Flurries, with a chance of insanity expected

So it's snowing again. Like, really snowing. We got ten inches last night, and the worst is still on it's way, according to intellicast, which I've been watching for the past couple days. Finally, we get a proper Vermont winter. Not necessarily cold, but a helluva lot of snow.
This is a bit of a bigger storm than I can really remember, at least on it's own. Last night, as I drove up to work, there were already snow cancellations for various central Vermont towns, something I don't think that I've ever heard of happening before, notice of a cancellation the night before. Good thing too, because the roads are pretty bad. Not really slippery, but the plow crews are really working to keep up with the snow that's coming down, and the snow's winning.
Storms like this make the entire state burrow in for a couple days - or at least the smart ones. There were a couple of people in smaller sedans driving around from campus, which isn't really striking me as the smartest idea at the moment. The president sent out an e-mail earlier this morning urging students to remain on campus and not to drive. I guess they didn't get the memo. They've also asked students to volunteer helping with snow removal from stairs and walkways, another thing that I haven't seen happen before. As I said, there's a lot of it at the moment. I think the entire English department is closed up today, there was sign after sign after sign on the classroom doors, making me wonder why I even bothered to come into campus, because my English teacher has trouble in even mild weather, let alone this. I have to walk into town eventually and pick up some random things, and possibly do some research for the seminar. I'm hoping that my math class will be cancelled. Actually, I'm seriously considering going home and picking up my skis and hiking up Mt. Payne. I might end up doing that, if I can find out if my class is cancelled. One thing's for sure, the ski industry here has got to be thrilled at this, because some places have been struggling this winter, because of the really mild winter that we've had thus far.
It had some interesting reppercussions at work last night as well. Retail stores have a certain quota that we have to hit every day. We call it Plan at Walden Books, I'm not sure what other places call it. We doubled our plan last night, pretty much setting us ahead for the rest of the week. Undoubtably, this is because people planned ahead, realised that they probably wouldn't be driving around tomorrow and went in last night. Today, it's most likely going to be completely dead- if they're open at all. I'm glad that I'm not working, because I have some serious doubts about some parts of the road. I don't mind driving in snow at all - I'm just curious as to whether my car can make it up some of the hills.

And, Happy Valentine's Day / Singles Appreciation day.

Upcoming TV, or, How TV Networks have Run out of Ideas

Variety just posted up a bunch of pickups by the Fox network for Drama and Comedy TV series:

DRAMA

The Apostles (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec Producer: Chuck Pratt (writer)
Logline: Cops whose intense job pressure spills over to their personal lives.

- Old idea. Done with NYPD Blue, the Shield, CSI, and just about every other cop-drama out there.

Canterbury's Law (Sony TV)
Exec Producers: Denis Leary, Jim Serpico (writer), Dave Erickson (writer)
Director: Mike Figgis
Logline: Female attorney makes waves while defending her innocent clients.

- Another old idea. Another lawyer show? Nope.

The Cure (Warner Bros. TV)
Exec Producers: Patrick Massett and John Zinman (writers), Akiva Goldsman, Danny Cannon
Director: Danny Cannon
Logline: A group of doctors that cuts red tape to treat patients.

- Third old idea in a row. Let's see if they'll make the lead a grumpy doctor like House. Or the CBS failure, 3 Lbs.

K-Ville (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec Producers: Jonathan Lisco (writer)
Cast: Cole Hauser
Logline: The few cops who stayed in New Orleans following Katrina.

-Okay, this could be interesting, but I'm not sure how long they could possibly drag this out for.


New Amsterdam (Regency TV)
Exec Producers: Allan Loeb and Christian Taylor (writers), Lasse Hallstrom, David Manson, Leslie Holleran, Steven Pearl
Director: Lasse Hallstrom
Cast: Nikolaj Coster-Waldau
Logline: Police detective who is secretly centuries old.

- Interesting concept? TV Show worth? I'm not sure yet, and I'm not sure that this would have a very big audience.

NSA Innocent (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec Producers: Bob Cochran and David Ehrman (writers), Jon Cassar, Joel Surnow, Howard Gordon
Director: Jon Cassar
Cast: Stana Katic
Logline: Everyman is recruited by the NSA and forced to spy on his boss.

-Sounds like Alias! But with less action.

Nurses (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec Producers: Barry Josephson, Eileen Gallagher, Ann McManus, PJ Hogan
Writers: Samantha Goodman and Andrew Stern
Director: PJ Hogan
Logline: Nurses in a big-city hospital.

- Grey's Anatomy anyone?

Sarah Connor Chronicles (Warner Bros. TV)
Exec Producers: Josh Friedman, David Nutter, James Middleton, Mario Kassar, Andrew Vajna, Joel Michaels
Cast: Lena Headey, Thomas Dekker, Summer Glau, Richard T. Jones
Logline: "Terminator" character in L.A. fights attackers from the future.

- Given the last Terminator movie, I'm not holding high hopes for this, but it is SciFi, and it's now got Summer Glau, so it might be interesting.

Supreme Courtships (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec Producers: Gary Tieche (writer), Marty Adelstein, Michael Thorn, Ian Toynton
Director: Michael Thorn
Cast: Kurtwood Smith, Shane West, Zachary Knighton, Leslie Odom Jr.
Logline: Six Supreme Court clerks' personal and professional lives.

- At least it's not the Court Justices themselves, but nope, sounds eh. Nice play on words for the title though.

Them (CBS Paramount Network TV)
Exec Producers: David Eick and John McNamara (writers), Jonathan Mostow
Director: Jonathan Mostow
Logline: Based on graphic novel "Six" about alien spies on Earth.

- If done right, might be good. Could be another Dark Angel though.

