I promised Lindsey I would write this entry.
I recently decided to re-write a series of books I first wrote in junior high and high school (I wrote one book a year). They were really quite terrible in too many ways to mention, but I was also a teenager. I wrote most before I read anything truly good. I decided this mostly because I think I had some really fun ideas in those books, especially pertaining to politics and religion, which are my favorite subjects, and like I "owed it" to the skeleton of this seven-novel series to not just let it crumble in obscurity (born in lust, turn to dust). I think I also decided to do this because these characters were people I knew, long-forgotten friends who saw me through my most hormonal, unstable years. And I missed them. We've been through a lot together. I named the series after Walton Ford's "Sensations of an Infant Heart" (this is the only thing I've ever written to Harper's Magazine about - I emailed the woman in charge of the art department and said, "So I have this picture from your magazine of a chained up monkey strangling a parrot and I have no idea who it's by, please help?" and she wrote back, "Oh, it's Walton Ford. What a picture, amirite?"). I think I knew while writing it that it was juvenile and half-baked and that I wasn't ready for the story I was trying to tell.
I started publishing short stories a couple years after I finished the last book of this series. I don't feel very much for my short story characters. This enables me to do to them what I could never have done to these first proto-characters, my Adam and Eve. It enables me, supposedly, to view them objectively. There are some that have stayed with me more than others, like Lizbet from "Pugelbone" and the unnamed narrator from "Intertropical Convergence Zone," because they were drawn from places close to me emotionally - Lizbet was drawn from my blood, the army guy from, well, my dad and Suharto and other larger-than-life Indonesian men from my childhood. But most of them are pawns. I like to think they're reasonably well-rounded, but it's entirely possible that they read a little cold and distant because of this wall I put up. I put the wall up for reasons that I thought were good: I was way, way too invested in my proto-characters, it got in the way of the story, and in the end their characterization suffered for it. "Are You Hurting The One You Love," indeed. I know that Kill Your Darlings refers to words, but after this series I decided to use it with my characters. These characters' next permutation were still near and dear to me, but much less so. Because I was also becoming a better writer throughout this whole process, I associated the technique with good writing.
And I think this affected the way I read other books and watched movies/television, too. I stopped getting emotionally involved with other people's characters. I had gone through a period where I was very involved in fictional characters - incidentally, at the same time I started writing my overly-emotional series - and I was embarrassed by that side of me. Sure, there were characters I liked, a lot, like Dale Cooper and Audrey Horne from Twin Peaks and Starbuck and the Agathons from Battlestar Galactica. I think I only ever fell in love with Billy Budd, of all characters, after the calamity of The Song of Roland (and yes, they all end up dying, always), and maybe a little bit with Yossarian. It took me a long time to find a female character I genuinely liked, and then I found myself much more sympathetic to a whole host of them: Eleanor Vance from The Haunting of Hill House, the narrator of The Bell-Jar, April from Revolutionary Road, Lily from Run, River. But for the most part I appreciated these books and movies for other reasons - words or stories or ideas. A lot of my favorite stuff, like A Sound and the Fury and The Violent Bear It Away and almost everything I've read by Cormac McCarthy, were populated entirely by noxious, terrible people. I wanted to see their worlds collide, I wanted to watch them climb over each other and go up in flames, but there was no visceral attachment.
Then I decided to rewrite this series. Around then I started watching The Tudors (I know, I know), and I got all invested in the tragic queens. I've gotten invested in television characters before though - I think it's an effect of spiraling melodrama, it catches you up the way sports catch you up - so that in and of itself was not worth much. But I did end up writing a story based on Jane Seymour and Anne Boleyn, because they wouldn't get out of my head. And then when I came back to DC this semester, I started watching that free Netflix series, House of Cards. And I "met" Peter Russo.
Everyone I know who watches that show - and my sample size is all male, for what it's worth - loves the main character, Francis Underwood, because he's "boss" and callous and cool and is in control of everyone. I think Francis is evil and horrible and shitty, but I totally fell in love with Peter's character. I would start episodes being like, "Peter, you'd better not [insert stupid thing here]." And Peter is a terrible judge of character and an addict, so there's a lot of "Oh Peter Russo no" in the show. Peter is weak, while Francis is strong. Peter has big dreams and really deep lows, while Francis is always level-headed, rational, logical, focused on the prize. At the time I wasn't sure why I loved Peter so much. I decided later that he reminded me of who my male proto-character was turning into, and man, I always loved/hated that guy - and it recently occurred to me that my proto-character evolved this way because he's like the id version of myself: the volatile, angry and depressive mess driven by resentment and self-hatred. Starbuck is the female version of this, which is I think why I like her. And my female prototype, the stoic good girl, is my super-ego side that most people see on a daily basis while I work and study and listen to people's problems. This is a surprising realization, to say the least (and not one I was at all expecting), but may go along the way toward explaining why I keep writing this duo over and over, until the end of time.
