(1) WRITE ON DEMAND PUBLISHING. Chuck Tingle wasted no time capitalizing on the Chicago Sun-Times’ gaffe of including numerous AI-hallucinated titles on its summer recommended reading list. He has slightly adjusted the author’s name from Andy Weir to Andy Mirror, which will probably help keep his lawyer happy.

(2) THE ANARCHY AND THE ECSTASY. Molly Templeton argues “Magic Doesn’t Have to Make Sense” at Reactor.
For reasons I’m not sure I will ever fully understand, the topic of magic and rules comes up with slightly alarming frequency in SFF circles. So much so, in fact, that it is very tempting to use ominous capital letters when referring to the two bits of said topic: Magic and Rules. Does magic have to have rules? Would everyone just run about drunk with power if the rules did not constrain their magics in some way? What are rules, and what are parameters? If limits are not imposed upon wizards, will they ever impose them upon themselves? When does magic become science, and how much of this entire topic can I throw at the feet of Clarke’s third law?
That law, for those in need of a refresher, states that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. Fair enough. But must we try to reverse-engineer this?…
… I am here instead to sing the praises of rebellious, lawless, delightfully un-rulebound magic—not just the kind people do, but also the kind that simply is. I tried to find an example from Catherynne Valente’s Fairyland books and was overwhelmed with them: the wyverary (half wyvern, half library); Gleam the lamp; the smartly dressed Green Wind; the whole thing with the moon in the third book: Valente writes like she’s never heard of “rules,” and I have never wanted anything in one of her novels explained to me any further than she explains it. Strange, arguably magical things happen in Helen Oyeyemi books, and whenever they—or she—run up against a rule, whether of science or nature or anything else, it goes ignored. A lot of my favorite books, I can’t remember how the magic works. And I mean that as a compliment. In The Incandescent, magic exists, and some people are just better at various kinds of it than others. (Some of it involves invoking demons, and if you mess up that kind, well, magic definitely has a price.) Magic in The Magicians comes from pain. That’s fine. That’s a source, not a rule (one does have to learn fancy hand motions in order to do magic, but that’s a process). It also always kind of feels like a wry punchline to me. Every life has some pain. Therefore we’ve all got some magic….
(3) WRITER BRIEFINGS. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] BBC Radio 4 (formerly known as the Home Service) has just broadcast two programmes of interest to writers and, I guess, avid readers too.
The first is on the history of copyright through to today. As Filers will know, there has been great author and fan concern over the use of using copyright material to train AI. This is of relevance to the history of copyright which came about due to advances in reproduction technology, from monks’ highly illustrated ad coloured manuscripts to the printing press and digital material. Listen here: BBC Radio 4: In Our Time, “Copyright”.
Copyright protects and regulates a piece of work – whether that’s a book, a painting, a piece of music or a software programme. It emerged as a way of balancing the interests of authors, artists, publishers, and the public in the context of evolving technologies and the rise of mechanical reproduction.
Writers and artists such as Alexander Pope, William Hogarth and Charles Dickens became involved in heated debates about ownership and originality that continue to this day – especially with the emergence of artificial intelligence.
Melvyn Bragg moderates.

The second is on the way we (society) are (is) changing the use of punctuation. The question mark and exclamation mark is holding its own, but the comma, colon, and eve the full stop is on the way out! Listen here: BBC Radio 4: Word of Mouth, “The End of the Full Stop?”
The use of punctuation is rapidly changing within the quick-fire back-and-forth of instant messaging. Are these changes causing misunderstandings?
Presenter Michael Rosen and his guest Dr Christian Ilbury discuss. Is the full stop on the way out? What about capital letters? Exclamation marks and question marks seem to be holding their ground, but what about the rest?

(4) RECALLING THE FIRST TIME. [Item by Steven French.] Remember the first time you saw Star Wars in the cinema? Well, the Guardian would like to hear from you: “Tell us your memories of seeing Star Wars in cinemas”.
You can tell us your memories of seeing the original Star Wars using this form.
Please share your story if you are 18 or over, anonymously if you wish.
(5) BILL WOULD BLOCK STATES FROM REGULATING AI. “House Republicans want to stop states from regulating AI. More than 100 organizations are pushing back” reports CNN Business.