COMEDY

Rules for Starting Over (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec Producers: Brad Johnson, Peter Farrelly, Bobby Farrelly (director), Bradley Thomas
Writers: Chris Pappas & Mike Bernier
Logline: A 35-year-old and his buddies, all newly single after years of marriage, jump headfirst back into the dating scene.

- Um, no. A bunch of guys all getting divorced at the same time? This just sounds dumb.

Playing Chicken (Warner Bros. TV)
Exec Producers: Sean Anders & John Morris (writers); Tom Werner; Eric Gold; Jimmy Miller; John Pasquin
Director: John Pasquin
Cast: Norbert Leo Butz
Logline: Two brothers who differ politically are forced to live together after one suffers an accident that leaves him wheelchair bound.

-Also sounds stupid.

The Return of Jezebel James (Regency)
Exec Producers: Amy Sherman Palladino (writer-director); Dan Palladino
Logline: When a single successful children's book editor learns she is physically unable to conceive, she is forced to ask her estranged sister to carry her baby for her.

- What happened to adoption?

The Minister of Divine (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec Producers: Suzanne Martin (writer); Richard Curtis; Andrew Zein; Mark Chapman
Cast: Kirstie Alley
Logline: A woman known for her rebellious younger days returns to the small town she grew up in to be a minister at the town church. Based on the BBC show "Vicar Of Dibley."

- Eh, another pond jumper. Probably not.

Work Wife (20th Century Fox TV)**
Exec producers: Barbie Adler & Brad Copeland (writers)
Logline: A female reporter and her male co-worker navigate the challenges that their partnership at work brings to their relationships at home.
**(Cast contingent pickup)

- Sounds like Anchorman: The series. But not as good.

Untitled Victor Fresco Project (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec producer: Victor Fresco (writer)
Logline: A 10-year-old boy tries to navigate life in his high-achieving, overstressed family with the help of his crazy grandfather.

- Sounds like Everybody Hates Chris, just not as interesting.

Frances & Angela (Touchstone)
Exec Producers: David Zuckerman (writer); Dan Pasternak; Peter Traugott
Director: David Steinberg
Logline: Two best friends are content with their successful lives until they realized they are more "Afro-Saxons" than African Americans.

- Um? Sounds pretentious.

Life and Times of Tim (Warner Bros. TV)*
Exec Producers: Steve Dildarian (writer); Tom Werner; Eric Gold; Jimmy Miller
Logline: The story of a very normal guy named Tim who somehow always finds himself in deep trouble at both home and the office.
*(presentation order)

- And this is different from the Office or ANY OTHER TV show how?

Anchorwoman (Fox 21)*
Exec producers: Chad Damiani & JP Lavin (writers); Brian Gadinsky
Logline: A reality hybrid where a supermodel settles down in a southern Texas town and becomes an anchorwoman for the local news.
*(presentation order)

- That just sounds stupid.

Hackett (Sony Pictures TV)*
Exec Producers: Sarh Timberman and Carl Beverly
Writer: Denise Moss
Logline: Bad-boy literary luminary escapes both his troubles with women and a disgraced career teaching at Yale as as a public high school teacher in Ohio.
*(presentation order)

- Eh, no.

Two Families (HBO Independent Prods.)
Writers: Barbara Wallace and Thomas R. Wolfe
Logline: A blended family centering around two sets of adult siblings who didn't know they shared the same father.

- This sounds like it could be somewhat interesting.

The Beast (CBS Par TV)
Exec producer: Tucker Cawley (writer)
Logline: A veterinarian who can’t stand animals but loves their female owners.

- A vet who goes through something like 10 years of school, but doesn't like animals huh? He must really have trouble meeting women.

Untitled Liz Meriwether Project (20th Century Fox TV)
Exec producers: Dawn Parouse and Jeff RichmanWriter-supervising producer: Liz Meriwether
Logline: Four single women post-college

- Like Sex and the City? Or Six Degrees? Nope.

Fox: Fire 90% of your writers and get better ones. And with that, new ideas and things that don't sound stupid.

Pictures in War

Just caught Flags of Our Fathers. I've got some mixed reactions to the film. Overall, I liked it, but it felt very confused to me. At times, it wanted to be a war movie - The landing scenes on Iwo Jima were on par with Band of Brothers and Saving Private Ryan in energy, action, technical work and the overall scope. Other battle scenes were likewise as good. I got chills as the flag went up both times.
But then we get to the parts where the men are paraded around in front of the public, and the son speaking with the veterans, which were also very well done. There were some very powerful moments here, mainly ones that left me shaking my head, and which were summed up perfectly at the end, when the son tells the audience that heroes are products of ourselves, not of the men who we bestow the title - and it's something that's relevant today, especially given the importance of the media.
Also important was the mention at how a picture wins or looses a war - but I think that there's more to it than that. The contrast between the image of the second flag raising and the picture from Vietnam - I think that reflects the changing state of warfare. In the Second World War, we faced a very clear enemy, and things were largely black and white. Come to Vietnam, and the picture blurs, and the public isn't sure what's true and what's not true. I wonder, with that thought in mind, what the current war will be thought of, twenty, fifty, a hundred years down the line, once everyone has the ability to look back. I'm sure that that view will be just as muddled as it is today.
Back to Flags of Our Fathers - It's a film that tries to be a war film and a political commentary - one that has strict relevance in our recent past, our present and most certainly our future. As a war film, it works spectacularly. As a political film, it works spectacularly. But together, something is lost. The energy from the war film abruptly stops at times while the three men are brought to a stage, and vice-versa. There are times when the transitions work, and overall, the result is good, but not nearly as good as it could be.

