Pixel Scroll 4/5/25 Oh, Scroll Us The Way To The Next Pixel Bar, Oh Don’t Ask Why

(1) PREVIEW OF COMING ATTRACTIONS. The 2025 Hugo finalists won’t be publicly announced until tomorrow at Noon, but Escape Pod has already posted their 2025 Award Voter Packet.

(2) NON-SCIENCE AND WORLDCON IMPLICATIONS. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] The Seattle Worldcon has expressed concern as to what the stricter US border controls will mean for fans and authors attending from overseas.  As a result it is giving advice and also plans for an enhanced, virtual, on-line attendance experience. In science there are similar concerns.  This week’s issue of Nature has a number of articles and news items on the new US presidency’s border policy impact on the nation’s science.

From the off an editorial spells out the problem of Trump’s funding cuts to science. Nature conducted a poll of over 1,600 US-based scientists and 1,200 said that they were considering leaving! Nature notes that this might not present an accurate picture of the feelings of all US-based scientists but it does, they say, provide a strong indication of the “despair” many feel. Those leaving gave Europe and Canada as their preferred destinations. Meanwhile, the EU is doubling the absolute maximum of two million Euros (US$2.2 million) relocation grant per applicant! (I understand that this is for senior scientists seeking permanent relocation, so don’t get your hopes up for some easy dosh.)

Then there is an article on the detention of visiting scientists at the US border which notes that researchers whose mobile smartphones have a record negative social media posts on them regarding US science policy have been barred from entry. Since 2019 visitor visa applicants to the US have had to provide details of their social media accounts and user names but these have rarely been used to bar anyone from entry. (I guess if I applied for a visa I’d be met with disbelief in not filling out those sections as I don’t have a home internet connection or smartphone – all my (by choice) limited online is done at local library and learned scientific society  cybercafés.) LGBTQAI+ scientists are also actively reconsidering travelling to the US for symposia, conferences and field trips. Meanwhile, several US universities have warned foreign students against unnecessary travel outside the US in case they have difficulty getting back in. Advice for visitors is to arrive in the US with a clean burner phone and/or a lap-top pad that has already been wiped of unnecessary files and social media history.

Elsewhere in this week’s Nature there is an article on the cuts to CoVID and climate change research. The past month some 400 National Institutes of Health (NIH) and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention research grants have been cut.  Apparently, there was discussion in the NIH on potentially cancelling LGBTQAI+, gender diversity, equity and inclusion research. Meanwhile, the CDC is cutting US$11.4 billion in pandemic response science…! Yup, we have just had a global pandemic that has killed more than 7 million globally (a sure under-estimate as cause-of-death recording in less-developed nations is not that good) and 1.2 million in the US alone, so it might just be a bit of an idea to invest in ensuring lessons are learned and strategies are developed for use when the next pandemic comes… And it really is a case of ‘when’ not ‘if’…

Finally, there is piece on international food aid cuts. Here it is not just the US, which is dismantling its US Agency for International Development (USAID), but aid budgets in Britain (cut by 40%), France (37%), Netherlands (30%) and Belgium (25%) as money is diverted into military spend and support for Ukraine. Globally, severe malnutrition is responsible for up to 20% of deaths among the under five-year-olds.

Together, these articles from just one issue of the journal, paint a bleak, almost Orwellian, picture.  Goodness knows what forthcoming editions will hold?

Turning back to SF, there has been some discussion in certain fannish quarters as to whether the US should host the Worldcon under such a socio-political regimen?  While such a move may, for some, be controversial, it would not be impossible as in the coming years there are a number of serious bids from outside the US, plus few others. Montreal, Canada, is bidding for 2027. Brisbane, Australia is going for 2028. There is only one bid for 2029 and that’s Dublin, Ireland provided folk can all squeeze in (?). However, so far there are only US bids for 2030 and 2031. This may very well change.