More than 100 organizations are raising alarms about a provision in the House’s sweeping tax and spending cuts package that would hamstring the regulation of artificial intelligence systems.
Tucked into President Donald Trump’s “one big, beautiful” agenda bill is a rule that, if passed, would prohibit states from enforcing “any law or regulation regulating artificial intelligence models, artificial intelligence systems, or automated decision systems” for 10 years.
With AI rapidly advancing and extending into more areas of life — such as personal communications, health care, hiring and policing — blocking states from enforcing even their own laws related to the technology could harm users and society, the organizations said. They laid out their concerns in a letter sent Monday to members of Congress, including House Speaker Mike Johnson and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
“This moratorium would mean that even if a company deliberately designs an algorithm that causes foreseeable harm — regardless of how intentional or egregious the misconduct or how devastating the consequences — the company making or using that bad tech would be unaccountable to lawmakers and the public,” the letter, provided exclusively to CNN ahead of its release, states.
The bill cleared a key hurdle when the House Budget Committee voted to advance it on Sunday night, but it still must undergo a series of votes in the House before it can move to the Senate for consideration.
The 141 signatories on the letter include academic institutions such as the University of Essex and Georgetown Law’s Center on Privacy and Technology, and advocacy groups such as the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Economic Policy Institute. Employee coalitions such as Amazon Employees for Climate Justice and the Alphabet Workers Union, the labor group representing workers at Google’s parent company, also signed the letter, underscoring how widely held concerns about the future of AI development are….
(6) CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS FOR JOURNEY PLANET AUGUST ISSUE, [Item by Jean Martin.] San Francisco and the Bay Area have inspired cultural and scientific revolutions since the Gold Rush in 1849. Thus, we’re excited to boost the city’s relevance in the science fiction/fantasy genre in the August issue of Journey Planet.
If you have any suggestions for an article, poem, story or art that revolves around San Francisco and science fiction/fantasy, please reach out to us at: journeyplanetsubmissions@gmail.com.
The deadline for submissions is July 1.
For instance, we’d welcome articles about books or movies/TV shows set in San Francisco and its environs and/or created by residents of the SF Bay Area. We’d especially like to hear from diverse voices, such as myths and folktales from the Ohlone and Hispanic cultures. Looking forward to hearing your creative ideas!
(7) FREE READ. A new story from Grist’s “Imagine 2200” – “The Seed Dropper”.
In this poetic story, by simóne j banks, Louisiana native June returns to his hometown decades after devastation from floods and petrochemical plants chased his family away, with a mission to reseed the land and memories from the past to point the way.
Deeply connected to both the beauty of the Mississippi River and the devastation brought by petrochemical plants to the region known as Cancer Alley, The Seed Dropper dabbles in nostalgia and sadness, but also hope and possibility, as it imagines the world of 2050 and the first steps to restoring what’s been lost.
(8) GUFF PAPERBACK RELEASED. The GUFF trip report anthology announced as an ebook in February is now also available in paperback from Ansible Editions: GUFF: The Incomplete Chronicles edited by David Langford. Here’s the full information about the book.
This volume gathers up the chapters of GUFF reports that were unfinished or too short for standalone publication. Donations to GUFF rather than TAFF are encouraged for those who enjoy this one. Download it here.
This book brings together the known segments of unfinished Get Up-and-Over/Going Under Fan Fund trip reports. The GUFF winners represented are Joseph Nicholas (1981), Justin Ackroyd (1984), Irwin Hirsh (1987), Roman Orszanski (1990), Eva Hauser (1992), Paul Kincaid (1999), Damien Warman and Juliette Woods (jointly, 2005) and Ang Rosin (2007).
From the Introduction by David Langford
As with its ancestor fund TAFF, a long-standing tradition of GUFF is that returned winners administer the fund until replaced by their successor from the same hemisphere and if possible write a substantial trip report, both for sale in aid of the fund and for the entertainment and edification of fandom. This tradition goes back to before TAFF itself began. A special fund was organized to bring Walt Willis from Ireland to the USA and the World SF Convention in 1952 (an initiative which led directly to the founding of TAFF), and his report The Harp Stateside is regarded as a classic of fan writing.
