shadowkat: (Default)
2024-12-22 07:12 pm
Entry tags:

Books and Television shows not necessarily in that order

1. Someone on Facebook posted this statement by Virginia Woolf.

“Whatever happens, stay alive. Don't die before you're dead. Don't lose yourself, don't lose hope, don't loose direction.Read more... )

And I thought, wait, didn't Virginia Woolf die by suicide? Yep, she ironically did. I think this was probably Woolf trying desperately to stay alive.

This is a tough time for a lot of folks. The holidays always are. Points at icon.

2. Television...

I finished watching Arcane - both seasons, on Netflix. I loved it. It worked for me, the metaphors, the characters, the relationships, and the themes. And it had a great romance between Viv and Caitlin throughout.
One of the better f/f romances I've seen on television. Usually they don't work for me. But this did for some reason or other.

Also it had fascinating relationships - which propelled the plot, as opposed to the plot propelling the relationships. It's very much a character driven piece, with some interesting themes about technology, science, hubris, and war.

After re-watching the Rankin/Bass & Ralph Bashi 1977 animated adaptation of The Hobbit on HBO Max, I decided to go back to Rings of Power on Prime. (By the way, MAX has all the Lord of the Rings films, including the Ralph Baski animated versions done in the 1970s and early 1980s. I decided to hunt it down after reading a review of the recently released Lord of the Rings: War of the Rohirrim by Athena Scalzi (who isn't quite there yet as a film reviewer or writer. She's sloppy.) She states in her review that this is the first animated film of the Lord of the Rings series. And I thought, Scalzi? You just lost your geek and nerd creds. Seriously, you never showed your daughter the 1970s Hobbit? Or saw it yourself?

Her father is my age. The Hobbit aired on Network Television in 1977 or thereabouts, and then was re-shown in 1979, along with Return of the King Film, which was an abridged version of the Lord of the Rings, and shown as a kind of sequel to the Hobbit. Read more... )

Does it hold up well? Yes, and no. Read more... )

I tried to watch the animated version of the Return of the King - which I also loved as a child. But it doesn't hold up well at all. Read more... )

At any rate - I started watching S1 of Rings of Power again - its a rewatch. I can't remember most of it, and it's kind of necessary for S2. It's very odd - I can remember films I've not seen in years, but can't remember something I saw as far back as last year. I think it may have a lot to do with how much time I spent on it? Read more... )

3. Books...

I've completed the audiobook version of Sanctuary by Illona Andrews - while I enjoyed Brinkley's narration and voice, he didn't do a good enough job of vocalizing the other characters - I couldn't quite tell them apart. I've admittedly gotten used to the stellar "Graphic Audio Dramatizations" so that could be part of the problem. It's interesting in how it utilizes Russian folklore, myths and legends. I've learned a lot about modern and ancient Russia in the last couple of years, without intending to, and realized how many misconceptions Americans have about Russia. Read more... )

Illona Andrews unlike a lot of mainstream writers, writes and self-publishes side stories about their world. Sancturary is self-published or non-traditionally published. Read more... )

Now, I'm listening to the audio book version of the Kate Daniels Wilmington Years - "Magic Tides and Magic Claims" that is dualy narrated by a female and male narrators - in the roles of Kate and Curran. Read more... )

Working on "Rules of Redemption by T.A. White" rec'd by Illona Andrews fandom. But, I can't quite get into it? My focus is off. Too keyed up about things work related, I think? I may be better able to read it this week. Still struggling with a reading slump. Audio books aren't a problem, other's weirdly are. It's ironic, considering in 2019, I stated that I couldn't do audio books and didn't understand the appeal. The pandemic changed me in oh so many ways.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-12-02 09:29 pm

This and that and the other thing

1. I may be cancelling my cable soon - I can't get NY1 unless I upgrade to the $120 a month option, and seriously? Not sure it's worth it.

Optimum appears to have fixed the problem - the DVR is working finally, as is the internet. Read more... )

2. I listened to several podcasts at work - because I was bored and gone were the days in which I had to entertain myself by doodling or listening to music or surfing the net... now, when I'm bored, I can entertain myself with podcasts on my mobile phone via youtube. Gotta love technology.

* Joss Whedon, His Life, His Work, He's Here via Connecticut Public Radio. Read more... )

* Willow, a podcaster, feels the need to talk about Neil Gaiman, prefacing it with the fact that she's been a huge fan of his works and now has to figure out how to deal with the fact that well...maybe she shouldn't continue to support him in any way The bulk of this - is the podcaster explaining why she's going to put her collection of Neil Gaiman books in a cabinet with the collection of Harry Potter books, out of sight and out of mind. And will no longer support him financially in any way - ie. by buying his books, etc.
But if people want to do something other than that - that's up to them and on them, and no judgement. (Actually there's lots of judgement, but she's trying very hard not to convey it.)

I also briefly listened to this Felicia Day Speaks to the Joss Whedon issue - basically she states: "I'm not going talk about Joss because I don't want my experience to negate someone else's experience with someone. He was an amazing friend and mentor to me, but at the end of the day, I can only represent me, and I definitely can't negate other people's experiences, so I'm not going to say anymore."

To wit, Michael Rosenbaum relates that he can identify - he knew Kevin Spacey, and never had any bad experiences. He did two movies with him, and never had any issues. But Day refuses to say more than, yes, that's the same thing she had with Whedon.

I give Day credit for that.
my two cents such as it is )

3. Dancing with the Stars

Mother informed me that the people on this show were getting paid upwards to $650,000, and the winner got $50,000 on top of the signing fee of $100,000 or more.

I was shocked. I thought the contestants did it for free. They don't. They are paid for every episode they are in.

Mother got this information off of instagram or FB, she can't remember.

Also, apparently there was a huge controversy about Chandler (the Disney Star).

* I was apparently right, the audience didn't vote for her because they saw her as a professional dancer who hadn't improved.

* they resented that the race card was raised at all - since the audience didn't care about the race of the dancers. And considered it irrelevant.

* The husband of the choreographer, who did the final tennis ball dance number with the Bachelor and winner, was furious with Carrie Anne - the judge - for critiquing and ripping apart his wife's choreography, which he thought was fantastic. Carrie Anne wanted Chandler (Disney Star) to win not the Bachelor.

I looked it up. How Much Do they Make on Dancing with the Stars
blurb )
Mother said the gymnast made about $650,000. The rugby player was up there as well, with at least $650,000 or more.

Well, that explains a lot. I wondered why some of these folks did this. I thought it was for exposure. Nope. Money.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-10-21 08:06 pm
Entry tags:

Books, TV, and Film mini reviews...

1. Books

* Gave up on or DNF (Did not Finish) Live Long Evil (Time of Iron - Book 1) - I may come back to it, but I don't know. The writing is sloppy for a traditionally published book and very YA, even though it feels like it is slanted towards an adult audience? It's an interesting idea - I just wish it was executed a bit better. (I'm wondering if Illona Andrews who is executing a similar idea, will fare better? They are good at world building and you kind of have to be for this to work?)

The set-up is that Rae has just turned 21 and is dying of some sort of cancer. I can't remember what it is or if I was told what it is. (Which is a problem right there. Shows the writer isn't interested in certain details.)She's stuck in a hospital, visited mostly by her younger sister, who is absolutely stunning, who is in love with a fantasy series entitled Time of Iron. To the extent that she does cosplay, and attends fantasy conventions. Each of the characters in the story have multiple names and titles..like the Lady Dipped in Blood, the Lady of Hope, The Emperor, etc and so on. Rae never really read the books, and only later editions. Her sister is reading them to her in the hospital, and she pokes fun at them.
Then one night, a woman comes to her and offers her a way to live - she just has to choose to pass through a door to the fantasy realm in her sister's favorite series and pick a flower from the Emperor's Gardens, the flower will cure her cancer or all her ills. The series's realm was made real by all the fans love of it and belief in it. She'll take on the body of one of the fictional characters best suited to her - one recently left vacant. And has such and such limited time to complete her task. (I think it is 48 hours?)

I like the idea, but the execution is on the sloppy side and a bit ridiculous? At any rate, I was bored by it. I tried to read it on the way down to Hilton Head, but found myself staring out into space most of the time. Did not hold my attention at all. The blurbs say it has great banter - I'm wondering about the source of the blurbs and the editor? Because the banter is falling flat. Also it doesn't have an interesting world or characters - too Game of Thrones light. Reminds me of what various folks tried with Harry Potter and Narnia. Not a trope I particularly like. It's rarely executed all that well.

I may come back, but not certain.

* Finished Bayou Moon by Illona Andrews - [I did it as an AudioBook via a credit. I basically get free audio books for a monthly subscription price. And since I get a lot of audio books - it's worth it. You can get these for free via other sources and the library, I've just not figured it out as of yet. Without the subscription - they would cost close a bundle a shot. So worth it.]

This is more horror novel than romance. It's urban fantasy, with a heavy dose of body horror, biological science fiction/fantasy, and mad scientist worked in. The antagonist fuses the protagonist's mother with a magical tree like creature, with tentacles and vines - it's horrific. And the sort of thing that can give nightmares. The villain is something out of a horror film. There is a romance, and because the romance is the central focus not the horror aspects - it ends happily and not with the emphasis on the horror.