If all this happens, it will see a massive – would ‘seismic’ be OTT? – change to the Worldcon. My first Worldcon was Brighton 1979. That was a great con with plenty of talks, a load of seasoned SF authors on the programme who’d been round the block several times and who had tales of their own encounters with other SF giants, and there was a solid film programme; a far cry from Glasgow and its mindless planorama computer package sifted, panel-led programme with few prepared talks and zero films (this last being a first for a British Worldcon). Back in 1979 I recall a bemused Christopher (Superman) Reeve astonishment at the cheer in the hall for Hugo-shortlisted Hitch-hikers’ Guide to the Galaxy: Superman won such was the N. America dominated Hugo-voting constituency as Hitch-hikers had yet to make it to the States.  That Worldcon spawned a four-part BBC documentary on Science Fiction with interviews of authors at that Worldcon: true heritage value. Throughout the subsequent 1980s all but two (Melbourne 1985 and Brighton 1987) were held in the US!  Since then the Worldcon has become more mobile but US-venued Worldcons still dominate. This could well end (for a while at least). The question is that in such times as these, what would a US venued Worldcon look and feel like? Almost certainly, there may well be fewer fans and pros from outside the US attending and if so might it be more like a NASFic than a Worldcon?  I don’t know, but we will see.

You can see the 1979 Worldcon part of the four-part documentary series below…

(3) GROWING UP SFF. [Item by Steven French.] Author Oisin Fagan on his teenage reading material: “Novelist Oisín Fagan: ‘I was at the altar of literature and had its fire in me’” in the Guardian.

As a teenager I read fantasy. Growing up in rural Ireland, I’d see an oak tree on a hill and think: my God, this is Robin Hobb, JRR Tolkien, Ursula K Le Guin. It gives you back these parts of your life and allows you to recognise them as magical. Then at 14, I was like: time to read Ulysses! At that age you’re always reading above your capabilities. Dostoevsky might resonate deeply, but you fundamentally don’t know what’s happening. You read Notes from Underground thinking: “Yes, he’s totally right! Finally someone understands!” Then you reread it: “Oh, this is a comedy?”…

(4) JUSTICE IN FANTASY. “Power and Punishment: Using the Language of Fantasy to Subvert Real-Life Oppression” at CrimeReads.

Power lies at the heart of all fantasy, written or imagined. To craft a novel of the genre is to visualize an expression of power and assign it to factions that will then weave and warp over the course of the story. Yet, our ability to conjure is naturally shackled by the limits of what we have seen, what we believe, and what we hope is possible. It is little wonder then, that fantasy gives us worlds that are altered, yet familiar—inversions, allegories, and warnings. With these carefully constructed societies come equally detailed punishment, for there can be no law without consequences for breaking it. And it is in this interplay between power, its exercise, and its fettering that the fantasy genre’s subversive nature shines.

Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time series is a more conservative example of this subversion. The books center in great part around a schism in magic along biological sex. All who channel magic draw it from the One Power, the driving force of all creation that’s split into male and female halves. The male half was corrupted by the Dark One in an ancient battle that has since resulted in male channelers being driven to madness over the course of using their power. It isn’t a taint of their causing, but one that makes them extremely dangerous. Naturally, it falls to female channelers of an authoritative magical organization, known as the Aes Sedai, to hunt and gentle men—essentially castrating them of magic to such severe degree that it often results in their suicide.

It seems a little on the nose when stripped down to bare bones and certainly is conservative in its rigid adherence to a biological binary. Yet, the matriarchal Aes Sedai isn’t a giant middle finger aimed at men, but a cautionary tale to all social groups seeking power that maintaining it can require great evil. And while readers, especially women and those who have been societally designated as other, are encouraged to empathize with the plight of male channelers in this world, they are also shown the danger these men pose, in part because they have the literal power to threaten a millennia-old hierarchy as much as because of their tendency to destructive violence due to it. The Wheel of Time’s subversive beauty doesn’t lie in its inversion of the modern patriarchy, but the means it employs to examine two pertinent questions of every age—is the potential for destruction enough cause for punishment before crime? What happens when a faction is downtrodden for too long?…

(5) DAVID THOMAS MOORE Q&A. The Unofficial Hugo Book Club Blog hosts an “Interview with Rebellion Editor David Thomas Moore”.

UHBCB:
Do you have any thoughts on the state of modern SFF?

