Pixel Scroll 3/26/24 There Are Some Things Money Can’t Buy; For Everything Else, There’s Pixel Scroll

(1) THE ROBOPOCALYPSE. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] Who is the best time traveler?  Well, of course the Doctor is, but then Brit Cit is the epicentre of SF. Nonetheless, across the Black Atlantic, in the home of the Mega Cities and the Cursed Earth, there are other time-travelling franchises…

“He was back….” BBC Radio 4 has just aired a programme dedicated to The Terminator a modern classic SF film that is this year 40 years old: ”I’ll Be Back: 40 Years of The Terminator”.

“It was the machines, Sarah…a new order of intelligence. Decided our fate in a microsecond: extermination.” So says Kyle Reese, time travelling freedom fighter in The Terminator. Released in the perfectly fitting year of 1984, The Terminator was a low budget, relentless slice of science fiction noir, drawing on years of pulp sf to conjure a future nightmare of humanity hunted to near extinction by the machines it created. In 2029, just 5 years away now,
Arnold Schwarzenegger’s unstoppable cyborg killer is sent back to 1984 to kill Sarah Connor, the yet to be mother of humanities saviour to come. Fate, redemption & the destructive power of A.I. all made in the analogue age but still influencing the way many imagine our new age of Artificial Intelligence.

Professor Beth Singler re-visits the making of the film with producer Gale Anne Hurd and explores its lasting influence. Forty years on, and the circular self-contained time travel plot of The Terminator has been cracked wide open letting out alternative timelines and delayed apocalypses: more films, a television show, graphic novels, comics, video games, theme park rides and even memes have spread versions of the original robopocalypse. More than that, the first Terminator has given us a vocabulary and a vision for the dangers of Artificial Intelligence.

(2) OVERVIEW OF CHINESE SFF RECOMMENDATION LISTS. [Item by Ersatz Culture.] I have finally published my write-up of Chinese recommendation lists: “Chinese SFF recommendation/best-of-the-year lists for works published in 2023”

The following summary bullet points for the Science Fiction World list are a suitable teaser – producing a Chinese recommendation list that doesn’t include any Chinese works first published in the year of eligibility — other than the fanzine — strikes me as an unconventional choice…

Science Fiction World

Links

Summary

  • Recommendations over 6 categories, with between 1 and 5 recommendations in each.
  • No Chinese fiction works first published in 2023 are included in the recommendations.
  • All the recommended novels are in English or Polish, and not yet announced for publication in China.
  • All of the novella and short story recommendations are older stories that were published in English translation in 2023 in a pair of venues.
  • Several of the categories that had recommendations last year – including Best Novelette – have no recommendations this year.
  • The editor recommendations are almost identical to last year – including the works listed.

(3) CLIPPING SERVICE. [Item by Daniel Dern.] I’m a NYTimes digital/paper subscriber, so I can do 10 “gift links”/month. I’ve been told (by somewhat reliable colleagues) that I can share to email lists, groups, etc, which I assume/believe includes F770-type thingies.

If I’m wrong, may the Pallid Ghost of the Gray Lady bite me on the nose (with mild apologies to Johnny Carson).

Note, these share links are only good for “30 days after [I’ve] shared it}…good enough for current readers, not so much for anyone dredging the past.

A) BORKED METAL. “A Rock Fell From Space Into Sweden. Who Owns It on Earth?”

Sweden’s courts have been debating claims to a meteorite that fell north of Stockholm, including whether the right to move around in nature, including on private property, extends to claiming a meteorite….

B) SNAKES IN A SCROLL!  “Now Arriving at J.F.K.: Horses From Iceland and Dogs From the West Bank”.

The ARK, a 14-acre facility at Kennedy International Airport, is often the first stop for animals of all kinds arriving in the United States….

(4) GLORIFIED SPYWARE. “How The BookmarkED/OnShelf App, Created to Help Schools [Navigate Book Bans], Fuels Them Instead” at BookRiot.

In December 2023, BookmarkED—an app designed to “help” educators, librarians, and parents navigate book bans in school libraries—rebranded. Now OnShelf, the app has been making its way into schools in Texas. Freedom of Information Requests obtained new information about how the app is getting into districts in Texas and how the app alerts users to so-called “banned books” in the district. The app is a student data privacy nightmare, and it undermines the professional capabilities of trained teacher librarians in educational institutions.

What Is BookmarkED/OnShelf? A Little About The App’s History

Founded by Steve Wandler, who works in the education technology space, BookmarkED aims to “empower parents to personalize school libraries.” It aims to ensure that parents get to decide the “individual literary journey for their children, based on their personal values and interests,” while teachers and librarians can keep “confidently recommending and providing more personalized books to their students, knowing precisely the learning outcomes they will achieve.” The technology helps libraries “simply and efficiently navigate the ever-changing challenged books landscape.”

