Friday, December 15, 2023

It's no wonder Lionel Jeffries went mad

 Bill Mantlo's Alpha Flight comics are notable for having the characters recap the events of the past twenty issues at length, every time they open their mouths. This page is probably the single most impressive example of that tendency!


I mean, at least they're explaining relevant information to the unfortunate Dr Jeffries - a lot of the time, they just tell each other things they already know, for no reason. But since Lionel starts the page by saying "Let me see if I understand this..." I can only assume Alpha Flight have just this minute finished telling him this whole story, and his apparent uncertainty led them all to rehash the entire conversation again!

Meanwhile, Lionel's brother Madison has got a bit confused. It looks like the "To Bochssie's chagrin..." speech bubble should be a thought bubble, and the "Then Langkowski, on turnin' human again..." should have been spoken out loud. I bet he's embarrassed that he accidentally said what he should have just thought to himself. It's no wonder Roger Bochs went mad, too!

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Another favourite page

'Bits of books that I really like', part 2. This is one of the many cool things you can see if you buy the Order of the Stick books, above and beyond the bits you can read for free on the internet. I love how this ridiculously convoluted chart really does give you all the information you could possibly need about the OOTS characters at that particular point of their history (the start of volume 4), as well as a big helping of silly and clever jokes!


Xykon and Redcloak want to control the god-killing abomination The Snarl, while Roy wants to control his wild teammate Belkar, and Roy's father wants to control Roy. This is why I love this comic so much.

Saturday, December 09, 2023

A fun one

 This time I will write about Dr Who, which proves I thought this one was all right. Just a few observations before I go and read what everyone else has said about it and argue with them...

I'm surprised they've never done John Logie Baird before, actually - it's so obvious, if you're going to do a stereotypical Russell T Davies hidden-mind-control-messages thing, that you'd think it would have been the first story in 2005. Maybe he was waiting for the hundredth anniversary but got fed up.

Nice to see Mel, and I was really expecting a reference to The Nightmare Fair, but I guess it really didn't happen after all.

The climactic ball game was underwhelming - couldn't they have spent some money on making it look acrobatic and exciting?

It was a nice episode, but I really want to see something that makes me go "Ooh, that's clever," and I'm not really doing that about this one.

But despite all the negativity, it was good! More of the same at Christmas, please!

3001, a sedentary odyssey

I'm happy to say my knee is recovering nicely, but this first post of a new millennium of bloggery is still more of a 'sitting around on my backside' thing than venturing into space or the Aegean Sea. And I'm catching up this morning with everybody who's sent me condolences or friendly messages or insults in the last week or two, so I'd like to especially thank Tom for leaving a comment here on my blog, and urge more readers to do the same! People don't comment here nearly enough! Let's build some kind of Zoomy-fan community, so I can think I'm appropriately great and famous!

Or you can continue talking to me in less ego-centric venues, I don't mind. Anyway, I didn't really feel like writing about Dr Who last Saturday night - it wasn't terrible, it was at least watchable, but that's as far as my praise goes. We'll just have to see what the third and final 'special' tonight is like, and then hope that one day they'll make it back into a proper weekly series like Dr Who should be, every year, for say six months at a time. I don't mind if it looks cheap, just hire some capable writers!

And when I say good writing, here's a literary example. Not an example of how to write Dr Who, a completely unrelated thing in classic Zoomy blog style to confuse the readers. I've mentioned before, several times, how much I love 'The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay', and it seems a good place to start a series of posting examples of great pages from favourite books. It's a cold day in late 1939 New York, and teenage Sam Clay and Joe Kavalier have just been given the okay to create their own comic book. They go out to find a team of artists, meet Sam's friend Julius "Julie" Glovsky and go with him to the apartment/studio where Julie's older brother Jerry lives with two other artists. When nobody answers the door, Joe (with a completely unnecessary display of acrobatics) scales the fire escape, climbs in an upstairs window and immediately provokes a scream from the naked woman asleep on Jerry's bed. It's his first meeting with Rosa Saks, who will play a central role in the lives of both Joe and Sammy. And, as we learn in this one beautifully-written scene, the whole incident had a lasting effect on Julie too...