Moore:
It’s great, to be honest! There’s such a richness and plurality of identities and voices now; when I started fifteen years ago stories by marginalised authors were marketed on that, because they were exceptional, but now it’s scarcely worth mentioning. And that’s reflected in the stories themselves — when most writers looked like me, most of the stories were the types of stories I’d tell, but now I get to read and work with stories, characters, language and structures that are completely out of my safety zone and I love it.

We’re challenging genre conventions (and mashing them up). We’re pushing the boundary between “literary” and “genre.” We’re trying new things out, questioning assumptions and experimenting. And we’re having fun — the younger crop of writers approach their work with such joy and love, it’s wonderful.

(6) A BIT OF CONVENTION LORE. Why you would want to know the history of The Gross-Out Contest? But if you do, Brian Keene has summed it all up in “Jack Ketchum, Jay Wilburn, and The Gross-Out Contest”, an unlocked Patreon post.

…The Gross Out Contest is purposely profane, purposely over-the-top, and purposely counter culture. It is intended to be shocking. It is intended — for those who’s sense of humor leans toward such things — to be hilarious….

(7) WORLD SF STORYBUNDLE. There are five days left to buy the 2025 World SF StoryBundle curated by Lavie Tidhar.

Join me for a trip around the world, from China to Nigeria, Luxembourg to the outer reaches of space. Hello – and welcome to the eighth annual World SF bundle! Can you believe we’re still here?

Things are definitely looking bleak everywhere you turn, which is why literature matters more than ever. What better way is there to reach across languages and cultures then to experience the stories people tell? The language of science fiction and fantasy is universal, and here I tried to bring together a group of remarkable writers from all corners of the world.

Support awesome authors by paying however much you think their work is worth!

The three basic books are:

  • The Bright Mirror: Women of Global Solarpunk by Future Fiction
  • The Siege of Burning Grass by Premee Mohamed
  • Sinophagia by Xueting C. Ni

Pay at least $20 to unlock another 7 bonus books, for a total of 10!

  • Ecolution: Solarpunk Narratives to Transform Reality by Francesco Verso
  • Jackal, Jackal: Tales of the Dark and Fantastic by Tobi Ogundiran
  • Breakable Things by Cassandra Khaw
  • The Golem of Deneb Seven by Alex Shvartsman
  • The Escapement by Lavie Tidhar
  • The Good Soldier by Nir Yaniv
  • The Pleasure of Drowning by Jean Bürlesk

(8) TOTAL ECLIPSE OF A STAR. “How Rutger Hauer Made Harrison Ford ‘Disappear’ in Blade Runner”Inverse tells all about it.

In 2019, the legendary Dutch actor Rutger Hauer passed away. For cinephiles, his legacy was immense, ranging from films like Nighthawks to The Osterman Weekend, to Eureka, in which Hauer starred alongside the late Gene Hackman. And before his Hollywood breakthrough in Nighthawks, Hauer’s work in Dutch and German films was extensive. But, for science fiction and fantasy fans, his stardom is almost exclusively defined by his performance as the rogue replicant Roy Batty in the 1982 classic Blade Runner. Yes, fantasy fans and Ready Player One ‘80s completists will argue that Hauer’s turn in Ladyhawke is just as iconic, but history has proven that if there’s one role that truly became his legacy, it’s that of the baddie in Blade Runner.

Appropriately, a new documentary about the life of Rutger Hauer takes its title from a line from the movie, a line that Hauer himself helped craft. The documentary is called Like Tears in Rain, and it’s directed by Hauer’s goddaughter, Sanna Fabery de Jonge, who narrates the opening moments of the movie to give the documentary historical context. Naturally, this documentary isn’t only about Blade Runner or science fiction. And yet, the revelations and observations about how Hauer was eerily connected to Blade Runner are a huge part of the movie and, certainly, a must-see for any serious student of sci-fi cinema….

…But, just as the movie takes its title from Blade Runner, the discussions of that film and how Hauer changed it forever are central to what makes the documentary crucial for all future discussions about Blade Runner.

“He really turned that into a role for the ages,” Robert Rodriguez says in the movie. Meanwhile, Mickey Rourke asserts that, “He made Harrison Ford disappear. I’m sorry. No disrespect to Harrison Ford, but you couldn’t wait for the bad guy to come on the film.”…

(9) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Paul Weimer.]

