- You know you aren't quite well when left to your own devices you sleep for 12 hours straight-ish.
# - @acheverton OH EM GEE. That's shameless. #
- @roseypea Good news indeed! Although I am well out of the area, I will watch intently! #
- Car just went past the house blaring Push It by Salt n Pepa. #
- @Chris_TOMP News AND maths? #
- Rt'd cos I don't agree with it. Article asks what you think. I think it's butthurt bullshit about a guy who's earned right to an opinion. #
- @The_Phil_T During the Olympics? #
- @Godzillastwin Chocolate cake IN bed! #
- @Glinner Yeah, it's super full of people who are better at games than me.
# - @Chris_TOMP phew! #
- @georgelondon Lols! #
- @Godzillastwin You just let me do the thinkin', you sit there lookin' pretty. #
- @The_Phil_T Ah, I see! It was one of the few things I've watched on tv live in ages. #
- @Godzillastwin Aww yeah! #
-
Found Objects

Wednesday 22nd May: “Tantrum recovery effort continues”
THIS IS THE NEWS!
(Fucking ace, as always.)

Game of Cats
Perfect.

History of mankind by Milo Manara

He said Star Trek is too “philosophical”? Screw that noise.
I don’t know when this interview happened but I AM SAD AND ANGRY NOW
The philosophies in Star Trek are kinda part of the actual setting. If you don’t get that, why are you allowed to make Star Trek movies.
Sigh. The whole point of Star Trek is that it’s philosophical. If you don’t want philosophical Science Fiction, there’s plenty of that for you to enjoy, but Star Trek is philosophical. Philosophy is part of Star Trek’s DNA, and if you’re given the captain’s chair, you’d better damn well respect that.
While you characters unbunch your panties, here’s a thing to consider: Abrams as a kid didn’t like Star Trek for being too philosophical. That’s an entirely legitimate reason for never having watched Star Trek as a kid. Abrams as an adult made a massively successful - both commercially and critically - Star Trek movie, which was both a sequel and a prequel and a reboot of a franchise dying on its arse.
I submit that the two are not entirely unrelated.
In fact, I’d go as far as to say that much - if not most - of the success, on every level, of J. J. Abrams’s Star Trek is precisely down to him not being a lifelong fan of the show.
When you cry and complain that Abrams shouldn’t have been allowed to make Star Trek films because he isn’t ‘one of us’; when you mock or criticise someone because their worldview isn’t yours, and you say it shouldn’t be allowed to intersect with yours; when you denigrate, rather than celebrate, diversity; when you desperately try to keep your part of the world clean and safe for yourself and don’t let the outsider and the alien in…
Then maybe the philosophy of Star Trek hasn’t taught you as much as you like to think it has.
I’m a pretty arrogant guy, so it isn’t often that someone says exactly what I was thinking, when I didn’t know it was exactly what I was thinking, and I can’t think of a single way to improve on it or amend it.
Oh, but for more rumination on fandom, you should definitely listen to Unanswered episode 11 - http://unansweredpodcast.wordpress.com/2013/05/01/show-11/
Space Jam: ‘I.S.S. (Is Somebody Singing)’ - Barenaked Ladies and Chris Hadfield, two great tastes that taste great together.