 Michael Chabon should be writing Doctor Who. And I've always thought someone needs to get David Renwick writing it as well. And there are other candidates too - you know, proper good writers is what the series has really been lacking, it's not about the expensive special effects. Sort it out, BBC!

Saturday, December 02, 2023

Being the Autobiography of a Really Good Man

 This is my 3000th post on this blog! The big round number crept up on me a little unexpectedly, and I wanted to do something special and lengthy for it, but then I'll probably want to write something about Doctor Who tonight, and it'll probably not be very good, so I thought I should write a three thousandth post before it's on.

But it seems a good opportunity to announce something I've felt reluctant to tell people, possibly worried that they won't think I'm cool - I've been officially diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, although it's not really causing me any serious symptoms and isn't likely to in the future. But if I mention it here, and people still don't know about it if it comes up in conversation, that'll be because they haven't read my blog. And if they haven't read my blog, that means they aren't cool!

Largely unrelated to that, I fell down last week and emulated Augustus Carp's father, who in the process of denouncing the new lectern at his church injured his knee and suffered "extremely severe contusions of both his larger gluteal muscles". This made me want to read the book again, and recommend it to anyone who hasn't heard of it - "Augustus Carp, Esq, by Himself"

Published anonymously in 1924, it was written by Dr Henry Howarth Bashford, and it's hilarious. Funnily enough, it's only on this latest reading I noticed that Augustus is 47 years old at the time he's writing his autobiography, meaning he's exactly a hundred years older than me. I think I should be emulating him more - by the time he got to that age, he'd long since "commenced his life's afternoon", and despite having lost his job despite all the pious blackmail and swindling he'd used to get it, has married into enough wealth to live comfortably as "sidesman, churchwarden, Sunday School superintendent and secretary of the Glee Club, no less than as President of the St Potamus Purity League". It's an example we should all follow!



Monday, November 27, 2023

The amazing world

 I'm sorry to hear that Mike has died. Mike as in Mike's Amazing World of Comics, that is. The long-established, universally loved and admired, comic cataloguing website. It's been my first go-to site for any obscure superhero comic trivia I might be interested in for longer than I can remember.

I then spent a heck of a long time searching the internet to try to find Mike's surname, because I knew I knew it at one point but couldn't remember it now - I'd almost decided he kept it a secret from everyone and I'd never known it at all, finding him universally referred to just as "Mike" by everyone mourning his loss. I did find it in the end, but it seems to be the done thing not to mention it, so I'll just leave it as RIP Mike. A true hero of the comic nerd universe.

Saturday, November 25, 2023

It was pretty good, really

Yes, and that's high praise, compared to the last ten years of Doctor Who. I won't spoil it, but I'd advise everyone reading this to watch the new episode. Although I have to ask - what's with David Tennant's hair? 

But in all fairness, I was worried that even "bring back Russell T Davies and David Tennant and Catherine Tate and write a story based on a classic comic" wouldn't be a solution to the decade of badly misguided attempts to make Doctor Who, so I was prepared to be disappointed. But actually, it was pretty cool. Let's see if they can use this as a template for the future!

Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Best ending ever

 For want of anything more productive to do with my time, I've been re-watching my way through the entire run of Regular Show for the last few months. And really, there could never be a more perfect ending to a series than the final montage. I defy anyone to watch this without a tear in their eye...



Well, possibly you do need to know something about the characters and settings to get the full effect, but even so, I'm sure everyone finds it impossibly beautiful, right?

I feel it's also worth pointing out that Hi-Five Ghost is my absolute favourite character (closely followed by Eileen and Rigby), which might say something about how I see my role in life as being that of a sidekick. Now, I'm aware that there are people in the world - quite a lot of them, indeed - who don't think of me in that way at all, and would think it downright weird if I say I've always been a smaller best friend to some or other larger and more dominant personality, floating alongside them and high-fiving where appropriate, but I still do feel that that's the position I always automatically slide into at every opportunity, and certainly the kind of character in a well-written show like Regular Show who I'll always most empathise with. It's really got me thinking about how realistic my self-perception actually is...

