Thursday, January 7, 2010

Its Been A While But A Friend Needs Help.

I know its been sometime since I blogged or posted or whatever you want to call this but some things have been in turmoil and now a friend of mine is getting hit too. I don't want to go into too much detail as I'm not sure how much he wants out there right now but suffice it to say that author and podcaster Tee Morris just sustained a TERRIBLE blow and he now needs our help.
Tee is a great dad and a great guy. Anyone who has ever stumbled across him at a con will tell you that. Gracious and ingratiating he is always quick to smile and and have conversation with you and his little Sonic Boom seems to always on the tip of his mind. He has spent years helping us learn to write and he has done so much toward helping me get my stuff straight, well now I want to stand up and help him back.
Tee's expenses are about to go through the roof and I am asking you to give anything you can. I know its a crappy time (believe me I know, and those of you who've been following me and my efforts to keep my house on Twitter know that I know) but even the tiniest amount will help, even if its just re-blogging this.
Please help me to help my friend and thank you so much.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Somnium or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Astronomy

Welcome back!

So what are you watching?

For me, I'm watching the staples; Fringe, Dollhouse, The Big Bang Theory... is there anything else? I cant think of anything off the top of my head but I must be...oh! Supernatural! Thats the other one! So, those are my big four I guess. Others of course but those are the ones I try not to miss.

I was watching Defying Gravity but only just barely. Its a great... well, its a nice idea. At least its something different just not enough... action? Maybe? The characters were all a bit to blah for there to be so little action and the big mystery just wasn't mysterious enough. Wasn't completely turned off by it though and if it gets picked up, Ill watch it again. I should say that I missed several episodes, catching up on story through the top o' the episode recap, so it could be that not having to slog through whole eps made it easier for me to stick with the series.

Heroes got off to a decent start though I know a lot of people are already kicking it around. I thought it was OK. I liked the idea of the carnies and ANYTHING Ray Park touches is gold so...there you go. I should say that I tend to be a little forgiving of my genre shows; if you can get me through the first couple of episodes Ill try and take in the series. But you've got to get me through those first couple. Eureka lost me midways through the second ep and I didn't pick back up again until the beginning of the 09 season. I didn't think it was bad just nothing interesting enough to hook me. They've really developed the characters though. Story content is about the same as far as basic plot devices go but the interaction between the characters is so much more interesting than it was at the jump. Relationships have been really thoroughly fleshed out and its just become very interesting and entertaining to watch.

Supernatural is another one I bailed on then came back to. I was totally bored with the first two eps. Not a huge horror fan so I dropped it quick and didn't look back. Last year however it was Halloween and Smallville, which I watch with my wife, was over and Supernatural was starting and I thought "You know what? This show continues to hang on so let me give it another shot. If a show like this cant sit me down for a Halloween ep, well, I know I made the right choice." I was blown away. One of the best hours or TV programming I have sit through in a while. The feel of the show, the atmosphere, the banter between all of the cast, the performances, all dead on. Been watching ever since. I occasionally wish that I could go back to the beginning, maybe pick it up on DVD, but then I think that maybe missing all the growing pains was a good thing.

Flash Gordon is good example of not hooking me. I should have loved this show, wanted to love this show but I dropped that turkey 15 minutes into the first ep. It was truly awful, horrendous even, and I just dont have time to slog through and try and find entertainment in an hour of truly bad programming.

You know who's doing it right? Well, besides Supernatural I think shows like Castle and The Closer, Burn Notice, Psych and The Mentalist are tearing it up in the character development and interaction arena. Great performances, crisp dialog and entertaining to boot! Thats it. Thats all you need. For me Dollhouse is scooting along on dialog and character alone though the story is starting to shape up. Fringe... Fringe is hard for me to put my finger on. Solid performances, good dialog though not great (by this I mean not crisp and wry and witty like you might find in a Whedon show,Pacey's banter aside)... I think the mythology is difficult for me. I am not a hard science guy and I know that concept is a tricky trail to walk in entertainment but it took me forever to get past all the... hokum, for lack of a better term. It really was the strength of the performances that have kept me coming back to this series.

