Pixel Scroll 5/16/25 It’s Hot As Hell In Pixeldelphia

(1) NATIONAL SPACE SOCIETY PICKS ROBERT A. HEINLEIN MEMORIAL AWARD WINNER. “Legendary Nasa Astronaut Story Musgrave To Receive Award At The International Space Development Conference” reports Fox 5 San Diego.

Former NASA astronaut Dr. Story Musgrave will receive the prestigious Robert A. Heinlein Memorial Award for his efforts toward making humanity a spacefaring civilization this June at the National Space Society’s International Space Development Conference® (ISDC®). The conference will be held June 19-22 in Orlando, Florida, at the Rosen Centre Hotel.

Musgrave is a former NASA astronaut who was active during the Apollo, Skylab, and shuttle programs. He flew into space six times and aboard all five shuttle orbiters. He is also a medical doctor and holds six academic degrees in mathematics and statistics, business administration, chemistry, physiology and biophysics, literature, and an M.D. Musgrave served in the U.S. Marine Corps and has flown 17,700 hours in a wide variety of aircraft including 7,500 hours in jets.

“Story Musgrave is a legend in the astronaut corps,” said Isaac Arthur, president of the NSS. “Besides his stunning academic accomplishments, he is also a pilot, has practiced medicine, and is deeply educated in literature. He is a true polymath, and his contributions to core ideas of long-term spaceflight and settlement are impressive, making him a truly deserving of the prestigious Heinlein Memorial Award.”…

(2) GREGORY BENFORD UPDATE. Kathryn Cramer wrote in a comment on File 770 today:

I called Greg Benford last night and spoke to him about the statement Jim is circulating. Greg opposes Jim getting control of his finances and of his life.

My understanding is that this was either Jim’s 5th or 6th attempt to get Greg under conservatorship. The statement posted by Joe Haldeman was emailed out by Jim Benford as a PDF to a number of Gregs hard SF writer friends. (I now have a copy of the PDF.) Apparently, Jim was requesting that they post it.

The statement does not accurately represent the situation. And indeed if everything in the statement were true, Jim would not be causing the situation to be litigated on Facebook and via spamming Greg’s friends.

Cramer has made similar posts on Facebook, including here and here, where many comments have been left.

(3) ERIN UNDERWOOD PRESENTS. Erin Underwood has two new videos, a review of the first two episodes of Murderbot on Apple TV+, and a review of the conclusion of Andor Season 2. 

  • Murderbot TV Series Review – Did They Get It Right?

Apple TV+ brings The Murderbot Diaries by Martha Wells to life—but does the series capture the sarcastic, media-loving SecUnit fans adore? Here’s my review of Episodes 1 & 2 and why Murderbot might be your next favorite sci-fi series.

  • Andor’s Ending Just Rewrote Rogue One – Star Wars Finale Review

Andor Season 2 ends not with a bang, but with something more powerful. In this review of Episodes 10–12, I explore how Tony Gilroy’s season finalé doesn’t just complete Cassian Andor’s arc, it reshapes how we understand Rogue One. From Luthen’s quiet sacrifice to Kleya’s infiltration (and the surprising final scene that reframes Cassian’s final moments) this series changes everything.

(4) WHAT IS NEWS? The Pew Research Center analyzes “What News Is (and Isn’t) According to Americans”.

…In the digital age, researchers – including Pew Research Center – increasingly study news from the audience perspective, what some have deemed an “audience turn.” Using this approach, the concept of news is not necessarily tied to professional journalism, and audiences, rather than journalists, determine what is news….

…Key findings:

  • Defining news has become a personal, and personalized, experience. People decide what news means to them and which sources they turn to based on a variety of factors, including their own identities and interests.
  • Most people agree that information must be factual, up to date and important to society to be considered news. Personal importance or relevance also came up often, both in participants’ own words and in their actual behaviors.
  • “Hard news” stories about politics and war continue to be what people most clearly think of as news. U.S. adults are most likely to say election updates (66%) and information about the war in Gaza (62%) are “definitely news.”
  • There are also consistent views on what news is not. People make clear distinctions between news versus entertainment and news versus opinion.
  • At the same time, views of news as not being “biased” or “opinionated” can conflict with people’s actual behaviors and preferences. For instance, 55% of Americans believe it’s at least somewhat important that their news sources share their political views.
  • People don’t always like news, but they say they need it: While many express negative emotions surrounding news (such as anger or sadness), they also say it helps them feel informed or feel that they “need” to keep up with it.
  • People’s emotions about news are at times tied to broader feelings of media distrust, or specific events going on at that time – perhaps in combination with individuals’ political identities. For instance, partisans often react positively to news about their own political parties or candidates and negatively to news covering their opposition, which means feelings can shift with political changes.