See, what other comedy cartoon show can give you a tear-jerking finale and a healthy dose of psychoanalytical prompting? It's genius, I tell you.



Friday, November 17, 2023

The sensational debut of a supervillain

 It's 1993, Wolverine is a very cool character in the coolest Marvel comics, his arch-enemy Sabretooth is also extremely cool, and the market is absolutely flooded with new characters who are trying to be just as cool as them. It helps if your name sounds a bit like "wolf", definitely. So how could this new character fail, with a cover like this?


Aardwolf. A name that just screams "picked up the book of animals of the world, turned to entry number 2 and stopped looking." He was probably doomed to failure from the start. But Aardwolf's background is Madripoor (the Asian island nation chock-full of evil businessmen who are also crimelords, where Wolverine spends a lot of time), so the cover decides to stress not only how much like Sabretooth he is, but also that he's like a famous businessman. Donald Trump. Yes, that's not going to look at all silly, thirty years down the line.

The cover of Night Thrasher #3 is drawn by Javier Saltares, who was supposed to be the regular artist of the series, but inside it's a fill-in story pencilled by Ken Lashley and Fred Haynes, and inked by six different people, taking a few pages each to get it done by the deadline. The letters page tells us that David Boller and Don Hudson will be drawing the next issue, and Saltares will return to his regular role with #5. Hudson isn't actually credited on #4, but Saltares does come back for #5, only to disappear once more, and for good. Boller became the regular penciller after that.

The writer, though, was Fabian Nicieza, and you'd think he must have had something to do with creating Aardwolf. But he cheerfully acknowledges that it's a funny kind of thing for an Asian crimelord to call himself, having him explain that it's a childhood nickname, and "a hyena-like mammal which feeds mostly on termites and insect larvae, would you believe?" He tries to justify it by saying he kills termites like Night Thrasher (who of course also has a silly name that's had a lot of jokes made about it over the years, but Nicieza isn't to blame for that one - Tom DeFalco thought it up), but it sounds more than a little forced.

And speaking of silly names, Aardwolf's real name is Chon Li. I mean, seriously? Street Fighter II was a very big deal by the time Aardwolf made his debut! Chun Li, busty female street fighter, was a name on the lips of everyone in the target audience of comics like Night Thrasher. How could Nicieza, or whoever, not have heard about her?

To cap it all, Aardwolf is completely the wrong colours on that cover. Inside the comic, he's got grey skin and dark red hair. He's also rather lost among a lot of other rather better characters, and he is never seen again after Night Thrasher #4 (though he ends the story still a businessman/crimelord in Madripoor). Donald Trump had more staying power.


PS The letters page in Night Thrasher is titled "Talk - or I'll gladly break your jaw" after a famous line of his. Other people suggested "Nocturnal Submissions", but Marvel decided against it.

PPS Would you believe there's another Aardwolf in the Marvel Universe? He's part of the "Hyena Clan" who showed up in a Fantastic Four story involving the Black Panther, in 2012. He also hasn't become a supervillain sensation, but at least he lives within a thousand miles or so of actual aardwolves. 

Saturday, November 11, 2023

If you're in Sheffield train station...

... take a look at the new shiny stainless steel (what else?) commemorative plaque under an arch of poppies! The plaque was unveiled yesterday by the Deputy Lord Lieutenant, accompanied by a whole lot of speeches, exhortations, prayers and Last Posts. It was actually a remarkably big spectacle for such an obscure family as the Pridmores; I never thought I'd see the like.



But then, if there's one thing our family specialises in, it's quantity rather than quality (though of course we've got abundant supplies of that, too). And yesterday's event was a great opportunity for a rare gathering of our branch of the family tree - the four soldiers' little brother Sydney's eighteen grandchildren and their various descendants couldn't all make it yesterday, but an impressively big chunk of us did! It was quite a day, all in all.