It's also really long-winded. I kept thinking it was over, only to have another problem or cliff-hanger that kept it going. There are way too many characters for one person to lend their voice too - so I got confused occasionally, because some of them sounded a like. The narrator is good, but not that good. (I may be spoiled with the Graphic Audio Full-Cast Dramatizations. Because this narrator is better than most.)

Overall? I enjoyed it. It had a lot interesting side-characters. The writers are really good at writing and developing side or supporting characters. Not everyone is. It's hard to do well. I love these writers for that ability alone, that and their ability to write good dialogue. A lot of novelists suck at dialogue. They need to read more plays. (That's how you learn to write dialogue - read and see plays, not musicals, plays.)

* Currently reading two things:

- 1) Home Before Dark by Riley Sager - this is the horror novel that Joe Hill (Stephen King's kid, and the writer of the Lock & Key series, among other things) recommended on Twitter a few weeks back - and I read the synopsis on Good Reads and grabbed it.

It's selling point? It will appeal to fans of the Haunting of Hill House series by Mike Flanagan - since it has a similar vibe. (That was hands down the best ghost series that I've seen - it scared me, and I still can't forget certain images from it. Also it was endlessly fascinating.)

It is set up as your run of the mill - Haunted House book, but after about the first chapter or prologue, I realized it wasn't at all. It's two books or a book within a book - told in two separate first person points of view. vague spoilers )
It's the first book that has held my attention in a while - in regards to reading. And that isn't a comic book.

[Comic books are easy, they are about 30 pages, sometimes 50 if that, and mostly art. Not everyone can read them of course (folks think differently) - for some the art or visuals makes no sense at all. They don't think visually or in pictures. But I can read art well - it's actually easier for me than words. I think in visuals. So reading a comic is akin to reading a story-board, which is why comics make great films. You don't have to do all that much. The dialogue is there, along with the visual setups.]

-2 Currently listening to Fate's Edge by Illona Andrews - this is book three in their Edge series, which I'm thinking they wrote prior to the Kate Daniels and Innkeeper series, which are a whole lot better. I like it though - these stories focus on down on their luck people, with little to no money, and are struggling to make things work. This one has potentially the most interesting hero - a con artist and gambler, and an interesting heroine, who is trying to distance herself from a family of grifters. They are going after something valuable in a Pyramid in this world's version of Egypt. So it's more of an adventure story and less of a horror novel like the previous two books were. Or so it seems at this point.

Like the others it is a romance/sci-fantasy/urban fantasy hybrid. And it is the third book in the series. You don't really have to read them in order? But it helps - to understand the hero in each book and what his motivations are. I mean, the hero in book two, is in book one. And the one in book three, is featured prominently in book two and the two kids (that I'm thinking come with him but not certain) are introduced in book one.

If you've read The Innkeeper Series - this is in the same world as that series with the same sci-urban fantasy hybrid. Read more... )

2. Television

* Watched a lot of Dancing with The Stars (DWTS) ("Hulu") with my eighty-two year old mother (she turned 82 last Friday). Mainly because we couldn't find anything else to agree to watch together. (I have the same problem with Wales - we scroll forever and you can scroll forever on these streaming channels now. Plus they are badly indexed. The suggestions for me from Netlix are not the same as for my mother.)

Anyhow, this season is kind of fun. We even watched an episode from last season - but mother wasn't that enthralled - she's more interested in Pommel Horse guy.

We are alike in this way? We both love to watch dance. Prefer it to watching concerts. Although mother likes to watch the classical concerts and choirs, and perform herself in choirs. I need the dance element. Watching people sing kind of bores me. Listening to them on the other hand - I adore and can do endlessly. I tend to see stories or people dancing when I listen to music, or pictures. See? I think visually.

[Also watched our soap, where we agree on all the characters and storylines. It's why we watch it - because we agree. We only have a handful of shows. And with streaming - we rarely watch shows at the same time, one of us is ahead of the other. We can rec stuff to each other. But our tastes tend to vary per mood. But when it comes to GH, we agree on everything. I've watched soaps all my life for the same reasons some people watch sports or play board games - it gives me something to discuss and do with my mother, and when my grandmother was still alive - and in her right mind - it gave me something to do with her. When it comes to family? Life is easier if you can find common denominators.]

* Finished (after I got home) The Perfect Couple (Netflix) starring Nicole Kidman and Liv Schrieber finally. It's okay. It's based on a Elin Hibbrand (sp?) beach book. Wales read it and said it was similar to the series, except the book was told in the first person pov or the pov of the bride. The series kind of is too, but makes the mistake of jumping to various other points of view - and veering away from the Bride, to the point in which we kind of lose track of her and don't care all that much. I think she's more of a focal point character in the novel.

This has too many characters. And too many twists and turns (some bordering on outlandish and poorly developed). I lose a lot of characters in it, and my attention span wandered. It's also harder to figure out the murder - because of the lack of development of various integral to the plot side characters. I barely know Thomas's wife, the mistress, or the younger brother, or even Thomas. I also barely know Amelia, or her parents. It jumps around too much and doesn't develop them enough. I don't know if the book did a better job or not - haven't read it. But it reminded me, as did the Illona Andrews novels and Live Long Evil - that character development of side-characters and world building are kind of crucial. If you don't want to develop a lot of side-characters, get rid of a few or combine them.
But don't leave hanging out there like stock characters with no real purpose outside of a plot point here or there.

* Also watched three more episodes of The Great British Baking Show -(Netflix) after I got home. It's fun, they fixed the problems they had in S8-10. This season (12) is better. I think the new host really helped make the show a little warmer, like it had been previously. It's my comfort show.


* Tracker - which is now on Hulu. It's about a guy who was raised by a mentally ill survivalist father in the woods, with his mother and two siblings. His estranged older brother may or may not have been responsible for his brother's death. At any rate, Colt, played by Justin Hartley of This is Us fame, tracks down missing people or people who have been kidnapped or lost in the woods. He works with two women in an RV. One may or may not be his sister. The two women are Lesbians and very likable.
There's also a lawyer, who he previously had a relationship with, and reluctantly took his cases. She's not in the next two episodes - so this may be a one time thing. Nor is the rookie cop that he appeared to be having a romantic hook up with - but doesn't pop up again. Instead the focus is on his mother and estranged family, and what went down with his Dad. Romance is thrown out the window. (Wise move. It works better without it.)

It's set up as a kind of "help/save someone" once a week, A plot line, with
the family character centric B plot-line in the background. Read more... )

* Two more episodes of Season 2 of Sullivan's Crossing - it's similar to Virgin River (adapted from a series of contemporary family drama/romances by Robyn Carr. Carr appears to write contemporary family drama novels...which kind of fall somewhere between Lifetime and Hallmark. They have more edge than Hallmark (not as boring and better actors/scripts/dialogue), but not quite the edge of Lifetime (about the same in actors, better scripts/dialogue). I kind of enjoy it? I like family relationship dramas. This one takes place in Nova Scotia. Big City Doc returns to her father's lodging/campground business to see him, and deal with issues she's running away from. Think Norther Exposure and Gilmore Girls - but not quite the same level of writing. She falls for the local handyman (Chad Michael Murray of One Tree Hill), struggles with her Dad (Scott Patterson of Gilmore Girls), and has an odd-sibling/romantic rivalry with Lola. Add to the mix, the Native Canadian couple running her father's campground, the Black diner owner and his ex-model sister (and Doc's best friend), the owner's son, and the local Fire/Rescue group - and we have a series, with quirky or not-so-quirky residents, and family drama. It kind of makes me miss Gilmore Girls and Northern Exposure which did all of this ever so slightly better?

* On the plane - I watched over half of IF - the Ryan Renyolds film with I think the little girl from The Last of Us? It's much better than I expected. The Imaginary Friends are interesting and innovative, and it is heartwarming in places. I thought about going back to it on the way home on the plane, but decided against it. It made me cry. I really don't want to cry on the plane again. Also laugh in places.
vague spoilers )

It's kind of musical, but not at the same time. It has a few - dance and song numbers which fit the story, and are realistically rendered. Very imaginative. And works well for children or families. I watched it on the plane - because when I selected Hacks (R rated raunchy LGBTQA adult comedy), it told me that this had adult "visual" content that may not work for kids or the people around me. I looked around me, and thought, okay, Hacks is so not worth the trouble, I'll pick something else. I had a small child on one side of me, a couple of kids behind, and an older gentleman next to me. He was falling asleep to a horror film, that he couldn't hear. No one could really see it. I was sitting on the aisle.

I may have to hunt for it on Prime or Hulu, to see if I can see all of it uninterrupted. It exceeded expectations. I heard it was awful, it wasn't. Helped by the fact that we're really following and in the little girl's pov not Ryan Renyolds (who I like well enough - but a little can go a long way).
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-10-02 05:29 pm

Wednesday Book Meme...among other things..

I found this title on DW which I like..."The Book on the Edge of Forever", it's apparently the title of a book about an anthology of stories by Harlan Ellison that were never published. They've been talking about it all over social media, regardless of the platform.

1.) Book Meme

* Still reading Experimental Film by Gemma Files
Read more... )
* Audio Books

- Completed On the Edge by Illona Andrews as read by Rene Raudman

The narrator is excellent. Among the better narrators. I actually think it's a full cast? She can do up to thirty distinctive voices.

It's hard to describe. Read more... )

Main quibble? There's far too much ruminating over the romance. Or navel gazing over it. The writers hadn't quite mastered their banter yet.