April 5, 1917Robert Bloch. (Died 1994.)

By Paul Weimer: Psycho, and so so much more.

Psycho, the movie adaptation of his novel, is where I first got onto the Robert Bloch train, although I didn’t know I was doing so at the time (I thought I was on a Hitchcock train, I didn’t realize it was a shared train line). I was stunned by the movie, in a good way. It’s a bank robbery that turns into something far far darker. Sure you have seen the memes, but if you haven’t seen the original movie yet (don’t bother with the remakes). Do.

Bloch’s oeuvre and repertoire was usually crime and horror more than fantasy. He wrote Cosmic horror and cosmic horror adjacent work. I remember Nyarlathotep being in a number of his stories, he made good use of the Black Pharaoh. You might say that he punched his ticket in his early career. 

Later on, Bloch’s screenplay writing was the major way he got from stop to stop on the trainline of life and wrote for a wide variety of shows. “Wolf in the Fold” (the Jack the Ripper one) is the one that I vividly remember as being unusually putting us into the head of Scotty and the other members of the crew. It turns out the Ripper was a recurring theme, and Bloch made stop after stop at that particular station in his writing.

I haven’t read all that much of his crime fiction, except for an occasional story here and there (especially for a podcast). But his vivid pulp-fueled writing made every word on the page memorable and sometimes visceral on the rails of his plots and characters.  His mastery of the psychology of his victims and antagonists alike is what really set him apart from other similar writers. He got into the heads of his characters, and so his words got into the head of me, right along the old straight track of fears and doubts.

But why all these train metaphors. My favorite Bloch piece is “That Hell-Bound Train”, his Hugo award-winning short story. Our protagonist, Martin, is a drifter with a love of trains. He makes a deal with the devil, to stop time when he is happiest. The devil knows the essential indecision of a person means he will never do it, and thus he will claim Martin’s soul when he dies. But in a classic and amazing ending, Martin finally makes his choice to stop time…while on the train to hell itself. His eternity will be on a perpetual train ride, a fitting fate for a lover of trains.

Robert Bloch

(10) COMICS SECTION.

my HORRIFYING cartoon for this week’s @theguardian.com books

Tom Gauld (@tomgauld.bsky.social) 2025-04-05T11:03:42.204Z

(11) TRON IS ON. “’Tron: Ares’ Trailer: First Look at Disney’s Sci-Fi Sequel”Variety introduces the clip. Movie arrives in theaters October 10.

“Tron” is back, more than 40 years after the original sci-fi movie hit theaters.

Disney has released the first trailer for “Tron: Ares,” the third film in the “Tron” franchise after the 1982 original and the 2010 sequel “Tron: Legacy.”

Jared Leto leads the film, which includes original star Jeff Bridges back as Kevin Flynn. Leto plays Ares, one of the programs from the digital universe who is tasked to enter the real world….

(12) JURASSIC HOMAGE – OR PERHAPS FROMAGE. “The film fans who remade Jurassic Park​: how an Australian town got behind a $3,000 ‘mockbuster’” from the Guardian’s Australian edition.

This morning’s location: a field outside Castlemaine, Victoria. The air is thick with flies, attracted to the cow dung but ignoring the nearby dinosaur poo, sturdily constructed from papier-mache.

“Oh god,” Sam Neill groans – though these words aren’t actually uttered by Neill but local builder Ian Flavell, who has taken on Neill’s role as palaeontologist Alan Grant – and drops to his knees in front of an ailing triceratops.

This is Jurassic Park: Castlemaine Redux, a shot-for-shot remake (if you squint) of Jurassic Park, the 1993 blockbuster directed by Steven Spielberg. This film’s director is John Roebuck, the man with the vision and the $3,000 budget. Right now, he’s hunched over a monitor: some sheep walked into the last shot and screwed up the continuity….

…To Roebuck’s surprise, support for his project quickly grew, which meant he only wound up spending $3,000 of his own money – mainly on venue hire and catering. Jurassic Park Motor Pool Australia – a club for owners and enthusiasts of replica Jurassic Park vehicles – supplied some wheels and props. Local cameraman Kristian Bruce brought his professional gear, retiring the DSLR Roebuck had been using. A man in Texas saw the trailer and offered his VFX services. Castlemaine itself – a town that embraces sublimely ridiculous ideas, such as Castlemaine Idyll (a raucous take on Australian Idol) and the community dance-off Hot Moves No Pressure – leapt on tickets to the “world premiere”. There are four screenings of Jurassic Park: Castlemaine Redux at the Theatre Royal between 11 and 13 April….