Friday, November 03, 2023

Mind sports updates

 I did indeed get knocked out in the first round of the Microsoft Excel World Championship at the weekend, but as I told you, I was drawn against the sixth seed, and now that the dust has settled after yesterday's third and fourth rounds, he's one of the eight Excel masters who are going to Las Vegas for the grand final in December!


And I still think it's a great achievement to get to the round of 128 two years in a row, but I'll need to buckle down and get good at this if I'm going to become official world champion in the years to come - preferably before more talented Excellers find out that the competition exists! So that's my resolution for the next year or so, anyway.


Meanwhile, if you remember that thing I used to be world champion at before the more talented memorisers found out that it exists (but still want to read a really rather good article about how the whole memory principle works and be inspired by it to start taking part yourself), check out this interview with Katie Kermode!



I like the repeated namechecks of the Ben System - that's something that hasn't gone away, even though Katie (like all really good memory masters) has given it her own individual twist and would be fully justified in calling it the Katie System instead. Modern-day memorisers are less inclined to name things after themselves these days.


And moving on to the mind sport I've never been anywhere near the world's best at, but still very much enjoy anyway, the World Othello Championship is happening in Rome right now!


After seven of thirteen rounds, it's still all to play for! See, one of these days I might still be world champion at othello too - I'm just waiting for all the really great othellists to forget that the competition exists.

Saturday, October 28, 2023

Halloween - the most important annual festival in a world where adults rule

 I promised, a while ago, to tell my blog-readers all about the coolest dream I had as a child. And no amount of apathy from my loyal readers will stop me fulfilling this promise, don't you worry! Now, I don't remember what year I had this dream, but from internal evidence it must have been around this time of year, probably late October. One major date-indicator is that the new season of television programmes always started in September, and this dream must have been heavily inspired by the kind of children's drama series on BBC or ITV that would always start with the new season and run for six weeks or so. It's really not the kind of thing I could have dreamed up all by myself, though I can't remember a direct source for the story.

A description of this dream will need a lot of explanatory notes, so be prepared for some lengthy analysis.

The premise of the dream, which I think was just understood rather than directly narrated, is that adults have taken over the country or the world, and treat children as slaves - this involves the children all wearing handcuffs.

'Country' and 'world' were essentially the same thing to me at a young age; I don't know if the dream specified which it was that the grown-ups had taken over. Nor does the fact that adults already rule the world seem to have bothered me - really, 'parents' or 'teachers' taking over would have made more sense, but it was a more general 'adult' seizing of power I was dreaming about.

The story started with our hero (me) in a newsagent's with my mother - me in handcuffs, looking at the new year's annuals on the shelves, and being excited to see that they not only had the ones with the next year's date, but also the year after's. My mother asked which of the two Beano Books I wanted; I said I'd rather have both, and she said I could only have one.

This scene's intention was apparently to demonstrate how horrifically cruel the adults are to their innocent children. I apparently can't imagine anything more evil than only getting one Beano Book when two were available. That the adults are still required to buy things like comic annuals for children is an unshakable rule throughout this dream. 'My mother' in this dream didn't resemble my real mother at all; I'm thinking blonde hair and glasses, and get vibes of 'TV actress' from her. The comic annuals in Britain come out in September/October and have the following year's date on them - so if I dreamed this in 1986, the Beano Books would have been dated 1987 and 1988.

I don't recall if there was any transition from that scene to the next, but now we're in Woolworths in Boston, at the back of the store where the photo booth was. I have to get my picture taken. My mother gives me the coins to put into the slot - lots of different coins, all with old-money names which she tells me one at a time. One of the names was along the lines of "a jack o'nickel".

Pre-decimal money (which became obsolete in 1971) is obviously something that grown-ups would want to restore if they took power. The coins all did have unusual names, which adults would talk about to the mystification of 1980s children. This is exactly the kind of thing that would have been on a kids-versus-adults TV show, although again I don't remember one that did it.

