Tuesday, November 04, 2008

I Voted, This Is My Voted Face, Random Pictures and History

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I voted, this is my voted face

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McCain/Palin: Funny hats + burgers

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Careful last-minute deliberations

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At play in the fields of McCord

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Moneychangers in the temple

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Dowlin the the Plumber & Heater

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For a signier future, vote Pro Signs

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Metaphor-in-chief

Something so strange and surreal at seeing Obama's name on the ballot, after all that waiting, after all these months of watching cable news, playing with the big map on cnn.com — this is real, this has an impact on my life, I am a part of this even if I don't want to be. It didn't hit me until I saw him on the ballot. The remoteness of it all parted just for a second, and things were important. I added my number to the little number on the tally machine, now it's all free to be remote again, and I can go back to work with my coffee and hope hope hope.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Covers Mash-Up vol2





This one's harder to mesh since John's keyboard is out of tune, but still better than the silly version the other beatles released.

Regina Spektor has one of the nicest vibratos. And I'm not usually a fan of vibratto, it usually sounds so showing-off. Her's is delicate, soft, it wraps around you. Like Beth Gibbons'.

On the other end of the spectrum there's Diamanda Galas. Wooo.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Positive Female Role-Models in Science Fiction, part1

Because a recent discussion on this execrable list of "hot sci fi women" got me thinking about the few interesting female characters in a genre generally played to slobbering manchilds. Which brings me to my personal favorite female character in sci-fi:

Alia Atreides, St. Alia-of-the-Knife, "The Accursed One," "The female death spirit that walks without feet"





She can read your mind, she can kill you with her finger, she talked down the Emperor of the Galaxy, she murdered her own grandfather, she has excellent taste in hats. How's that for a role model kids of today can look up to? Every young girl should strive to be this bad ass by age 4. If they aren't by then, they probably never will.

Here she is going around the battlefield and finishing the dying or wounded, like any good fremen child:



Of course she grows up to be a royal bitch, and looks like a low-rent Elvish-American-princess in the tv-movie:



But we can forgive her for that, and try to remember how she was at her best: all potential. Older Alia isn't terribly interesting, mostly because between a certain age-range most female characters in sci fi fall into a small set of sexualized stereotypes. Hers being the overbearing and unstable unmarried figure just waiting for a strong man to come around and beat some sense into her. You have more luck at not being a flimsy male fantasy if you're under 16 or over 40.