Pixel Scroll 5/4/16 (Take Another) Piece Of My Artificial Heart

May the 4th be with you

(1) BREAKING THINGS. Wired studies the physics behind the destruction of a Super Star Destroyer in Star Wars.

The Mass of the Death Star

The real question remains—why is it moving so fast? There are three possible answers:

After rebels destroyed the bridge, the Super Star Destroyer veered out of control and used its thrusters to drive into the Death Star.

The Destroyer used its engines in some way to stay above the Death Star. The attack eliminated this ability, and the ship fell into the Death Star due to the gravitational interaction between the two objects.

The impact was the result of the engines and gravity.

For the purpose of this analysis, I am going to assume the collision was due only to the gravitational interaction. If that’s the case, I can use this to estimate the mass of the Death Star.

(2) ANATOMY OF A REWRITE. Mark Hamill confirmed the story: “It’s official: ‘The Force Awakens’ almost started with Luke’s severed hand”.

“I can tell you now, the original opening shot of [Episode] VII, the first thing that came into frame was a hand and a lightsaber, a severed hand,” Hamill reveals in a video Q&A with The Sun timed to May the 4th. “It enters the atmosphere [of the desert planet Jakku] and the hand burns away.”

The lightsaber landed in the sand, and an alien hand picked it up. Hamill says he doesn’t know if that alien was Maz Kanata, the castle owner who has the lightsaber in a trunk in the movie.

Then “the movie proceeds as you see it” — presumably meaning we’d cut from the alien hand to a Star Destroyer above Jakku as Stormtroopers depart in shuttles, then Max Von Sydow handing the all-important map with Luke’s whereabouts to Oscar Isaac.

(3) FOURTH WITH. Digg has a compilation of Star Wars related fan art.

The “Star Wars” fanbase has always been fantastically passionate and creative, so in honor of their greatest holiday, here’s a bunch of different kinds of fan art to represent every corner of the “Star Wars” universe.

(4) FASHION STATEMENT. Michael A. Burstein had a big day, and shared a photo with his Facebook readers.

Today, I was sworn in for my fifth term as a Brookline Library Trustee. In honor of Star Wars Day, I wore my Han Solo vest.

(5) EQUAL TIME. That other famous franchise is making news of its own. Canada Post will issue a set of Star Trek themed stamps to commemorate the show’s 50th anniversary. Linn’s Stamp News ran an article about the stamp for Scotty.

The three previous Canada Post Star Trek designs have pictured William Shatner as Capt. James T. Kirk on a commemorative stamp similar to the Scotty design, the Starship Enterprise on a coil stamp, and Leonard Nimoy as Spock, also in commemorative format. Full details of the set, and the planned issue date, have not been officially revealed by Canada Post, though information released with the “Scotty” stamp design added, “More stamps are to be revealed soon.”

And Canada Post has release several short videos previewing the series.

(6) YOU DID IT. Donors stepped up to support Rosarium Publishing’s Indiegogo appeal and Rick Riordan dropped $10,000 of matching funds in the pot. The appeal has now topped $40,000 in donations.

(7) J.K. ROWLING’S ANNUAL APOLOGY. On May 2, the anniversary of the Battle of Hogwarts, J.K. Rowling followed her tradition.

(8) FIRST FAN. Inverse knows this is the perfect day to dip into Craig Miller’s font of Star Wars anecdotes: “George Lucas’s Original Plans for ‘Star Wars: Episode VII’ and Boba Fett Revealed”.

Craig Miller, Lucasfilm’s first fan relations officer, reveals the original plan for ‘Return of the Jedi.’

…“At first there was one film, and then George originally announced that it was one of 12, and there were going to be 12, and then that changed to, oh there was never 12, there was only 9, and he was going to make 9,” Miller said. “And then during all of it, George kind of lost interest in continuing it… While we were working on The Empire Strikes Back, George decided he was going to complete the first film trilogy and that would be it.