BookmarkED soft launched their product during a Texas State Senate Committee on Education meeting on March 30, 2023, two and a half months before Texas passed the READER Act. Wandler noted that the app was developed while working with a superintendent in the state. That superintendent, Jason Cochran, is one of the owners of the app, and as of writing, works as the superintendent of Krum Independent School District. Prior to Krum, Cochran was superintendent at Eastland Independent School District. …

(5) A ROMANTASY MINICON. Publishers Weekly gleans all the details in a long report about last weekend’s event: “A Romantasy Festival Comes to Chicago”.

Romantasy was added as a category in the Goodreads Choice Awards in 2023, a fact mentioned several times at the inaugural Romantasy Literary Genre Festival, held March 22–24 at the Otherworld Theater in Chicago. More than 100 people celebrating the relatively new but rapidly growing genre attended the festival, which included author signings and Q&As, live podcast recordings, a drag tournament called Drag’N Brunch, and daily showings of Twihard!, a musical parody of Twilight. Books were sold on site by local indie bookstore Women & Children First.

The festival kicked off on Friday with a cocktail hour, mixer, and the weekend’s first performance of Twihard! Saturday, the first full day of the festival, began with the recording of the Whoa!mance podcast, hosted by Isabeau Dasho and Morgan Lott, who moderated an author panel with authors Samara Breger, Tamara Jerée, Megan Mackie, and Melanie K. Moschella. During the 90-minute conversation, the authors discussed their creative processes, genre crossovers, worldbuilding, escapism, beloved tropes, queer monsters, and more….

(6) ONE CLICHÉ AVOIDED. Simon Bland interviews several people who made The Thing, including the director, and an actor who didn’t come to a predictable end: “John Carpenter on horror classic The Thing: ‘It was an enormous failure and I got fired’” in the Guardian.

Keith David, who played Childs:

“ What I didn’t think at the time, and wasn’t thinking about until later, was how, traditionally, the Black man is not the guy who lasts to the end. This was one of the first movies where the Black guy lasts to the final scene. I don’t think I’m the only brother who’s ever survived in a horror or sci-fi movie, but I’m certainly one of the few. It was great foresight on John’s part.

I hear lots of theories about the final sequence. We played it various ways; as if I was the Thing, as if it was MacReady, and as if it was neither of us. People wonder why there’s no breath coming out of my mouth in the cold after the station burns down, and say it had to be me. But I say that if I’m downstage of the fire you wouldn’t see steam coming from my mouth because there’s too much heat. That’s how I explain it, but it’s your movie, your experience. The Thing is whoever you think it is.”

(7) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Born March 26, 1931 Leonard Nimoy. (Died 2015.) Pointy ears, green skin —  it must be Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock. And what an amazing role it was. So what was Roddenberry’s initial conception of the character? Here it is:

The First Lieutenant. The Captain’s right-hand man, the working-level commander of all the ship’s functions – ranging from manning the bridge to supervising the lowliest scrub detail. His name is Mr. Spock. And the first view of him can be almost frightening – a face so heavy-lidded and satanic you might almost expect him to have a forked tail. Probably half Martian, has a slightly reddish complexion and semi-pointed ears. But strangely – Mr. Spock’s quiet temperament is in dramatic contrast to his satanic look. Of all the crew aboard, he is the nearest to Captain April’s equal, physically, emotionally, and as a commander of men. His primary weakness is an almost catlike curiosity over anything the slightest alien. 

“The Cage” — Jeffrey Hunter as Captain Pike. Leonard Nimoy as Spock.

Although Memory Alpha says that Roddenberry settled on Nimoy from the beginning, other accounts say that Martin Landau was an earlier casting consideration for the character, and several sources say DeForest Kelley auditioned for the role as well. Actual history is often far messier than the official version is.

So we get to Nimoy. It’s hard now over a half century on to imagine anyone else in that role, isn’t it? Can you envision Martin Landau in the role, or DeForest Kelley? Especially the latter? I certainly can’t. For better or worse, well better, Nimoy made for me the perfect Spock. 

Cool, elegant, ever so, dare I say it? almost on the edge of being sarcastic if Vulcans could indeed be that. Certainly more fascinating a character by far on the series than Kirk was by far. Yes, Kirk was cast in interesting stories such as “Shore Leave” but Spock was script in and out just more interesting to watch.

