Television

June 13, 2008

Oh No! It's Friday the 13th!

I know it makes me weird, but I've always treated Friday the 13th like a semi-holiday.  A mini-Halloween of sorts.  I'm corny that way, what can I say.  I'll probably celebrate by watching the new Shyamalan movie tonight if it's not crazy crowded at the mall.  Anyone out there remember the TV show Friday the 13th?  Man, I loooooved that show as a kid.  Of course, I also loved Freddy's Nightmares, Tales from the Darkside, and Monsters.  Probably explains a lot about me.

Anyway, any of you out there with fun Friday the 13th plans?

April 28, 2008

Library Police

AAAAAAH HA HA HA HA HA!

Guess what?  There really is such a thing as the Library Police!  Apparently, the Library_police_badgeLibrary of Congress has their own.  Check it out, these guys can actually say stuff like "Library Police!  Put down the Hemingway and come out with your hands up!"  Oh god, that's priceless.  I so work at the wrong library.  How cool would it be to make friends with the Library Police?  Man, I could actually scare the crap out of some little kid, and have the fire power to back it up.  Could you make a TV show out of it, I wonder?  Kinda like NCIS, but with books?  What would it be called?  LPIS?  CSI: Library?  "Yes, Agent Grissom, it would appear the victim suffered blunt force trauma to the skull when all five volumes of the Library of Congress Subject Headings were dropped onto his head.  To add insult to injury, he was buried under the pages of the AACR2.  How very gruesome." 

Okay, it's official.  I've been watching too much crime TV.  It'll only get worse now that we switched to Showtime yesterday, and I got my first taste of Dexter.  I can finally see for myself what all the hype is about, since we have Showtime on Demand and I can catch up on the first two seasons.  Oh, what a dark, twisted little show that promises to be.

Damn it!  When did I start watching so much TV?  Curse you DVR and your convenient partner in crime, On Demand!  Curse you and your convenience, you evil seducers, you!  Curse you for being so bloody entertaining!  Curses!  Curses, I say!  *Shakes fist melodramatically.*  I so need to get out more. 

Right after I catch up with Dexter.

February 21, 2008

Sorkin, Whedon, TV & Comics

I hope I can get back into writing this weekend, now that I'm getting some of my focus back.  I've been stressing out about some things at work lately, and it seems I'm starting to get a handle on most of it, thank goodness.  Plus, I'm feeling all "girl power" today after watching a fantastic episode of The West Wing  Cj_2Wing ("The Women of Qumar") while working out on the treadmill this morning. I really think the show was at its best during its second and third seasons.  The writing was nothing short of stellar, and I totally want to be CJ Cregg when I grow up, with a healthy dollop of Amy Gardner thrown in.  Maybe I can channel some of that into my ongoing "Mission:  Simplify" when I get home tonight, and clean out some more of those old boxes cluttering up my closets and attic space.  (Ha!  How funny.  "I'm feeling all empowered with female energy--I must use it to clean!"  Doh!)  I really feel like reducing and tidying up will help my zen. 

I also need to get back to writing my comic.  Poor neglected little comic.  It's been waiting so patiently while I try to figure out how to get my act together.  If I could channel even a smidgen of Aaron Sorkin's genius into my own written word, I'd be in good shape.  I know it sounds weird, but I consider watching The West Wing and just about anything Joss Whedon writes for television as kind of homework when it comes to improving my own comic writing.  To write well for TV or for comics, it takes more than just a few clever phrases strung together.  You need to write visually, or it doesn't work.  Sorkin and Whedon do such a great job translating what is written to what should be shown on screen that I can't help but hit the rewind button sometimes and go over what I just saw.  The speech President Bartlet gives in "Two Cathedrals" (probably my favorite episode to date) makes me want to clap and cry at the same time, but all of the subtleties that are shown at the end of the episode without Bartlet even having to open his mouth (e.g. the hands in his pockets, the lighting from outside the window--not natural lighting, but lightning, the look on CJ's face when Bartlet points to the center of theBetter_days room instead of the guy he was supposed to call on, the little smile Leo gives as he says "watch this", etc. etc. etc.), that's just art.  In a completely unrelated genre, Whedon can do the same thing in just about any episode of Firefly.  Some of his frames even look like they came out of a comic book. (Inara and Shepherd in the pilot episode, for example.) I know it's probably the fangirl in me gushing, but if you ever feel the need to geek out and really pick apart the scripts for either show, I can almost guarantee you'll learn something new.

Anyway, speaking of Firefly and comic books, did you know that there will be another Firefly comic book coming out next month?  It's called Serenity:  Better Days.  I can't say I'm terribly crazy about the cover (Mal looks pretty doofy, to be honest) , but you know if it's written by Joss, I'm going to pick it up!