“And I remember sitting in a mixing room with George, working on Empire, and he told me he was just going to make the third movie, which didn’t have a title at that point, and then stop,” Miller continued. “He was going to retire from making big movies and make experimental movies. And that’s why the whole plot of the third movie, what became Return of the Jedi, completely changed.”

Lucas’s 15-year retirement from Star Wars didn’t do much to derail the enthusiasm amongst hardcore fans, who showed early on that they were very, very dedicated to the Galaxy far, far away. Miller remembers one of his better publicity coups, setting up an 800 number (1-800-521-1980, the film’s release date) that allowed fans to call in before Empire and hear little clues about the upcoming sequel, as recited by Luke, Leia, Han Solo, C-3PO and Darth Vader.

“There was no advertising; we talked about it at conventions, and Starlog ran a two paragraph announcement of it,” Miller recalled. “And with just that, we completely swamped the 800 system.”

AT&T forced Lucasfilm to buy more phone lines, cease their advertising (easy, since they weren’t doing any), and apologize to the public and other 800-number users. “That was great because now it was being carried all over the world that we were apologizing that Star Wars fans were so enthusiastic about seeing Empire that they swamped AT&T,” Miller said, laughing.

(9) MAKING THE SCENE. Cat Rambo shares some material from a class, that takes apart what having a scene gives you for purposes of making it into a story: “More From Moving from Idea to Draft”

What it is:

A scene is usually a moment in time that has come to you. It usually has strong visual elements, and something is usually happening, such as a battle, or has just happened in it (a battlefield after the fighting is done). It is probably something that would appear at a significant moment of a story and not be peripheral to it.

What it gives you:

  • Everything but the plot. But actually, that’s not true. What is the main source of tension in the scene, what is the conflict that is driving things? That is probably a version of the overall plot.
  • A scene gives you a strong slice of the world and all that is implicit in that, including history and culture.
  • If characters are included in your scene, they are usually doing or have just done something more purposeful than just milling about. You have some sense of their occupation, their economic circumstances, and often some nuances of their relationship.

(10) NED BROOKS. Part of the late Ned Brooks’ fanzine collection is on display at the University of Georgia, where his family donated it.

The university library’s blog has posted “To Infinity and Beyond! Selections from the Ned Brooks Fanzine Collection”.

A look at a fun collection examining all facets of science fiction fandom. Included are representative fanzine titles from the 17,000+ issues to be found in the Brooks zine collection. They represent a variety of times (including the zine some hold to be the earliest Science Fiction zine in the U.S., Planet #1, from July of 1930), a myriad of international locales, and a broad spectrum of specialized Fandom communities and their interests. Mementos from Brooks’ 38-year career with NASA’s Langley Research Center, along with a vintage typewriter and early reproduction equipment.

The exhibit, in the Rotunda of the Russell Special Collections Libraries, will be up through July.

(11) COOL SPACE PICTURES. Digg has “The Best Space Photos from April”.

Every day satellites are zooming through space, snapping incredible pictures of Earth, the solar system and outer space. Here are the highlights from April.

(12) YA AND AWARDS. Joe Sherry makes raises a point about YA in his post about “2016 Locus Award Finalists” at Adventures in Reading.

This is likely worth a longer discussion, but this year’s Locus Awards are pretty close to what the Hugo Awards should have looked like in the absence of the Rabid Puppy participants voting a slate in apparent lockstep….

Now, there are things we can argue with because it isn’t an awards list or a list of books at all if there isn’t something to argue with. For example, the YA category features five books written by men even though a huuuuuuge number of YA novels are written by women. Further, Navah Wolfe points out that the nominees in this category are, across the board, writers best known for adult science fiction and fantasy.

In terms of the Locus Awards, I think this is a bug rather than a feature. Locus (and it’s readers who voted / nominated), as a whole, is far more plugged into the adult SFF scene. Their nominees for Young Adult Book very strongly reflects this.