How I Became a Geek

So I was reminded of something today - Today's the tenth anniversary of the re-release of Star Wars: A New Hope into theaters for the special edition. And I'm a big Star Wars fan. While I know I didn't see the movie on the opening night, I distinctly remember hearing the theme music on the AP Five minute news update on WDEV.
My father (Who's undoubtably reading this and getting a kick out of it) recounts this story often. "Do you think Andy would want to see Star Wars in theaters?" To which my mother replied: "Maybe, but if he gets scared, you can pull him out of it." Or something along those lines. I remember driving down in our trooper to Montpelier, where we got in line and got tickets, and I wanted to see Empire Strikes Back for some reason, wanting to skip the first one. I spent the next 123 minutes glued to the screen, from the moment the yellow text scrolled up into space, followed by the Star Destroyer attacking the Tantative IV. On the car ride home, I distinctly remember loving the Storm Troopers, and secretly wished that I could eventually get one of those kick-ass suits.
Over the next couple weeks, my dad took me and my brother back to see The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi. ROTJ was my favorite at the time because of the Speeder Bike chase.

Something about Star Wars completely captured my imagination - I had been exposed to some fantasy and science fiction films before, such as Escape from Witch Mountain, E.T., The King Arthur stories, and some others. I believe that I caught a glimpse of A New Hope once at a party at a friend's house, but it was short enough not to make an impression. Something about the sheer epic level and storytelling of the movies pulled me in without a struggle.

So I'd seen the movies. We were given a copy of the original trilogy on VHS (Which we still have) - on full screen - and I swear that I watched those movies hundreds of times. I'm surprised that the tape is still intact. My memory is somewhat fuzzy on what happened next. At some point, I aquirred copies of The Courtship of Princess Leia (From Barnes and Noble), Heir to the Empire
(Given to me by the Moretown Library for helping out)
Heir to the Force (Bought from Brooks in Northfield). I'm not sure which order I read these in, but I remember being very impressed with Heir to the Empire, and sought out the next books in the series. Through various book clubs, I picked up Iron Fist (Which I really disliked for years - it was in the middle of the X-Wing series, so without any background information...) Guide to Vehicles and Vessels, and began to start picking up book after book after book, going through all of them very quickly.

It was in middle school that I began hanging out in the school library, and became friends with the librarian, Mrs. Allen (Who I need to e-mail at some point...) which would become helpful in the future. It was also in Middle School that I met my best friend, Eric, at the one of the school dances. I was dressed up as Luke Skywalker, and we had a long discussion about the three films. It would be a couple of years before I ran into him again, when we both entered High School. Though my time at the library, I got a greater access to books. Mrs. Allen was kind enough to order some of the harder to find ones for me, as well as newer releases. She also suggested that I try some other things, starting with Ender's Game, by Orson Scott Card. I realised then that there was a much broader universe out there besides Star Wars, and one that had likely influenced much of what made it onto the screen. Just as quickly, I discovered Dune by Frank Herbert, Foundation and I, Robot (In addition to a number of others) by Isaac Asimov, 2001: A Space Odyssey and others by Arthur C. Clarke, Lord of the Rings, by J.R.R. Tolkien, T.A. Barron's books, His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman and Harry Potter, by J.K. Rowling. At school, I got lucky, because I was never harrassed for being a geek - everyone knew me as the random kid who regularly had about a dozen books on him, either in his pockets or backpack. I also got loosely into comics at this point, through some of the Star Wars ones that the library had.
Throughout High School, my tastes varied and changed a bit. I finally reached the X-Wing Series by Michael A. Stackpole, and was completely engrossed in those, reading them a dozen times, and got Eric hooked on them. I also got the Star Wars Encyclopedia for Christmas from my Grandmother (In addition to the Star Trek one- something I've always been amused by). During this time, Eric and I met Michael Stackpole, and through my increased use of the internet, I began tracking down other Star Wars authors via e-mail, pelting them with questions about the books. I also became a regular user of Theforce.net boards, starting in 1999, where I still regularly post, although not so much in the Star Wars sections any more. During this time, I got into other SciFi movies, such as Minority Report, The Matrix and a couple others, although reading remained my preference. Through this, I began reading new authors, such as Philip K. Dick and others who had movies based off of their works.
In 2000, I went off to Camp Abnaki, where I met another best friend of mine, Sam Gallagher, who was also interested in the same things that I was, although this took me a little while to realise - I listened to another CIT, who was paticularly mean to Sam, and after a couple of days, I realised that he was a) an asshole, and still is, and b) Sam was a cool guy. Through him, I learned of Dungeons and Dragons, a role playing game, which I would slowly get more and more into. Sam is also responsible for introducing Babylon 5 to me, and this was one of the second larger universes that I would become a fan of, as I borrowed the DVDs from him and watched the entire series over a couple years. It further showed me that there were some incredible Science Fiction TV shows out there. None the less, I continued to pick up the newer Star Wars and books, now having come to a point where I was waiting for the next release. I started writing a lot on my own, and even started trying to sell stories to magazines, which never happened, although it's still a dream of mine.
During this time, The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones was released in theaters, and for some reason, I never went to them on opening night, although I would eventually make it out to see then three times apiece. I loved them completely then, although my impressions of them have cooled somewhat. I loved, and still love the stories that they have, although not so much the acting.
The summer after I graduated, I got one of the coolest things that I own, a set of Storm Trooper armor. That previous spring, our high school band (where I played Trumpet) played music from Star Wars, after bugging my director for five years. To celebrate, I got on the internet and put in a request to the 501st Legion (Whom I'd learned about through the Star Wars insider magazine) and asked if any would be interested in coming up to march around. One did, and it was one of the coolest concerts that we had. My dad still has it on tape, and I've got some pictures still. The guy - Scott - sold me a suit of armor later on that summer, and it arrived the week after camp ended. My dream of owning a suit - something that I'd had since I first saw the movie, was realised. I wore it on Halloween since then, and bring it out at camp for the campers. At the end of my senior year, I began work as a content provider for The Unofficial Clone Wars Site, which would become the largest website dedicated to the Clone Wars, all the media (books, comics, cartoons, etc) between Attack of the Clones and the upcoming Revenge of the Sith. This gave me a place in the Star Wars community, and allowed me to have a reason to harass a number of authors, including Matthew Stover, Michael Stackpole, Aaron Allston, Karen Traviss, Steve Perry, Michael Reeves, Steven Barnes, Sean Stewart, Kathy Tyers, Troy Denning, Walter Jon Williams (Mostly through the website, although some through TFN) as well as comic creaters John Ostrander, Jan Duursema and a couple of others. The site's still around today, although we've gone onto a haitus, because well, the Clone Wars are pretty much over.
This brings me up to college, where I enrolled at Norwich University. I quickly found the Norwich University Tactical Society, the resident gamers club, and made a number of friends due to common interest in books and movies. It was at the end of 2003 that I came across the first thing that really took Star Wars off of my radar, was Firefly. I bought the DVD set on a whim after seeing an ad for it in a SciFi magazine and watched the entire 14 episode run over my winter break. The different approach to Science Fiction (SciFi + Western) and the fun characters really got me interested in storytelling and the actual visual approach to SciFi on TV. This influenced me in a number of ways in the way that I see and percieve TV and movies now. At the same time, I saw a preview of the upcoming remake of Battlestar Galactica, and quickly got hooked on that when that hit the air, and over the next couple semesters, watched all of Farscape (4 seasons and a miniseries) and Stargate SG-1 (at the time, 7 seasons). I also picked up Taken (SciFi miniseries) and Dark Angel.
2004 marked a huge year for me, as it was the year of Celebration 3. Eric and I had planned on going together back in high school, but he wasn't able to make it out. I saved money, got a plane ticket and hotel, and flew out, missing some school to do so. There, I was a volunteer for Del Rey books and the convention as a whole, and ended up meeting a number of the authors whom I'd interviewed and talked to over the year. In addition, I met a number of fellow fans that I knew only through TFN, as well as some new people. A chance encounter with a girl named Lihn on the flight over led me to Sarah, who's since become my girlfriend. It was certainly something that I never would have expected. The convention was extrodinary, because of the number of people in the same place who shared all the same interests as I did. We gawked over the new Revenge of the Sith footage, talked about the upcoming Firefly movie (Serenity), exchanged e-mail addresses and took pictures. I even got to meet one of my idols, Timothy Zahn.
That summer, Revenge of the Sith was released, and I went, for the first time, to a Star Wars movie on the opening night, in full Storm Trooper armor, making the evening news and front page of Vermont's biggest newpaper (I even edged out news that President Bush was attacked by a grenade while overseas.) For the rest of the summer, a number of people commented on that, and I still get people who remember it. I liked Revenge of the Sith, and could appreciate it on a better level now, with my interest in film and how to watch better. That fall, Serenity was released, and I liked it even more than I did ROTS. Battlestar Galactica also came back that fall, and I was elected President of the Norwich University Tactical Society, where I still am today.
That next spring, a year ago, I went to London, where I found J.R.R. Tolkien's pub and school where he taught, and met Philip Pullman along the way, got interested in Dr. Who (Britian's largest TV show), and did my final project on fandom in the UK. I returned home, spent the summer at camp teaching kids how to play D&D, and returned to school for the current year, again as president. I dressed up as the Storm Trooper at work on Halloween and got really into TV over the year, especially SciFi TV. Heroes has become a huge show for me, as well as EurekaThe Dresden Files, all new shows.
This brings me up to the present moment, where I'm watching A New Hope while writing this. I can't believe how much has happened over the past ten years, who I've met, who I've talked to and written. I've found someone significant who's just as much of a geek as I am. I've gotten back to my roots with SciFi books over the past break, and I have to wonder:

