Fracture Linky

Typing carefully on account of the bright green cast on my left forearm. Scaphoid fracture, sport-caused. My first ever cast! But this linky will be brief as a result.

Beautiful Lego creations

Epic takedown of Columbus Day – complete with suggested alternative, Bartolomé Day

Don’t dress as a Pocahottie this Halloween – annotated!

Excellent – L.A. Times says it won’t publish climate denial letters. “Saying “there’s no sign humans have caused climate change” is not stating an opinion, it’s asserting a factual inaccuracy.” The denial industry (like the tobacco equivalent that preceded it) has found an exploit in public discourse, and this kind of initiative is one of the only ways to counter it.

Freaks & Geeks – the online choose-your-story game!

Government shutdown bug report

And finally, Funky Imperial March. This really needs a video – get on it, internet:

Fortnightly Linky

It seems I’ve ended up on an every-two-weeks schedule for the linky. But stubbornly I refuse to stop blogging! I know my enormous* fandom needs me! That’s why they never comment, the emotional stakes are too high!

*I haven’t had any visitor numbers for this blog for several years, so I think it’s reasonable to presume that over that time my audience has grown ten-thousand-fold.

Huge numbers of us are now writing for an audience – thinking in public. And this is changing how we think. Svend sent me this noting it was part of why he writes up reviews of every film he sees at the film fest each year (he sees LOTS of films) – and it’s the same reason I [used to] use this blog to talk about things that bugged me or were on my mind. Writing for an audience here helps me think things through, to assemble a mess of thoughts into a structure and take it a few more steps than I can manage otherwise.

Oh man. A project set up so prisoners in long-term solitary confinement (in the US, of course) get to request a photo be taken just for them, of any subject they want.

Methods for fighting internet trolls (instead of just trying to starve them) (via Hugh Dingwall)

Lucha Libro! Competitive short-story writing, wearing wrestling masks, in Peru. (Harlan Ellison would destroy at this…)

In the buildup to the Breaking Bad finale, Dangerous Minds linked to “the best ever analysis of a scene in a TV show”. I only watched the first two seasons of BB so haven’t watched this, but I figure someone out there will be interested…

I am 90% sure that these dinosaur-human erotica books are a prank, and not a genuine expression of someone’s weird fetishes. They just seem a little too contrived. But still. [EDITED TO ADD: ayup]

Archive of classic comedy monologues, particularly lots of Vaudeville standards.

The great American novel has already been written, and it was the first 27 years of the Fantastic Four comic.

A plausible explanation for the origin of the Tarot? (via Allen Varney)

EW’s lengthy Joss Whedon interview

Bitcoin: super convenient if you’re homeless, apparently.

*sigh* The cast of Twin Peaks at the 1990s Emmys

The gender advertising remixer, Lego edition

Sugar association advertising madness.

And finally, via d3vo… the sea pig

Suffrage Linky

Yesterday marked 120 years of women’s suffrage in NZ – infographic showing some significant changes in that span

Non-white guy in turban dresses as Captain America, wins.

Medieval jokes (you have to provide your own comedic timing)

Complete version of The Wicker Man being released to cinemas! I watched a version with Malc once that had a bunch of lost footage restored but the quality of the restorations was incredibly poor so it was hard to even see what was going on – but this material is apparently pristine. Exciting!

Deceit and success in the contemporary art game (via Allen Varney)

Skeletons with abundant treasure

via John Fouhy – incredible cover of Bohemian Rhapsody on the subject of string theory! It all went way over my head, the closest I came to grokking this stuff is reading a few John Gribbin books in the mid-90s, but this is compulsively watchable.

Yahoo redesigned its logo. Graphic designers everywhere have had plenty to say about the process and the outcome, none of it good. Here’s a good example of the kind of responses Yahoo’s had.

25 animal-shaped buildings from around the world – somehow embarrassed that NZ only has two animal-shaped buildings in this list

How many NZers served on Gallipoli? Te Ara spreads a correction to the historical record.

Peter Sellers doing a range of British accents in one phone call – breathtakingly smooth.

No Names, No Jackets – each post gives you the opening chapter of an unidentified novel; at the end you can click through to the actual book on Amazon if you want to read more. Interesting.

This has been in the linky file since Jan – I have a big backlog – and it seems to me this hasn’t been nearly as viral as I expected. So, in case you missed it: someone made a live-action version of Toy Story (the entire film).

And finally, for mature readers only, Ukrainian breast dance to the Star Wars Imperial March theme. I haven’t watched this, you’re on your own if you click.