This isn’t to say that these finalists are bad, because they very much are not, but they are also not reflective of the YA field.

A committee has been looking at a proposed YA Hugo category for a couple of years. The Hugo voter demographic is probably similar to that of Locus voters. So if we make two assumptions – that the category had existed this year and was not affected by a slate – wouldn’t the shortlist have looked pretty much like the Locus Award YA novel category? And how does that affect people’s interest in having a YA Hugo category?

(13) DEFECTION FROM THE RANKS.

https://twitter.com/ferdinandpage/status/727766395719651329

https://twitter.com/damiengwalter/status/727748585132072960

(14) ANOTHER SHOCK. Because that’s what popularly voted awards do?

https://twitter.com/ApeInWinter/status/727758368555806720

(15) USE OF WEAPONS. Paul Weimer curated the latest SF Signal Mind Meld reading pleasure today, in which people talk about their favorite SF/F weapons.

(16) TODAY IN HISTORY. Norm Hollyn remembered on Facebook:

May 4 is the 19th anniversary of the death of Lou Stathis, one of my closest friends and major influences (I first heard the Mothers thanks to him). Hopefully you’re happily playing the kazoo wherever you are.

(17) HAY THERE. Signal boosting author Judith Tarr’s appeal to help feed her horses.

Right now I do not know how I’m going to feed the horses for the rest of the month. I have managed to scrape out enough to pay for the last load of hay (if that late check finally gets here), but once it’s eaten, which it will be in about ten days, I don’t know what I’m going to do. The farm will be gone by midsummer unless I find a steady source of sufficient income. I’ve been hustling like a hustling thing but so far with minimal results.

The market does not want either me or the horses. The horses are all old and therefore retired and unsalable, or else would require thousands of dollars’ worth of training and show fees to have any sale value. No one can take them. The market is saturated with unwanted horses and the rescues are overloaded. I am over 60, hearing impaired (ergo, unable to use the phone), and with chronic fatigue syndrome which makes office or minimum-wage work difficult to impossible. And minimum wage would not support the animals, let alone me. All my income streams from backlist books, editing, writing, etc. have shrunk to a trickle or dried up. No one has booked a Camp in over a year.

I have had a few small things come through, but as with everything else, they’ve fallen short or failed to produce. I continue to push, and with the fiction writing regaining its old fluidity, I may manage to make something happen there. I’ve been urged to try an Indiegogo for a short novel, and I am closing in on that. (Indiegogo, unlike Kickstarter, offers an option that pays even if the goal is not met. The goal would be enough to cover mortgage, horses, and utilities for a month.) Since for the first time in my life I’m able to write more than one project at a time, that means I can continue to meet my obligation to backers of last November’s Kickstarter for a science-fiction novel, and also write the novella (and short stories, too).

A friend suggested that I offer sponsorships for the horses. I feel weird about that, but they need to eat. What I would give in return is a little writeup about the horse being sponsored, with a digital album of pictures and a monthly update. And short fiction as it happens, if you are a reader with an interest….

Details and specific support levels at the site.

(18) MEMORY OF THINGS PAST. Katster once was “Dreaming of Rockets”

Of course things got derailed.  My cunning plan to eventually raise myself to a point where I’d get notice from the nominating body of Worldcon crashed hard with two factors — the rise of blogs and fancasts as well as the related fact that pros were getting nominated in the fan awards and, more importantly, my own demons.

I’d end up semi-GAFIAting (the acronym means Getting Away From It All, and covered anybody who’s dropped out of science fiction) and not being very enamored of fandom in general.  The break point came in 2013, with a completely different award.  Fanzine fandom recognizes its own in an award called the Fan Achievement Awards (FAAns) and I’d hoped a particular issue of my fanzine Rhyme and Paradox I’d poured my heart into might have a chance at Best Issue.  A friend of mine said he was nominating it, and I hesitantly nominated it myself, hoping in some way that it would end up on the shortlist.  It didn’t, and the award was won by somebody that was well known in fandom for a typical issue of his (once a year) fanzine.