So my favorite Spock centered episodes? “Dagger of the Mind” in which marked the introduction of his mind-meld ability; “Amok Time” of course which also has the bonus of when “Live Long and Prosper” first showed up; “Journey to Babel” in we meet his parents, Sarek (Mark Leonard) and Amanda (Jane Wyatt); and “The Enterprise Incident “ for his not really amorous relationship with the unnamed Romulan Commander (yes she gets no name) and the rest of that splendid story.

Leonard Nimoy (Spock) at the Las Vegas Star Trek Convention 2011. Photo by Beth Madison.

I rewatched much of the series recently on Paramount+ as well as all of the other Trek series save the one season of the animated YA series whose name is completely escaping my name are here. (Never did figure out why they cancelled something so cheap to do when Strange New Worlds can cost them as much as ten million dollars an episode.)  He’s still my favorite when I rewatched them. I so wanted a spin-off Spock centered series to have happened after Trek ended. 

Usually I look at a performer’s entire genre career but I think I will look at just a single post-Trek undertaking, being Dr. William Bell in the stellar Fringe series. He decided to do the role after working with Abrams and Kurtzman on the rebooted Star Trek film and was offered with this series the chance to work with them again. He actually retired from acting before the series concluded but continued on here through its ending. 

(8) COMICS SECTION.

(9) EARTH ABIDES TO TV. [Item by Ersatz Culture.] TVLine reports that a six-episode limited series adaptation of George R. Stewart’s Earth Abides is about to go into production.

Alexander Ludwig is relocating from Starz to MGM+.

Fresh off the cancellation of Heels, Ludwig will headline the MGM+ limited series Earth Abides, based on the George R. Stewart novel of the same name.

Adapted by showrunner Todd Komarnicki (Sully) and described as “a wildly imaginative new take” on the sci-fi classic, Earth Abides centers on Ludwig’s Ish, “a brilliant but solitary young geologist living a semi-isolated life who awakens from a coma only to find that there is no one left alive but him…

Production on the six-episode series is set to begin in Vancouver on Monday, April 8. MGM+ is targeting a late 2024 release date. 

There is similar coverage at VarietyDeadline and The Hollywood Reporter.

(10) THESE SUITS ARE MADE FOR WALKING. “’Walking Dead’ Creator Robert Kirkman, Others Beat AMC’s Effort To Get Profits Lawsuit Dismissed”Deadline tells how they convinced the judge.

The first season of the latest Walking Dead spinoff The Ones Who Live is concluding this weekend, but the latest profit participation lawsuit from zombie apocalypse creator Robert Kirkman, franchise executive producer Gale Anne Hurd and others is far from over.

With heavy emphasis on the $200 million settlement AMC suddenly made in 2021 to end ex-TWD showrunner Frank Darabont and CAA’s nearly 10-year long lawsuit over profits, U.S. District Judge Fernando Aenlle-Rocha yesterday denied the outlet’s move to have Kirkman, Hurd, David Alpert, Charles Eglee and Glen Mazzara’s mega-millions case dismissed.

“It would be an illogical interpretation of the MFN (most favored nations) provisions and contrary to the reasonable expectations of the parties in entering into the agreements if the court were to allow Defendants, as a matter of law, to provide Darabont and CAA with increased contingent compensation and a greater share of future gross receipts for the series through a settlement agreement—at Plaintiffs’ expense—without providing Plaintiffs the same,” the California-based federal judge wrote in a 13-page ruling filed Monday (read the TWD EP case ruling here).

Having pulled the short stick in a previous suit against AMC, Kirkman, Hurd and fellow TWD EPs sued AMC for $200 million in a November 15, 2022 breach of contract action.

“Plaintiffs are entitled to the same treatment afforded to Darabont with respect to his MAGR interests, they are therefore entitled to have the same valuation applied to their MAGR interests, which, collectively, exceed Darabont’s and CAA’s,” the LA Superior Court filing declared with reference to  modified adjusted gross receipts metric used to gauge profit participation payouts. “As a result, Plaintiffs are entitled to a payment well over $200 million from AMC, in an amount to be proved at trial.”…

(11) DIBS ON LUNA. “Scientists call for protection of moon sites that could advance astronomy” reports the Guardian.

Astronomers are calling for the urgent protection of sites on the moon that are rated the best spots in the solar system for advanced instruments designed to unveil the secrets of the universe.

The prime locations are free from ground vibration, shielded from Earth’s noisy broadcast signals or profoundly cold – making them uniquely well-suited for sensitive equipment that could make observations impossible from elsewhere.

But the pristine spots, known as sites of extraordinary scientific importance (Sesis), are in danger of being ruined by an imminent wave of missions such as lunar navigation and communications satellites, rovers and mining operations, with experts warning on Monday that safeguarding the precious sites was an “urgent matter”.