Red Barn Linky

(I am getting absolutely hammered by spam comments these days – 200 or so a day and I only have one post open for comments. I try and get all legit comments approved ASAP, but if I’m slow, that’s why.)

Why are barns red? The answer is fascinating. (via Svend)

Via Stephanie, the PBS Idea channel on Youtube. I’ve seen a couple of these before, there’s a good chance you have too, but man – there are waaaaaay more of them than I expected and they all sound super interesting.

Angry, lengthy (I didn’t read it all) account of wikipedia’s decision on whether to name the article Chelsea or Bradley Manning. Lots of wikipedia inside-baseball here.

Art collaborations with a 4-year-old

Teju Cole throws the right glass of icewater about Syria: 9 questions about Britain you were too embarrassed to ask

Freestyle Bane. (I must watch this movie sometime.)

Adding colour to b+w photos – to me, this has interesting emotional effects. (via Fraser)

Zombies vs Parkour (needless to say, these are running zombies)

The Imperial March vs Beethoven

“Wired Love”, an 1880s novel about internet dating (really)

Achewood mashups (don’t bother if you don’t know what “achewood” means) (via Pearce)

Sad Youtube – moments of melancholy sifted out of the huge mess that is Youtube comments

And finally, the Domino’s Pizza app

Dream Linky

The only Martin Luther King link I want to offer is from the Onion.

Star Drunk: a film written by drunk people, then acted by drunk people. It is… very watchable.

Ta-Nehisi Coates writes in compelling fashion of his ongoing mission learning French in Paris. Speaking as someone who is 95% monolingual, this feels very truthful to me. (The whole series of Paris dispatches is worth a read.)

What happened to those new words added to the dictionary in the 90s? Here’s a great antidote to the news coverage about “twerking” and “selfie” going in the dictionary – a smart, funny, generous look at the fate of some 90s additions like “e-tailing” and “netizen”.

An oral history of Attack of the Killer Tomatoes. I remember the stage of childhood when you learned about horror movies only through playground rumour; the Killer Tomatoes sounded exactly as terrifying and serious a proposition as the killer shark in Jaws. We knew there was a joke in the very idea of killer tomatoes – but it sounded like a pretty scary joke.

40 maps that will help you make sense of the world

Marvellous article by Charlie Stross on how Generation Y have been molded by Western capitalist culture in such a way that they will readily betray the secrets of Western capitalist culture. [I skipped the Linky last week (still busy) and since then this essay has been reworked into an article in Foreign Policy.]

Detailed account (from 1898) of Robert Louis Stevenson’s development of a wargaming system and the battles fought thereby.

8 epic photographs of the same house

What 200 calories looks like in different foods (via Damon) (no of course I don’t give a hoot about calorie counting but this still interested me enormously)

Star Wars Propaganda Posters

A 1-minute horror movie – this worked on me, that’s for sure. (via Frank N)

Scooby-Doo reimagined (via Pearce)

And finally, via Nick Tipping, sheep protest:

Wotty Linky

Sick child has borrowed DVD of “The WotWots” from the library. As kids DVDs go, this is very pleasant background as I type up a linky.

Animated GIFs of The Wire – a new one is generated automatically every hour.

You’ve heard about the Google Maps easter egg that lets you step inside the TARDIS? Well Craig Oxbrow let me know about another one – you can get inside a Dalek, too.

Three-point landing.

Advice from the ’30s about undressing and kissing.

Dan Harmon, writer of Monster House, is so identified with his own cult status these days that it’s easy to forget it all came about because he has some serious writing chops. I was fascinated by his two-part discussion of his process of breaking a story – it’s very simple and not something I’ve seen before (although obviously it has been influenced by all kinds of other approaches). Well worth a look for writing types, even if just to reflect on what a process like that means. Part one: explaining the process and part two: examples.

And finally, He Touched Me.

Right, back into it with poor Wee Beastie. Enjoy!

Much Ado Linky

Saw the Whedon Much Ado About Nothing [2013, USA] today – it did what it promised. The plot is ridiculous and the wheezing contrivances weigh it down in its back half, but despite this it absolutely sings when blessed with committed performances thanks to the sheer delightful energy of the Beatrice/Benedick relationship. Whedon finds a darker kernel to the business than Branagh did in his lush ’93 film, and his presentation is nearly claustrophobic compared with Branagh’s expansive staging, but the two films share a gleeful, inclusive energy that makes for good moods all ’round. Like everyone’s been saying, Amy Acker is just phenomenal. Everyone else is at least good (which trumps Branagh’s version!), special mention to Nathan Fillion who deftly finds the laughs in a particularly difficult Shakespearean clown. It’s a good watch, and if there’s any sanity in the world it’ll be back on general release soon.