At this point I know some of you are screaming "WHAT ABOUT DR WHO??!!!" I have a long history with the good Dr. Goes all the way back to the 80's when, as most of my American readers will know, Dr Who was run on PBS over here. I, well, I fell in love. I even had a crush (and still do!) on Sara Jane. I had never seen anything like this. The effects were behind the times to say the least, shows like Battlestar Galactica and Buck Rogers were smokin em in that catergory. But there was something else; something different. Heres how ridiculous I was about it, besides buying and cutting out and collecting EVERYTHING I could find that was Dr Who related I had a string. A simple piece of classic white kite string about 3.5 feet long that I wore around my neck and it was my Dr Who scarf. Oh yes I did. And I would wear it everywhere. To cut to the core when Tom Baker was finally done with his run and his Dr was standing on that dish my hands and forehead were literally sweating and when the Dr fell to his "death" I cried. No joke, no lie, no exaggeration, I freaking cried. Couldnt stop it. I still get a weird feeling in my belly when I think about it. Peter Davison is a wonderful actor and he did a brilliant job as the Dr. And I just couldn't watch it. My Dr was dead. Didnt he know that? So, to say that I had guarded expectations and mixed feelings about this new version is understating things a bit. I wanted desperately for the Dr to be introduced to a new generation but would it be my Dr? Alas the answer was no. Great performances, occasionally fantastic dialog, just not my Dr. Oh, I'll watch it and enjoy it but it has never made it back into my top choices.

So, what are you watching? What have I forgotten or missed out on? What are your favorites and how have I butchered my understanding of the things I watch? Let me know! Vote! Email! Comment! Whatever!

Ok, down to business!
Well, today is a Tuesday and Tuesdays are dedicated to Books and Authors so how about we take it way back! All the way to the 1600's!

Somnium

Written between 1600 and 1630 by Johannes Kepler. Edited and published posthumously in 1634.

Somnium is considered by some to be the first example of science fiction in literature, a position supported by both Carl Sagan and Issac Asimov, and the first real scientific treatise on lunar astronomy. Originally written by Johannes Kepler, a noted mathematician and astronomer, as a student in 1593, the manuscript was circulated by Kepler to describe what practicing astronomy would be like from the perspective of another planet, to show the feasibility of a non-geocentric system i.e. a system in which the Earth circled around the Sun.

Told from the perspective of the author relating a dream Somnium concerns the adventures of Duracotus, a native of Iceland whose father has died and whose mother sells bags of herbs to sailors to support the family. The bags also contained luck charms and healing aids needed by the sailors on their long and dangerous trips across the North Atlantic. Out of curiosity Duracotus opens one of the bags intended for a particular captain, spilling its contents and angering his mother. As punishment she sold Duracotus to the captain instead.
Duracotus took ill on his first voyage so the captain put him ashore in Denmark in the care of Tycho Brahe, a real 16th century astronomer, who took the boy in as a student. After some years he took leave of Brahe and set off for home. His mother was overjoyed at seeing her son and hearing of his education told him that she too knew of the stars through her connection with the Daemon of Lavania, the spirit of the moon. She then offered to take Duracotus to the Deamon for a tour of the moon.

The force of the take-off for the moon hits the two as a severe shock, “for he is hurled just as though he had been shot aloft by gunpowder to sail over mountains and seas.” In order to counteract what Isaac Newton would later define as the force of gravity, the moon voyagers are put to sleep with the aid of opiates and their limbs are arranged in such a way that their bodies will not be torn apart by the force of acceleration. We are told that the flight of four hours is “most difficult and fraught with the greatest danger to life.” Within a short time the speed of flight becomes so great that the body involuntarily rolls itself up into a ball like an endangered spider, “we are carried along almost entirely by our will alone, so that finally the bodily mass proceeds toward its destination of its own accord:” With this Kepler had introduced the concept of “inertia” to the physical sciences and had extended its operation into the heavens. Kepler went on to expound upon extraterrestrial biology describing entirely new and different species that inhabited the moon and the dangers of unprotected exposure to the sun on the lunar landscape.

Kepler anticipates another major obstacle to the moon voyager when he observes that we agreed not to begin “until the moon begins to be eclipsed on its eastern side. Should it regain its full light while we are still in transit, our departure becomes futile.” Implying that Kepler knew that once outside the protective blanket provided by the earth’s atmosphere, humans could not survive the resulting solar bombardment.

Kepler goes on from there to further illuminate the physics of the voyage and life on the moon. As a scientific treatise his work on Somnium is startlingly accurate as he builds on Copernican astronomy to create his fiction.

As a work of fiction Somnium is in many ways standard 16th century fare but it is Kepler’s unique use of physics and astronomy that makes this piece stand out both as science and science fiction.

Ironically Kepler’s mother was imprisoned in 1620 on a charge of witchcraft. Kepler fought strenuously against the charges at the risk of losing his good standing and reputation in the community. The charges were eventually dropped.