What's next?

The Northfield Bookstore

I like book stores. I work in one, the Walden Books in Berlin, and they're certainly an interesting place to work. The problem is, it's a chain store, and not really a book store. It doesn't have an identity. You can walk into any Borders, Borders Express, Walden Books, Barnes and Noble, or any other larger chain store and you'll essentially get the same service and stock, depending on the bookstore size. They've got the same shelves, items, check out kiosks and general layout.

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That's why I love the Northfield Bookstore - It doesn't have any of that. Mainly, because it's the only one, unique. The ceiling arches overhead in a vintage tin painted white, something that the owners discovered - and decided to keep - when they tore up the existing tiling that brought the overhead down about five feet. The floor is a battered wooden affair - it creaks in a half dozen places and lets everyone in the store know exactly what section you're looking at. On each shelf is a hand painted sign denoting the section type, fiction, mystery, non fiction, etc, each section of which is almost overflowing with books, some turned on their side to fit the smaller shelf, or a couple piled on here and there, spines out towards the buyer. A couple of racks at the ends of the shelves are scattered with books that have been heavily discounted, while the centre shelf is covered with books with notes, highlighting a newer work or author, covers spread out so they don't inadvertently become a domino set.

I've become a regular at the store over the past four years now, ever since it's been open to the public, stopping in, not necessarily to buy something (although that's often what I end up doing), but to wander along the limited shelf space, looking for something to catch my eye. When something does, the price, written in pencil in the front cover, usually a huge discount from when the book was originally new, is well within my limited budget and will sometimes end up in my bag on the way out.

The owners know me by name - I've had an account with them for a while, and even when I haven't been in there for a while, for a span of time that's reasonable to forget one patron or another's name - they still remember me, and will be more than happy to sell me another book, or to find something that I've been looking for. They're also almost always able to take various used books from me, and it's always fun to see some of my older ones on the shelfs, and to see them vanish after a while.

Now that is a proper book store.

iPod

So, remember when my iPod crapped out on me and I got a new one?

Well, I fixed it.