Many GUFF winners since 1979 have likewise published full-length trip reports (click here for available downloads). Some were waylaid by the horrors of real life and failed even to begin a report; some published instalments in fanzines but didn’t finish. Joseph Nicholas drafted a very long report whose MS was lost in a house move. Irwin Hirsh has published ten instalments, enough to be called a completed report, but wants to add more and is represented here by two chapters about the UK Worldcon he attended. Otherwise, this ebook collects what remains of reports that have been abandoned, or are so brief that they couldn’t plausibly be published as a standalone fanzine in the tradition of The Harp Stateside. There’s a lot of fine fan writing here.
This GUFF-centred companion to the TAFF Trip Report Anthology (2017) is published as an Ansible Editions ebook for the TAFF site on 1 March 2025. Cover artwork by Ian Gunn. 73,000 words.
(9) STARTS TOMORROW. Fountain of Youth – Official Trailer. The best secrets are the hardest to find. John Krasinski, Natalie Portman, Eiza González and Domhnall Gleeson star in Fountain of Youth. Premiering May 23 on Apple TV+
(10) MEMORY LANE.
[Written by Cat Eldridge.]
May 22, 1981 — Outland film
Outland premiered forty-four years ago this date in the States in select cities, but everywhere that following weekend. It got a Hugo nomination at Chicon IV, the year that Raiders of the Lost Ark won.
This original title of the film was Io as it’s set on Jupiter’s moon Io, but audience testing showed that wasn’t understandable at all as the test audiences thought it was the number ten, or, at least to me less puzzlingly, low. So in homage to the Western genre, it became Outland.
Which was appropriate as the writer Peter Hyams wanted to do one: “I wanted to do a Western. Everybody said, ‘You can’t do a Western; Westerns are dead; nobody will do a Western’. I remember thinking it was weird that this genre that had endured for so long was just gone. But then I woke up and came to the conclusion – obviously after other people – that it was actually alive and well, but in outer space.”
So they had a script that they really liked, now they need their actor. They wanted and got Sean Connery to be in their version in High Noon. Connery’s career had been in a nose dive as of late then, so this was a golden chance for him, so he took the role.
Law enforcement officers are faced with the nature of right and wrong, and duty versus keeping themselves safe, but while Will Kane in High Noon is played as an archetypal hero who discovers the world isn’t black and white as he was led to believe, Will O’Niel already exists firmly in the gray where things are always messy when we meet him.
Connery was magnificent in this role. In addition to Sean Connery, the movie includes performances by Peter Boyle, Frances Sternhagen, and James Sikking, who all I firmly believe deliver memorable portrayals of complex characters.
So they got the lead and the rest of an excellent core cast, now they had to film a movie. They had a very tight budget, just seventeen million dollars. The quite amazing sets were enhanced by the use of a new filming process called Introvision which allowed the director to mix a combination of sets, mattes and a generous use of miniatures in-camera, avoiding the then-lengthy process of extensive use of green screens.
Critics were mixed on it. Gary Arnold at the Washington Post thought it was “trite and dinky” whereas Desmond Ryan at the Philadelphia Inquirer called it: “a brilliant sci-fi Western.”
I said it cost seventeen million to make, and it made, errr, just about seventeen million dollars. That means that it lost money for the studio. Lots by the time you figure printing up reels for the theatres, promotional costs and that the studio only gets fifty percent most often of ticket sales. Not that the studio would admit that.
Now I liked the film. I saw it some years after it came out and thought it worked rather well, but then I think it is police drama rather than a SF film.
It is not legally streaming anywhere so you know that linking to it is a bad idea, right?

(11) COMICS SECTION.
- Bizarro moves a show to a different state.
- Mother Goose and Grimm discover a misleading name.
- Rubes knows you know the answer.
- Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal finds writers that other writers can’t stand.
- The Other Coast is barking mad.
(12) WHAT’S THE BEST WAY FOR A MUSIC FAN TO SUPPORT THEIR FAVORITE ARTISTS? [Item by John A Arkansawyer.] This is an interesting look at how fandom and commerce interact, focusing on music but of interest, I think, to fans more generally. NPR asks “Is there a right way of being a music fan?”