Organizing and planning the rewrite is like a drug to me now (the outline for the first book - thankfully I scaled it down from seven to three). I do think that the edited/overhauled version has a lot of potential. I think it reflects how much older I am now - the characters and their relationships and the context they operate in are all vastly changed, having been boiled down to their core and seen for what they really are: damaged people, in many ways, the full extent of which I couldn't quite fathom as a high-schooler. I also think it picks at a raw nerve in me, and I've always picked at wounds.
I still can't shake the feeling, though, that real writers don't write this way - not the ones that end up living relatively healthy, balanced lives, anyway. I know that Caddy was Faulkner's heart's darling, but Caddy was barely ever on-page and never heard from directly - which mitigates, I would think, the detrimental effect of an emotional attachment to one's own creation. Because writing is business, right, it's politics and nothing personal?
This one has to be seen to be believed. Oh the uproar this baby caused. I'm not sure which part is the worst, but it's probably one of these lines [my comments in italics]:
The other thing is, I hope this guy never finds out how many male fans of re-imagined BSG exist, because there are a lot. I'd almost say more than women, because the women are all pissed off about how women are represented in it. Except for me, of course.
- Science fiction is a very male form of fiction. Tell me ray guns and rockets aren't phallic. I mean look at them.
- The new [Battlestar Galactica] series instead had lots of relationship drama, men whining, and men generally unable to find their way out of a wet paper bag. So fuck you Adama, you useless sack of shit. Why don't you crawl back into your wet paper bag.
- The Sci-Fi channel even changed its name to “Syfy”. "Y"s are totally girly. I mean look at them.
- Given that this is the BBC, all of this nonsense that alienates men for the benefit of women shouldn’t be surprising. Fuckin' Brits are all emasculated.
- Minsky has said, “General fiction is pretty much about ways that people get into problems and screw their lives up. Science fiction is about everything else.” and “But aside from the science fiction, I find it tedious to read any ordinary writing at all. It all seems so conventional and repetitive.” Gaaaaaawd so boreeddddd need spaceships.
- However, many boys who would have gone on to make scientific discoveries and invent new technologies will not do so since they will never be inspired by science fiction as boys. AND THEN WHERE WILL WE BE?
The other thing is, I hope this guy never finds out how many male fans of re-imagined BSG exist, because there are a lot. I'd almost say more than women, because the women are all pissed off about how women are represented in it. Except for me, of course.
battlestar galactica: the finale
Mar. 21st, 2009 12:49 amNo reason to get excited.
( spoilers )
I'll probably have more thoughts at some other point. The New York Times has some weird commentary on BSG that I don't quite agree with. I'm going to have to think about this one.
( spoilers )
I'll probably have more thoughts at some other point. The New York Times has some weird commentary on BSG that I don't quite agree with. I'm going to have to think about this one.
daybreak pt. 1
Mar. 13th, 2009 11:02 pm
We shall know the... truth?
( spoilers )
Oh my God, the last two hours. What the frak am I going to watch after this is over?
Oh yeah, new eppies of ACI. If you want to watch the investigation of an airplane that shattered into 600 pieces over the strait of Taiwan (and who doesn't?!), you should definitely click the link.
islanded in a stream of stars
Mar. 6th, 2009 11:06 pm
I don't GET IT. We're getting NOWHERE.
( spoilers )
Speaking of dying flying vehicles... Air Crash Investigation started without me! Frak! And they're actually doing an Indonesian crash this season. About time. Indonesian airlines are banned in the EU (you know, along with airlines from North Korea and Liberia...), that's how bad they are. Truly it's amazing that people get in and out of that country.
Yes, I know I missed last week. I didn't have internet. But it was a confusing episode anyway. Unlike this one, which was very simple.