Anyway, some linky.

Explore Afrika Bambaata’s record collection

Japan’s giant Godzilla crotch entrance (via Pearce)

What would a nuke do to your home town? 70s/80s kids can revisit their childhood nightmares and find out here. (via Nate)

10 years since The O.C. debuted. Interesting interview with the showrunner – I enjoyed watching this for a season or so, mostly because of its good gags and dementedly overcranked pacing. There’s some real insight into what made this show what it was in this chat, well worth a look for TV writing peeps.

How advertisers convinced Americans they smelled bad

How Pacific Rim got kaiju wrong (written by someone who loved Pacific Rim)

Blimey, I knew there were four writers in Stephen King’s family; but turns out there’s actually five. Lovely interview with the whole clan.

xkcd’s updating comic “Time” finally finished. It’s kind of an amazing project. Get the scoop here. (via fraser)

Sweden runs out of garbage (via Sarah E)

Cookie Monster recreates a famous poem on Twitter. Yeah, you’ve guessed the poem correctly.

Jedi Parkour

Those who were around for the discussion about Richmastery on this blog will perhaps appreciate this, but probably not as much as I did. (News report spotted by David R, former Pope of this parish.)

Also via David R: the sublime cluelessness of throwing lavish Gatsby parties. (Reminds me a little of all the veneration of the space marines in my favourite film, Aliens.)

Scans of a 1956 Martin Luther King comic book that was widely distributed through the south in protest at segregation.

1880s fashion catalogue (via Giffy)

And finally, Benedict Cumberbatch hates liquid

Star Wars Linky

So over on the Ruminator I made a post about Star Wars, specifically about why there’s a Star Wars-related link here every week. I think it’s sorta interesting, plus it has something like a billion Star Wars links in it. So, you know, go take a look, and tweet it or whatever. Tweets feel great.

Since then I’ve discovered this week’s Star Wars linky: Lando sings karaoke in the Cantina bar.

A short film that offers an ominous take on the idea of what a superpowered being would mean in the world. I haven’t had a chance to watch it yet but it seems like it’d be hot stuff.

Twin Peaks pie & coffee: supercut & infographic

Huge US govt dept displays an admirable thoroughness in computer security: smash everything with a brick.

Genuinely disturbing account of increasing deployment of armed response units in U.S. policing. Founded on the same mix of paranoia and unchecked power that causes most of that nation’s problems as it shuffles backwards into some kind of weird capitalist authoritarianism. (Not that any other nation is free of this kind of overreach.)

Biggie vs. Thomas (the Tank Engine) (via Richard Burge)

The Rockwell Integrated Space Plan. (Space as in rocketships, not space as in architectural design.)

The Anagramaton: a Twitter bot that finds tweets that are anagrams of each other. Amazing. (via DavidR who got it via Mike Upton; no, I’ve been corrected, via Mike who got it from David)

99 Problems (via Mike Sands)

Fascinating wee article about crypto-currencies like Bitcoin and how they work. Well worth a look, especially if (like me) you occasionally suspect you should know more about Bitcoin.

Kindle Worlds: release your fanfiction through this official route, earn real money, get incredibly rich. Okay maybe not that last one. An odd selection of worlds there at launch…

Huge book domino chain at the Seattle public library (which is a really cool space, I hung out there quite a bit when in Seattle)

How Rambo was perceived in Tonga and Bougainville. Wow.

Huh, it’s already the second half of 2013, I should really get around to linking to Teju Cole’s “12 essays I wrote in 2012“. And also to reading those essays.

And finally… have I ever linked to this before? been int he linky folder for *years*. It’s Bad Romance.

American Flag Linky

It’s the 4th of July in the USA! To honour the occasion, make an effort to seek out and enjoy an American cultural product or consumer item.

150th anniversary of Gettysburg. Check out these photos of veterans gathering at the 50th anniversary. (via AndyMac)

So, so perfect: all the American flags on the moon are now white.

Twelve Tones. A half hour video about music, patterns, shapes, and stuff. I haven’t watched it yet but Hugh Dingwall says it’s amazing and I clicked around in it a bit to figure out what it was and every bit that I watched was really interesting and made me want to see more. So. Try it.