The blow really came when I got ahold of the longlist and found how many votes my ‘zine had gotten.  It had gotten two, one from my friend and one from me.  It stung like hell.  Here I had poured my heart out writing that zine (I still think it’s some of my best writing ever) and it had sailed quietly in the night.  I know, it’s just an award, and all these things are popularity contests, but even now, I feel the hurt in that moment.

I wonder if it’s the same hurt that has fueled the slates.  The influence of failing to get an award did somewhat lead Larry Correia to start making slates.  As I’ve said before, the Hugos were vulnerable to this kind of attack, but it was explained to me pretty early in fandom that making slates was anathema in fandom, a policy only practiced by Scientologists.  Everybody knows where the rest of this story goes.

(19) ANTI. “’Ghostbusters’ Is the Most Disliked Movie Trailer in YouTube History” says The Hollywood Reporter.

Not only does it have the most dislikes for a trailer on the social platform, but it also makes the top 25 most disliked videos overall.

Things are not boding well for director Paul Feig’s upcoming Ghostbusters based on the film’s first official trailer on YouTube.

Released March 3, the trailer, viewed 29.2 million times and counting, is the most disliked movie trailer in YouTube history, according to “MyTop100Videos” channel’s “Most Disliked Videos” list that was last updated April 16. (Justin Bieber comes in at No. 1 with 5.99 million dislikes for “Baby.”)

Coming in at No. 23, the reboot — starring Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Kate McKinnon, Leslie Jones and Chris Hemsworth — has more than double the number of dislikes as likes (208,606)….

Although there has been controversy over the trailer, with many YouTube comments centered around the all-female cast, the video has been generating mostly positive reviews on Facebook with 1,186,569 positive reactions (like, love, haha and wow) and 32,589 negative reactions (sad, angry). The reactions add up to 97.3 percent positive sentiments on Facebook overall.

(20) BREAK THE PIGGY BANK. Coming August 16 in Blu-Ray/DVD — “The Adventures Of Buckaroo Banzai Across The 8th Dimension [Collector’s Edition]”. (Doesn’t it feel like you’ve been reading the word “buckaroo” a lot this week?)

Expect the unexpected… he does.

Neurosurgeon. Physicist. Rock Star. Hero. Buckaroo Banzai (Peter Weller, Robocop) is a true 80s renaissance man. With the help of his uniquely qualified team, The Hong Kong Cavaliers, Buckaroo is ready to save the world on a moment’s notice. But after his successful test of the Oscillation Overthruster – a device that allows him to travel through solid matter – he unleashes the threat of “evil, pure and simple from the 8th Dimension”… the alien Red Lectroids.

Led by the deranged dictator Lord John Whorfin (John Lithgow), the Lectroids steal the Overthruster with the intent of using it to return to their home of Planet 10 “real soon!” But no matter where you go, there Buckaroo Banzai is… ready to battle an interdimensional menace that could spell doom for the human race.

How can Buckaroo stop the Lectroids’ fiendish plots? Who is the mysterious Penny Priddy? Why is there a watermelon there? For the answers to these and other questions, you have to watch The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai, monkey boy!

[Thanks to John King Tarpinian, Mark-kitteh, James Davis Nicoll, Will R., Martin Morse Wooster, and Andrew Porter for some of these stories. Title credit goes to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel Dern.]


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293 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 5/4/16 (Take Another) Piece Of My Artificial Heart

  1. Umm, wasn’t having Quinn attend on his behalf a suggestion on here a few days ago?

    I’m wondering if we should all turn and wave to Chuck Tingle.

  2. I’ve never been to a Worldcon – do you get to choose what’s on your name badge?

    Wouldn’t it be great if a whole bunch of people decided to put Chuck Tingle on their name badges?