Sensing an opportunity for escape, since I'd be alone and unsupervised in the photo booth, I cunningly said that I wouldn't be able to put the coins in the slot wearing handcuffs, and so my mother unlocked and removed them. I immediately made a run for it, racing down to the front end of the store, grabbing either a tin of beans or a pot of yoghurt from a shelf and giving it to a pair of handcuffed children (an older girl and younger boy).

The front part of Woolworths, near the till, was where the sweets were sold. There might possibly have been yoghurt there, but not beans. Nor would a tin of beans have been likely to be in my subconscious mind, probably explaining the confusion if I'd seen a similar scene with beans involved.

The girl was unimpressed by my heroic act, saying that it wasn't much help to them. I replied something, and ran out the front doors to continue my crusade.

A streetwise girl, the same age or a bit older, would routinely feature in TV shows with a male child protagonist. This one might seem to have a point, but in the dream I felt she was being unfairly ungrateful. I have no idea what I said to her, but I hope it put her in her place. I'm sure she would have made a reappearance later in the saga.

There might be a missing scene here, because the next thing I remember I'm outside the back entrance to Woolworths, at night, and looking at the sky above the shop, where fireworks are exploding. "Of course!" I thought to myself. "Halloween! The grown-ups' favourite special occasion, because it doesn't require them to spend money on children!"

To get to that location I would have had to go a long way around or back through the shop I'd just left. At that point I woke up, sadly. But clearly the point was that I would do something to resolve the whole situation at Halloween, the biggest event in the evil adults' calendar. Obviously I'm conflating Halloween (October 31st) with Bonfire Night (November 5th), which is when we have fireworks, but they're so close together it's quite understandable. We didn't do much for Halloween where I came from - trick-or-treating was an American thing that hadn't quite made its way over here yet. There was usually a Halloween party and a costume competition, but in our neighbourhood it was understood that costumes should be hand-made rather than store-bought (and thus in my mind didn't cost the adults any money). Halloween being a non-present-giving festival obviously means it's a cheap event for evil grown-ups.

Really, words don't do the sheer coolness of this dream justice. I just wish I knew exactly how much was my own invention and how much was just cribbed from something I'd seen on TV before bedtime...

Saturday, October 14, 2023

The difficult 47th issue

 It's my 47th birthday! Honestly, it's hardly worth celebrating when you get to such a big number. 47 is a good number for fans of Star Trek: The Next Generation - someone thought it was fun to put lots of 47s into computer displays and things on the show. But for a fan of superhero comics, it's not a very good number - as proof, here are all the Marvel Comics 47th issues I could find in my comic collection today!


A motley collection. Comics nowadays rarely publish an issue numbered 47 - by the time they get that high, they've usually rebooted with a new #1, to boost the flagging sales. And in days gone by, the 47th issue would usually see a title struggling to establish an identity after the departure of the original writer or artist or both. Or being a convenient place to slot a fill-in issue to allow the regular writer or artist to catch up. Or just starting the build-up to a big fiftieth-issue spectacular. Nothing very cool happens in 47th issues. Here are the nine, with at least one interesting piece of trivia about them:

Defenders #47 - May 1977

Guest Scripter John Warner
Artists Keith Giffen & Klaus Janson
Plot David Kraft & Roger Slifer

That's how the credits are written. It's more normal to put the 'plotters' first, but I guess Kraft and Slifer didn't make much contribution to this one. Warner is a one-off fill-in writer. Defenders was trying to continue with the kind of stories Steve Gerber had been writing, but had no real sense of direction.
In this one, Valkyrie apologises to Clea for not wearing the hideous gold costume she'd recently adopted (explaining that her magic clothes-changing spell defaults to her original outifit), and Clea spontaneously fixes that problem and designs her a much nicer-looking white suit to wear in future.