How I taught myself to code in eight weeks (via mundens)

Why this vintage Masters of the Universe figure still smells bad three decades on (via DavidR)

Jason Everman, the guy who was thrown out of Nirvana just before they were hugely famous and then Soundgarden just before *they* were hugely famous, has an interesting story to tell about those events and what came next for him.

Artist refashions Barbie to real teen-girl proportions. It looks really weird, and also awesome. (Yes I’m linking to an article on Stuff.co.nz, which amazingly enough covered this ahead of all my other much trendier sources. First in NZ for your Barbie-related news needs!)

Like many, I snorted at and shared the image of a CNN panel discussion with the on-screen graphic, “N-Word vs. cracker: which is worse?” When you can’t even say one of the words, you have your answer. But now this clip from that discussion is also being shared, and it’s well worth watching. Levar Burton (best known internationally for Star Trek TNG) discusses how he was raised, and raises his kids, to follow a set routine when stopped by police to avoid being brutalised.

Revising your writing again? Blame the modernists.

Jamie Oliver read his first book recently. I posed a question on Facebook: if one of your friends wanted to read a book for the first time, what book (on your shelf) would you offer? Loads and loads of people made cool suggestions.

Jack Kirby comic artstravaganze: loads of his amazing double-page spreads. It’s kind of obvious why he was the King, looking at all these jammed together like this. (via Dylan)

The impossible “literacy” test once required of black voters in Louisiana. (via Nick Tipping)

Ultimate Tic-Tac-Toe. Ingenious!

Pac-Man as survival horror game (via Sonal)

My Imaginary Well-Dressed Toddler Daughter

Laurie Penny: I was a manic pixie dream girl
Asher Wolf: I was never a manic pixie dream girl
Read ’em both. (Second one via Gem Wilder.)

C-3PO rapping. How did I never know about this?

And finally, the Unipiper has upped his game… OF THRONES. This makes no sense.

Storm Linky

No Linky last week on account of storm! We had no power for 12 hours and no internet for 48 hours. Apart from our woodshed and a few other minor things, our house made it through just fine, which was a relief! Anyway, my linky backlog just got bigger.

James Gandolfini reads ‘In the Night Kitchen’

Does the Dog die? A website for very specific spoilers: find out if the cute animal in that movie you want to watch will make it through the film alive. (via Conan)

Classical sculptures in contemporary clothes – you probably saw this already but just in case.

Did you know that action figure collectors make review videos? Here’s one for the Agent Coulson action figure (from the Avengers film). It’s… special. (via Dave Chapman)

Why I am no longer a skeptic (via the other moose)

Watch Disney Princesses heads explode

Here is what happens when you cast Lindsay Lohan in your movie. (via Blair R. The more I find out about Hollywood-right-now, the more this resonates.)

For some reason a revelation in a 2005 film magazine article started making the rounds online this month. I’m pleased it did, because it was news to me. It involves Dame Judi Dench, crafts, and extremely bad language.

Fathers of girls are more leftwing than fathers of boys. (Note, the article presents the causality as straightforwardly cultural, but includes at the end a more complex suggestion about relative testosterone levels; there’s room for both levels of causation to be active at the same time.)

Re: Nigella – here’s an intriguing, sad little analysis of why no-one directly intervened – and why that might have been for the best. (I’d sign my name under the first bit, but I wouldn’t go so far for the second bit, but definitely worth thinking about.) (via Brian Nisbet)

Security cameras celebrate George Orwell’s birthday

Google Poetics: found poems from google search predictions. (via Michael Upton)

And Michael also sent me something with the note: “Social change activism, SF (including Star Wars reference), writers seeking funding, perks involving speculative hip-hop (!?) – I think this link goes here?”

Dan le Sac writes perceptively on crowdfunding – what we lose, as well as what we gain

Outstanding micro-doco about two very young boys who made their own metal band. Inspiring and fun.

GZA. School science classroom.

Phil Sandifer, who has been writing an incredible, delightful redemptive analysis of Doctor Who’s entire history for several years now, has started publishing his next project: an account of the magical war between Alan Moore and Grant Morrison. It starts here.

At least once a year, NZ media headlines some international creative (advertiser, toy manufacturer, fashion designer etc) who has made use of Maori imagery and symbolism, to the consternation of Maori. This happens for American First Nations too of course, as recounted in the excellent blog Native Appropriations. And sometimes… rarely… it all works out really well and everyone is happy.

Tetris Hell (via Scott A)

Dog grooming competition

The Before Watchmen project gets eviscerated in this spectacular takedown at the Hooded Utilitarian. Works for me.

And finally… Justin Giger