The internet is a fantastic resource and after poking around a little, I discovered two things. First, unplugging all the internal wires connected to the battery will reset some things, and make it better. Second, sliding a folded up business card inbetween the casing and harddrive will put pressure on the drive and make problems go away. So, I did both of those things, after figuring out how to take the damn thing apart (it's a real pain), and after about half an hour of loading music back on and reformatting the drive, it works. Just like new, I guess. The warrenty's void now anyway, and I didn't manage to destroy the thing, which is good, as I've got plans for it...
I've grown attached to my smaller nano, having gotten over the fear of breaking it. I just wish that I knew about these fixes earlier, like when I first got this thing.
Odd thing is, that my older version seems really huge now. I remember first getting it and thinking that it was tiny. The nano is tiny. The other one is huge. Weird.

Pan's Labyrinth

So, Pan's Labyrinth, or El Laberinto del Fauno, was released back in December, and it's taken this long to reach Burlington (The only place that gets the good movies AND accepts a debit card for payment). Needless to say, I've been waiting to see this movie for a very long time, ever since the first trailer gave me chills back in August (?), sometime around then.

http://www.deltorofilms.com/featured_pix/Cartel.jpg

The movie is set during the end of the Spanish Civil War. In the opening scenes of the movie, we're told that there's a magical land below the earth from before humankind was around. A princess of the land wanted to see the sunlight and sky, and stole away to the surface, but was blinded and lost her memory - but legend said that she would return to the land.
From Yahoo (These sites can summerize movies more succinctly and better than I)
Set in 1940s Spain against the postwar repression of Franco's Spain, a fairy tale that centers on Ofelia, a lonely and dreamy child living with her mother and adoptive father, who is a military officer tasked with 'ridding the area' of rebels. In her loneliness, Ofelia creates a world filled with fantastical creatures and secret destinies. With Fascism at its height, Ofelia must come to terms with her world through a fable of her own creation.

The movie is beautiful, brutal and brilliant. There is clearly a lot of work that's been put into this, as it's incredibly well thought out, with a number of characters (really well done characters) and a story that left me on the edge of my seat the entire run time, which is rare nowadays. This isn't your kid's fantasy movie, for sure - this is something else entirely. In the days when fantasy epics like Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter reign supreme, this movie undercuts them by bringing a much more human story to them - one that's not driven by action or even magic, but by an intense notion of wonder and imagination and a sense of realism.

I'd highly, highly highly recommend this to just about everyone. There are some scenes that are hard to watch at times, (again, dark movie) but there are others that are just amazing to watch.

Chalk this up as a potential classic.

Blarg

Taking two 100 level classes and a 200 level class has it's advantages and disadvantages. Advantage 1 : The work is brainless and easy. Especially Politics. Disadvantage 1: Everyone else in the class is a freshman with no brain. Or they just ask incredibly stupid questions.

And a fan in my computer is making a lot more noise than it should be. It's irritating, and I can't figure out how to make it stop. Gah!

Firefly marathon with the Tactics club is today, right now in fact. I'm taking a short break for lunch while people are there and will be back in a bit to close everything out and catch another episode or two. People actually showed up, which is good. I'm thrilled with the Tactics club this year. It's really taken off and become a real club.

Because I'm bored...

Once upon a time in the Kingdom of Heaven, God was missing for six days.

Eventually, Peter, the Archangel, found Him resting on the seventh day.

He inquired of God, “Where have you been?”

God sighed a deep sigh of satisfaction and proudly pointed downward through the clouds.

“Look, Peter, look what I’ve made.”

Archangel Peter looked puzzled and said, “What is it?”

“It’s a planet,” replied God, “and I’ve put life on it. I’m going to call it earth and it’s going to be a great place of balance.”

“Balance?” inquired Peter, still confused.

God explained, pointing to different parts of the earth, “For example, Europe will be a place of great opportunity and wealth, while Africa is going to be poor. The Middle East over there will be a hot spot.”

God continued, pointing to different countries, “This one will be extremely hot while this other one will be very cold and covered with ice.”

The Archangel, impressed by God’s work, and then pointed to a large landmass with an ocean as it border and said, “What’s that one?”

“Ah,” said God, “that’s Vermont, the most glorious place on earth.

There are forests, rivers, lakes, and climate.

The people from Vermont are going to be modest, intelligent, and humorous, and they are going to be found traveling the world.

They will be extremely sociable, hardworking, and high achieving people, and they will be known throughout the world as diplomats and carriers of peace.”

Peter gasped in wonder and admiration, but then exclaimed, “What about balance, God? You said there would be balance! Everyone and everything seems so totally perfect in this place you call "Vermont"

God replied wisely, “Wait until you see the assholes I’m sending down from New York and Massachusetts every summer.”

Trouble on the Horizon?

This article has me slightly worried about some things that'll probably be making more headlines in the coming months:

Washington may take up TV violence
Amid rising criticism of gore, some members of Congress are pushing for action that could include letting the FCC punish broadcasters.

By Jim Puzzanghera, Times Staff Writer


WASHINGTON — Despite efforts to quell complaints that they air too much death, blood and mayhem, broadcasters are facing a renewed battle over regulating televised violence.

With a fresh Congress sworn in and a major federal report expected soon on TV gore, pressure is likely to mount to more aggressively stem graphic and gratuitous scenes in shows. One proposal would give regulators powers similar to those they have now to punish indecency and coarse language over the airwaves.
In addition, TV violence is shaping up as a 2008 presidential campaign issue with some of the leading potential candidates already at the forefront of the issue. Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) has long talked about the effect of gory TV shows and video games on children. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) favors allowing families to buy cable channels separately so they can spurn objectionable shows. Sens. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and Sam Brownback (R-Kan.) also have bemoaned TV violence.