(5) ANOTHER SEASON OF FUTURE FOOTBALL. [Item by N.] Sports writer and documentarian Jon Bois’ multimedia narrative 17776 amassed a lot of buzz and a cult fandom upon its release in 2017 (this contributor remembers trying to push for it to get a Hugo nomination, despite its unconventional framing). Following its 2020 sequel 20020, it looks like there’s a third installment coming—and this time, it’s been sold to Tor:

(6) THE SENTENCE IS WRITTEN. “Man who attacked author Salman Rushdie gets 25 years in prison” reports NPR.

Hadi Matar, the man who severely injured novelist Salman Rushdie in a 2022 stabbing attack, was sentenced Friday to 25 years in prison — the maximum for attempted murder.

Matar, 27, was found guilty of second-degree attempted murder in February for his attack on the author at the nonprofit Chautauqua Institution in New York state in August 2022. A knife-wielding Matar leapt onto the stage where Rushdie was about to give a lecture, stabbing the author multiple times in the face, neck, arm, abdomen and eye.

The assault left Rushdie, now 77, partially blind and with permanent nerve damage. The author did not return to the Chautauqua County court in Mayville, N.Y., for the sentencing, but did submit a victim impact statement….

(7) LORDS CONSIDER AMENDED AI BILL. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] The House of Lords (in the UK) have returned a second time to the House of Commons an amendment to the forthcoming Data (Use and Access) Bill.  This amendment has already been rejected twice by the Commons who want AI trainers copyright free access to copyright material.  The House of Lords want IP creators to have the right to refuse to allow their work be used to train AIs. The Lords voted against
the Commons position by 287 to 88.

We await the Commons response. Constitutionally – and remember Britain has an unwritten constitution (unlike WSFS) – the Commons should now accept their Lordship’s view, however there is precedent for them to ignore it though that would likely spark a bit of a Parliamentary row.  We await, with interest, outcomes.

Details here: “Industry urges government to accept data bill AI amendment as it passes in Lords” at The Bookseller (behind a paywall).

(8) A TIME THE WRITER GOT PAID. Daytonian in Manhattan recalls some notable tenants of “H. I. Feldman’s 1940 139 East 35th Street” in New York.

…Moving into an apartment in October 1941 were actor Frank O’Connor and his wife, author and screenwriter Ayn Rand.  The couple met on the set of Cecil B. DeMille’s The King of Kings and were married on April 15, 1929.  Born in Saint Petersburg, Russia, in 1905, Ayn became an American citizen in 1931.

Two months after moving in, Rand landed a contract to publish the novel she was working on, The Fountainhead.  It was published in May 1943.  Later that year, Rand returned home from a business lunch and, according to Anne Conover Heller in her Ayn Rand and the World She Made:

When she got back to the apartment, tired and downcast, her husband was waiting in the dimly lit living room, a peculiar look on his face.  “Well, darling,” he said, after a dramatic pause, “while you were at lunch you earned fifty thousand dollars.”

Frank O’Connor had received the phone call from Warner Bros. informing her they had purchased the screen rights to The Fountainhead.  The couple left 139 East 35th Street in December that year….

(9) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Paul Weimer.]

May 16, 1999The Phantom Menace

By Paul Weimer: The year was 1999 and the Moon blasted out of orbit, leaving Martin Landau and Barbara Bain to wander through space…

Wait, wrong universe, let’s try again.

The year was 1999. Near the end of the decade between the fall of the wall and the fall of the Towers. Sixteen years after Return of the JediThe Phantom Menace was going to be released in theaters. Uncharacteristically for me, I had already seen the soundtrack and realized that there was a movie spoiler hidden in the list of tracks.

Regardless, I was determined to see it in a theater, on opening day. I tried three theaters that day (May 16th) before finally getting a ticket, in a completely full theater. It was an event, an excitement in the air.  And then the crawl began. The cadence and style were of the first three movies, but taxation dispute? What WAS this? And then the movie began.

There is some good stuff, some of the old Lucas magic. The Qui-Gon and Obi relationship. Classic serial plot twist with the switched Princess. The enemy droids. (Roger, Roger). Some of Naboo looks great.

But some of the magic was gone or worse, turned and twisted. Jar-Jar Binks, the worst character Lucas has created, bar none. Anakin originally made C3P0? Really? Why? It’s a story beat and choice that makes absolutely no sense, then or now. 