- Still working my way through: Bayou Moon by Ilona Andrews as read by Renee Raudman - it's much better than On the Edge.
Read more... )
* Digital Comic Books

Finished
Read more... )
Still reading:
Read more... )
So far?Read more... )

Up next?
Read more... )
***

2. Donated Blood at work today. The NY Blood Drive was taking blood donations at my workplace, so I went ahead and did it on my lunch break. Once again I wore a long sleeve button down blouse. So had to roll up the sleeve. I've been wearing short sleeve shirts all year long, and on the days I have to donate blood and get a flu shot - I wear long sleeve button down shirts?

It's a process donating blood. Reminded me of why I've not done it in a while. Read more... )
I donated because I wasn't that busy, and I learned it could save three people's lives. And I was annoyed with people today, so...I figured I'd help a bunch of strangers.

I think I may try to give blood once or twice a year now. Do what I can to help people even if they drive me crazy.

3. Mother: You sounded tired when you called earlier, now you sound better, more upbeat and more energetic.
Me: That's because I've been alone in my apartment and away from people for about an hour, maybe two?
Mother explodes with laughter.

People are exhausting.

Frigging city is constantly under construction. They are putting in a couple of traffic lights at the intersection that leads to the train station. a new obstacle on my commute )

4. Crazy Workplace

Well, the "pendant" attorney, who is also a frustrated copy-editor and grammatical pendant, is leaving the organization. I only know this - because the head honcho sent me an invite to his going away party. We got the "farewell party" notice via email today. They are throwing a farewell party for him next week at a local pub in Manhattan around 5pm.
Read more... )
5. Television

I attempted Doctor Odyssey. It reminds me of 9-1-1 and 9-1-1 Lone Star, a kind of comforting medical/rescue procedural, with various relationship dynamics. With likable actors, and likable characters. In short, it's very plain vanilla. I expect a bit more from Ryan Murphy, sheesh.

Read more... )
Right now, David E Kelly's Lincoln Lawyer is the winner of the procedurals. It's better written. Mainly because Kelly at least knows something about his subject matter, and has good source material.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-09-30 08:37 pm
Entry tags:

Scavenger's Reign, Kris Kristofferson, among other things..

1. Finished Scavenger's Reign over the weekend. It's a limited animated science fiction series by MAX, which wisely only gave it one season. While there was room for more, I'm glad it only had one - because it had a satisfying ending. Often television series go on too long, when twelve episodes is the perfect amount.



It is among the most innovative animated series that I've seen to date. It's also among the best sci-fi series that I've seen, specifically in regards to the humans stranded on an alien planet trope. The humans stranded on an alien planet trope is hard to pull off. Or settling on an alien planet, equally hard to pull off. This is both. And it pulls it off, partly by telling the story through animation.

The series reminded me of why I adore science fiction. When done well, it's brilliant. I don't want to discuss it too much, because it's best to go in blind.

***

2. Work was frustrating and depressing. Read more... )

***

3. Watching the Voice - because it has Michael Buble and Reba McIntyre on it. And I'm curious. We'll see how long I last, because it also has Snoop (who I can barely stand), and Gwen Stefani (who annoys me). I lasted fifteen minutes. So no, not long. Buble and McIntyre aren't worth the pain. Also my interest in both waned a while ago. I like Seth McFarlane better than Buble. I realized he also annoyed me.

Read more... )
***

Found out a few things about Kris Kristofferson via social media that I did not know.

When Sinead O'Connor was "booed" off stage at the Bob Dylan 75th Tribute Concert in the 1990s, Kristofferson came up and hugged her. And comforted her as she cried on his shoulder. And he went on to write and sing this song about her...

Sister Sinead - which is an excellent song about artists who have the courage to stand by their convictions no matter what.



He was a kind man, who struggled with addiction and his own demons. And an excellent song-writer, known as the poet. His songs hit hard, and we often don't even realize he wrote them - since they are made famous by others. In that he's a lot like Dolly Parton. Also an actor, who was in Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore, Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, and Star is Born.

And toured with legends Roy Orbison, Willie Nelson, and Johnny Cash.

Me and Bobby McGee - was made famous by Janis Joplin.

Sunday Morning, Coming Down - the song he wrote for Johnny Cash, but was about his own demons, which Cash identified with.

Go HERE for others...

One of my favorites is the one he wrote for the band The Highwaymen - that included Orbison, Nelson, and Cash.
Read more... )

In addition, my mother talked to her sister about Drake Hogestern who played John Black for years on her sister's favorite soap. He did 4290 episodes of the series and was on it from 1986-2024. Everyone who knew him - mentioned how kind he was, and how much they'd miss him.

We lost a few kind souls this past week. I'm glad they were in the world, the world was made better by their presence in it.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-09-15 08:37 pm
Entry tags:

The Emmy's

Watching the Emmys, and realized the following:

1.) looking at the nominations? I've actually watched most of the television series that have won or were nominated. The only ones I didn't see - were
television series nominated for an emmy that I either haven't seen or haven't seen all of )

ETA: Oh, figured it out - these are for shows that aired in 2023, not shows that aired in 2024. Which means I've seen more than I thought. I saw S2 of Hacks.
***

Damn, there are a lot of television shows. I've seen most of them, and there's a ton I haven't seen or didn't see the most recent season of, because no time. It is humanely impossible to see all these television series.

Those were just the ones I hadn't seen. Also I don't watch Late Night - because I get up at 5:45 am in the morning, and have no time to do so. I did years ago, on occasion, when I didn't get up early in the morning, such as in the 20th Century, when it was a big deal.

The ones that I've not seen and want to catch up with?
Read more... )


2.) I hate insult humor. And 90% of the humor on this is insult humor or at the expense of people.

But there are some bits that are hilarious. Don Levey and his son's bit in the audience, where the father was in the wrong aisle and couldn't read the teleprompter is hilarious.

I like a good sight gag. Getting into the wrong aisle is relatable.

Also, I have to say that Candace Bergen's political joke landed.

"I played Murphy Brown, and was even the target of a Vice President when my character decided to raise her child as a single mother. And I have to say that now, all these years later, a Republican Vice Presidential Candidate will never condemn a woman for having kids on her own."

No, just Single women for not having kids. Worse having cats instead.

3.) Why aren't more fantasy and sci-fi shows nominated.

This year we got two - Fallout (Amazon Prime) and 3 Body Problem (Netflix).
Neither of which I liked all that much. And I only made it through one.

Frigging Emmy's and television industry is run by the mainstream.

Although to be fair, there really weren't any good fantasy series on this year? Animated maybe, but they don't do animated - again why is that? There's a lot of animated series? Is that a separate group?

Oh, I looked it up, they did it already.

Creative Awards - Emmy for Outstanding Animated Program

Non-mainstream creative awards aren't televised.

Who won?

Blue Eye Samurai
"The Tale Of The Ronin And The Bride"

Who was nominated?
Read more... )
I've seen all of them? Read more... )

4. So far, I'm agreeing with the awards. Although I kind of have to see Shogun to determine how I feel about it. It cleaned up on the creative awards, got 25, but not so much in the acting and writing awards.

Hacks got best Comedy Writing. It's really been Hacks and The Bear cleaning up in Comedy. (The only two I like.)

And Slow Horses got best writing in Drama. Best supporting went to Morning Show and I can't remember the other one...

There's too many comedic routines. I really wish they'd just do clips from the series nominated instead, and do what the Grammy's do - advertise the shows, as opposed to make presenters do comedy routines they aren't comfortable doing.

5. My main take away after watching creative arts awards - is how the frigging heck do you give out awards for Arts? I never understood that.
It's so subjective.
Read more... )

6. They did a presentation of including the Latino actors in the awards, and nominations, along with POC, and transgender.

This year had more than previous years. And more wins. Including the first transgender latino nomination.
Read more... )

Okay off to bed. I think. I'll tape the rest.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-08-30 09:42 pm
Entry tags:

The Magicians Review

I've finished The Magicians and now want fanfic, specifically Quentin/Eliot and Julia/Penny, also Margo/Eliot and Margo/Alice.

I kind of wish we'd gotten a sixth season, mainly because watching Margo, Alice, Fenn and Josh create a new world or new Fillory, while Eliot, Charlton, Penny and Julia tried to teach at Brakebills, would have been fun. I liked how the series wrapped itself up in any event, leaving those openings. That's a series you can write fanfiction about for a very long time.

So many avenues to play with.

I'm tempted. I won't. I suck at fanfic. I like playing in my own world with my own rules and characters. I'm not a fan of playing in someone else's sandbox. The rules make me itchy. I want to make up my own.

I had a long discussion with my father about it once. He was much the same way. He couldn't write creatively on demand either, nor could he write in another person's world or with another person's creations/toys/characters. He felt like he was imposing himself or something.

I also want icons. Does anyone have Julia, Margo, Zelda, or Eliot icons? Even Kady or Alice?

The neat thing about the Magicians is it had cool and tough as nails female characters. More great female characters than male characters. The only cool male characters were Eliot and Penny, also possibly Quentin. Plus they occasionally broke out in song and dance numbers, and made fun of them. (Think Whedon's Once More with Feeling except more Glee with top 1980s and 70s pop singles. A lot of ear worm songs, I didn't realize how many ear worm songs the 1980s, 90s and 70s had? We got "I Wanna Be Sedated" by the Ramones, "Don't Give Up" by Peter Gabriel and Kate Bush, "Take on Me" by Aha....)