Podcast:




A short time ago I discovered Dan Carlin's Hardcore History. In Hardcore History the very unconventional Dan Carlin takes what appears to be his signature outside-the-box way of thinking and applies it to the past. Was Alexander the Great as bad a person as Adolf Hitler? What would Apaches with modern weapons be like? Will our modern civilization ever fall like civilizations from past eras?

This is a difficult-to-classify show that has a rather sharp edge. Carlin will be the first to tell you that he is not a "student" of history, just a fan. But his innovative style and approach is more than mildly addicting. He is more telling the exciting story of history then reciting the facts. His presentation is energetic and excited and you can very much hear in his voice how absolutely fascinated he is by his subject, be it the near prehistoric Steppe peoples of Asia or the all but gone from history Assyrians all the way up to the fierce Apaches who terrorized the southwestern United States until the early 1900's to the bizarre fascination with the Nazi party.

This is a truly engrossing and entertaining podcast that will leave you wanting more after each episode. Dan covers his subjects in depth, going down as deeply as he can into the information and working his way out. Each episode presents itself like a mini movie, Dan's unbridled zest for the subject and the use of subtle sound effects in the background creating a rich tapestry of images of far off places and long dead peoples, mad men and dictators and entire cultures who literally bathed in the blood of their victims; empires that were won and lost on the backs of individuals and ancient, alien societies that looked vaguely like our own. I find myself at the end of each episode wanting to go out and learn as much as I can about each enthralling subject. Were I a teacher this would be a must listen for my history class as nothing has lit a fire in me to learn more than Dan Carlin's Hardcore History. Try it HERE I guarentee you wont be dissatisfied!

And thus ends another installment of Scifi:365. Hope you enjoyed it!

I do so relish these times of peril! (You will get MAD bonus points with me if you get that reference!)

Edward.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Captain Video and his Video Rangers


So here it is: Episode 1 as it were...

First, lets start with a random geek moment.

I drive for a living. For hours at a time. And one of the things I like to do when I drive, other than listening to podcasts, is eat. I like to eat, like food, and as a result I eat a lot. One of the things I like to eat is carrots. I know I know, not exactly an exciting food but I like the way they snap. Anyway, after some hours of driving I get a little loopy and my mind starts to wander especially when things slow down, like when I am sitting at a stop light. One of my favorite things to do at a stop light is to take a half eaten carrot, close one eye and hold it up against a car somewhere in the distance and pretend that it is the planet killer from the "Doomsday Machine" episode of Star Trek TOS, complete with dramatic music and slow motion consumption of the automobile in question. Oh yes I do.

Oh, The photo you see of Captain Video being filmed above is courtesy of The Chuck Pharis Web Page, a historical television and radio website. The original can be found here. Thanks Chuck!

Monday, Day 1: TV
Captain Video and his Video Rangers

Premiered June 27, 1949; Bowed April 1, 1955 Created by James Caddigan. Produced by the Dumont Television Network. Broadcast on the Dumont Television Network.

Capitalizing on the public’s fascination with space and the new television medium Captain Video was the first, and for some years the longest running, science fiction series to air on network television. Broadcast live on the Dumont Television Network five to six days a week and using what was at the time the cutting edge special effects of superimposition and dissolves the show was extremely popular with both children and adults. Lasting some 1500 episodes Captain Video would inspire a spate of similar offerings in the coming months and years including TV versions of Tom Corbett, Buck Rogers and Flash Gordon. Because of the large adult audience, the broadcast time was 7 to 7:30 p.m. EST, leading off the “prime evening” time-block. The production was always challenged by a very low budget at roughly $25 a show, to the point that the Captain did not initially have a space ship of his own.

Played first by actor Richard Coogan and then by Al Hodge (best known as radio’s Green Hornet) Captain Video was a technological genius who would invent a variety of special gadgets to help him in his exploits including the Opticon Scillometer, a long-range, X-ray machine used to see through walls; the Discatron, a portable television screen which served as an intercom; and the Radio Scillograph, a palm-sized, two-way radio. Captain Video’s weapons were never lethal, intended instead to capture his opponents, a Cosmic Ray Vibrator for example, a static beam of electricity able to paralyze its target or the Electronic Strait Jacket, which placed captives in invisible restraints. The Video Ranger communications officer was played by young Don Hastings, who would later go on to be a soap opera star. The adventures followed a common theme of moralistic story telling but with a twist; while messages on other children’s programs would focus on children’s issues such as safely crossing the street, Ranger Messages dealt with more global issues such as freedom, the Golden Rule, and nondiscrimination.