(13) ROBOVALET. The New York Times prepares readers for the “Invasion of the Home Humanoid Robots” – link bypasses the paywall.

On a recent morning, I knocked on the front door of a handsome two-story home in Redwood City, Calif. Within seconds, the door was opened by a faceless robot dressed in a beige bodysuit that clung tight to its trim waist and long legs.

This svelte humanoid greeted me with what seemed to be a Scandinavian accent, and I offered to shake hands. As our palms met, it said: “I have a firm grip.”

When the home’s owner, a Norwegian engineer named Bernt Børnich, asked for some bottled water, the robot turned, walked into the kitchen and opened the refrigerator with one hand.

Artificial intelligence is already driving carswriting essays and even writing computer code. Now, humanoids, machines built to look like humans and powered by A.I., are poised to move into our homes so they can help with the daily chores. Mr. Børnich is chief executive and founder of a start-up called 1X. Before the end of the year, his company hopes to put his robot, Neo, into more than 100 homes in Silicon Valley and elsewhere….

(14) ANCIENT SPACE MARINER. “Vanguard 1 is the oldest satellite orbiting Earth. Scientists want to bring it home after 67 years”Space tells how they want to do it.

Decades ago during the heady space race rivalry between the former Soviet Union and the United States, the entire world experienced the Sputnik moment when the first artificial satellite orbited the Earth.

Sputnik 1‘s liftoff on Oct. 4, 1957 sparked worries in the U.S., made all the more vexing by the embarrassing and humiliating failure later that year of America’s first satellite launch when the U.S. Navy’s Vanguard rocket went “kaputnik” as the booster toppled over and exploded.An emotional rescue for America came via the first U.S. artificial satellite. Explorer 1 was boosted into space by the Army on Jan. 31, 1958. Nevertheless, despite setbacks, Vanguard 1 did reach orbit on March 17, 1958 as the second U.S. satellite.

And guess what? While Explorer 1 reentered Earth’s atmosphere in 1970, the Naval Research Laboratory’s (NRL) Vanguard 1 microsatellite is still up there. It just celebrated 67 years of circuiting our planet….

…A team that includes aerospace engineers, historians and writers recently proposed “how-to” options for an up-close look and possible retrieval of Vanguard 1….

Vanguard 1 could be placed into a lower orbit for retrieval, for instance, or taken to the International Space Station to be repackaged for a ride to Earth. After study, this veteran of space and time would make for a nifty exhibit at the Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum….

…But there’s a major challenge of snuggling up close to the three pound (1.46-kilogram) Vanguard 1. It is a small-sized satellite, a 15-centimeter aluminum sphere with a 91-centimeter antenna span. It would be a delicate, ‘handle with care’ state of affairs.

As suggested by the study group, perhaps a private funder with historical or philanthropic interests could foot the retrieval bill….

(15) THE EARTH ONCE HAD RINGS. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] Everyone knows that Saturn has rings, but the Earth might have had them too.

Once – before the dinosaurs (whom I have never really forgiven for what they did to Raquel Welch) – the Earth may itself have had rings!

There is evidence of heavy meteorite showers half a billion years ago and, some scientists think, this may have been the remains of ancient rings orbiting our planet….

Matt O’Dowd, over at PBS Space Time looks at a paper that came out at the end of last year that runs with this idea….

Planet Earth is the jewel of the solar system—the shimmery blue oceans, the verdant green forests, the wispy whimsical cloud formations. Saturn is the only competitor for most gorgeous planet with that giant ring system. Hmm… what if we could put the jewel of the Earth in its own ring? Then no contest. Well, there’s an extremely good chance that Earth once DID have a ring system. At least, that’s the proposal by a recent study that has evidence that a mysterious burst in meteor activity nearly half a billion years ago was actually caused by that ancient ring system collapsing onto the Earth. And, you know, if we had a ring once maybe we can have one again.