  3. Somewhere, of course, VD is screaming “I’ve won! Can’t you fools see I’m winning?! Xanatos six dimensional chess!” to a mostly empty room…

  4. @ Tingle/Quinn, Trolls For Great Justice ~

    She is developing a video game based on one of his properties. How Vox ever believed this wasn’t going to detonate in his face, I will never know. As one of my friends just put it:

    This is beyond trolling; this is gazing back at the abyss and solemnly putting a clown nose on the abyss and nodding, slowly, while the abyss wonders WTF just happened.

  5. @Mark,

    *raises hand* Yes. That was me.

    Honestly, if Chuck Tingle turns out to be anyone, I’d expect him to be someone like Zoe, rather than someone like Vox. I wouldn’t be at all surprised to learn that Tingle is actually a woman.

    As for my suggestions… Larry Rostant needs to show up too, with prints, and I’ll be two for two.

    He’s been hitting the Hugo hashtag a lot showing off his work, so I think he’s definitely interested in winning.

  6. If the idea of a YA Hugo (or not-Hugo) is that it should effectively represent the whole YA SFF field, I’m very doubtful whether that can be achieved. It’s not as if the Hugos now gave equal representation to all parts of the (old) adult SFF field. This has caused complaints both from Puppy supporters and from others, but I think most people here see it as fair; there are distinctive qualities which appeal to Hugo voters, and there’s no reason why there should not be.

    In the specific case of YA, my feeling is that some works are written very much for the YA community and are best appreciated within that community, and others have more capacity for boundary-crossing, and it is the latter that are likely to get the Hugo; I don’t see why this should not be so. Similar things are true of other genres and subgenres. (And compare Graphic Story, where the award is clearly a distinctive perspective on the field.)

    This is independent of any question about gender. Possibly the most talked-about ‘YA’ (perhaps actually older children’s) writer in adult SFF circles is Diana Wynne Jones. Of people working now, Rachel Hartman and Frances Hardinge (who just won the BFA award – for all ages!) are obvious examples of people with boundary-crossing ability. So I don’t see that an old adult perspective on the YA field has to be all-male. But it will be skewed in some way – all awards processes are.

    I think some arguments I have seen regarding the YA Hugo (and also the series Hugo) do have a tendency to suggest that Hugo voters are Wrongfans having Wrongfun – that we are obliged to cover the whole field and give equal representation to everyone interested in it, and are failing to do so. I think we should resist that. It’s good that Hugo voters should take an interest in things outside their central field – as they’ve been doing since Dramatic Presentation was created in the 60’s. But they have a central field, and their perspective on other things cannot help but reflect that.

  7. @alexvdl
    I also really hope Rostant shows up to Kansas City; I’d totally buy some prints. His covers are awesome and he was on my ballot.

    EDIT: I totally realize that I have been critical of some cover art and specifically have mentioned Kate Elliott’s Black Wolves as being a cover that would prevent me from buying a book. I still hold true to that. Black Wolves’ cover is neat, but not what I want for a book cover. However, ones like Linda Nagata’s The Red trilogy are just stunningly cool , plain and simple. Not sure what the difference is in my mind between the styles…

  8. Speaking of Agents of Shield, I’ve only seen a couple episodes of this season. Those of you who have seen both, which eps are most important to see before I go to see Civil War on Sunday? Just give episode #s, NO SPOILERS NO SPOILERS!!

  9. @Tasha

    18) MEMORY OF THINGS PAST. Katster
    What is it with all these whiners over not winning awards? Do they not get that it’s a combination of work, popularity, and luck. You have to build a fan base and educate your fan base on the awards. Your work has to be better than good.

    I see a bit of a paradox in the above. Is it a combination of “work, popularity, and luck” or does the work need to be “better than good”? With what I preceive as a wealth of “better than good” works in the field, I can readily buy that it is a combination of “work, popularity, and luck” with an emphasis on popularity within the voting pool as well as luck in getting noticed by that pool that pushes a few works onto the list of finalists. Or perhaps put another way, when the number of finalists is limited to a given number, there is still a wealth of outstanding works that didn’t make the final cut.

