Saturday, February 01, 2014
It's just no fun
All this rain. I mean, it's better than if it had been freezing cold and snowing all winter, but I really can't wait until it's summer again...
Friday, January 31, 2014
Drat, I missed a day
But it's not my fault - I had to go out unexpectedly with work people. I'll return to uninformative daily blogging starting today, although I'm not going to write anything worth reading tonight, because I'm very tired.
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Transformation
I know I mentioned it a few days ago, but it's only just struck me that it's thirty years this year since Transformers first came along. Perhaps I'm biased, but the 1980s glut of toy-based cartoons and comics was probably the greatest era in the history of the world.
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Excitement
I got really quite enthusiastic about practicing 5-minute numbers tonight. This is a good sign, because I never enjoy numbers as much as cards or binary. Maybe if I keep this up, I'll knuckle down and create that 4-digit-image system?
Monday, January 27, 2014
Competitions
I have got to get round to finding a good place to hold mind sports competitions. I've promised to do an Othello regional and a friendly memory championship, and I need to settle on dates for them right now. Well, maybe tomorrow...
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Universes
The best thing about the Justice Society of America, which I mentioned in passing several weeks ago and now expect you all to be fully clued-up about, is that it definitively established that all the cool superheroes of the 1940s shared the same fictional universe. Although Superman and Batman were too busy to hang out with the JSA (it was a comic designed to encourage the youth of America to read the comics featuring the less popular characters) most of the time, their couple of appearances in JSA stories prove that the adventures of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Hawkman, the Flash, the Green Lantern, the Spectre, Starman, Doctor Fate, Doctor Mid-Nite, Sandman, Wildcat, Mister Terrific, Hour-Man, the Atom, the Black Canary, Johnny Thunder and, best of all, "Scribbly" (thanks to parody superhero the Red Tornado's cameo appearance in the first JSA story) are all linked in the same reality. It's the foundation of modern superhero comics, only more fun to read.
Actually, the idea of 'fictional universes' would sound strange to the superhero-fans of the early forties. The idea that Superman's adventures in the comic, the newspaper strip, the radio show, the cartoons, the movie serials and wherever else the omnipresent superhero was showing up weren't all part of one giant continuity would have got you a funny look from anyone you tried to explain this point to. That's the kind of attitude that superhero writers in the twenty-first century need to return to.
Actually, the idea of 'fictional universes' would sound strange to the superhero-fans of the early forties. The idea that Superman's adventures in the comic, the newspaper strip, the radio show, the cartoons, the movie serials and wherever else the omnipresent superhero was showing up weren't all part of one giant continuity would have got you a funny look from anyone you tried to explain this point to. That's the kind of attitude that superhero writers in the twenty-first century need to return to.
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