"It's such an easy thing to do, curse Hollywood, curse television," said Jack Valenti, the former top movie studio lobbyist who is leading an industry initiative to head off government action by teaching parents how to block objectionable TV shows. "It makes headlines…. It looks like they're doing something and they get political brownie points for it."

This month, the Parents Television Council stoked the fires by unveiling "Dying to Entertain," a report that concluded that TV violence had reached epidemic proportions. The media watchdog found that broadcast TV violence rose 75% in six years.

Full Article

This is one issue where I seem to be out on my own, as both Democratic and Republican parties seem to be able to agree on something. And it's the one issue where I don't want them to agree on something.
The way that I see it is this isn't something that can be solved by regulation alone, if at all. As of now, I have yet to see a paper (from someone besides the Parents Television Council - I'll get to them in a moment) that can with certainty, link youth violence to violent television programs. Not while there are still issues of parental abuse, problems in public schools, the ease to which youths have access to firearms and other weapons and things of that nature. Same goes for video games. There are headlining articles every now and then about a school shooting and youth violence, and it seems that the one thing that they always have in common are poor parenting and that the kids were big fans of the latest first person shooter game.
This is something that can be solved mainly with education. Not necessarily education at school, but with parents as well. I work at a summer camp, and I see a good number of kids - kids who come from good households and kids who come from ones where the parents just don't give a shit. The real message is that a television should not be placed in a home where it'll essentially replace the parent, because then the kid will get ideas. And instead of learning to control his/her/it's temper, they learn how to take their anger out on something, and don't learn how to deal with problems at school and things like that.
The Parent's Television Council - from everything I know about them - a load of idiots. They're responsible for over 90% of all the lawsuits that are brought to the FCC. Godforbid that someone should hear a bad word after hours or see a little skin because of a mistake or even if it's not a mistake. And godforbid, that they should travel outside the country and see how other societies work with television. If they went to England and turned on one of the five public channels, I'd bet that they'd have a stroke. Instead of complaining about how the tube is ruining the nation, they would be better off focusing their efforts on informing parents where the 'off' button on the television is, and teach parents to set limits for their kids - not banning violence, sex or obesenity from television all together.
While I'm not saying that those things are especially welcome on TV, they do form elements of TV shows, that when used correctly, can drive a good story. Some of the best television out there right now has all those elements in them. Battlestar Galactica, Veronica Mars, Prison Break, Heroes, Stargate SG-1, House MD, LOST, and Supernatural, just to name a few. If I had kids, they definently wouldn't be allowed to watch a couple of those, and if/when they were allowed, there'd be a good couple of conversations about some of the elements.
Banning violence / suspect behavior is not the right thing to do. Education, hell, even talking to your kids is something that should be pushed or even thought about. Now, ratings and some regulation, such as sticking up a warning before the show, as most of the Fox shows and Battlestar Galactica use at times, that's something better. Prohibiting sales of really violent games to six year olds? Same thing. But outright banning of something is the same as censoring it.

Bah.

Frackin' Hell

Battlestar's back! Finally, we've got a nice run of the nine remaining episodes for the rest of the season after another long wait and cliffhanger. After the Eye of Jupiter, Dianna's been boxed, everyone gets off of the algae planet in one piece, the star went nova, Six is on board Galactica (again), Baltar's back as well and in the brig and whee! Some of the best ground combat that the show's had was in there as well, not to mention some of those visuals.

The Dresden Files premired as well, and it was okay. Not as good as I'd hoped it would be, but it's got the makings of another fine show. As far as the book went, there's a lot of similarities, a bunch of things that are a real departure, and some things that were improved upon. Dresden himself looks the part, and he's got a better jacket than the one in the book - he seems a little more realistic. Some of the sarcasm was there, and the general Chicago environment of the underworld stuff was present. However, Bob's kinda weird, Murphy's nowhere near her character from the books (almost angry and sarcastic in the books, while she's pretty mellow here), and Dresden seems to be pretty well off, not at the complete desperate bottom-of-the-barrel that he's in in the books. Ah well, there's time for improvement.

I'm not going to continue with the weekly TV-This-Week thing, just because I don't have time. If I like a show, I'll probably gush about it. If I don't, I'll bitch. Savvy?

Latest Readings

I figured I'd review the books that I've gone through recently:

Matriarch, Karen Traviss: I'm going to throw out this: Karen Traviss is one, if not the, best contemporary science fiction writers alive today. She knows how to weave a story that's both believable and goes pretty much against everything that science fiction up to now has had. Her characters are insanely realistic, there aren't any utopian alien races (especially not humans) and the plots of her books are second to none. Matriarch is continuing her Wess'Har series (two more books to go) and things go from bad to worse. One alien race that we'd grown to like turns out to have been nazis, war's about to break out, said nazi aliens are now imortal and I want to kill several characters. Very good book. Can't wait for Ally to be released. April can't come soon enough.

Bloodlines, Karen Traviss: I'm behind on Star Wars books. I picked this one up over the summer, and only just got to it. Overall, I'm impressed with the new story arc that they're doing, and it's much better than the New Jedi Order. Karen's one of the best things that's happened to Star Wars literature in recent years, and she's up there for me with Timothy Zahn or Michael Stackpole. She's made Boba Fett into a character, not just a fanboy juggernaut, and done some pretty interesting things with the universe thus far, as well as brought a geniune military sense to some aspects of the story that are terrifying.

Singularity Sky, Charles Stross: I've been trying to get through this book for about a year and a half now. I was first introduced to Stross's work in Asimov's, and enjoyed his stories. Unfortuently, I've been picking this book up, and not devoting enough time to it, and as a result, set it aside for a later time. Fantastic read, great writing and an interesting storyline. This guy's got some of the more interesting military scifi and fleet action that I've ever read, and does a wonderful job blending physics with politics. I can't wait to get to Iron Sunrise, the next book with the characters from this book.