October 23, 2007

You Know, We Do This in Real Life Too...

So my friend Paris has a blog.  You remember me talking about Paris.  He has this cool indy comic called  After, and runs a comic label called Memetic Press.  Paris and I have known each other since college, and though I love the guy to pieces, we argue a lot.   A lot.  We've been arguing, quite literally, since the first day we met face-to-face, and we haven't stopped since.  Not all-out fights mind you, but the kind of testy bickering only friends who have known each other a long time and who will never change their minds about certain things can have.  He's a smart guy, but we are sort of on opposite ends when it comes to a good many things.  And I'll admit it, sometimes I like to push his buttons when I'm bored.  I'm sure he'll admit to doing the same with me.  If he doesn't admit it, he's a great big liar. Don't believe him.

Paris has gone and written a post in his blog about women in comics.  As usual, I agree with some things, but feel the need to argue over some details.  Now, go read the post.  I'll wait.  Read it?  Good.  Here's what I think.

"This can be seen reflected in the nature of virtually every female comic book character conceived prior to about the late Silver Age, with the notable exception of the good Dr. Marston’s original “girl-on-girl bondage action” treatment of Wonder Woman. Not entirely progressive in everyone’s eyes perhaps, but Princess Diana certainly wasn’t in the kitchen chilling anyones martini in time for them to get off work."Ww_skirt

How about coffee?  Don't forget, the Amazon princess who could kick the asses of probably anyone on the JSA at the time was also their secretary.  There's nothing wrong with being a secretary.  I used to be a secretary.  But she was, perhaps, a smidge overqualified for the job, yes?  Sure it was a sign of the times, but that sign stinks. 

"Secondly, this is a reality that is CHANGING, like every other depiction of females in popular entertainment that I can think of. It just seems to be happening in mainstream comic books at a much slower rate, but so are a lot of progressions quite frankly, and analyzing THAT particular stagnation could fill a fucking book, let alone another blog entry."

This reality is changing.  Well done American Society.  Do you know why it's changing?  Because nitpicky, uppity females are hollering about it on a daily basis.  Yeah, fangirls can be pretty annoying, but sometimes we make good points.  And sometimes extreme hollering is the only hollering anyone will take notice of.

"Ladies, you want treatments of women in comic books that are insightful, respectful, interesting and realistic? Create some. Oh, and buy the ones that already are."

A fantastic idea, and you are not the first to point it out.  More women are, in fact, writing and creating comics.  You know a few of them, myself included.  (*Shameless plug, shameless plug.* )  However, sometimes a woman has already bought a she knows and loves, with a character she can truly identify with, and all of a sudden for no good reason other than the writer was too lazy to come up with a better storyline, that character gets jammed head first into a refrigerator?  That still happens more often than I'd like, and I feel we still need to point it out when it does.  (Some will point it out more loudly than others perhaps, but it still should be pointed out.)

"Quick quiz: Other than Foxy Brown, Sigourney Weaver’s Ripley, and Geena Davis in The Long Kiss Goodnight, name ONE female lead in an action movie prior to about the late 1990s. Seriously, take your time with it. Now, just for shits and giggles, think about the trend Tarantino started with the Kill Bill films."Resident_evil_3

Kill Bill? Kill Bill?!?  You're going to give Tarantino credit for something that is a direct result of the women's movement in the 60's and 70's?  No way buddy.  I'd give credit to the current surge of female action heroes to Second Wave and Third Wave feminists (however you feel about the labels) more than I would Tarantino for goodness sakes.  The commercial success of movies like Alien and Star Wars, not to mention television shows like Wonder Woman, The Bionic Woman, and Charlie's Angels have more to do with why Mila Jovavich is kicking zombie ass on screen than Tarantino.  This "current trend" as you call it started way before Kill Bill.  Don't get me wrong, I like Kill Bill, but pop culture changed because society changed, and society changed because, whether you agree with their politics or not, feminists changed it.  That was a collective voice arguing for a long, long time.  I agree it takes awhile, but come on.  Credit where it's due, yeah?

In any case, I know Paris and I will probably discuss this topic more in depth sometime later on, as is often the case with topics like these.  In the meantime, I'm going to get to work on my own comic, and let him work on his.  And for those of you who haven't read After yet, you should.  For those who have and are patiently waiting for another issue, I'm promised a second issue very soon.  (Right Paris? *Glares*)  In it, you'll get to read a pretty damn cool character by the name of Tempest that definitely meets my "cool female comic character" standard.  That is, if he hasn't beheaded her and dumped her in a major appliance already.

June 2008

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