    Problems start when people (other than potential nominees) start equating making/not-making the final cut more with being/not-being high quality SFF and less about simply lacking in popularity (with the voting pool) and luck.

    (also caught Katster’s comments. Nice context and good thoughts. Hope better things are in your future.)

    On a tangential front, I finished Uprooted this week. At least for 2015, I’m going to have to shift to the position that I have read other works that were equally as good even if they didn’t make the final cut. (Brett, Castell, and I think Moore, FWIW) Uprooted was very enjoyable.

    I’ve just cracked Aeronaut’s Windlass. Steampunk really isn’t my thing……but not bad thus far.

    Sadly, I’m going to have to put off James Moore’s “The Silent Army” which dropped yesterday whilst I go through the rest of the novel finalists. Based on the three previous installments, I’m expecting this to be top shelf reading for 2016.


    Regards,
    Dann

  10. I must admit, while I suspect I’m very unlikely to put Space Raptor Butt Invasion at the top of my ballot, and it might not even go on my ballot at all, at this point I’m certainly going to read it and give it a fair shot. Which will make it the first piece of Extruded Amazon Porn Product (EAPP, pronounced “eep”) I’ve ever looked at.

    If he’s going to stay in the competition at all, he’s certainly making a magnificent show of it.

  11. This was discussed a bit when the Doctor Strange trailer was released, but there’s been a bit of a dust-up over comments made by screenwriter C. Robert Cargill concerning the casting of Tilda Swinton as the Tibetan Ancient One in the upcoming Doctor Strange movie. When complaints surfaced, the writer said that they didn’t want to cast a real Tibetan because it might annoy the Chinese, which was… A very shaky limb to climb onto. He’s walked it back since then, but George Takei ain’t playin’.

  12. @Dann,

    I’m a huge fan of James Moore’s work. I’ll probably start the series over and just read through straight through at some point. I might put that next on the docket, though I’ve had a hankering for some W40k, for a bit.

    Right now I’m reading Bloodlines by Claudia Grey, the new book about Princess Leia. It’s pretty damn enjoyable.

  13. @Doctor Science

    So far as I could tell, there’s nothing in AoS that leads in to Civil War.

  14. I’d like to see a free-standing YA award, along the lines of the Campbell, living in the Hugos, but slightly separate.

    I wonder if there is some way to find a patron for it.

  15. “Pooh-pooh to the fans!” he was grinchily humming.
    “They’re finding out now that No Award is coming!

    They’re just waking up! I know just what they’ll do!
    Their blogs will be blogged and their cries will be cried
    My Xanatos Gambit will not be denied!

    That’s a noise,” grinned the Grinch, “that I simply must hear!”
    He paused, and the Grinch put a hand to his ear.

    And he did hear a sound rising out of a tweet
    It started in sour but then it went sweet!

    And this tweet wasn’t sad!
    Why this tweet sounded glad!

    Every fan down in Fanville, (well, not quite all)
    (Getting fans to agree is an order quite tall)
    Was laughing at Tingle’s great big brass…fortitude.

    He hadn’t stopped fans from enjoying the Hugo, just the same!
    He tried to stop fandom, but fandom still came!
    (Though not quite like in books with Chuck Tingle’s name.)

    And what happened next? Well, on Twitter they say
    The Grinch’s gall bladder grew three sizes that day.

    And so the Grinch stands, while elk snivel and whine
    Claiming “Don’t you all get it?! Victory’s mine!

    Stop thinking it’s funny! Stop having fun!
    Why won’t you acknowledge that I’ve really won?!”

    But in Fanville it’s Christmas, and fans know it is true–
    That this time the Grinch lost to…Literally Who.

  16. [Expression of delight and appreciation for RedWombat]

    *simulation ends*

  17. @alexvdl

    HA! I called Zoe Quinn going for Chuck Tingle last week. I am STOKED.