Altered Carbon, Richard K. Morgan: This is another book that I've been meaning to get to for a while now, ever since the New York Times named this a notable book of the year back when it was first published. This gave me a huge Blade Runner vibe, along with conspiracy theories, hard boiled detective noir and a fair share of violence. Not to mention a very good writing style. Broken Angels and Woken Furies are the next two Kovacs novels, and as soon as I can, they're mine.

Storm Front, Jim Butcher: The SciFi channel picked up these books as an original television event, and to get a jump on that, I picked up this book, which is the basis for the pilot. These were fun, but very light reads. I went through this in about two days. There's humor, a fun twist on magic, and if I'd read these five years ago, I would have been totally in love with them. Not so much now, but it's far from bad. I'm fully intending on keeping up with the series, mainly as a disctraction.

Fool Moon, Jim Butcher: Pretty much the same thing as above, and it seems like some of his books might be themed with various supernatural things, and in this one, it's Warewolves. And rogue FBI agents who are warewolves. As I said, fun, light reading.

The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid, Bill Bryson: I love Bill Bryson's works, ever since I went through I'm A Stranger Here Myself earlier last fall. He's got such a tongue in cheek manner of telling stories, and his autobiography on his growing up in Iowa should be taken with a large grain of salt, but it's certainly a larger than life tale, and a hysterical one at that. Seemed a bit short, but again, complete fun to read.

Next up, Revelation Space, Lies of Locke Lamora, The Sky People, Trading in Danger, Good Omens and the Gunslinger. Among others.

I was interviewed last week for an article that just came up online. Here it is:

Social networking in the digital age
by Joshua S. Larkin, staff
Jan. 15, 2007

Faced with a 175-mile cross-New England trek for her first year at college, Caitlin Torrance did what many millennial generation kids faced with similar situations do: she logged on and began networking.

Accepted as an architecture student at Norwich this past summer, the Waterboro, Maine, native said it was important for her to make connections with other students prior to arriving on The Hill. Her first moves: boot up the pc, fire up a browser and surf over to Facebook, a social networking Web site that facilitates connections between folks who have a ".edu" email address. And it paid off.

“Over the summer I did a search for people at Norwich and I kept [the search limited to] first-year students and architecture students, because I'm an architecture student, and I wound up meeting quite a few people,” Torrance said. “I didn't know it at the time, but I wound up meeting my best friend through Facebook. I was at orientation and I saw her there and I was like, ‘hey, I know you.’”

Torrance's story is echoed on college campuses across the nation, Norwich included. Launched in 2004, Facebook has seen meteoric growth with the company reporting 14 million registered users, over half of whom log in daily. Similar to other social networking services on the Web such as MySpace and Friendster, Facebook users can create profiles, post information and pictures, create and join groups with like-minded individuals and interact with other users on the site.

According to Norwich senior Andrew Liptak, Facebook has helped to boost membership and facilitate communication between members of the Norwich University Tactical Society (NUTS), an on-campus club for those interested in games, science fiction and fantasy. Liptak, who created the NUTS group on Facebook, said the services available at the site have been useful and have had an impact on the social experience on campus.

“It's made it easy to get messages out to club members and to let people know about events,” he said. “And one of the reasons it's called Facebook is because with a person's profile picture you can kind of see them, learn about their interests, you know it kind of quantifies them.”

But the use of social networking sites isn't all roses. On a personal level, Liptak said it's easy to waste hours of time reading profiles and group messages, and he's now making a “conscious effort” to curb his Facebook use. Worse still, the opportunity for increased spam and random instant messages increased for Liptak substantially when he had a MySpace profile, a service the history major said he no longer uses.

Spam and wasted time are, however, relatively minor threats. One larger concern, according to recent studies conducted at Purdue University, is that employers are now actively using sites such as Facebook, MySpace, YouTube and others to investigate job candidates' true characters. Findings from the research were printed in the Summer 2006 NACE Journal, a publication of the National Association of Colleges and Employers. Purdue's researchers, the article states, found that “…50 percent of employers surveyed reported using some sort of online technology to screen candidates, and 7 percent said they do not currently use this screening method, but plan to start.”

And that screening method, said Tony Cannavale, an information technology recruiter working with Spherion in Boston, will hurt job seekers.

“As a recruiter, I definitely Google people,” Cannavale said in a telephone interview. “And it's pretty standard practice in the industry right now. I tell recent college graduates that if you're in the job market and you have a profile online, you shouldn't have crazy stuff in it. It doesn't hurt to have a profile, but if you put up ‘hi my name is John and I like to drink lots of beer,’ it's probably not going to help you too much.”

Norwich University's Distance Learning Librarian, Meredith Farkas, repeated what many employers and job recruiters across the country are saying.

“I think anyone that doesn't Google a job candidate nowadays is crazy,” Farkas said.

Moreover, Farkas said students need to realize that while social networking tools can be quite beneficial to the educational experience, there are consequences for inappropriate online action. And this, Farkas said, must be explained and made clear to students.

“The possibilities of what we could be doing with these tools in terms of the educational materials we could offer online are tremendous, but we also have an obligation to educate students about the dark side of social software and the consequences that can result from the inappropriate use of those tools,” she said. “I think showing students some of the object lessons that are out there, showing them things that have happened to other students at other universities as a result of using these tools will have an impact.”

Specifically, students who've posted inappropriate and illegal information on such sites are subject to disciplinary and legal repercussions. In a November 2006 story published in Inside Purdue, Purdue University's Associate Dean of Students for Activities and Organizations, Pablo Malevenda, recounted two recent incidents involving inappropriate postings. In the first, students attending the University of Wisconsin were cited by police in February of 2006 when photos of stolen street signs were noticed on Facebook. Four months prior to this, underage students at Northern Kentucky University were subject to fines and a year-long probation for posting pictures of themselves drinking in the school's dorms.