And then there is the momentum killer. Don’t get me wrong, the pod race is a spectacle and very fun to watch. But it absolutely kills the momentum of a movie that is flailing already. Sure, Ben-Hur did it but Ben-Hur was not floundering before the chariot race. The pod race is outsized for the stakes it has. And the movie never recovers from it.  By the time we get to the fight with Darth Maul, it’s a relief, not the culmination of a great movie. Lucas’ magic failed him in this movie. 

I tried watching the movie one more time since that fateful opening day…and my opinion, unfortunately, has not improved. I did watch Attack of the Clones and The Revenge of the Sith and those movies have their own problems. But, fortunately, they are not The Phantom Menace.

(10) COMICS SECTION.

(11) SPIDER-GWEN. Announced earlier today at Collider, the adventures of Spider-Gwen will undergo an evolution this August in Spider-Gwen: Ghost-Spider #1 by writer Stephanie Phillips and artist Paolo Villanelli.

The series follows Phillips and Villanelli’s current run of Spider-Gwen: The Ghost-Spider which comes to a thrilling conclusion this July and sets the stage for this bold new beginning. Departing her home dimension under mysterious circumstances and finding herself trapped in Earth-616, Gwen embarked on a journey involving Loki, the TVA, and the reality-altering Cosmic Cube. Now, Gwen’s extended stay becomes permanent as her very life is rewoven into the main Marvel Universe!

Gwen Stacy isn’t from this Earth but she’s here to stay, so it’s time to make herself at home! A new costume, a new home life– heck, she’s even starting a new band! Unfortunately for Gwen, new threats are also heading her way, starting with one that just might be her own fault! Follow the Ghost-Spider as she settles into Earth-616 to stay!

“For Gwen, this new start is about possibility,” Phillips told Collider. “She’s carrying the weight of her past, but she’s finally in a place where she can build something new—new allies, new purpose, and maybe even a new sense of self… or, recovering an element of herself we haven’t seen in a while. Like playing in a band.”

(12) FIRST VOLDEMORT, NOW… “Hunger Games Sunrise on the Reaping: Ralph Fiennes Is President Snow” says The Hollywood Reporter.

Lionsgate‘s The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping has found its President Snow.

Ralph Fiennes will play the ruthless Panem dictator in director Francis Lawrence‘s forthcoming film in the franchise, The Hollywood Reporter has learned exclusively…

…Fiennes follows in the footsteps of the late Donald Sutherland, who portrayed Coriolanus Snow in the series’ first four films that kicked off with The Hunger Games hitting theaters in 2012. Blyth starred as a younger version of the character opposite Rachel Zegler in 2023’s prequel feature The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes….

(13) IS HE SUPE ENOUGH? [Item by Steven French.] The Guardian’s “Week in Geek” considers the trailer for James Gunn’s Superman: “James Gunn’s new Superman is more human than alien god – but can he still inspire awe?”

For those of us brought up on the 1978 version of Superman, the sight of him squirming in the face of a mildly probing interview by Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan) in the first full trailer for James Gunn’s Superman is like watching a Greek god forget his lines in a school play. Rather than a morally upright, granite-jawed colossus watching over us like Jesus in a cape, this new David Corenswet-essayed take on Kal-El is one who is less a saviour from the stars than a disbelieving schoolboy who can’t quite understand how he’s getting aggravation for rescuing a cat up a tree….

(14) SOL GALL. “Sun Launches Its Strongest Solar Flare of the Year So Far, Causing Radio Blackouts Around the World” reports Smithsonian Magazine.

The sun has had quite a busy week hurling solar flares at our planet, causing blackouts across the globe.

“After weeks of calm, solar activity is suddenly high again,” reports Spaceweather.com. This is not totally unexpected, as scientists announced in the fall that the sun has reached the peak of its natural, 11-year cycle of activity, a high level known as the solar maximum. During this phase, the sun has more sunspots—dark, cool regions with tangled-up magnetic fields that can erupt material out into space.

The recent flares came from a pair of sunspots, including a new one that emerged earlier this week. Called AR4087, the spot is not completely aligned with Earth, but it’s currently turning toward our planet. “If the explosions continue for a few more days, however, Earth will find itself squarely in the strike zone,” with the potential for aurora-causing coronal mass ejections (CMEs) to arrive, writes Spaceweather.com….