[Thanks to SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, 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 Shrinking Violet.]


Discover more from File 770

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

33 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 4/5/25 Oh, Scroll Us The Way To The Next Pixel Bar, Oh Don’t Ask Why

  1. (11) I remember seeing the first Tron at a drive-in; probably won’t see the new one that way (streaming is the new drive-in, perhaps)

  2. The Pixels have long for the day settled in on across the Multiverse for their time inside as the cold outside has lingered this year in the areas of northern hemisphere where they reside.

    Some are napping, some are playing, some are being companionable and some are having eating as they often do. They are here in this universe, than gone, than, well, it might the same one back…

  3. (2) If you have to travel, get a burner phone and don’t put anything more than absolutely necessary on it.

    Also, I was at Seacon 79, and I remember Reeve’s acceptance speech. He had the crowd in two sentences. (In the US, we did have tapes of the radio show, though the quality wasn’t great.)

  4. The BBC was broadcasting episodes internationally — I ran the schedule in an early issue of File 770. I should have been able to pick one up on a shortwave frequency but I didn’t succeed. I had to wait to hear it til Hitchhiker was offered on cassette tapes.

  5. Mike, I know I heard the THGTG broadcast but I’ll be damned if I can remember where I was living when I did. I was really, really impressed with the story and the characters, and the cast.

  6. 2
    This whole “texts or emails or thoughts critical of certain individuals or groups” is disqualifying for entry to or continued presence in the US is so childish it really makes a case that certain individuals or groups are not well.

    10
    I so love Tom Gauld’s cartoons; he is a treasure. Hah hah, I say.

    15
    That would have been a lovely sight to see, quite possibly. I think there’s a time-travel story in it for someone.

  7. @Mike Glyer
    The same location I was hearing it, most likely. (Late lamented location, though it’s physically still there.)

  8. (2) HOPEFULLY, the Drumpf crowd will be out by the beginning of 2029–but there’s, first of all the lead-time necessary. Then, the time needed to show ICE and CBP have really been made to stop this crap.

    We’d best find more overseas bids for at least 2030 and 2031, and that’s being optimistic.

    Another Torcon? Vancouver Island? Surely there are plausible European sites, beyond Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Belfast?

  9. Sigh, no jetpack, and I’m still recovering from spending the afternoon with tens of thousands of others around the Washington Monument… and what seems to be about five million around the country.
    Appropos to that, “You can file anything you scroll, at the Pixel Restaurant.”
    (2) Yes. It’s literally insane… as though you can only come in if you fawn over Dear Leader. And the cuts to the NIH REALLY hurt. I worked there for 10 years, until I retired. I emailed some feds I know, and have heard nothing from four of them. The other’s a fan, and I have his non-work email.
    Comic: Bizarro… https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/apr/05/tech-car-driving-government
    (13) On the one hand, doing housework is what people want. On the other hand, another job, along with ditch-digging, that will disappear, leaving no low entry-level jobs.
    (15) And Mu$k, and one or two others, are determined to recreate them (before they create a Kessler Syndrome).

  10. @mark: I went to the one in Salt Lake City. Normally a few hundred people is considered a pretty good turnout. This one was much, much larger. One of the speakers claimed 10,000 although I don’t know how they arrived at that.

  11. JimJ: might have been close. And with the numbers from the West Coast… they’re saying something like 1300+ protests, and over FIVE MILLION turned out.

  12. Lis Carey wrote:
    “Another Torcon? Vancouver Island? Surely there are plausible European sites, beyond Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Belfast?”

    When I moved to Nice in 2019 I was anticipating a successful bid for the 2023 Worldcon. For many good reasons it didn’t happen (Chengdu would have scuppered it in any case). But Paris is plausible, or Amsterdam, Rome, Madrid, Copenhagen, Vienna … all places I’ve attended large (non-SFF) conventions. So as far as facilities are concerned, all very plausible. The necessary fan base? I don’t know, but could they have smaller ones than say Belfast or Helsinki? Perhaps language (level of English) is an issue? It could’ve been a problem in Nice someone indicated to me, but something that would only be minor. So I think there plenty of European possibilities.