“This is the first time humanity has to decide how we will expand into the solar system,” said Dr Martin Elvis, an astronomer at the Harvard and Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts. “We’re in danger of losing one-of-a-kind opportunities to understand the universe.”…

[Thanks to Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, Ersatz Culture, Daniel Dern, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Soon Lee.]


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29 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 3/26/24 There Are Some Things Money Can’t Buy; For Everything Else, There’s Pixel Scroll

  1. 9) “a wildly imaginative new take” on the sci-fi classic, Earth Abides = I’m keeping the Title and a couple of the character names and making up my own story

    It’s a shame, the book would work as is, just update the timeperiod to today and go from there

  2. (2) OVERVIEW OF CHINESE SFF RECOMMENDATION LISTS.

    Why in the world are they recommending to Chinese fans novels which are not yet available in Chinese translation?

  3. (0) Needed a Pixel Scroll in the right place at the right time just north of here (we’re in the DC ‘burbs), up in Baltimore. So far, all fen known safe from the bridge disaster.
    (4) Everything possible wrong with it.
    Birthday: Yes. And he came to see what he had done, and meant, and the good that the role was far beyond him.
    (9) That’s… an odd choice. I have vague memories of reading it when I was young, and it’s rather depressing, without lots of explosions, etc.
    (11) Save the dark side!

  4. SIXTH

    5) Back when I was immersed in Sharon Shinn’s Twelve Houses, I gradually realized to my great surprise that the author was doing “romantasy” in each book. Not that there was a term for it at the time, but it was pretty neat for this cis het male to find out that he had been reading “romances in disguise” all the while. 🙂

  5. 4). Why am I not surprised someone involved with this horrible app is from Krum? (full disclosure. I grew up in a small town near Krum, and we called the inhabitants Krum Bums). All during Jr. High and High School I was a volunteer librarian at the small town library (across the street from the high school). I also had experience working in my college library. It’s a bedrock of American freedom that we have open and free libraries without censorship. Reporting to parents what their kids check out? Yes, I can just see what will await them at home when racist parents find out their kids are reading books by Black authors or books about the problems of racism. And then the kids getting to that age where they are questioning their sexuality and need good resources, and not just what “the Bible says.” It’s to the point that I think we need a federal law against any kind of library censorship at any level (not that the weasels in congress would ever pass anything like that). I swear, if I were at the Bill Gates level of wealth, I’d create a free, online library of censored material so that anyone with a computer/tablet/kindle could check out banned books for free and without any government or parental notice.

  6. P J Evans says He was on “Mission: Impossible” for a while, also, as “Paris”.

    I know. As I said, I decided just to focus on one of his post-Trek performances instead of his entire career after it. I’m actually going to watch the entire Mission: Impossible run soon.

  7. (4) They’d close down libraries altogether, and ban anyone still in school from reading unapproved texts during the school year, if they could.

    (7) Leonard Nimoy was born in Boston, and grew up in Boston’s West End, a low-income, multicultural neighborhood that was destroyed as part of a malignant “urban renewal” process. The displaced residents were promised that when it was done, they’d have better, more comfortable homes. They lied. There was no provision for the displaced residents. People were left to find what they could where they could, mostly not in Boston at all. Social connections that made the West End a thriving neighborhood were utterly destroyed, and the low-income homes were replaced by pricy, upscale apartments and condos. There are videos on YouTube of him talking about it.

  8. Lis, the destruction of the West End – I suggest you read a book by Robert Moses’s nemesis, Jane Jacobs: The Death And Life of Great American Cities.
    A distribution course I took in college in the eighties, Urban Studies, my instructor said one day that there were two theories of cities. I mentioned that book, and he smiled. “Actually”, he said, “There are three. None of the professors who study it like Jane Jacobs, because she has no degree. However, they have trouble arguing with her, since she’s so obviously right.”

  9. @Mark,
    Thinking of the people affected by the Baltimore bridge tragedy.

    (7) Were you thinking of “Star Trek: Lower Decks” as the animated series? I enjoyed watching its lighter take on an often unseen part of the ships, and in some ways, it feels more like the vibe of Old School Star Trek. It feels more optimistic.

    Title Credit again? Thank you!

  10. @mark–Ahem.

    I’ve read Jane Jacobs’ book on it. And her other books. Wonderful writer who loved and really studied cities.

    But I was mentioning it because of Nimoy’s connection.