…I offer these two stories to highlight the contrasting conceptions of what constitutes fandom in 2025. In the first case, the fan is a customer looking for the best deal. In the second, she is a patron, supporting a creative favorite not only with money but through sustained attention and care. Both terms stick the artist within a somewhat servile position, delivering goods, but the latter feels more genteel and possibly more sustaining. “Customer” implies a one-way relationship, with the artist cast as a seller; “patron” suggests an ongoing connection through which a fan ardently supports an artist for a time or over a whole career….
… Today, “always on” artists have to be far more responsive to their fans’ desires. This means providing more music, but also many other means of consumption and interaction, from VIP concert experiences to TikTok videos, special merch lines, and, for an increasing number of artists, OnlyFans or Patreon accounts that grant direct access. Much commentary exists on the ever-growing power of the fan, but I’m interested in how fans negotiate this partly real, partly imagined surge in influence, and what it means for artists at a moment when their role in society has never been less clear….
(13) AI CHATBOTS DO NOT HAVE FREE SPEECH RIGHTS. [Item by Mark Roth-Whitworth.] So says the judge. “In lawsuit over teen’s death, judge rejects arguments that AI chatbots have free speech rights” – AP News has the story.
A federal judge on Wednesday rejected arguments made by an artificial intelligence company that its chatbots are protected by the First Amendment — at least for now. The developers behind Character.AI are seeking to dismiss a lawsuit alleging the company’s chatbots pushed a teenage boy to kill himself.
The judge’s order will allow the wrongful death lawsuit to proceed, in what legal experts say is among the latest constitutional tests of artificial intelligence.
The suit was filed by a mother from Florida, Megan Garcia, who alleges that her 14-year-old son Sewell Setzer III fell victim to a Character.AI chatbot that pulled him into what she described as an emotionally and sexually abusive relationship that led to his suicide.
Meetali Jain of the Tech Justice Law Project, one of the attorneys for Garcia, said the judge’s order sends a message that Silicon Valley “needs to stop and think and impose guardrails before it launches products to market.”…
(14) ROCKETSHIPS IN QUEENS? Untapped New York tours “Rocket Park, a Space Age Remnant of NYC’s 1964 World’s Fair”.
Peeking over the foliage outside the Hall of Science in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park are two towering metal structures you wouldn’t expect to find in Queens, rocketships. These space-age remnants are relics of the United States Space Park, an attraction created by NASA and the Department of Defense for the 1964 World’s Fair. These vessels aren’t even the first rockets to come to New York City. In 1957, a Redstone rocket was put on display in the main concourse of Grand Central Terminal. While the Redstone rocket was only a temporary fixture, you can still see the World’s Fair’s rockets today in Rocket Park, a playground area outside the Hall of Science….
… The fair was buzzing with excitement over the final frontier. Streets in the park’s radial grid pattern had names like Universe Court, Astronaut Court, Avenue of Science, and Avenue of Discovery. Visitors would find the iconic Unisphere in the Fountain of the Planets. The space motif is also exemplified in the Rocket Thrower, a massive bronze statue by Donald DeLue. The Rocket Thrower is posed in motion as he hurtles a rocket towards a constellation of gilded stars….
… The United States Space Park at the World’s Fair gave people a chance to see space travel technology, which they heard so much about on television, up-close in real life….
(15) MINI TRYLON AND PERISPHERE. And here’s a memory from even earlier, New York’s 1939 World’s Fair. “A Trylon and Perisphere Replica Once Stood at the Lincoln Tunnel”.
Searching the World’s Fair archives, Untapped New York’s founder Michelle Young came upon a forgotten gem: a mini Trylon and Perisphere replica that once stood at the New Jersey entrance of the Lincoln Tunnel. This information booth structure was meant to be eye-catching and to “induce the out-of-town motorist to stop at the booths before plunging into Manhattan.” The Trylon and Perisphere were the centerpieces of the 1939 World’s Fair and this piece of promotional architecture was one of many replicas that popped up around NYC to promote the fair….

(16) NO WONDER THEY’RE ‘THE LAST’. The Guardian’s episode recap stirs up a panic: “’I didn’t sign up for a musical!’ Are the guitar sing-alongs killing The Last of Us?”