Captain Video’s live adventures lasted about 20 minutes of each 30-minute program. To allow for set changes the Video Ranger would show about 7 minutes of old films, usually a cowboy flick, described by the communications officer, as “the adventures of Captain Video’s undercover agents on Earth.” During the 1953-1954 broadcast season, there was also a spinoff series, The Secret Files of Captain Video which aired September 5 1953 to May 29 1954. It alternated every other Saturday with Tom Corbett, Space Cadet.

Captain Video pulled in some real heavy hitters in scifi literature at time. Writers for the series included many of the big names in science fiction, James Blish, Arthur C. Clarke, Damon Knight, Cyril M. Kornbluth, J.T. McIntosh, Robert Sheckley, Jack Vance and Issac Asimov among others.

Adding to its firsts this series inspired the first TV to game license with The Captain Video Space Game, and the first TV-to-Hollywood spin-off in the form of a 15-chapter serial from Columbia Pictures called Captain Video, Master of the Stratosphere (1951) which ran with a different cast. Also, Fawcett Comics published six issues of a Captain Video comic book in 1951.

Look for a young Ernest Borgnine as Norgola, one of the Captain’s many villains.

Captain Video was ranked #25 in TV Guide’s August 1, 2004 list of the “25 Greatest Sci-Fi Legends.”

Podcast:

Scott Sigler; horror and science fiction author extraordinaire.

New York Times best-selling author, ground breaking podcaster and all around stand up guy Scott Sigler is the mastermind behind INFECTED (in pre-production as a major motion picture by Rogue Pictures) and CONTAGIOUS, hardcover thrillers from Crown Publishing and currently THE ROOKIE. Scott is as of this writing on his THE ROOKIE Tailgate Tour.

Before being published, Scott built a large and ravenous online following by giving away his self-recorded audiobooks as free, serialized podcasts. His fans have named themselves “Junkies,” and have downloaded over seven million individual episodes of his stories, interacting daily with both Scott and each other in the social media spaces of Twitter, Facebook, and Scott's own website to name a few.

Scott helped start a revolution in the book publishing industry when he released EARTHCORE as the world's first "podcast-only" novel. Released over the internet in twenty weekly episodes, or "podcasts", EARTHCORE was a nod to the days of serialized radio fiction, a throwback to the edge of your seat cliffhangers of the radio era with a decidely modern horror twist. Siglers innovative use of technology has easily put him at the forefront of modern-day publishing and has garnered brand-name exposure among hundreds of thousands of fiction fans and technology buffs even garnering him the attention of such esteemed tech news sites as TechNation.

Scott has been covered in Time Magazine, the Washington Post, the New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, Entertainment Weekly, Publisher's Weekly, The Huffington Post, Business Week and Fangoria. He also blogs regularly for AMC TV.

Scott was kind enough to include my little burg on his THE ROOKIE Tailgate Tour and he was an absolute gentleman. He managed to be gracious, genuine and professional all at once. If you get the opportunity to meet the man or enjoy his work dont pass it up! Scott still records his own audiobooks and gives away every story – for free – to his Junkies at www.ScottSigler.com.

And thats that. Like it? Dont like it? Comments? Suggestions? Ideas? Let me know and stay tuned for the next installment coming next week!
scifi365@gmail.com
writefast on Twitter

Peace and Live long and prosper my friends!

Edward. Out.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

So I have this idea...

So, Ok. I'm a geek. Lets get that out of the way right off the bat. I love scifi and fantasy. And comic books. Cartoons too. And games. And I don't really have any more but I still like toys, the more ornate and detailed the better. I love Dragoncon (went for the first time in 08, was awesome!) and ren faires (though I've never been to one). I don't hide the fact but there's no doubt that it makes my social life complicated. I don't really know anyone who really gets me or is into the genre stuff like I am. Not personally anyway. I try to talk to people about the things I am interested in and they literally look at me like I am speaking some other language. Its as if I have just abruptly started spouting russian and wildly flapping my arms. They just don't get it.

Always loved this stuff and probably always will and I am always looking for ways to get more into the genre; to get more from it. Twitter is a great opportunity for me, forums too, websites and podcasts, and of course the old standbys TV, movies and books.

So I was reading some random knowledge and trivia book some time ago and it occurred to me that I would be getting so much more enjoyment out of this book (which was very interesting in its own right) if it had at least some genre reference in it. So I started looking around for something like this and quickly learned that there was just nothing to fit exactly what I wanted: something that covered all of scifi. Something that would give me a taste of all the different aspects of one of my favorite genres, note just a biography, not just a history, not just a question and answer trivia book, but all of this rolled into one.