  13. @Liz Carey Leeds? After all, we were first! (But no, I’m not planning to put in a bid …)

  14. 2) The only bid for 2030 that I’m aware of is Edmonton, which is in Alberta, Canada. So right now Texas in 2031 is the only US bid on the horizon. They put a pin in that date years ago and have been in wait and see mode since.

    The other years have bidders attached to them, but with the exception of the stellar 2029 team, they generally don’t have strong teams and/or Worldcon experience and/or a robust local fandom to draw on. So if people are invested in seeing the Worldcon continue, they really need to be reaching out to these groups and offering to help.

  15. @Steven French–

    @Liz Carey Leeds? After all, we were first! (But no, I’m not planning to put in a bid …)

    Not knowing much about Leeds, I have no idea whether that’s potentially a real suggestion, or only the joke I believe it mainly is. But “We were first!” could be part of a fun campaign. Be careful what you joke about, or people may start throwing twenties at you.

    Hmm. “Who’s on first? Leeds is on first!”

    Okay, wrong side of the pond for baseball jokes, but you should be doing some campaigning for votes and supporters in the US, too.

    Surely?

  16. Jetpack’s sputtering again, I see….

    TRON, HHGTTG, and humanoid robots all link up in my mind. While some of TRON‘s visual effects actually were early CGI, most of them were done by painstaking teams of human animators and VFX people – as were all the “computer” effects in the TV version of HHGTTG. (And that one just went to prove what they say about radio – it beats TV, the pictures are better.) I strongly suspect that the same is true for “Your Plastic Pal Who’s Fun To Be With!” in number 13, too – that its performance is the result of a lot of elaborate coaching by human beings, and its responses are governed by an entirely human-made decision tree that tries to anticipate every possible circumstance and, in the end, fails, because you just can’t do that.

    The robot can fetch a bottle of water: well, fine. Maybe it can cope if the fridge door sticks; maybe it “knows” what to do if there aren’t any water bottles in the fridge. Can it cope if you move the fridge? Maybe. What if it gets to the fridge and the door is already open, because a masked psychopath is stuffing its owner’s girlfriend inside, in the time-honoured traditional manner? What happens if its owner has a stroke while it’s fetching the water, and the robot returns to find him slumped in a chair, whispering the single word “Rosebud”? Human beings can at least react to things like this (I won’t say “know what to do”, but at least they can have a stab at something.) Robots? Not so much.

    Of course, we poor humans have our limitations, too. I don’t know if it’s even sensible to plan for Worldcons in 2030 or 2031 right now… we need to see how the current situation develops. Perhaps a clearer picture might emerge after those 2026 midterm elections. I’m not even too sanguine about the UK in those years – Labour, having been elected with a massive mandate for change, is utterly failing to use it, and disappointed voters are now turning to the facile lies of the far right, again. It’s all rather worrying, really.

  17. Pingback: AMAZING NEWS FROM FANDOM: April 6, 2025 - Amazing Stories

  18. 2 and PJ Evans: As I noted a few scrolls back when I mentioned Reeve’s remarks, I also was at Seacon. Reeve did not strike me as astonished, maybe more like taken aback, and he very graciously said in his acceptance comments that from the sound of the applause, it seemed that Hitchhiker’s Guide should have won. The difference, of course, was the higher proportion of Americans in the mail-in vote. American fans had had less exposure to Hitchhiker and for all I know might have preferred the film anyhow.

  19. Clarification: All the Seacon Hugo votes were by mail, but a higher proportion of the British voters were subsequently in the audience at the Hugos than were American voters.

  20. We were at Seacon in 1979, though I have no memories of anything but a party at which I saw Roz Kaveny from across the room. I do, however, remember hearing an episode of Hitchhiker’s Guide on the radio, almost certainly at one of the B&Bs we stayed at during that trip–though I’m having trouble tracking down a broadcast history that would confirm that memory. (We were in the UK for several weeks in August of ’79, on our way to Denmark, where my wife would be teaching in her university’s year-abroad program. We spent much of our UK time driving around in a rented yellow Mini and going to Shakespeare productions.)

