton genre roles, he was in the 1987 series Knights of God where a bunch of religious nut-jobs have taken over England. Their overthrow ensues…

  11. (2) Good
    (6) Good!
    (8) I’ve seen a few of the Second Doctor stories – I liked “The Mind Robber.”

  12. Patrick Troughton had one-off roles in a number of genre productions, including Doomwatch, Out of the Unknown, the 1959 Invisible Man series, and Terry Nation’s Survivors. And the episode of Thriller in which he appeared was one with a supernatural theme. Looking him up, I find that he had a small part in the BBC’s version of 1984, and his first ever genre role was way back in 1948, playing Radius in a TV version of R.U.R..

    As Cat notes, he turned up in a huge range of other things (does his appearance in The Goodies, as Dr. Petal, maker of evil android duplicates, count as genre?) – he was a highly talented and very professional actor, and, while he’s not the best Doctor, in my opinion, I do think of him as the best actor to play the part. (And now I will have to change my name and grow a beard and flee somewhere obscure, to avoid the justified wrath of all the David Tennant fans…. but that is my opinion., I’m afraid.)

  13. Troughton also played the Duke of Norfolk in the 70s Masterpiece Theater series “The Six Wives of Henry VIII.”

  14. 4) so all women writers/artists are having their work shredded by Gannett.
    On August 5, 2019, New Media Investment Group, parent of GateHouse Media, announced that it would acquire Gannett.

    New Media Investment Group is managed by New York-based firm Fortress Investment Group through an affiliate (Gate House Media). Fortress is owned by SoftBank, a Japanese conglomerate.

    SoftBank Group Corp. is a Japanese multinational investment holding company headquartered in Minato, Tokyo which focuses on investment management It’s founder, Masayoshi Son, is a billionare and owns over 30% of the stock. He is, by the way a naturalized Japanese citizen, having been born in S. Korea.

    Washington Post, https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/2024/03/16/gannett-comics-women-cartoonists/ ::

    “An announcement started hitting the pages of newspapers dotted around the country: the USA Today Network, owned by Gannett, was “standardizing” its comics across more than 200 publications. One of those newspapers, the Coloradoan, published a list of comics, batched in groups, that it said made up Gannett’s new lineup of options.
    What began to concern some cartoonists and industry observers: None of the dozens of comics listed as print offerings for Gannett papers was actively being created by a woman artist…
    Just three strips in Gannett’s list of print comics have a credited woman: “For Better or For Worse,” which creator Lynn Johnston says is in reruns; “Luann,” by writer-artist Greg Evans and his daughter, co-author Karen Evans; and “Shoe,” by artist Gary Brookins and Susie MacNelly.

    Some female cartoonists say that as they endure double-digit percentage losses in their income from client papers, their representation in print, already historically unbalanced, is growing alarmingly, and disproportionately, small. …
    Reached by The Washington Post, a Gannett representative said its “revitalization” made 34 comic strips available to its papers on Sundays (and one fewer on weekdays), and based its selections on reader surveys. They include credited women and diverse characters. “Our comics pages have been updated to provide a consistent and modern presentation for our evolving audience while incorporating beloved favorites,” Gannett told The Post in a statement, while noting that it offers a larger roster of comics online.

  15. 4) Comics in the newspaper peaked with ‘Bloom County’, ‘The Far Side’, and ‘Calvin and Hobbes.’ ‘Dilbert’, ‘Get Fuzzy’, and ‘Pearls Before Swine’ are still decent but it’s a far cry from the glory days.

    6) It’s pining for the fjords and has joined the bleedin’ choir invisible.

    8) As far as the classic Doctors go, I always liked the 1st and 3rd better than the 2nd, although he’s still better than the 5th, hands down my least favorite.

    10) I’m glad to see 2000AD keep ticking along. Judge Dredd is right up there with ‘Dune’ and ‘Warhammer 40K’ as far as societies I’d hate to live in but enjoy reading about.

  16. In some senses, the situation with women in comics is even worse than described, since Johnston is long since retired in any meaningful sense, and both Evans and MacNelly are the daughters of their respective strips’ creators.

    Looking through the roster at gocomics.com doesn’t really make the situation much better. I’m a fan of Amanda the Great by Amanda El-Dweek and Frog Applause by Teresa Burritt, but I’ll admit that they probably don’t have a lot of commercial potential. DInette Set probably appeals to someone, and I suppose it’s a big enough world that C’est La Vie might. Most of the other small percentage of strips by artists that appear to be female all into the large gocomics category that I think of as hobby strips (with a few overlapping into the surprisingly large self-therapy bin there)

  17. Does Get Fuzzy ever even do new strips any more? I seem to recall lots and lots of reruns.

    My favorite strip might be Cul de Sac, sadly discontinued since the creator passed away.

  18. Joe H. asks Does Get Fuzzy ever even do new strips any more? I seem to recall lots and lots of reruns.

    No, there isn’t any. They stopped producing new material five years ago, so all of it is now just previously produced material.

  19. (4) Of course sexism. Excellent of “Breaking Cat News” to actually break real news.

    You really can’t count FBoFW, it’s in reruns, “Luann” has always, ALWAYS sucked, and so that leaves MacNelly Jr. as the only female worker on a decent comic. Only Patterson is a comic creator, and she’s not actually created anything new in ages. That leaves exactly NO currently-produced comics that have a woman creator.

    I agree with @Quartermain about the age of great comics, and with @ PJ Evans regarding “Shoe”; Mr. LT had several of those either on the fridge or on his cubicle when he was working. I will have to check on “Mark Trail”, since @Ja is likely correct about improvement there.

    (9) Macanudo confused me, as the speaker in that panel looks so much like Mooch from “Mutts”. Is it an homage? I don’t read that strip, but I love Mutts (yesh!)

    If Danae’s horse is actually as portrayed in Non Sequitur (along with several other characters/happenings), then the teacher may be incorrect.

    (8) Patrick Troughton was a perfectly competent actor, as can be seen by the list of credits including Filer comments. But the writing on early DW is not that good, and with later more dynamic Doctors, color, and an ever-increasing budget that means nowadays the walls don’t shake when someone closes a door (plus casting Doctors who are very easy on the eyes, male and female), the old stuff doesn’t hold up too well for even us old folk, save out of nostalgia. And IIRC, his episodes didn’t get released in the US till after the color ones, so even compared to T. Baker, they look rudimentary.

  20. I have online subscriptions to two different newspapers, but will admit that I haven’t looked at their comics pages but just go straight to the web. In addition to the comics previously mentioned, I will recommend Frazz and Phoebe and Her Unicorn.

  21. @Lurkertype
    “That leaves exactly NO currently-produced comics that have a woman creator.”

    Nancy is currently done by Olivia Jaimes, who is a distinct improvement over her predecessors.

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