  11. Re the Baltimore bridge collapse: I (lifelong Baltimore resident; in fact, I live in the address on my birth certificate) was listening to the police radio recording of the incident, and was struck by the professionalism of many of the people involved. Not exact quotes, but a summary of what I heard:

    After the ship sent out a Mayday call as it lost steering, the police immediately blocked the bridge. Someone announced on air that it should happen, and people said they were already taking care of it. “I’m blocking the northbound entrance.” “I’m blocking the Inner Loop.” “Is there a construction crew still on the bridge?” “Yes, I’ll go collect them, continue north, and block the southbound entrance.” “I’m blocking the Inner Loop, that is southbound.” But then immediately, from someone else, “The bridge is down.” So most of the construction workers died, because there just wasn’t enough time. But there were very few vehicles on the bridge, thanks to quick work by the police.

  12. 7) The animated Trek show was quite good. DC Fontana was heavily involved with it, so the writing is quite good. The original plan was to only have a few of the top stars involved, with the rest of the cast voiced by other people. Nimoy refused to do it if they did that, so everyone was brought back but Chekov (though he was given the opportunity to write an episode). The main problem the series had, besides the limited Sat morning animation, was they used different music, and to me at least it changed the feel having different music. The episode where Spock goes back in time to visit himself as a child is particularly good.

  13. (5) That sounds like a cool idea for a festival. I know a lot of people react badly to the idea of romantasy being “everywhere” — so some of them will probably automatically think “Ugh” when they read about this festival. They should probably do some soul-searching…

    (7) It’s too hard to pick a favorite Spock episode. I did like what he did with the mind meld in “The Devil in the Dark.” I think that was the first time he performed a mind meld with a truly alien creature? It must have felt really bizarre to the actors — I’m going to kneel next to a stuntman/actor wearing a rubbery rug and then emote — but Nimoy pulled that off.

  14. 7) One great thing about The Animated Series is that they were able to do things (giant, derelict spaceships, non-humanoid aliens, etc.) that would have been entirely impractical in the live-action series.

  15. Bonnie McDaniel says Soon Lee: I think Cat’s thinking of “Star Trek: Prodigy.” I believe the first season is on Netflix now, and the second will air shortly.

    I indeed was. I just completely went blank on the name when I writing up that up. If you haven’t notice by now, I’m varying the way that I do each Birthday so as to make them interesting for you’ll to read and enjoy.

  16. @Troyce
    ISTR reading that somewhere on the Minecraft website there is housed a New Library of Alexandria which contains crores of copies of banned books and documents.

  17. @mark: There are plenty of popular or well-received genre shows which are dark and depressing and don’t feature many explosions: The Walking Dead, The Last of Us, A Handmaid’s Tale, or even the brilliant and underrated Orphan Black (a personal favorite, although that one does feature a fair amount of comic relief–but it’s often pitch-black comedy). Earth Abides doesn’t seem like much of a stretch.

    I do hope they’ll do it justice, but that doesn’t seem as unlikely as it would have when I was young. As SF has gotten more mainstream, Hollywood seems to have become a little more willing to treat it with respect. Fingers crossed this is one of those cases.

  18. Lis: Like I said, she was, in real life, his nemesis.
    JeffS: that’s what I’ve been reading. 90 sec from the mayday to blocking the bridge. The one that hurts the most is the one officer saying that he had the inner loop blocked, but as soon as another police car showed, he was going after the construction crew. And then, literally seconds later, “no way, the bridge is down.” And apparently no one had the phone of the crew foreman.

    Worse: the ship was docked for two days, and had power issues the entire two days. And last year, the Chilean Navy held it for having power issues (which, amazingly, were resolved and signed off on the same day).

    Xtifr: – sorry, we subscribe to Paramount+, and Ellen’s got Amazon Prime, and that’s it. Haven’t seen most of those.

  19. (2) There will be thousands of Chinese fans who are members of 2023 Worldcon but not of 2024, thus can nominate but cannot vote on the final ballot. They can well influence the finalist, but have little to say about the winner.
    I guess SFW wanted to promote items likely to get votes from western fans. They did not want to “waste” nomination on a work unlikely to win, but was ambitious to “produce” a Hugo-winning work for their own publications (as is the case of 2023 SFW list, all items in 2024 SFW list are SFW-affiliated, they are/were/will be published by SFW).

  20. @Jeff Smith I’m pretty sure they ended up successfully blocking the bridge so that there were zero cars on it when it went down, just a truck parked with the construction crew.

  21. rochrist says I’m pretty sure they ended up successfully blocking the bridge so that there were zero cars on it when it went down, just a truck parked with the construction crew.

    Correct, there was just a crew of eight doing road surface repairs. There were security at each on the bridge making sure no one went on it at all.

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