Monthly Archives: August 2007

Happy Birthday, Anne

As you may have surmised from the title of this entry, today is The Girlfriend’s birthday. Neither of us are all that keen on birthdays anymore, on account of having had a few too many of them for comfort, but, darling, I hope this will be a good one for you anyhow. I also hope you won’t think your presents suck. You’ll be receiving them in a few hours.
In the meantime, allow me to embarrass you with this classic image from your past:

Anne napping with a stuffed penguin.

When I think of you, baby, this is the image that often come to mind: you engaged in one of your favorite pastimes — napping — with a stuffed penguin…

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Interview with Danica

Okay, last week I was obsessing over Flash Gordon, and now this week I keep going on about The Wonder Years. So I’m a fanboy, sue me. Well, no, on second thought, don’t do that. I’ll be nice…

If you’re interested, Wired has just posted an interview with Danica McKellar about her new book and “why being a math whiz and a girly girl are not mutually exclusive.” It’s a pretty interesting read, and it even includes a link to McKellar’s published proof, Percolation and Gibbs states multiplicity for ferromagnetic Ashkin–Teller models on Z2.

No, I don’t know what that means. And neither do you, so stop trying to show off…

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TV Title Sequences: The Wonder Years

I mentioned The Wonder Years yesterday, so it seems appropriate to make that show’s opening our TV Title Sequence for this week. My research — okay, the two minutes I spent perusing YouTube — indicates that the 30-second version of the opening I’ve been seeing on those nightly re-runs on the Ion channel is actually cut down from the original sequence, which I had forgotten ran much longer when the show first aired. Here’s the full-length, one-minute version as it appeared in the show’s first four seasons, circa 1988-1991:

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It’s Our Life, Man

Wil Wheaton on reports that Hollywood execs were using last week’s Comic-Con as a focus group:

For those [Hollywood] executives [who almost always seem to screw up movie adaptations of the things fanboys love], I present a very brief, very simple primer in understanding geeks: We want this stuff to be done right because we’ve lived it for our entire lives and know it better than any of you ever will. We’ve played with the action figures and written the fan fiction and crammed fifteen of our friends into the hotel room so we could afford to go to the conventions where we buy T-shirts that say HAN SHOT FIRST because, goddammit, this stuff is our lives. Before we could talk to girls, there was Princess Leia. Before we had cars, there was the Batmobile. Before we could find escape from the horrors of modren life in a bottle, we escaped into the pages of comic books and science fiction magazines.

 

These stories that you buy and put on the big screen may just be numbers on a yearly accounting to you, but they are more than that to us. To us, they are something that brings us together and makes us part of an exclusive (and frequently stinky, unfortunately) club.

I concur. The whole essay is a passionate battle-cry that’s worth reading if you’ve ever salivated at the thought of your favorite superhero coming to live-action life, only to be crushed when the movie turns out to be colossal dud like, well, 98% of the superhero movies that come out. Be warned, though — Wil can get pretty potty-mouthed when he’s worked up about something, and he’s very worked up about the upcoming movie adaptation of Watchmen

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