This week’s episode of The Last of Us contained a moment that froze the blood. For a split second, the hearts of the viewing audience rose into their throats in horror. This is a show that has presented us with terror after nightmarish terror but, even by these exceptional standards, this was almost too much to bear. I am talking, of course, about the scene where Ellie started playing a Pearl Jam song on a guitar.’
(17) TRAILER PARK. “Universal Drops ‘Jurassic World Rebirth’ Final Trailer” – Animation World Network sets the scene.
It’s a survival story, harkening back to the original, iconic Jurassic Park. Universal has just dropped the final trailer for its upcoming badass dino adventure, Jurassic World Rebirth, in theaters July 2.
With lots of big, sharp, pointy teeth!
The huge Jurassic franchise is back with its latest adventure, set five years after the events of Jurassic World Dominion, filled with biting humor and biting creatures… including raptors! And Pterywhatevers! Johansson, Bailey and Mahershala Ali anchor an all-star cast as an extraction team, hunting potentially life-saving DNA at the original Jurassic Park’s research facilities, that happens to be inhabited by the worst of the worst dinosaurs that were left behind. The film also stars Rupert Friend and Manuel Garcia-Rulfo….
[Thanks to John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, Jean Martin, David Langford, John A Arkansawyer, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, and Andrew Porter for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Andrew (not Werdna) (and not Gene Wolfe, either).]
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1) Strangely enough, earlier this week I was trying to explain Chuck Tingle to another member of my local yarn guild. I don’t think I did a good job, and I wish I had had this book cover on hand to help me.
Thanks for the Title Credit (which I hope is a functional word pattern)
(3) I’m reminded of the Old Magic in Alan Garner’s The Moon of Gomrath: wild, free, and intensely annoying to the High Magic. And not that it matters, but I think the hand manipulations in The Magicians were added for the TV series, because TV is a visual medium. But while magic can have rules or not as it likes, stories need consistency: readers want to think the author is playing fair with them.
(5) Remember when conservatives believed in states’ rights? Me neither.
(1) Chuck Tingle is a treasure. One of these days, I really have to buy a book from him, if only to support him.
(2) STRONGLY disagree. I think it was Dunsany who said that fantasy was the hardest fiction to write, that in the real world, we know they rules. In fantasy, we must make them all up, and then never break them, or we’ve cheated the reader and lost them.
(5) What about “state’s rights”? Oh, that’s just for when the GOP doesn’t control the feds. Then it’s forget nanny state, it’s dictatorship of the oligarchs.
Comics, SMBC: I liked Twain’s utter destruction of Last of the Mohicans. If you haven’t read it, you should. For example, the raft is 20 or so feet wide, and the river’s only 30 feet wide. Now a native american leaps from a branch… and misses the raft, falling in the water. Seeing this, the other two do the same.
(12) Not sure how now, but it used to be that most artists got most of their money from selling CDs at their concerts (while being screwed by their record label – for example, about 15 years ago, Janis Ian ranted that they were charging her $11 PER CD, which she was selling for, IIRC, $15.) Besides, if we have the CD, nobody can decide to stop streaming…
(13) Which goes along with the IBM quote I mentioned the other day. PEOPLE are responsible for their creations, esp. in this case.
(14) whimper When there was a real future ahead of us, and it would be wonderful, and better than the past…
(1) We can always count on Chuck Tingle!
(2) If the magic in your story doesn’t have any rules, you need to tell a very different kind of story.
(5) There’s so much in this bill that’s so very terrible. The attempt to ban state regulation of LLMs is just the one that’s most relevant here.
(10) I loved Outland.
(4) I first saw Star Wars at the UK press preview in 1977 (I believe Alec Guinness was seeing it for the first time as well, somewhere in the audience), not that I would ever contemplate providing The Guardian with free copy on the topic.
(5) if the big billionaires bill has a beneficial provision in its 1100 pages, I have yet to hear of it. USians should call their Congresspeople to share their views about it.
Mark: “Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offenses” is a great favorite of mine.
(2) I use rules when writing about magic because I want magic to be useful to whoever is using it. But if a sorcerous 1+1 doesn’t equal 2, then that becomes the theme, the arbitrary and absurd nature of existence, like Kafka’s protagonist turning into a cockroach (without even a spell!). Chaotic magic works for me in fairy tales because everything in the story is moving towards a moral, and who cares how you get there as long as it’s fun?