Marvel Two-in-One #47 - January 1979

Writer Bill Mantlo
Artist Chic Stone

Marvel Two-in-One didn't really have a regular writer or artist at this point - it was a series of one-off stories in which the Thing teams up with a random Marvel superhero. This is the first of two issues by Mantlo and Stone, and the first which doesn't even have a guest-star - the Thing this issue deals with his regular off-screen bullies the Yancy Street Gang. It's really not much good.
Alpha Flight #47 - June 1987

Writer Bill Mantlo
Pencils Craig Brasfield, Mike Mignola, Steve Purcell
Inks Whilce Portacio, Terry Austin

Three pencillers, two inkers and one inventory story wedged into the middle of Bill Mantlo's continuing storylines.

Funnily enough, this was one of the very first comics I bought as a young comic-collector discovering the joys of back issues. That I soon became a devoted fan of Bill Mantlo's Alpha Flight is despite, rather than because of, this comic. I always tell people they need to read the whole Mantlo saga, but they're allowed to skip this one.
Avengers West Coast #47 - August 1989

Writer/Penciller John Byrne
Inker Mike Machlan

This was actually the first issue of "Avengers West Coast" - the previous 46 had been called "West Coast Avengers". They changed the title so that it would go on comic shop shelves next to the main Avengers comic, and maybe someone would buy it. This isn't any kind of fill-in story; Byrne was the regular creator.

John Byrne's time on the second-string Avengers comic has its fans, but I'm not one of them, I'm afraid. I don't actually know why I own this comic. It totally ruined the Vision, a great character, for years and years to come. Sorry, I'll calm down now. Why DO I own this comic?


New Warriors #47 - May 1994

Writer Fabian Nicieza
Pencillers Darick Robertson, Vince Evans, Kevin Kobasic, John Czop
Inkers Larry Mahlstedt, Mark Stegbauer, Tim Dzon

Four pencillers and three inkers. Wow. It doesn't look as bad or rushed as the credits might imply.

First part of the "Time and Time Again" crossover with the solo Night Thrasher and Nova comics which had recently spun off from New Warriors. Fabian Nicieza was REALLY keen to get as many comics on the shelves as possible. In this one, Night Thrasher announces that he's planning to split the team into two comics, recruiting a bunch of new members and giving Nicieza yet another monthly paycheque. But this plan was axed by editorial on the grounds the sales weren't good enough.
Generation X #47 - January 1999

Writer Larry Hama
Pencils Aaron Lopresti
Inks Walden Wong

The second of two issues drawn by Lopresti and Wong - next month, Terry and Rachel Dodson return to the regular artist position, and Hama is replaced by new writer Jay Faerber.

So this is basically a 'downtime' story, in which the gang catch up on sub-plots and have a training session in the Danger Room, which goes wrong and tries to kill them, like always. But everything's fine in the end and they play basketball.
Thunderbolts #47 - February 2001

Writer Fabian Nicieza
Pencils Mark Bagley
Inks Greg Adams & Scott Hanna

Barely any kind of fill-in at all, although the two inkers stops it getting a perfect business-as-usual score.

A whole lot of ongoing plotlines are slightly advanced in this one. We're building up to the big fiftieth issue. A little later, Nicieza was able to do what he hadn't been allowed to do with the New Warriors, and Thunderbolts started coming out twice a month, chronicling the adventures of two different teams. Yay!
Avengers #47 - December 2001

Writer Kurt Busiek
Reserve Artists Manuel Garcia & Bob Layton

They really are credited as "reserve artists" but this was the fourth consecutive issue drawn by Garcia and Layton. They'd taken over from Alan Davis, and with the next issue the "new regular artist" Kieron Dwyer arrives. He lasted three issues before we were back to fill-ins.

This is an issue focusing entirely on Warbird and the rather uncomfortable subject of her relationship with Marcus, son of Kang. Not Marcus, son of Immortus, although Immortus and Kang are the same person. It's all complicated and gets historically very weird. He asks her to grasp his halberd at one point, but she refuses.
Wolverine #47 - December 2006

Writer Marc Guggenheim
Penciller Humberto Ramos
Inker Carlos Cuevas

Part of the extensive "Civil War" crossover storyline - every participating comic had that layout, with the bottom half of the cover in one solid colour.