I may rewatch it. Or move onto AMC's Into the Badlands, Interview with the Vampire (which I couldn't quite get into), or Mayfair Witches also couldn't quite get into. I have a craving for Dark Fantasy Ensemble Series at the moment. Also need to finish Scavenger's Reign, and 3 Body Problem.

I talked to Chidi and AA about television shows. Rec'd The Magicians. And discussed how I could not get into Ted Lasso. Read more... )

Anyhow, after struggling to get into the first season, I fell in love with the series in the third season. Once you get past the dark crap in S1-2, it gets a whole lot better. I honestly think it had at least eight seasons in it. Too bad Netflix didn't keep it going a bit longer when it grabbed it from Syfy. Syfy had a tendency to cancel shows it owned or produced after about four-five seasons, sometimes less. While shows it didn't own, like Star Gate, went on forever, with multiple spin-offs.

The Magicians is only five seasons, on Netflix, and thirteen episodes per season with a diverse cast, and innovative plotting. It's loosely adapted from Lev Grossman's novels of the same name, although Grossman did serve as a consultant on the series and is a producer - so he had a say in how things evolved and what was changed. From what I understand - the first season and second seasons are closest to the books, but the others vary in a huge way. The series subverts the hero's journey trope, or the white male chosen one trope, while the books follow it closely or so I've seen via reviews online. I've not read the books. I do own the first one in E-book, so may read it to see.

I highly recommend the series, with the following caveats:

1. The first season is hard to get into and it took a while.
2. There's a rape that occurs, which is rather brutal, and an important plot point, furthering one of the characters. If rape is triggering for you, you might want to skip over those episodes? I don't know. It is a metaphor for how the Gods abuse their human charges at their whim. Or about power plays. That said, if you made it through Outlander, Game of Thrones, Buffy, Angel, or Supernatural - you should be fine. It's not as graphic as those or anywhere near it or as frequent. It only happens once, and is only seen once. There's no nudity with it. Just blood.
3. The story is dark fantasy/horror, with major character deaths. And horrific violence, and foul language.
4. The characters do break out in song occasionally, although it is always explained as magical in nature - either a spell or an acid trip or a test.
The songs are ear worm 1980s and 1990s songs.
5. There is a major character death but it's not POC or female.

It's a show that premiered in 2016, and it's liberal, so lots of pop culture references to stuff happening between 2016-2020. Last season was 2020, I think the pandemic got it cancelled. And it is for the most part politically woke. There are bisexual and gay couples in the series and one of the major characters is openly bisexual, and mostly interested in men with few exceptions.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-08-18 06:39 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

Having had COVID legitimately twice now? (Positive test confirming it). I'd say the flu and sinus infections, not to mention bronchitis are far worse. So too is Shingles for that matter, and it lasts longer.

Proof, in case you needed any, that these viruses affect folks differently?
We really need to stop generalizing about them.

Making my way through the Magicians, which has multiple dark plot twists. Also two people from General Hospital portraying charming villains on it.

I'm on S2, they've made it to Fillory and are none too happy about it. eh spoilers )
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-08-18 09:49 am

Don't Look at the Person Behind the Curtain...

[On the COVID front? I think I'm getting better? Last night ran a slight fever - at 100.11 or thereabouts. But headache meds (acetametphine/Asprin (NASAI)/Caffeine) and water reduced it quickly enough. I also think the fact that I had the latest COVID Booster in January, along with the Flu Shot is why it's milder than some folks cases have been.

I'll probably call in sick Monday, take another test, and if it is negative, see how I'm feeling on Tuesday and/or Wed - to determine whether I go in to work.]

So, I've become a little fascinated with the topic of worshipping writers and the negative impact that has on well everyone concerned. Former Minister had a sermon on the topic once - in which she stated "you are going to worship something, just be careful what it is." (She was talking about money, politics, etc. But it applies to humans as well.)

Although I do think there is a difference between being obsessed/fannish about something, and worshiping someone. Picking apart a writer's work, being fannish about their work - isn't quite the same thing as idolizing. Or defending a writer - who may or may not have done something terrible isn't idolizing, depending on why? I question allegations, because I have a criminal defense background and was taught to question everything. And let's face it? The internet isn't reliable.

There's an excellent thread on Reddit about it.

Someone states that's why they only idolize fictional characters because they will never let them down. To which someone responds: "Didn't read Go
Set the Watchman, I take it?" (OR the Watchmen, I thought.)

And then in regards to Gaiman** - there's a thread that compares him to another famous and beloved British writer, Charles Dickens, who was also a bit of a mess. (I'm hesitant to call either terrible people, because I know people are more than one thing, and our actions don't necessarily define who we are. And never have. Our actions vary from day to day, one situation to the next, and we have different choices to make each time. That said, I admittedly am uncomfortable watching a couple of actors, and it may be a while before I read a few writers works.)

"This bit "I don’t think anyone should idolize anyone, ever. It’s not great for them, and it’s not great for you, they probably didn’t ask to be idolized (and if they did, holy shit, fucking run)". I've read a lot of Neil Gaiman and I particularly loved American Gods and the graveyard book. So when Neil Gaiman did an event at the Barbican with the BBC symphony orchestra in 2019, I got tickets. I came away disturbed. I didn't see any predatory behaviour or anything like that, but there was such an unhealthy atmosphere of basking in adoration."
Read more... )

Two statements to highlight:

* I don’t think anyone should idolize anyone, ever. It’s not great for them, and it’s not great for you, they probably didn’t ask to be idolized (and if they did, holy shit, fucking run)

*I'm certain that idolization is one of the most reliable ways to bring out the absolute worst in somebody

I agree with both. From everything I've read about famous folks - who do horrible things - it's usually the result of "idolization". They all fall into that trap. And idolization or adoration can be mistaken for love, it's not love. It's a false or empty kind of love that often destroys the object of it. There's parables, fables, fairy tells, and Greek Myths/stories that describe why this is a bad thing.

I've been watching "The Magicians" adapted from Lev Grossman's books. It's a story about a bunch of magic users who find a gateway into a world that was fictionalized in a bunch of beloved children's books. Halfway through the first season - it's revealed that the writer of the books is in reality a pedophile, with his sister's help, drugged, and molested the children in his charge. When he discovers that they can escape him into a fictional world, a world where he can do whatever he wants - he practices black magic to change himself in order to enter that world. The Writer is portrayed as a charming British writer, with graying hair, and tweed. Looks a bit like Neil Gaiman by way of CS Lewis.
Read more... )
Coincidentally this morning, the lay-worship sermon at my church, via FB, was on how humans, writers or AI creators, create things and then wish to assert control over them. And at what point does the creation become its own entity, with it's own free will, and desires? No longer an extension of the creator? And how do we interact with these creations? As separate from the creator of part of them.

The sermon argues that while all things are ecologically connected and we are indefinably a part of each other, at the same time we are separate entities and once the creation is released into the world - it becomes its own entity.

This furthers the view that yes, you can love Harry Potter and it's world, without supporting JK Rowling's views, or you can love A Tale of Two Cities or a Christmas Carol without supporting or loving Dickens (he's long dead anyhow and I think he's works are in the public domain), or you can adore the works of folks like Gaiman or Whedon without condoning their actions or worshiping them. The creation can survive outside of the creator, and in some cases expand and become more - based on every interaction others have with it.

In short? It is safer (well for the most part - not to the extent you get lost inside of it) to love the fictional work than the creator of the work. Or? Ignore the person behind the curtain, they are but a shyster and a conman, hardly a wizard worth worshiping. But their creation can be loved and adores separately.

** A side note about Gaiman? Unlike Whedon and Munroe, the allegations aren't being reported by any reliable news sources. Doesn't mean they are false, but doesn't mean they are true either. Read more... ) So at this point, I really don't know if Gaiman did anything.

What unnerves me about social media is how many people assume that if XYZ publication reports it is true. Or if someone says it in a publication - than it is true without any fact checking whatsoever. A reputable source fact checks. [I had a massage therapist who fully believed that vaccines were tainted and caused autism because...wait for it...she read it on an internet discussion board???] This is why people died of COVID. How do you know if something is true? There has to be reliable and primary sources, preponderance of the evidence, and a level of accountability. And even then, we don't necessarily know for certain. My father was on the jury of a child molestation case, he and the jury found the defendant guilty, only for the judge to throw out the case because it was determined that the therapists had manipulated the child's testimony to support the ends of whomever wanted custody. And this is easy to do.

That Reddit thread is weirdly disturbing - in how many people misread Scalzi's piece, and how many are quick to judgement based solely on something they read on the internet. And are insanely self-righteous about it.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-07-20 10:20 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

1. Got my new toy - the 10th Generation Ipad - perfect size and syncs well with the iphone. Now just have to figure out how to draw on it. I've an idea for a new story that involves drawing, and writing, but we'll see if I can get it to work.

I've decided to try my hand at illustrated works for a bit and see how that flies?

2. Finished Fool Me Once - the limited series adaptation from a Harlan Coben novel/ I've never read Corben, not my genre. He writes what my father used to call airplane thrillers - nicknamed for the ability to read them in their entirety in the space of time it takes to fly from point A to point B, often with airport layovers in between. My father read a lot of them, and tried his hand at writing a few - starring business men like himself - because he felt that most of the books lacked that reality. Sorry, certain things remind me of my father and I feel compelled to tell people about it. Kind of feels like keeping his memory alive or something?