  21. On the Hama affair. With further research, I find that Hama has been directly quoted as saying he feared getting back into the country explicitly because he is Asian. As quoted, he also said that three lawyer friends advised him not to cross the border, with it implied but not stated that this was merely on the basis of his being Asian. Is this overreaction or a correct reading of how far the border officials are likely to act in defiance of the law and common sense? We live in strange times. I remain puzzled.

  22. Trump promised to carry out the largest deportation in history, but his administration is predictably struggling to carry out what were always completely unrealistic goals. So the pressure is on for agents to make the numbers any way they can, combined with what appears to be a lack of training and accountability. If Hama doesn’t feel safe playing the ICE lottery I for one don’t blame him.

  23. I found it surprisingly hard to establish the date when Hitchhiker’s Guide aired on NPR in the US, (even an NPR Hitchhiker retrospective fails to mention it!) but apparently (per an article in the Brooklyn Eagle) it was not until 1981, so most American fans had never even had a chance to hear it before Seacon in 1979. No wonder it lost in the Hugo vote!

  24. (0) For Filers who don’t already know the Scroll title’s source reference, it’s from ALABAMA SONG (aka “Whisky Bar”). Some Filers may be familiar with it from The Doors, David Bowie, or Dave Van Ronk.

    Others may know it from the original: one of the songs in Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill’s THE THREE-PENNY OPERA.

    The amusing/interesting lagniappe/extra-credit (musical trivia) is that this is one of THREE still-popular songs from the 1928 opera, the other two being “Mack The Knife” (which many know best from Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, or Bobby Darin,” and “Pirate Jenny” (cue Judy Collins).

    All three of these songs are on Frankie Armstrong [1] & Dave Van Ronk’s CD LET NO ONE DECEIVE YOU: SONGS OF BERTOLT BRECHT

    Here’s some individual recordings by Armstrong and Van Ronk, from their solo albums (easiest to find quickly):

    Dave Van Ronk Mack The Knife

    Frankie Armstrong : Pirate Jenny

    And while I’m thinking of it, here’s my favorite recording of Ella Fitzgerald singing Mack The Knife

    [1] Frankie Armstrong was (one of?) the first to sing Peggy Seeger’s [2] I’M GONNA BE AN ENGINEER [3]

    [2] She had brothers named Pete and Mike, who you may have heard of…

    [3] Written while in England, where “engineer” is (often?) referring to “somebody working with machines”

    There will not be a quiz.

  25. Steven F: First? Nope, Philly, ’36.

    DanielD: Pete Seeger sang the Gonna Be An Engineer* as well. As much as I love him, nope, a guy should not sing that. My ultimate version is Frankie Armstrong’s.

    For Americans, “engineer”, in the UK, is what we call a machinist.

  26. @Daniel Dern: I didn’t know this song, so appreciate the information. It’s actually from a different Brecht/Weill collaboration, The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. I couldn’t find the Frankie Armstrong version on Qobuz, but just listened to the one with Lotte Lenya.

  27. @Steve F: I agree to liking Frankie Armstrong’s “Engineer” most (particularly having heard her sing it at, IIRC, the Iron Horse (Northampton, Mass) and probably also Passim (Cambridge, MA), perhaps also Philly Folk Fest. That said, Pete Seegar singing/recording it undoubtedly gave the song lots more exposure (and his sister presumably could have said, “Bro, don’t bogart my song” 🙂

    @Jim Janney: Here’s Frankie Armstrong’s Mack the Knife, on Spotify …ah! and here’s the Dave Van Ronk, from the Armstrong/Vank Ronk Songs of Brecht CD.

    Like I said (or tried to), it’s that many people are likely to those (these) three songs without being aware of their now-nearly-a-century-old antecedents.

  28. @Daniel Dern: thanks! You are quite right there, but the Three-Penny Opera is a favorite of mine, both in the original and in Weill’s arrangement for winds, so I was puzzled that I couldn’t place the song. I saw a production of Mahagonny once in the 1960s, on my parents’ black-and-white TV set in what was probably terrible sound, but I was far too young to understand or remember any of it.

  29. However, so far there are only US bids for 2030 and 2031. This may very well change.

    In item (2).

    The only 2030 bid of which I’m aware is in the beautiful Canadian city of Edmonton. If we’re fortunate enough to win the right to host in 2030, we will be very pleased to welcome fans from all over the world.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.