No fill-ins at all here - this was the regular creative team for the lengthy Civil War storyline, which had started in #42. Next issue there's one final aftermath issue, and then we're onto the new writer/artist lineup. I'm really not a fan of Humberto Ramos's art either - maybe I'm just in the mood to complain about the number 47 today, I don't know...



Friday, October 13, 2023

Only Jerks and Horses

 Do you remember, many years ago, there was some kind of 'comedy night', maybe on Channel 4, which included a series of short sketches mocking the American approach to sitcoms? Matt Lucas might have been involved, somehow. I suppose I could look it up, and not come across as someone with a poor memory, but I'm impressed with my powers of recollection here even if you're not.

The point is, it finished with an "American adaptation" of Only Fools and Horses, with Nicholas Lyndhurst (not the real one, an actor playing him) transplanted into it and being baffled by how they'd removed anything even remotely funny from the whole setup. So naturally it came to mind when watching the first episode of the new Frasier series.

Nicholas Lyndhurst does seem superfluous and pointless, and obviously rather awkwardly performing a script written by Americans (Jane Leeves suffered from the same problem in the classic series, of course), but the rest of it was actually quite good. There are some nice character dynamics among the all-new extended cast, and in fact (proving that that comedy-night parody was being unfair) quite a few funny jokes. It might turn out to be good, you know.

There's another episode to watch, but I don't like binge-watching a show like that, so I'll give it a day or two. And I might get an episode 3 before my week's free subscription to Paramount+ runs out - even if New Frasier is the best thing ever, I'm not paying that kind of money just to watch it.


So on that tightwad note, and since Frasier is all about poking fun at people whose idea of 'sport' is sitting at a computer solving problems on Excel spreadsheets (having paid an entry fee roughly the price of a Paramount+ subscription for the privilege), I should add that the draw for the Microsoft Excel World Championship has been made today!

And ouch, I've been drawn against the sixth seed in the first round...

Michael Clarke got to the quarter-finals last year, having qualified with a perfect score in the second-fastest time in the qualifiers - but I can maybe take some comfort in the fact that this year he's been focused on the Financial Modeling World Cup and hasn't played in this year's more eccentric challenges of the type that feature in the world championship. Unless he's been downloading them and doing them for practice, which he probably has.

But hey, I can still hope I do so well or he does so uncharacteristically badly that I win our match! And then I'm guaranteed not to meet any of the other top eight seeds until I get down to the quarter finals myself! Positive thinking is a major factor in Excel success, I think!

Sunday, October 08, 2023

Microsoft Excel World Championship, here I come!

 Actually, as I said, I was already qualified for the world championship, and didn't need to compete in the final qualifying round yesterday - but I wanted to anyway, just to see how I did. It was a 60-minute challenge rather than the 30-minute monthly ones in the "Road to Las Vegas", so a bit different. Five unrelated tasks of different difficulty and point value - I went for the four easier ones and left the highest-scoring (which looked like it would take a lot longer to do), and I think that was a sensible strategy. And I made it to the front page of the results sheet, in eighteenth place!


Last year in the equivalent competition I was 74th, and you had to scroll down quite a way to find me. Knowing how these competitions work is the trick - that's why I always say people should go to a memory competition as soon as they learn such a thing exists, rather than waiting and training until they think they're good enough!

I see from the points I made one mistake in section 1 (I did notice that only 'losing' attempts at the game were divided by 2, but missed that the one 'winning' one needed to be multiplied by 2! Careless skimming of the instructions, but at least it wasn't too costly - I suspect this was designed for the RtLV scoring system rather than the one used yesterday; it would have cost a bigger chunk of points that way), and got one of the bonus questions wrong (just a careless mistake, doing it quickly), but otherwise missed any other pitfalls.

So now it's the first two rounds on October 28th - I just have to hope not to get drawn against any of the REALLY good Excellers, and maybe I can make it a bit further this year than I did in 2022! A paid trip to Vegas is still at least a theoretical possibility...

Saturday, October 07, 2023

Scale It Back - the reunion!