We miss him. My family. He was a big presence in our lives. And now...there's just a hole or gap remaining, filled with disjointed memory.

Anyhow, the series was okay. Fairly uneven in writing and performance, some of the performances were better than others. The lead Detective was good, but the rest? Uneven.

It held my attention for the most part, but I felt the plot got away from the writers, or writer (not sure how close it is to the novel - haven't read it). Tried to do too many things and I lost track of it.
Vague spoiler )

I liked it, but I wouldn't recommend it.

3. Finished a few comics...which was among the reasons I got the Ipad. It works better than the Amazon Fire, which I've had for about ten years, and is crappy now. It doesn't down load well, and doesn't do much more than work as a kindle reader. I can read books on Kindle on Apple Ipad, computer, and phone just as well - if not better. Plus get Marvel Unlimited. And draw and write on the ipad. Going with the Ipad. And they cost about the same now. So made sense to get an Ipad as opposed to trying to upgrade the crappy Amazon Fire HD.

I think I'm done upgrading my Kindle devices. I have a Kindle Paperwhite which works well enough.

* X-men 1 by Jed Mckay and Ryan Stegman

For the most part? Good start for X-men from the Ashes.

The art is different than previous issues and takes a little getting used to, but overall above par. With comics, it’s always about the art first, the writing second. The dialogue pops for the most part. And the characters make sense. I rather like the scenes between Cyke and Logan, Hank and Cyke, and Magneto. Also it makes sense that after being tortured and put through hell - Cyclops would retreat to his birthplace, Alaska, and take the mutants who can’t blend in with humans, or are ostracized with him. The team up works for me - we have people who are deadly, former assassins and villains, which again works well with Cyclops, a character who believes in second chances. Only quibble - is the villains feel kind of stale? I was never a fan of the U-Men. But I’ll give it a chance, the rest is working for me so far.


* Phoenix by Stephanie Phillips

Better than expected. Finally someone who loves and appreciates the character - is writing and handling the art. Better yet? We have a female writer as opposed to the endless line of male writers handling the character. Male "comic" book writers don't always handle powerful female superhero characters well. In the previous series on The Phoenix - the male writers turned her evil, had her first love, Scott, save her from herself, and she sacrificed herself on the moon for them all. It was the 1970s. What can you expect? Gender politics was just gearing up for a fight.

Now, decades later, or rather a century later - we have a cosmic heroine, and we're largely in her point of view. Read more... )

* X-Men: The Wedding Special (2024) #1 - Celebration of Pride Month (the Wedding of Mystique and Destiny)

Mystique is a bisexual transgender character, and Destiny is equally bisexual. Both are usually portrayed as female. But Mystique is a shape-changer.

Uneven - mainly due to the multiple stories within it? It's an anthology. Read more... )
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-07-17 09:03 pm
Entry tags:

This and that and well horror television shows?

1. While musing about what might have beens, I got to go to a pre-negotiation meeting where I actually helped people and felt as if I'd accomplished something? We were discussing the construction of a bridge over tracks and a highway - which were connecting two separate tracks, and providing faster service for commuters.

2. The musing about what might have beens was triggered by boredom - and I had looked up an old college friend/acquaintance - we ran a folklore house together, taking turns writing up the request for it. Read more... )

3. My church is amusing me in regards to "The Listening Circles"
Read more... )

4. I was bored at work and trying to avoid social media platforms which were either throwing politics at me (do not want) or annoying platitudes.
So, I searched new bands. Found a bunch of stuff by Rasputina, and K's Choice. Also listened to the Broadway Cast album of Stereophonic - not all that memorable or interesting, unfortunately.

Then started hunting horror television shows. I'm in a mood for thrillers and horror - I want something gripping. Where folks are struggling to solve a big problem or escape something or figure something out?

I can't find the one I found at work - which was on screen rant? But did find the following lists:

* Elle's List of Best Horror Television Shows

Thinking of trying The Outsider on Max.

* It may have been Den of Geek?

Best Horror Television Shows of the 21st Century

These look intriguing...
horror television shows to try, if you dare... )
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-07-12 09:28 pm
Entry tags:

This that and the other thingamig

1. If you are into Fireworks...check out seriously insane fireworks:

HERE

Although you may want to fast forward, I got bored in the first twenty minutes. Also the host repeats the words "Seriously Insane Fireworks" and "Really Weird Fireworks" so many times in the first twenty minutes - that I wanted to inform him - "uhm we get it, these are insane fireworks, let's move on".

2. I talked to various people about the ranking of the Top Cities for Public Transportation. [See last post.]

Me: They have Chicago ranked at the bottom below Kansas City.
Mother: But Kansas City's is non-existent?
Me: I know. Also LA is number three.
Mother: Does LA even have one? It doesn't.
Me: No, it does. No one uses it. But it does.

Cousin on FB, who live in Chicago:

"Currently Chicago has multiple systems. The suburbs bus is 1 company & ticket, the suburbs commuter train downtown is company #2, the downtown subway & elevated trains is company #3, & the downtown Chicago bus is company #4. It confuses the heck out of the non-natives. But a recent state law is supposed to make it all 1 company & ticket, so maybe it'll improve in the future. The other problem is in the suburbs, you can get downtown pretty easily but not between the suburbs. So yeah, we have terrible public transportation so far. Not surprised Kansas City is allegedly better."

Me: Currently in a merger situation with public transportation - it's not as smooth as you might think. So no, it's not going to necessarily be better. So much as Different?

Also does Kansas City even have a public transportation system?

I've given the article the side-eye. I honestly don't think whomever wrote it knows anything about public transportation? Because their rankings make no sense.

3. PBS Special on How We See Numbers

I lost interest half way through. It began to give me a headache, actually?

4. A Reminder about things from John Scalzi

Apparently actors and folks wanting to get parts - send John Scalzi head shots, audition tapes, etc ? Why? Honestly, why would you send it to the novelist? He's not making casting decisions. If he has any input - it's after the actors have been brought in for audition. And most writers don't.

5. Books

I finished King of Diamonds on audio, and it was okay. Yes, we get a resolution - and find out who the burglar was or diamond thief. Turns out it was more than one - which makes sense considering it took place over a lengthy period of time. And the differences between the thefts.

I'm not sure if this would have worked better - in print, ie. reading it? The voice actor or narrator reading it - was kind of dull.

Have moved on to the far more entertaining Graphic Audio Dramatization of Kate Daniels short story Magic Gifts.

Almost done with Dreadful - which I've been reading in "paperback" format. I am to date the only person on my trains reading an actual book. Everyone else either reads/watches/plays on their phones or stares blankly into space. I miss the days that people read the paper or magazines. This may explain why print journalism is dying. I've given up on it.

It's odd being the only person reading a book. Every once and a while, someone will stare. But usually no one pays attention. Any more than they notice that I have diabetic sensor on my upper arm, above the elbow.

The lovely thing about NYC is folks are wildly unobservant. That and the fact it has no architectural building zoning guidelines, basically people build whatever they want and more or less wherever they want. And they are constantly building things. For a city on a couple of small islands, it's certainly building a lot of structures. And somehow magically finds space for all of them. NYC is a contradiction in terms - or rather proof that you can be wildly libertarian and socialist at the same time, while also sporting a capitalistic veneer.

Anyhow, the book is amusing me. I wouldn't call it ground-breaking or great or anything. But it is enjoyable. It holds my attention for the most part. And I think I may actually finish it. Also I like it better than the last five books I read, so there's that.

PenPal - is kind a surreal horror novel. I'm not sure what to make of it. I gave it a rest in favor of squinting to read Dreadful on the train. (I should put on glasses to read Dreadful, but I don't want to.)

6. Television

I don't know what I'm going to watch this weekend. Flirting with: Reacher (read an interview with the star and he's cool - made me want to watch the series, which admittedly is not the right reason to watch the series. Last time I tried to watch it - was with Wales, who insisted on poking fun at it and informing me how bad it is. After that - it was hard to watch the show. But I may go back to it.), Glee (except I'm annoyed with at least six of the lead characters...not sure I can get past them enough to just watch the musical numbers), Acolyte (which has finally dropped enough episodes), The Witcher (albeit a rewatch from S1, because I discovered S2 is kind of confusing if you can't remember S1. Damn, Netflix for the long wait times between seasons)...or some random movie. Or whatever I land on.

The problem with having too many choices is making a choice.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-06-29 09:48 pm

This that and the other thingamig

1. While on Threads this week - I discovered...that apparently someone went after and attacked David Tennant.

Who would go after David Tennant? He's a sweetheart. Be like attacking a puppy dog? Seems insane.

So...I looked it up. David Tennant vs. well UK Conservative Transphobes

Sigh.

Tennant has a non-binary child. He's an actor who has a right to his opinion. He's not a politician making policy for others. And he's advocating for the rights of his child and others. I applaud him for that.
Read more... )
2. Speaking of flawed humans specifically writers with huge fan followings, and unfortunately toxic behavior patterns, I did an online survey on Whedon's shows today via the Association of Buffy Studies. It kept asking me if I associated certain actors with Whedon shows - but alas was Dollhouse, Firefly and I think Nevers heavy on the actors - because I had no clue who a lot of them were. Who is Clark Gregg? He sounds familiar?
It also asked if Whedon's behavior influenced me in regards to his fictional content?

