Author: mdhughes
Wednesday Music Loves '80s Glam
- Duran Duran, by Duran Duran
- Adolescent Sex, by Japan
- Pleasure Victim, by Berlin
- Promise, by Gene Loves Jezebel
- The Hurting, by Tears for Fears
- In the Garden, by Eurythmics
And while you're listening, why not reread Less Than Zero (don't watch the shitty movie, they just took the title and some character names) and American Psycho (do watch the partially-shitty movie, if only for the Huey Lewis scene, which is how I will always remember Jared Leto).
Here in the post-apocalyptic shithole of the 2010s, nothing's lit in neon, I can't get music videos on MTV or cheap, pure cocaine from trustworthy Colombianos, and I blame the Republicans.
Alas Brian Aldiss
It is with sadness that we announce the death of Brian Wilson Aldiss O.B.E. author, artist and poet, at his home in Oxford in the early hours of Saturday 19th August 2017, aged 92.
Some of the most influential books on me were Brian Aldiss':
- Galactic Empires, vol 1
- Galactic Empires, vol 2: The rise and fall of Human civilization in space, as told through an anthology of classic SF with Brian's theory & practice of empire essays.
- Helliconia Trilogy: A lost Human colony coexisting with native horned Phagors through millennia-long seasons, and starfaring Human observers.
- Nonstop, aka Starship: The best of the failed generation colony ship stories.
- Hothouse, aka The Long Afternoon of Earth: The end of Earth, tidally locked to the Sun and overgrown with a billion years of evolution.
A common theme of much of his work is of adaptation, that life evolves and struggles even at the end of the Earth or civilization.
Eclipse
I'm ready to see the Sun go out because we no longer worship and make human sacrifice to Huitzilopochtli, are you?
Back later with my own photos.
Waiting for Rick Godot
Sunday evening. No Rick & Morty yet. So what's on?
- The Bitch in Apartment 23: Krysten Ritter (alias Jessica Jones) is adorable as a mean slutty girl, but the show doesn't work for me. I lack the ability to empathize with perky people, and screaming blondes exist only to be chased by guys/mothers in hockey masks.
- What Happened to Monday: Grim, serious, pretentious stylistic imitation of Children of Men, Demolition Man, and Blade Runner; total nonsense unleavened by humor or science or characters. A "European Federation" facing overpopulation and starvation from climate change puts ID tags in everyone and cryofreezes multiple siblings like Simon Phoenix. People are buying dead rats from street vendors. Reality: The birthrates in Europe are far below replacement rate, and would have zero impact on climate change. China showed that one child policies don't work. Rats don't look like chicken inside, and are an inefficient food source; you cannot feed seven people on one Rattus norvegicus. Also cryofreeze doesn't work except on dead bodies, and you can't possibly get people to put their six-year-old child in a death freezer as shown. Rick & Morty is hard science & social theory compared to this.
- Witnesses: French crime drama? Seems dry and dull, gloomy cinematography (they found a part of France as grim as Seattle or Scandanavia?), but opening with a weird graverobbing crime is interesting. I kind of like the characters, which is better than most shows. Despite my toddler-level French, I distrust the subtitles because they translate "le flic" (rather rude) more politely as "the force" instead of "cops" or "pigs", and a few other tone shifts. Gonna keep watching this.
Saturday Music has No Mercy for the Masses
The Defenders
- Why are they fighting in a sewer with glowing blue walls?
- Fight choreography brought to you by people not even in the same shot.
- Oh good we're starting with racist rich white trash cultural appropriator Danny Rand, this can only go up, right?
- "New York City"? Who says that, unless it's followed by "Git a rope."?
- Alias is still a mopey drunk, so characterization is established.
- Cage is boring, so there's nothing new there.
- Murdock takes all the best cases of chemicals (they're in everything!) either crippling or superpowering people, gets $11 million in settlement = $1.1M + court costs for him, but he still wants to go beat up bad guys instead of blowing coke off a stripper's ass.
- Sigourney Weaver! In a terribly staged scene with awkward dialogue. I wish this shitshow would kill me, but sooner than weeks or months.
- Long dramatic scenes going nowhere. I need to drink more than Alias to blackout thru this.
- Cage: "Hero's your word, not mine." No, in the comics he & the less shitty Danny Rand ran a biz called "Heroes For Hire".
- Oh no it's a natural(?) disaster which occurs about once a month in some places, so New Yorkers panic and light up Murdock's windows with gel lights, not that he can see.
Well, that was Ep 1. I can't even rate this, it's just random scenes leading to nothing. Maybe I'll watch E2 and see if it coalesces. Maybe I'll just self-flagellate some other way.
Thursday Music Thinks It's the Future
- Where Tradition Meets Tomorrow, by Jonathan Coulton
"Cause it's gonna be the future soon
And I won't always be this way
When the things that make me weak and strange
Get engineered away" —Jonathan Coulton, "The Future Soon" - I Shall Exterminate Everything Around Me That Restricts Me from Being the Master, by Electric Six
- At Apogee, by Mr Smolin — really just for "At Apogee" and "The Earth Keeps Turning On".
Wednesday Music has One Too Many Mornings
Tuesday Music Wears Black
- Year of the Ghost, by Bella Morte
- Bloodletting 20th Anniversary Edition, by Concrete Blonde
- Floodland, by Sisters of Mercy
(Apparently I didn't listen to music yesterday. I dunno, I was working and then heard some podcasts.)