When I moved to Redditch, I had no idea it was the national hub of Star Wars figure collectors' events, but it is - a couple of times a year, a huge space in the Kingfisher Centre is dedicated to an astonishing volume of toys, costumes, exhibits and celebrity guests! The one today was particularly special, because the theme was Jabba's Palace!

Return of the Jedi was my Star Wars - it was the first of the films I saw, and the time when I first got into the world of toys, books, comics and all the Return of the Jedi merchandise flooding the shops in the early eighties! And obviously the coolest part of the film was Jabba and his palace full of fantastic monsters!

Which made it especially cool when, twelve years ago, I had the opportunity to star in the fantastic music video to Scale It Back, by DJ Shadow, and meet Toby Philpott, left arm of Jabba the Hutt! Most people who appeared in that video must have found it the strangest collection of costumes they'd ever seen gathered together in one place, but Toby, seen here at rehearsal with the monkey puppet, had a collection of much wilder experiences to tell us all about!


He was a guest at Jabba's Palace today, and I and my brother (memorably represented by a cardboard cut-out in the music video) went along and said hello. It was a great reunion, and maybe we should track down some of the other stars of that day! They should make action figures, in fact, and hold big collector fairs for them a few years later!

Monday, October 02, 2023

I'm now 76% English

 You might remember that DNA test I did last year, and the "Ethnicity Estimate" that it provided. Well, Ancestry have updated their estimating and provide a more accurate estimate of where my (as far as I know exclusively English) ancestors came from. So here's how I'm put together now!


I've lost 3% of Sweden/Denmark, and 4% of Scotland, with that whole seven percent of me now granted English citizenship. Give it another few years, maybe I'll entirely have made it into this country!


I've still got that 1% of Norway lurking in me somewhere, though...

Saturday, September 30, 2023

The complete September

 There, see, I told you I could do a blog post every day for a whole month!

Friday, September 29, 2023

Ghost monsters

 
The ghosts in Pac-Man aren't actually ghosts, they're just hiding under sheets. I've always called them ghosts, though, and don't intend to stop now. Anyway, more interesting than what they're called as a group, is what their individual names are...



The original Japanese version of the game gives them each a "character" and "nickname" (although Japanese, the game is all written in Roman alphabet, and all in English except these names), which seems to have caused a bit of confusion in the early years of Pac-Man - "character" is meant to mean a description of the ghost's personality or behaviour, not 'this is the name of the character'. They describe how the red one chases you, the pink one ambushes, the blue one is unpredictable, the orange one is... 'feigning ignorance' seems to be the agreed translation on the internet, I don't know. The "nicknames" are just based on the colours red, pink and blue, and the fourth is the slow one.
If you connect two points on the game's circuit board together, you can change the names to "English" ones, and you can just about see what they were going for - "urchin" in the sense of sticking to you, and so on.
But when the game came to America, they either didn't know about the "English" names or thought they were stupid, so they went in and changed them into all-new character/nickname combinations. Except Pinky.
And the person who had to go in and do the reprogramming at least noticed the alternate names, replacing them with placeholders presumably in case anyone wanted to come up with some alternatives. So, undocumented in the instructions, arcade owners outside Japan could still connect those two bits of the circuit board and show these names instead, if they really wanted to.










But the early guidebooks that soon flooded the market unanimously referred to the 'character' as the name of the ghost, as well as claiming that Pinky is the fastest (he actually isn't) and Clyde the slowest (again, not) and that Inky will run away from you (only sometimes). This one is particularly good, since it calls them Monsters, but gives alternatives of Ghosts, Zombies or Screw-Eyes. Never mind what I said at the start, I'm calling them Screw-Eyes from now on.

Thursday, September 28, 2023

I believe I can fly

 Or at least I could in a dream I had last night. Now, I fairly often dream that I can fly, but it's usually more a sort of long jump, running-in-the-air and not going down kind of thing. Last night was the proper Superman style of flying, albeit in a modest, low speed and velocity, kind of way. I should do that more often.