Yes and no. Or I don't have a simple response to that, any more than I do to Rowling's fictional content - that I read prior to discovering she's a transphobic bully.
Read more... )
3. Hand feels better. Aloe Vera Gel is a miracle worker. Highly recommend. Blisters are pretty much non-existent now, and the redness has gone away. Aloe Vera and cold water - nothing else. (I'm kind of lucky I had nothing else, except for five different brands of Aloe Vera Gel. I got a lot of it to make my own hand sanitizer, also for sunburn.)

Also found a chai tumeric ginger latte tea mix that you just add hot water too. Helps greatly with digestion. Along with Physillium Husk and Miralax for IBS-C.

4. Television

Found two shows to watch:

* Acolyte -Disney + which reminds me a little of Andor. Like Andor - it takes place before Star Wars. This one takes place before Phantom Menace. Only drawback is it does rest on a rather cliche plot device - the evil twin. But I adore the lead actress in the role. And she's doing a good job of playing dual roles.

I'll probably like it better than most. I like the Star Wars world, and actually love the television series and films that have zip to do with the original three films or the Skywalker/Vader Legacy. My favorites are Andor, Rogue One, and Mandalorian...I've not tried Akoshka, or Rebels. And the Clone Wars - I watched the cartoon version, not the Lucas one.

* The Bear - Hulu (or Disney +) - which is a half-hour comedy (feels more like a Dramedy since I don't laugh during it) about a chef trying to create a fancy restaurant out of his family owned restaurant in Chicago.
It's a workplace comedy/drama. I love it. Season 3 just dropped.

***

Tried House of Dragon S2 - my difficulty with it is the subject matter, which is the same difficulty I have with Dune, which I outgrew about sixteen years ago? Just not in the mood for either.

5.) I'm flirting with horror. But I'm wise enough not to watch it at night before bed. I have enough difficulty sleeping as is, I do not need help. I have a love/hate relationship with horror films. Considering trying MidSommer, Hereditary, Talk to Me, and Babanook. Also, maybe, The Witch, which my brother loves and tried to show me once.

Oh, there are a few intriguing horror movies coming out...Longlegs...looks intriguing. It's kind of Silence of the Lambs meets the occult meets well puppetry?

6. The tower fan is actually keeping my apartment cool. Amazing that. I may not require a portable A/C in the living room, and just replacing the one in the bedroom will suffice. Also, I can just get another window A/C since this was PC Richards faulty A/C not the apartment or my fault.

7. Books

Saw a meme about memorable books off the top of your head. And I realized all mine were made into movies or television shows. Which means my memory is very visual? I'm sure I can think of a few memorable ones that haven't? Or have, and I've not seen the movie?

So, below is a list of books that weren't made into films or I've not seen the films, but were memorable. In other words - if it was made into a film or television show - I didn't see it, or it wasn't made into one.
books I've found memorable off the top of my head that either weren't made into films or I didn't see the film )
At the grocery store today - a young woman had a library book. She was in front of me at the checkout line. And there was this lovely library book sitting there on the conveyor book at Met Fresh, while she put down her food from the cart.

Me: I'm trying figure out what book you've got there? I'm curious?
Young Woman (she had a blond braid, blue eyes, fresh faced with freckles, no makeup, mid-late twenties, about average weight and height): It's about two people who develop a video game.
Me: Oh cool. Is it non-fiction.
YW: No, fictional. It's really good. I'm not that far - but so far I'm really enjoying it. And I really like having a real book in my hands.

Gives me hope for the future. E-books are slowly getting on my nerves, in that I have no idea how far I truly am in them and can't scan ahead to see if it gets better or flip back to figure something out. Or look at the cover. On the other hand? It's nice to read a book privately without someone seeing what you are reading - particularly on subways. Although, I've had some interesting conversations about books I was reading on the subway. I miss the days in which everyone was reading books, magazines and the paper as opposed to cell phones. I rarely even see an e-book. Just people on phones. It's sad.

Anyhow, found the book she had. Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin - it was the 2022 winner of the Good Reads Choice Awards apparently.
brief synopsis )

Kind of reminds me of Halt Catch Fire in a way.

I love books. I like books more than people. I think it's because they are easier to connect to? No rejection from a book. You can escape into their worlds. Be in another person's head. Rage. Feel. Whatever.

Everyone needs a safe space, I suppose. Mine has always been books.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-06-16 04:25 pm
Entry tags:

Television Roundup....

1. Brats - the Brat Pack Documentary on Hulu, about the five or six twenty-somethings that starred together in a group of B teen/twenty-something flicks in the 1980s - that was written, produced and directed by Andrew McCarthy, and features Andrew wandering about and interviewing various members, authors, journalists, directors, and producers of films etc that composed of the Brat Pack in the 1980s. Read more... )

My main takeaway - was one of the academic's views that our culture is far too fractured or fragmented for anything like that to happen now. No one is united on anything culturally speaking. Also the race issue - no POCs in the Brat Pack, and there really were no POC in any of their movies, and if there were they were stereo-typically and often offensively portrayed. There are movies in the 80s that are cringe-inducing now.

2. Bridgerton S3 - I enjoyed it. It was nice to have a voluptuous heroine in a historical romance for a change, particularly if you consider in the 18th and early 19th century, voluptuous was considered attractive and appealing. Also I like Penn. And she had beautiful gowns this season. Whomever is the lead couple each season - gets the best wardrobe. I actually liked Penn's gowns better than the previous season leads.

Wardrobe clearly hates Eloise Bridgerton. Not sure why but they do. Or her mother is punishing her. She wears these ghastly numbers with huge bows.

The series slyly comments on the romance genre. Also promotes a world that the writers wish existed - demonstrating that we've kind of won the culture wars in the 21st century. There's two twists in the end of S3 Part II regarding Francesca and Benedict, making me wonder which S4 will lead with, one or both, and whether we'll get a lead f/f or m/m romance in the next season.

I felt sorry for the antagonist/villain, who was rather complex. Rhimes doesn't do black and white villains - hers have layers, which I appreciate.
Cress - is placed in a cage by her father and provided with few if any opportunities for escape. She attempts to get Eloise to help her, but alas Eloise is far too self-absorbed to hear her cries. And as a result is left with little to no recourse than to attempt to connive and blackmail her way out - neither work. And she's sent off to live with her cruel and domineering aunt in Wales. (Having spent time in Wales in the 1980s, it's kind of hard for me to see this as a fate worse than death, Wales is lovely - far prettier than London. But it was admittedly in the early 19th Century...so.)

I'd like to see her romance, but it's unlikely. I found the character interesting.

3. Madame Webb - this is a badly written, directed and produced film. But, weirdly, entertaining. The script is on the wooden side? I thought during it - okay, I can see why this bombed at the box office. And Dakota Johnson tries but is one-note in the lead role.

I'd say it's a mildly entertaining C movie? Has some decent special effects. And the story has potential but isn't gripping. I'm afraid of spiders and it didn't bother me that much - the red spiders don't look real.

It is kind of hokey in places? And there's more than a few eye-rolling moments. But, I liked the women bonding together, and figuring out how to stop the bad guy - even if it didn't make a whole lot of sense.

This won't have a sequel - shame, it could have been an interesting series. I think it would have worked better if they had done it as a television series? Because the film felt a lot like a television pilot or premiere episode. It wasn't rounded off well enough for a film.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-05-23 08:04 am
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List of Television Show Renewals and Cancellations for 2024-onwards

The Official List of Renewed and Cancelled Television Shows for 2024-onwards

Renewals:

Fallout, Strange New Worlds, The Witcher (4- with 5th being final season), NCIS, Grey's Anatomy, Mr & Mrs Smith, Invasion, 3 Body Problem, The Boys, Welcome to Wrexham, The Night Manager (which I didn't know was a series - I thought it was just a limited mini-series), Monarch Legacy of Monsters, Ghosts, 9-1-1, Will Trent, The Last Thing He Told Me, The Bear, , Fire Country, Avatar the Last Airbender, Tracker, FBI (and all it's associated spin-offs), True Detective, , Survival of the Thickest, The Terror, Abbott Elementary, Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Hijack, Animal Control, Lioness, Slow Horses, SWAT ...have all been renewed.


Cancellations:

Constellation, Quantum Leap, American Born Chinese, Schmigadoon, Obliterated, Upload (fourth season is its last), Evil (fourth and final season - I thought it was on longer and already gone, oh well), Alex Rider (third and final season), Snowpiercer (cancelled by TNT and then renewed by AMC for 4th season, who bought the rights from TNT apparently), Bubkis (renewed for a second and last season), Uncouple (cancelled by Showtime after they bought it from Netflix),

Feel free to share.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-05-05 08:14 pm
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Opinions on various television shows and books..

1. Saw Boys on the Boat - via $3.99 on Prime, at Mother's recommendation. This is the George Cloony directed/produced film adapted from the non-fiction novel of the same name. It's about the epic quest of nine working class crew members to win Olympic Gold in 1936. Rowing was big back in the 1930s, folks listened to it on the radio. And Hitler was going all out for Germany's 1936 Olympics - with various lavish venues, to demonstrate how great Germany was under his rule. The book jumps between the working class boys training for the Olympics in Seattle, Washington, and Germany preparing for the Olympics. The movie, wisely, just focuses on the boys. Unfortunately it's only an hour and a half movie - so we don't really get much on the "boys". We only get the main point of view - Joe Rantz, who is the one who is telling the story to his grandson, or remembering it. We also get a bit of the lead coach.