Couldn't find it. Not anywhere. Not TV, not book or podcast or website. Nothing. And I looked.

So, I thought "You know what? I'm going to do this! I'm going to write the dang thing myself!" So this is it. Or part of it anyway. Pieces really.

I am writing a book and right now its called "SciFi:365" and its what I thought was missing in our genre; a comprehensive, broad ranging, general knowledge, compendium of science fiction facts and figures. Slices of scifi meant to be consumed once daily (or as you desire) to tease your imagination and broaden your scifi mind. Here is the "official" blurb/add copy:



About Scifi:365

Millions of Americans keep bedside and bathroom books of trivia and general knowledge; collections of daily slices of information meant to stimulate the mind and ignite the imagination. Scifi:365 (CreateSpace / December 2009 / $14.97
) is a genre version of this idea: 365 days of scifi facts and figures that will inspire and invigorate both the diehard fanatic as well as the casual fan. Each slice of scifi is drawn from one of seven aspects of our favorite genre: TV, Authors, Movies, Directors and Producers, Composers, Actors and Scifi to SciFact.

Astound your friends with your knowledge of the very first scifi book (hint: it may not have been Frankenstein!) pepper your Dragon Con after-party conversation with a wealth of Scifi to SciFact trivia and errata, weigh in on the biggest debates in the genre (JJ Abrams or Joss Whedon??) These slices of genre range from important moments in scifi history to actors who have made their name playing Klingons; from pivotal movie moments to tricorders in daily use. Scifi:365's goal is to refresh your knowledge of your favorite genre, to bring to light tid-bits of knowledge you may have forgotten and expand your your intellectual prowess when it comes to the feild of science fiction. Scifi:365 can also offer you an escape from the daily grind to contemplate more important things, (Mal or Picard?) or can be a great way to awaken in the morning or even to relax oneself before retiring in the evening. Let Scifi:365 be your guide to everything you need to know about your favorite genre!
Inside you will find seven unique categories each one assigned to a day and each covering a unique subject in that category each day of the year; 365 in all! The categories will breakdown as follows:

MONDAY-TV: A look at what for many of us was our first taste of scifi. Firsts, staples and everything in between.
T
UESDAY-AUTHORS: A look at some of the greats in the genre and some of their most important works.
WEDNESDAY-MOVIES: An insightful look into the cinematic arts and at some of the most influential works of our time.
THURSDAY-DIRECTORS and PRODUCERS: Mavericks in the industry, rebels whose vision would not be denied.
FRIDAY-ACTORS: The hard working genre actors who are the backbone of the movies and series we love. Often credtied only as "Red Shirt #2" or "Space Marine" these are the men and women that make the genre great.
SATURDAY-COMPOSERS: Some of the greatest musical minds of our time have worked in and provided the soundtrack for our favorite genre. We'll name a few.
SUNDAY-SCIFI to SCIFACT: A look at devices and concepts that first appeared as fancy in stories about spacemen and are now (or soon to be) part of out daily lives.


So thats it. Thats my idea. What do you think? You like it? I hope so!

With this blog I am hoping to do a couple of different things;

1) I want to create a site that will give the kind of information that I might be interested in, in the way I would like to receive it. I have so little time that the little bit of genre I do get to enjoy I have to squeeze and stuff into the cracks. As a result I wanted to create a sort of scifi concentrate: as much interesting info as I can squeeze in to as small an amount of time and space as feasible.

2) I am hoping to create a community of friends. People who may be like me, sort of stranded in a sea of "normal" people. People I can talk to and get to know, people I can laugh with and enjoy our favorite genre with. Might be nice to associate with some people that sort of "get" me, so to speak.

Beyond the scifi stuff (and, for the time being I am only going to focus on my scifi interests. Only so many hours in the day!) I am going to throw in some other things, links to podcasts and websites and errata of general interest to me that hopefully you can get something from as well. Peppering the blog with little items to add a little more depth to your experience.
Until the book is done (which may be a bit later than my promised Christmas release!) I am going to release these pages and entries, ideally on a weekly basis, so that you can enjoy it. You can decide for yourself if its something you may like to own. And if not, thats OK! The content is free either way! Enjoy!

If you have ANY questions or comments, improvements or suggestions you can email me scifi365@gmail.com or you can follow writefast on Twitter, thats me!

Well, thats about all I have to say about that. Hope you enjoy the site!

Ensign?
Course laid in Captain.
Very good. ENGAGE!

Edward. Out.