… On Tuesday, a sunspot named AR4086 shot out an X1.2 solar flare. The very next day, the new sunspot AR4087 followed up with an M5.3 flare before a significantly stronger X2.7 flare—then topped it all off with another M7.7 flare, as reported by Live Science’s Jess Thomson. The AR4087 explosion caused “strong” R3 radio blackouts in Europe, Asia and the Middle East, per Space.com’s Daisy Dobrijevic….

(15) JUST PUCKER UP, AND BLOW. [Item by Steven French.] If we could talk with the animals … well, maybe someday we can: “Dolphin whistle decoders win $100,000 interspecies communication prize” reports the Guardian.

A $100,000 prize for communicating with animals has been scooped by researchers who have shed light on the meaning of dolphins’ whistles.

The Coller-Dolittle Prize for Two-way Inter-species Communication was launched last year by the Jeremy Coller Foundation and Tel Aviv University.

The winning team, the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program led by Laela Sayigh and Peter Tyack from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, has been studying bottle-nosed dolphins in waters near Sarasota, Florida, for more than four decades.

The researchers used non-invasive technologies such as hydrophones and digital acoustic tags attached by suction cups to record the animals’ sounds. These include name-like “signature” whistles, as well as “non-signature” whistles – sounds that make up about 50% of the animals’ calls but are poorly understood.

In their latest work, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, the team identified at least 20 different types of non-signature whistle that are produced by multiple dolphins, finding two types were each shared by at least 25 individuals.

When the researchers played these two sounds back to dolphins they found one triggered avoidance in the animals, suggesting it could be an alarm signal, while the other triggered a range of responses, suggesting it could be a sound made by dolphins when they encounter something unexpected…

[Thanks to Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, N., Erin Underwood, Steven H Silver, Danny Sichel, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, and SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Maytree.]


Discover more from File 770

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

17 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 5/16/25 It’s Hot As Hell In Pixeldelphia

  1. (9) I confess I’ve never seen TPM – had a newborn at the time it was released and never got around to seeing it after.

  2. Andrew (not Werdna) says I confess I’ve never seen TPM – had a newborn at the time it was released and never got around to seeing it after.

    I readily admit that the only Star Wars I’ve seen since the first three films which I adore with The Empire Strikes Back being my favorite by far is the animated material.

  3. (0) Why, asks the Phlily ex-pat?
    (2) She spoke with him? This does not fit into the scenario posted previously.
    (4) And the distinction between news by reporters, and “journalism”?
    (7) I seem to agree with Lords – no, they can’t scrape my writing and pay nothing.
    (8) Yeah, well, given the polemics she wrote, she was not a novelist or storyteller. I read Anthem when I was 19, and complained since then that not only were all the characters strawmen, but you saw the strings pulling them. I may write political stories, but they’re stories, with people in them.
    Memory lane: Phantom Tollbooth… Was terrible. Around the time it came out, someone on the ‘Net wrote that they had a 17 page treatment, and they’d tried and tried to sell it to Lucas, and no one would even look at it. I read it – they did post it – and it was the story we’d been waiting for, scenes of Anakin and his mother escaping over rooftops… but no, this crap.
    (13) No, that’s not the Superman I want to go see.

  4. I don’t think anyone who didn’t see The Phantom Menace missed much.

    Well, except Jar-Jar Binks, and missing Jar-Jar has to count as a win.

  5. (9) In recent years I’ve seen opinion on the prequel trilogy shifting from “Oh my God those’re bad” to “They’re pretty good actually.”

    No…no, I’m definitely with Paul on this. That initial assessment was pretty spot on.

  6. Mark: Yes, I confirm that I spoke with Greg Benford over the phone.

  7. Mm re the reference via TPM to the old ITC/Gerry Anderson live action show “Space 1999”, if I recall correctly, the late Isaac A cut that ITC show to ribbons re the idea of the moon exploding and then sending the spacecraft therein on a journey. He had worked out that the amount of energy needed to do that would have probably destroyed the Earth and Moon anyway. There were also the caustic comments (by actor Barry Morse) on his leaving –at his request– said TV show at the end of the 1st series. His absence is barely mentioned at all in the 2nd series. Needless to say I have little positive to say re that (IMO awful) show: in no way does it compare to Anderson’s previous series: “UFO” (from which S/1999 derived). But to each his own. Oh and I accept that UFO also had its issues. Best wishes and BCNU..

  8. 4
    I know it’s just a poll, and a few odd responses can skew from true, but 85% is alarmingly low for “whether a story is factual” being news. I suppose you could hair-splittingly argue that initial reports are newsworthy even if they turn out to contain a falsehood or inaccuracy, all to be corrected eventually. But surely, for the love of all that is holy, the events themselves should be actual events to be considered news. Isn’t factualness the sine qua non, the shibboleth, the quintessence, the veritable literal definition of news?