It's an uplifting film which my Mother enjoyed more than I did. I felt it was lacking in character development, and didn't quite give us enough of various characters to truly care if they won or lost or how they became a team? This may have worked better as an Apple TV costume drama? Although I agree that it would be difficult to get viewers invested in a series about a bunch of men taking up rowing to compete in the 1936 Olympic Games.

The book is excellent and I highly recommend it. The movie is okay, it's worth $3.99. Not sure it's worth more than that - though.

2. Started watching Outlander again on Netflix. I fast-forwarded over most of the rape sequence in S1. may be triggering? )This is a difficult topic to do well. But again, I did fast-forward over most of it, and I'd given up on Outlander because of the sexual violence. Both Ron Moore and Diana Galbandano rely way too heavily on it for my sensibilities. However, I can get around it to some extent. (And I've seen worse.)

I started again - because I like the actors, and find the twin time line trajectories interesting. One is 1945-1970, and the other is 1500s through early 1700s, with early Scottish Settlers (which is part of my ancestory actually). Two periods of history that aren't done that often. And - the lead female character is a nurse, who becomes a doctor and surgeon, who works with people in the War. Also, the guy playing the male romantic lead is ...hot. And a good actor. I honestly wish they'd do the Chronicles of Lymond and have him play that role. May be too old now.

Anyhow, I've finished S1, and will start on S2 soon. Mother and brother are rec'ing Shogun, which I may do next. We'll see.

3. I wonder sometimes why other people read books? I've figured out why I do. It's to be in someone else's head. To see the world through another lens or point of view.

It's why I like social media actually - I get to see the world through various points of view. I'm curious. I want to understand why people do what they do, and how they see things?

It took me a while to realize that people did not perceive things the same way I did. Nor did they necessarily understand how I perceived things. And definitely didn't think the same way. Be nice if they did, but they don't. And actually it's probably more interesting that they don't.

Writing, stories, art, music are ways to express how we view the world or think to others, and help us understand each other, and get inside each other's heads? Not perfect, but it helps?

Along these same lines ...I've noticed a recurring theme in various television shows, books, and other things of late - which is, that most people want to save the earth or world they live in, and make it a better place to live, they just disagree on how to go about it. And in some respects vehemently so.

4. Is there any genre you haven't tried?

No.

I've literally tried all of them. I don't understand people who haven't. Aren't you curious? I mean, when I figured out how to read - I devoured whatever I could find. Maybe that's why? It took me forever to figure out how to read - so once it happened, I considered it this marvelous gift? I sometimes wonder if we take the things we do easily for granted? I took drawing for granted, so as a result am not as good as I could have been?

Granted I don't like all the genres. Biography, Memoir, Role-Playing Games or Interactive, True Crime, and Self-Help - I could do without.

Someone on Twitter said they felt that Science Fiction and Fantasy should be allowed to mutually co-exist in the same genre or book. That was okay.

And I did a double-take. Okay, does this person not realize that there is a genre entitled sci-fantasy, and actual books and films that fit in both and are hybrids? Did they skip over the whole Star Wars thing?

5. I am still watching Fallout on Prime. I've made it through about five episodes now? It's very satiric. I'm not a huge fan of satire for satire's sake, and it kind of falls into that category? Also there's the video game aspect (and as you all already know I'm not really much of a gamer, I tried, I don't have the coordination or the mental aptitude for it. It may very well be genetic? Since absolutely no one in my immediate family does either? The most I'll do is play a matching Redecor game. I like the puzzle games, I played those at the video game company that I worked for.) It's okay, just kind of slow and reminds me of a lot of other dystopian satires that I've seen.

Also still plan to watch Gentleman in Moscow - which is dropping slowly on Showtime and I keep forgetting its on. I gave up on Under the Bridge -it's True Crime, and I find True Crime to be icky. And it began to irritate me in that way that True Crime tends to after a bit. (It's why I couldn't become an investigative journalist - after flirting with it in college - that ick factor.)

Baby Reindeer (very popular on social media outlets) - I can't watch for multiple reasons - I tried and didn't get past the first ten minutes of it. I can't watch "You" either, which is a similar idea, albeit as fictionalized satire - I tried. The trailer alone turned me off of it. It's cringe and I can't do cringe. I don't care if its comedy or horror - cringe and me are unmixy things.

6. I've started reading "The Benevolent Society of Ill-Mannered Ladies" based on an old college friend's recommendation. She said it made her think of me and she loved it. It's actually pretty good, the lead character, Augusta ("Gus") is tall and unmarried. She's just not found anyone who fit with her. And can't understand really why anyone would want to marry or the whole deep romantic love thing. She's dated, but never been overtaken by passion apparently. She's very logical and rationale. Her sister, who is recently widowed, has breast cancer, and her brother is a bit of a pest. Anyhow, in an attempt to distract her sister from her ills - they've launched on an ill-advised campaign with their manservant to save a mutual acquaintance from her abusive husband. En route, highwaymen try to rob them - Gus accidentally shoots one of them, and takes the injured highwayman (who they recognize as a former disgraced Marquis) to the bad guy's residence - stating they require medical attention for their brother, and gain entry as a result.

That's as far as I've gotten.

While I can see the resemblance between myself and Gus, I also see the differences. Read more... )
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-04-20 09:46 am
Entry tags:

TV Show Meme

A television meme stolen from svgurl.

+ Bold all of the following TV shows of which you've seen 3 or more episodes.
+ Italicize a show if you're positive you've seen every episode.
+ Asterisk if you have at least one full season on tape or DVD [I'm counting if I've either given away or thrown away the DVDs and Tapes of them...because I no longer own a VCR or DVD player.]
+ Exclamation mark if it's an all-time fave.
+ If you want, add up to 3 additional shows (keep the list in alphabetical order).

[Just in case you didn't know there are a lot of television shows, and I've managed to forget more than most have seen?]
television meme )
Okay I added more than three...I added All in the Family, The Witcher, Star Trek: Picard, Hercules: The Legendary Journals - because you can't have Xenia on that list without it, and The X-Men Animated Series and X-men '97.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-03-23 10:57 pm

Art, Television, Cartoons and Movies...

1. Well, I submitted pandemic sunflower to the Brooklyn Art Museum Open Admission site. It's not really a contest - or it is - but the prize is being exhibited in the museum with a lot of other artists and having your work shown.
Read more... )

I'm proud of myself for submitting it. It's the first work of art that I've submitted to an exhibition in a very very long time, since I was a kid, actually.

2. Television

* Been binge-watching Resident Alien on Netflix, starring Alan Tudyk, there's two seasons of it available. Made it through about six episodes. They are about thirty minutes each and being Netflix, when one ends, the next one begins with barely a credits roll.

Set-up? vague spoilers - except all happen in first two episodes ) Think fish out of water tale such as Northern Exposure - except the fish out of water is an alien trying to destroy the human race, and failing miserably at it.

It's a comedy.

Started on Syfy, now on Netflix as well. Much easier to watch on Netflix.

* X-men '97 - Disney + - this is a reboot of the 1990-1996 Fox X-men Animated Series. I saw about two or three seasons of the 90s series back in the 90s. And it's really when the X-men became mainstream. Most people know about the X-men from the Fox 1990s series. (Ugh). The Fox 1990s series is not bad, it's actually better if you've not read the comics first. If you've read the comics first and remember them well - it will irritate you. The animation of the Fox 1990s series is on the clunky side (it was good in the 1990s however), but better than most cartoons. And the dialogue on the cheesy side. Cyclops is written kind of stiffly and not well at all. He's boring in the 90s series, the most interesting characters in the series are Rogue, Storm and Wolverine, Jean is kind of dull and poorly developed, as is Cyclops and Jubliee. Gambit is kind of edgy and creepy. That's the 1990s cartoon.

The 2024 reboot - or X-men '97 which was written and created by the (recently fired) Beau DeMayo is actually pretty good. And a vast improvement over the original. It has two episodes that have dropped. And it focuses on the late 1970s/early 1980s comics but - with big changes. Scott/Cyclops is written a tad better, as is Jean, Wolverine, Storm, Rogue, Gambit, Jubliee, etc. And they've brought back Morph. Xavier is gone, and Magneto is taking over.

What's odd is they fired the creator, and he's left social media entirely. Hasn't posted since the firing in early March, two weeks before the premiere.

No one knows why. Except he was posting semi nude pictures of himself - posing on Xitter - and well, he's Black and Gay. And it is Disney. But I'm hoping they had a better reason and guessing it was a legal one? No one knows, and no one is happy about it. The first two episodes were done well.
All the characters were written and drawn better, as were the action sequences.

On Beau DeMayo Firing and Where Things Currently Stand

Marvel is working towards rebooting the X-men films, and doing that through a reboot of the animated series, and the comic series - the X-men is its most popular flagship series, since it has the most diverse characters and the most diversified audience and ahem, appeals to women, LGBTA, trans, and not just nerdy heterosexual cisgendered fanboys.

And I foresee a Bridgerton rewatch in my future. Also the 3 Body Problem is on Netflix.