(10) I won’t post any links, but Justwatch lists a number of ways to legally stream Outland, including Apple TV, Kanopy, Amazon, Fandango At Home, and Microsoft (which I wouldn’t have thought to look for). I missed this when it came out, so I’m going to rectify that now.
10) Outland is another one of those R-rated SF movies that I was not able to see in the theater (on account of being too young to go on my own and my parents being Not OK with taking me to R-rated movies) so I had to content myself with repeatedly checking out from the library and reading the Alan Dead Foster novelization. Didn’t get to see the actual movie until some years later as a VHS rental.
It’s imperfect, to be sure — for one thing, that’s not how explosive decompression works — but I still find it a very watchable example of that sort of blue-collar SF pioneered by Alien.
(1) Chuck Tingle remains a national treasure.
(5) Conservatives’ belief in states’ rights ends the second any state does something they don’t like.
(10) I really enjoyed Outland, even though the film-makers evidently believed that the human head is normally under about 15 atmospheres of pressure.
Most of the scenes where you see Jupiter hanging in the background it’s a matte painting, presumably because of the tight budget, but there are a couple where the clouds are animated. In 1981 it was one of the most spectacular astronomical things I’d seen on a big screen.
Lis Carey- re:6) There’s a provision in the Big Bill which prevents courts from enforcing rulings against the executive branch. Section 70302 forbids courts to charge Trump or any other government officials with contempt for defying court orders (by forbidding them to spend any funds to do so). It also blocks court-ordered national injunctions to prevent potential illegal acts posing imminent harm.
This reminds many people of the infamous “Enabling Acts” which, to quote Wikipedia, “gave the German Cabinet—most importantly, the Chancellor, Adolf Hitler—the power to make and enforce laws without the involvement of the Reichstag or President Paul von Hindenburg. By allowing the Chancellor to override the checks and balances in the constitution, the Enabling Act was a pivotal step in the transition from the democratic Weimar Republic to the totalitarian dictatorship of Nazi Germany.”
@mark – you might like the two “Harriet Porber” books.
2) If “magic” is the manipulation of the world by means other than the material, then the urge to discover its rules is inevitable–as the history of all manner of supernatural beliefs will demonstrate. I’d be surprised to hear of any widely-held, systematic supernatural belief system that is without rules or structures, especially if it also includes attempts to control or appease or even just communicate with supernatural forces and beings. Rituals are rule-bound. As are garden-variety superstitions–what do you do when you spill the salt or say “Macbeth” in a theatre?
Literature is filled with depictions of the rules and protocols for dealing with the supernatural–the first example that comes to mind is Odysseus visiting the underworld (sacrifice and ritual required). Renaissance magic developed a whole system for controlling supernatural entities (see Doctor Faustus and The Tempest). As Lis Carey and Kevin Harkness suggest above, rule-less or opaque or arbitrary magic implies a quite different kind of story than one in which magic is the operating or enabling system for a part of the world we can’t see directly or manage with our material hands.
What has been considered the first copyright case in history was started in the 6th C when St. Columba of Ireland hand-copied a Psalm-book without its owner’s permission. The owner took him to court which ruled against Columba: “the copy follows the book as the calf does the cow.” Columba angrily threw his copy in a lake and a battle ensued between his clan and the royal owner’s. Remorseful for causing so many deaths, Columba left the country to found a monastery on for the island of Iona. A Psalter of that era called the Cathach (“Battler”) was once claimed to be the book in question. But it isn’t.
2) I liked that article, but then again I’m a ‘no kings, no gods, no recipes’, sort my ownself. I have some small skill with sleight of hand that I used to use to help me pick up girls and win bar bets and nowadays mostly use to entertain friends, co-workers, and small children. And win bar bets.
Whenever people used to ask me for explanations, I’d tell them that magic was just knowing one more thing than everyone else in the room. Or I’d paraphrase Bull Durham and tell them that explanations were fascist and besides that, they’re boring. (That’s right, I was misidentifying things as fascist before misidentifying things as fascist was cool)
9) That seems like the sort of movie that would have been a core memory for 10 year old me, so I’m definitely going to watch it with my boys.