    Especially since her book is coming out August 16th, the day BEFORE WorldCon.

    You did call it. Thanks for the book heads up I’ve pre-ordered. I’m looking forward to news from MACII.

    They’re going to need to have extra security. Still no weapons policy on the CoC page – continues to be listed as forthcoming.

  18. this antique vintage Arpanet still in its original packaging (with packet switching action!)

    Does it still have the BBN tags? Those go for a lot on eBay.

  19. I’m glad you all liked it–may take it to Twitter.
    Though I’m stuck on the rhyme scheme…not that I’m bitter.

  20. @ Red Wombat

    LOVE IT!

    Maybe you should consider a career as a writer? ;-D

  21. @18: I always thought that the Hugo being SO desired by so many fans (which includes the pros) was one of its greatest features:

    In fact: I want one (an earned one) so much that anything that tainted it (well, beyond the usual griping that x or y didn’t win instead) would render it worthless to me.

    These folks who think they ‘deserve’ one: have they no pride? No, probably not: I strongly suspect that they really want one for one of two reasons: because it will boost their sales, or because it would make someone else’s head explode.

    Those are NOT the reasons for wanting a Hugo Award. The reason for wanting one ought to be because someone has genuinely earned the respect and admiration of their (self-selected) peers, in a year when four other people did so as well, but not quite so much as you did.

    Getting the Hugo is the equivalent of receiving a standing ovation from the people you work with and respect, who have decided that today, they’re going to say “well done! we appreciate what you’ve done for us! Yay for you!”

    It doesn’t mean anything if its bought or bullied into your hands.

    (It’s just like those people who go to cons and wear a t-shirt proclaiming themselves to be “Professional Writer”, or the guy that talks incessantly about his perfect 300 bowling score he rolled once, as you watch him roll gutter after gutter.

    “Sure thing pal. That must have been nice for you. ‘snicker’.”

    The psychology of the mind sure is a weird thing: that guy knows that you know that he’s totally BSing for ego’s sake – but he can’t help himself. His self-worth is so next to nothing that even self-delusion is seen as a positive.

    3SV. Let’s get the awards back to something everyone wants to have.

  22. Doctor Science on May 5, 2016 at 10:52 am said:

    Speaking of Agents of Shield, I’ve only seen a couple episodes of this season. Those of you who have seen both, which eps are most important to see before I go to see Civil War on Sunday? Just give episode #s, NO SPOILERS NO SPOILERS!!

    No connection between the two really. Agents of Shield series 1 and Captain America: Winter Soldier connected because of SHIELD & Hydra but Civil War has no direct connections. I assume you’ve seen Captain America; Winter Soldier and Avengers: Age of Ultron – as they both have strong links.

  23. Rabbits! There’s never enough Internets around when you need to present one; I’m just going to have to fall back on fortitude, and invest in one of those screen film things for the iPad.

    Thank you, RedWombat.

  24. steve davidson: I suspect I will reach capacity on your preaching of shame and worthlessness pretty quick here.

  25. Wait, SFSignal is ending? Nooo!

    Zoe Quinn to accept Hugo on Chuck Tingle’s behalf if required?
    *Face breaks into a silly grin*
    [Also, turns around to wave hello to Chuck Tingle]

    @RedWombat,
    *APPPLAUSE*

    No wonder people experience FOMO. I go offline to get a good night’s sleep & this happened. You guys!

  26. So, is there any way to award the trademark and copyright for the slow clap in perpetuity to Chuck Tingle?

    If not, how about the mic drop? =)

  27. steve davidson:

    “3SV. Let’s get the awards back to something everyone wants to have.”

    I don’t think I would vote for 3SV. While it is good for weeding out blockvoters, I’m not fond of starting a culture of downvoting. I see large risks for years where the assholes aren’t up in force at first nomination phase and people don’t really bother to vote in the second. I fear it is a system that will work quite badly when people get complacent after a few years of no puppies.

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