3. Almost forgot... Cillian Murphy forms a new production Company, Big Things Films

" EXCLUSIVE: Cillian Murphy, fresh off of the massive global success of Oppenheimer — and as he gets ready to debut Small Things Like These (in which he stars and he produced) as the opening-night gala of the Berlin Film Festival next week — has set his next starring and producing gig with Steve.

This adaptation of Max Porter’s novel Shy also officially launches Murphy’s production company, Big Things Films, with longtime collaborator Alan Moloney."

The article contains a discussion with Cillian and his producing partner.
Also Cillian is starting filming on a Peaky Blinders movie for Netflix in September.

This is the team that did Breakfast on Pluto, Intermission and Delingquent Season.

" An independent, story-driven company, Big Things was initially created to produce Small Things Like These, and aims to collaborate with singular filmmakers, writers, actors and directors, both new and established, who have something to say and are passionate about what they do. Big Things will collaborate with like-minded financiers, studios, distributors and streamers in both film and television.

The company will seek material in which Murphy will act, but not exclusively.

Projects will be designed to provoke, inspire and explore themes that take audiences to places that can sometimes be uncomfortable, but more often reveal core truths about who we are, regardless of genre or format, the partners say.

Meanwhile, Berlinale opener Small Things Like These is based on the Booker Prize-shortlisted novel by Claire Keegan with a screenplay by Enda Walsh. Murphy, Eileen Walsh and Emily Watson star in the story which takes place over Christmas 1985, when devoted father Bill Furlong (Murphy) discovers the startling secrets being kept by the convent in his town, and some shocking truths about his own life as well. "

So good news for Cillian Murphy fans.

Ryan Gosling is starring in Project Hail Mary - the Andy Weir novel adaptation, which I will most likely skip, because it has a friendly alien spider race in it. I can handle that in a book, I cannot handle looking at alien spiders on screen.

Sigh, it's that time again - off to bed.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-02-17 10:55 pm
Entry tags:

Television Roundup....

Still furious about the CPAP debacle. I was blatantly lied to.

But alas, there's nothing I can do about it tonight.

Here's a picture from my walk today to the grocery store in Ditmas (aka Flatbush) Brooklyn. It's the area of the city that looks like Greenwhich, CT. In fact you wouldn't know you were in NYC walking through it. It's south of Prospect Park.



We got about four to five inches of snow last night. It quietly fell until around nine am, this morning. It's pretty. I missed it. (I don't have to shovel any of it, or put down ice - so not an issue.) Also I like snow.
I don't really think I can live in areas without it or Winter. I like the turn of seasons.

The walk cleared my head a bit. Plus sunny with blue skies.

Came home, had a gin and tonic - which numbed my wrath, and my aches & pains. And watched Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part I on Paramount Plus.

It's not a good movie. Too much exposition needed to explain the plot, which isn't that interesting. The stunts and chase scenes were however fun. I rather liked the train sequence. Cruise handles action sequences well.
My attention kept wandering during it - the only scenes that were interesting were the insane stunts. But it's free on Paramount Plus.

Tried:

* Tracker - got bored after about fifteen to twenty minutes. Gave up. It's basically about this guy who was trained on how to track people as a kid who has set up a tracking service to track missing people. His lesbian sister and her partner, and a lawyer help him. (I think?) And the back story appears to be that his dad took off, he tracked him down and found him, dead? I stopped somewhere around there. The writing and production are kind of lackluster. I'd say the acting was - but I've seen in the actor in other things, and he is a good actor. He just doesn't have much to work with here. It could just be the pilot though. Pilots tend to be clunky for the most part.

LouderMilk - about a scruffy therapist running a group AA clinic out of a church. The priest tells him to help a parishioners daughter deal with an addiction in return for keeping his clinic in the church. Apparently they've gotten complaints on how he runs it? (Netflix) - I gave up ten minutes in. It could be me.

Orion and the Dark - (Netflix) may go back to. It's told in an interesting way - but the animation is kind of substandard? Although I do like the use of felt for some of the characters, and how it does Dark, Sleep, Sweet Dreams, Insomina, Weird Noises, and Quiet. Quiet is rather cute. The human characters, sigh. I don't know why animators struggle with human characters in these things. It did surprise me in how they are telling it - told as a story or riff by a father to his daughter at night, to help her deal with her fears. And it shifts back and forth from the story, to the father/daughter talking about the story, and him telling it. Kind of like The Princess Bride?

Makami House - (Netflix) - this is horribly dubbed, which I found distracting. The lips don't match the dubbing. I hear them talking but the mouths aren't moving, or they are moving late. Also the close captioning doesn't match. It gave me a headache. I gave up. But I loved the concept - about a girl who tried to become a Makami, but becomes their chef instead. And is an amazing chef.

***

Landed on Rustin - Netflix. This was produced by the Obamas. And the lead performance was nominated for Best Actor (made history as the first Latino African-American to be nominated). It's about Bayard Rustin's push for and organization of the 250,000 Civil Rights March on Washington - which lead to MLK's I Have a Dream Speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. It was the largest protest march of its time. And resulted in the Civil Rights Bill being passed. Or aided its progression. The focus though is on Bayard Rustin - a Black homosexual activist.

And it's excellent. Held my interest, and surprised me. The lead actor, Colman Domingo, is excellent in the role. I looked for it - because of an Actor's round table that I saw with Cillian Murphy, Jeffrey Wright, Colman Domingo, Mark Ruffalo, and Paul Giammaiti. Domingo really impressed me.
So I hunted down his film. And he is amazing. (I'm sorry Paul, but between Murphy and Colman, you are outgunned in my opinion. I may hunt down American Fiction with Jeffrey Wright, flirting with the Holdovers, which is either Peacock (I don't subscribe) or $5.95.
shadowkat: (Default)
2024-02-03 10:17 pm
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And finally we see the sun again!

Lazy day, but pretty, with sunshine. There was actually a blue sky outside my windows, without a cloud tarnishing it. I took a brief walk in the crisp air to the Post Office and then the grocery store. The walk I took allowed for plenty of views of sky with barely a tree or building blocking it, and lots of sunshine, and little shade. I basked in it like a cat strutting its stuff.

It was cool though. Barely hitting forty, felt more like thirty, but still warmer than it had been. And I didn't need the full length winter coat to fend off the chill.

Didn't do much else, outside of watch my blood sugar sky-rocket, after eating a small bowl of New England Clam Chowder (imported from a restaurant in Rhode Island), crackers, and celery. Also some chocolate. I was annoyed.
All I'd had that morning was eggs and bacon. I didn't do it any favors by having a freshly baked chocolate chip cookie. (It should go without saying that everything was gluten-free. The gluten-free diet is a double-edged sword, on the one hand it makes it easier to stay off carbs, on the other, the substitutes are higher in sugar. And Metroformin makes me crave carbs and hate meat proteins, ironic that.)

Got a new blood sugar sensor finally - so I'm tracking the blood sugar better. But I am thinking of talking the doctor into proscribing the sensor that is completely covered by my insurance, which my co-workers use.

Anywho...enough of that...watched a couple of television shows today:

1. Market to Market - MASH S1, EP 2 (Hulu) - I discovered MASH was now on Hulu, commercial free. (Oh, how I wish I had streaming back in the day, it would have made analysis of television shows, not to mention binge watching a whole lot easier.). This episode still makes me laugh until it hurts - I was laughing so hard during it - I was coughing.

The set-up? Read more... )

MASH aired from September 17, 1972, to February 28, 1983. It ran longer than the WAR. And is among the longest running situation comedies and television series. It also won 14 Emmys during it's run, and was nominated for over 100.

I'd say it's probably one of the best television series that I've ever seen and among the most memorable. Also among the funniest. It's an example of the type of Satire that actually works for me.

2. All Creatures Great and Small - PBS - Masterpiece. This is, I think, the fourth season of the series. It does a good job of exploring a married couple's romance, and their relationship, along with the inter-relationships of the veterinary clinic. I rather like Siegfried (the same actor plays a bit part on Slow Horses). Character driven drama about a veterinary clinic in Derbyshire, England around the beginning of the Second World War.

3. Slow Horses S3 - Apple TV - excellent. I loved this season, which I finished tonight. It goes at quite a nice clip. Action packed, and hilarious in places. The characters are kind of inept? And it satirizes government incompetence, and stupidity well. I find it reassuring and weirdly comforting. There's actually worst places to work. Also the main characters are endearing. And it's kind of cathartic - in that the people I want to see killed or get it? Do.

4. Percy Jackson and the Olympians - Disney + - I finished this series tonight. It's better than expected, and relatively well cast. I'm not positive? But I think JAWS from the James Bond flicks and Superman II plays Aries, or someone who looks a lot like him does? Lance Reddick played Zeus, albeit briefly - the last episode is in loving memory of Reddick.
The kids are very cast, Percy in particular, who is likable. And the story and plot work. It's not too cheesy or juvenile and respects the intelligence of its audience, without talking down to them.

5. True Detective S4 : Night Country - Episode 2. Eh, I liked the first episode better. The second one is kind of uneven, and difficult to follow? It drags, and pacing is a bit off. Also it gets into weird horror sci-fi territory - which may or may not work here?

That said? I'm watching it for Jodi Foster. And I like the characters. Also the story is interesting, if gruesome.