Time wasted, spam, job offers rescinded, legal troubles; the laundry list of consequences that can result from a less-than-judicious approach to the use of social networking software goes on and on. Sadly, sitting at the top of that list is the 800-pound gorilla that all users should take notice of: physical harm.

On Jan. 9, 2007, the Associated Press reported that a Pawtucket, R.I. man was scheduled to be arraigned in court the following Tuesday for his alleged involvement in a Dec. 30 sexual assault. According to police, 26-year-old Jack Appiah, along with Henry Duah, 20, and Gabriel Clarke, 21, all of Pawtucket, allegedly drugged and raped a 17-year-old Attleboro, Mass., girl whom Appiah had befriended on MySpace over the summer. Similar stories are all to prevalent as an increasing number of users have logged on and posted information - photos, age, sex, address, email - that can make them an easy target for predators.

“I know a lot of people who refer to Facebook as stalkerbook, now,” Liptak said when asked about safety issues related to the use of social networking sites.

Although Norwich officials haven't seen any physical harm come as a result of online profiles, there are students who have posted personal information on the Web that doesn't exactly portray them in the best light. And according to Farkas, students should be aware of this and understand that that information is out there for the world to see.

“If most of them knew that the professors and deans were looking at this stuff,” Farkas said, “I think they'd be a little more careful.”

As for Liptak, he'll still use Facebook to keep in touch with friends and fellow NUTS members, but he does have a word of caution:

“I think people need to be careful about it and just in general about the Internet,” Liptak said. “I think maybe people lose focus that this is still the Internet; that you can still lose your identity and you can still [post] something that can have serious repercussions down the road.”


Update on the Reading

This is going to remain at the top so that I can keep track of everything.

My reading list:
Updated Jan 14th

I've since found/remembered that Walden Books employees can borrow books from the store and return them, using the place like a library, just with stuff that we have to keep in pristine condition. I've since borrowed a couple of books, which I'll be getting to after I finish the first two Dresden Files books. And, we can help ourselves to Advanced Reader Copies, which is really handy.

  • Bloodlines, Karen Traviss
  • Singularity Sky, Charles Stross
  • Altered Carbon, Richard Morgan
  • Storm Front, (Dresden Files: Book 1), Jim Butcher
  • Fool Moon, (Dresden Files: Book 2), Jim Butcher
  • The Sky People, S.M Stirling
  • The Lies of Locke Lamora, Scott Lynch
  • Revelation Space, Alastair Reynolds
  • The Grand Crusade, Michael A. Stackpole
  • Trading in Danger, Elizabeth Moon
  • Marque and Reprisal, Elizabeth Moon
  • Good Omens, Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett
  • The Gunslinger, Steven King
  • Dead Beat, Jim Butcher
  • Iron Sunrise, Charles Stross
  • The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid, Bill Bryson
  • The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay , Michael Chabon (Yes... still...)
  • Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintainence, Robert Pirsig

Gateways to the fantastic

It seems like forever since I've really sat down with the express purpose to read. While in London, I went through sixteen books, some good (Layer Cake and Collapse), some bad (Angels and Demons and The DaVinci Code), which isn't a bad number, considering the amount of time that we spent on trains and buses while in the city. But when I got back, it seems like I've never found the time to read. Right after London was working at the Y, where I couldn't read. Then on to summer camp, where I probably read two books in all, although I started a couple of others. Camp's busy, and by the end, any free moments that one gets, it's usually trying to get a bit of rest. School last semester was also busy, and while I did get through three or four books, I also got cable television, and dammit, I've gotten my money's worth out of that. So TV won out over books last semester. Thus, my slightly post New Year's resolution will be to get through this twelve book pile in a reasonable amount of time, ie, within the next two months. Doable? I think so.
I'm one of those weird persons who actually likes to read, to take the time to just sit and do just that, despite my many distractions this semester. I read a number of good books over the semester, including a couple that have either sucked me into a series, or left me wanting to see what else the author's put out. Altered Carbon was like that, and there's two more installments for the main character there. Singularity Sky was also really good, and both books were cutting edge, hard science fiction with some amazing prose. The first two books of the Dresden Files were fun reads, I read them both in the past week, and while not spectacular prose wise, they're amusing and light reads, which'll probably have me buying and finishing off the entire series before summer. I've got Alistar Reynolds coming up, whom I've been looking to read for a couple years now, as well as a couple of other books that I've had on my shelves for years now and never really gotten around to reading, such as the last installment of Michael Stackpole's Dragoncrown cycle, Grand Crusade and the Gunslinger, by Stephen King. And there's the random other authors that I've been told good things about.
Granted, I've got a huge chunk of my library that I haven't gotten to yet, but that's the fun of essentially owning a small library of books - there's aways something to look forwards to. Makes me want an ice storm to completely shut Vermont down for a couple of days.

Random Happenings

Work in the Kiosk has gone back down to pre-Thanksgiving rush for calanders. Fortunently, I've been in the store more recently than I have in the Kiosk, which gives me more to do, like organizing books and being OCD about it. I think, and some people at work have said that I'm likely to be retained for the spring, which would be really handy.
I did an interview with someone from Norwich about facebook, how the studen body percieves and uses it, which was interesting. I have a bit of a love - hate relationship with that platform. Good way to keep in touch with people, and less sketchier than myspace, but god, does it eat up time. I'm going to try and make a consious effort to avoid the computer more this semester and read more. Let's see if that actually happens.
Saw my friend Blackwell yesterday, he's going back to school today. I really haven't been around a whole lot of people this break. Maybe because of work or something, but I've been pretty much operating alone. Work, home, sleep, work, home, sleep. My roommate came back yesterday, before I'd cleaned the place a bit, but there's some company. He's been quiet.
And it's been a week since I met up with Sarah. I miss her.