10) Outland remains an underrated gem, much like Reindeer Games
11) I agree with Twain about Austen (P&P was immeasurably improved by the addition of zombies) but Borges can eat my entire ass.
17) Like George Costanza, I am down. You can mark me as down.
4) Does a station wagon at the drive-in count as a cinema?
Pixeled in the scroll by Chuck Tingle.
@Michael J. “Orange Mike” Lowrey–Yes, it’s a deeply evil and dangerous bill. I’m not saying the LLM anti-regulation part is the worst; just the bit that’s most directly on topic for File 770.
10) Whenever it comes up, I contend that Outland is the Platonic ideal of a western in space.
Is the Last Algorithm the one that produces the number 42?
Orange Mike: Yes, that provision putting government officials outside the law is one of the nastiest in a generally nasty bill, and it hasn’t gotten mentioned enough. With a handful of exceptions, Congress is divided between the Minion Party and the Coward Party.
I saw Outland when it came out in a movie theater. When someone said that the bad guys were coming on the Noon Shuttle, I started humming Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darling. I had seen this movie before in black and white on my TV.
Jim Janney says I won’t post any links, but Justwatch lists a number of ways to legally stream Outland, including Apple TV, Kanopy, Amazon, Fandango At Home, and Microsoft (which I wouldn’t have thought to look for). I missed this when it came out, so I’m going to rectify that now.
I have both Apple TV and Prime. Outland is on neither streaming service. You can rent or purchase it on both, but it’s not streaming on either.
The Apple TV search function is much better at showing where something is actually streaming as it connects you to that service. If you have it, it starts playing that video; if not, it gives you the option of subscribing.
JustWatch says the only way to free stream Outlander is on kanopy. On the others, where you can rent, it’s still streaming.
Isn’t a lack of rules for magic pretty much the norm throughout most of recorded history? I thought rules for magic was a fairly modern innovation! I don’t remember any particular rules in the Odyssey or A Midsummer Night’s Dream. I usually think of de Camp and Pratt’s Harold Shea stories and Randall Garrett’s Lord Darcy mysteries as being, if not the first to use the idea of rules-based magic, at least the first to popularize the idea!
Personally, I think there’s plenty of room for both approaches. It depends on what you’re trying to do!
(12), @mark:
“My father was a folk musician; he used to sell LPs…” Here are some nice a cappella harmonies on the subject of “Point Four Cents a Play.” (And yes, I have bought all of this group’s CDs.) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajLFlIsu8ws
@ Xtifr – The apparent lack of magic rules in some Classical fictions may be down to their author(s) either not knowing the rules of the supposed magic(s) then practiced (effectively or not), or their knowing them but not wanting to give them away.
Actual magical practices dating back to, for example, Ancient Egypt, usually had/have rules, whether or not one believes that the magics actually work.
Do they work? Well, that depends on what one understands magic to be – not least whether it’s objective or subjective, and in either case what effects it does or doesn’t have, and on what.
@Cat Eldridge: OK, I see we have different ideas of what it means for something to be streaming. In any case, I was pleased to discover that I could watch Outland online, legally, for a very reasonable price.
If interviewing the dead is magical, then what Odysseus has to do to get to talk to the dead (in particular to Tiresias, who has the power of prophecy) certainly has protocols and requirements: particular items to be part of the sacrificial offering, especially blood, since the dead can talk to the living only after having a drink of it. And the dead can’t even get into Hades without certain burial rituals being performed (see Antigone). The mysterious, arbitrary, and opaque part of the classical supernatural shows up most strongly in the gods, who can just Do Stuff without having to consult a rulebook. Zeus feeling randy? Well, how about a quick transformation into a bull or a shower of gold as a substitute for a come-on line.
This isn’t exactly Harry Potter territory, but it is a purposeful interaction with the supernatural realm. And religion is all about purposeful, etc., as any Catholic can testify. The requirements laid out in Catholic moral and sacramental theology are as tightly codified as those for getting a Real ID.
10) Probably nobody is going to see this, but did want to add here for the stragglers that Outland IS available to stream for free on Kanopy. All you need is a library card.
(10) Outland also gave its name to a six-episode Australian comedy series about an LGBTQ science fiction fan club (2012). It’s available to rent-stream on AppleTV, at least in Australia.