    6
    I have never understood why this kind of conviction and sentencing depends on outcome. Yes, the man only attempted to kill Rushdie, but the intention was to kill him. I don’t think we should reward him for being an incompetent murderer.

  9. (10) Fixing errors they created themselves is actually a very frequent activity for coding models: Their first draft ignores requirements or is grossly wrong, and as soon as this is pointed out to them, they try to fix their errors, sometimes successfully.

    The combination of prolific and sloppy is really soul sucking. I don’t understand how some engineers can put up with it.

  10. (2) Every time I see guardianship fights like this, I’m grateful for having dodged such a bullet in the care of my father, who passed away this January.

    Luckily, none of the people surrounding him had any serious intent of taking advantage of him (unless one counts mooching restaurant meals off him in exchange for listening to his steadily decreasing range of conversation).

    He used to be a rather smart guy, and was well connected and liked in the community, so when talking to him in casual conversation, you’d have a difficult time discerning that anything was amiss. But over the last few years of his life, he accumulated a rather significant list of erratic acts, such as a parking hit and run (which he blamed on his e-mail being hacked), being sued for failing to pay for his health insurance (he claimed to not have health insurance nor deriving any benefits from it, despite getting cancer treatment costing thousands a month which were fully covered), and refusing hospital treatments (he has a biology PhD and suddenly decided that blood tests for infection were made up by hospitals to get more business).

    It was a really difficult decision whether to have him placed under guardianship or not. Ultimately, he trusted the people around him sufficiently that we decided to humor his remaining erratic ideas and work around them, rather than depriving him of autonomy. The financial aspect was also tricky to navigate, as he had for a long time passed himself off as considerably better off than he really was, so some people learning about the true state of his finances were initially shocked and suspected exploitation.

  11. Mark, I can find nothing on the internet that indicates the notoriously security minded Mouse allowed this to happen. There are certainly fan treatments out there including several that fit the length you describe that take what they, as they describe it, the extraneous dialogue and scenes out and eliminate “that creature” (several used explicitly racist terms to describe him) and some even photoshop images to illustrate their scenes.

    Collected wisdom of the Filers, has there been a treatment released for any of the films?

  12. CatE: this was around 2000, so not the Mouse. This was an individual’s post. Several times in the last few years, I’ve tried to find it, and no luck. The Mouse never saw it.
    And the prequel trilogy, the only one worth watching is #3 – that’s the one when I saw it, I’d been waiting for. But jeez, the idiots bringing under 10 kids to a rated PG-13 movie… they probably had nightmares for weeks with the fight… And, for that matter, with Lucas’ references to Greek tragedies, this was it – Obi Wan’s failure to kill Anakin.

  13. (7) 100% wrong, I’m afraid. The constitutional position is the primacy of the Commons. This is via the Salisbury convention on matters that were in a manifesto, but generally, ultimately the Lords back down if the Government, via their majority in the Commons, refuses to amend or accept a Lords amendment.

  14. @mark
    “(0) Why, asks the Phlily ex-pat?”

    There’s a line sung by John Adams (played by William Daniels in both the Broadway play and the film) in the musical “1776” that goes “It’s hot as hell in Philadelphia in the summertime.”

    Several years later, Daniels played surgeon Mark Craig in the TV show “St. Elsewhere”. In one episode, Dr. Craig and Mrs. Craig (played by Daniels’ real-life wife Bonnie Bartlett) go to Philadelphia for a medical conference, and, it being summer, Craig sings to his wife “It’s hot as hell in Philadelphia in the summertime.”

    St. Elsewhere was just full of easter eggs like this – it was one of those shows that rewarded repeat viewing, so you could catch what you missed the first go-round.

  15. @bill: Not “in the summertime” in the song, just “As hot as Hell in Philadelphia” (in fact, the song is sung in the show in the first scene in early May, so it was unseasonably warm in Spring that year in Philadelphia).

  16. (11) A classic SF tale of the Silurian hypothesis is Niven’s “The
    Green Marauder” (a Draco’s Tavern tale)

  17. @Andrew (not Werdna) — Thanks for the correction. I was going off an ancient memory of watching that episode of St. Elsewhere (39 years since it first ran) and the contemporary reviews that pointed out the connections to 1776 but I have now double checked and you are correct. And it’s Congress that sings the line in the musical, not John Adams.

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.