( spoilers )

( spoilers )
Oh yes, I have also converted Lucia to BSG now, after she said it was "the most boring show ever" (that was A Disquiet Follows My Soul). This means I'm Baltar-good at converting people.
get back, temptation
Feb. 2nd, 2009 09:10 amFor anyone who doesn't know what Big Love is, it's a show about a successful Mormon pillar of the community, Bill, his legal first wife Barb, and his illegal second and third wives, Nicki and Margene (and their collective eight children) set in contemporary Utah. As we all know, mainstream Mormons do not condone polygamy, so the Hendricksons live in three houses that open up on the same backyard but no one knows they're "all" married. This is a secret it is very important they keep. It is a secret they share with the much scarier, much larger, and much more illegal compound run by Nicki's father. And as for the plot...
So that's the show. I really like it. I think it's extremely clever and well-written. But you know me and small towns, religion, family relationships, and "politicking". That's just me all over.
Anyway, Stanley Fish is writing about it for some reason, so I read his column (mostly for the updates about season 3, because I don't have access to HBO anymore... cry) and then I read the comments below. Here's a sampling:
Now, Stanley Fish's odd comparison to The Waltons aside - never watched The Waltons and I don't think that Big Love is sentimental at all, though I agree that the characters are likable (likability to me =/= sentimental, something that people all over the column seem to not be getting) - are you joking? Of all the television shows I have watched (and they are many), Big Love is like the last show I would classify as "misogynistic". Yes, it depicts a patriarchal situation. News flash: they're Mormon. They're fundamentalist Mormon. Probably some of the most overtly patriarchal people in the U.S. So of course that's how they live. Brother-husbands? Servile male sex partners? Slipping away for the night? You're talking about a different religion, one that I have never heard of (check out Xena: Warrior Princess? Maybe? No wait, they're Amazons).
So yeah. They're living in a patriarchal society. But they all still behave in very human ways. Barb and Nicki and Margene are all fully developed characters, as is Bill, for that matter (the psychologically unrealistic angle is so self-obsessed I don't want to go into it). The fact I enjoy the show does not mean I want to participate in polygamy. In fact, anybody that thinks this show glorifies polygamy has severe problems with their critical thinking faculties. It actually depicts polygamy as having serious fucking issues, but it doesn't clobber you with a moral hammer, it just shows, okay, here's a family that's polygamous. This is what could happen, given that these people are real human beings and not allegorical symbols of Certain Values. Very God starts the world running and just lets it go style of storytelling, not God is hanging over you with a thunderbolt or God is directing your every move to make an example out of you. It's a very, very difficult style of storytelling, but I admire the hell out of people who can do it.
Actually, Big Love doesn't glorify anything (where Stanley Fish is wrong) - and I wish people would stop trying to find moral compasses in fucking television shows! I'm looking at you, fucking Oscar Committee. So you find polygamy creepy? You don't like that Nicki is being pressured to have more children? News flash: that's allowed. You're allowed to not like what the characters do. That may mean you dislike the characters for a while (hell, I certainly go through those phases with BSG, which is why I have a love/hate relationship with pretty much everybody except Sharon, Helo, Baltar, and Six, who I love unconditionally - whoa, just now realized I have a thing for Cylon woman/human man couples), but so what? Are you watching the show as a replacement for your Sunday sermon? As a replacement for your friends? If it makes you uncomfortable to watch characters do what you don't want them to do, maybe you need to go into a little box by yourself, because you're clearly not ready for mass media. Or the world.
And as for this obsession with "strong female characters"... I just want strong characters. Whether they're male or female doesn't matter (then again, I am very opposed to gender quotas in legislatures; talk about your classic 3rd-world-tries-to-emulate-1st-world-and-lands-on-its-fucking-face). Now I think a tv show with no women at all is unrealistic, but on a slight tangent, the insertion of female characters for the sake of having female characters is beyond dumb. They have no chance of being strong characters - and I don't mean strong in the sense of oo-rah, I have a gun and control over people, which is what most people seem to want in their "strong female characters", I mean strong as in, fully-developed, three-dimensional, realistic, flawed, a character you can tell apart and not by a stereotype, a character who makes decisions, whether or not they're the right ones or for the right reasons. A character that has discernable reasons.
Unless we're just going to say that no television show should depict an extreme patriarchy. Is that what this is about? Because that makes more sense logically, but sucks even harder. Cuz guess what, guys? Patriarchy (and extreme patriarchy) exists. Just like sadness and death and prison and the mafia. And you know, patriarchy exists too... everywhere. Just in milder, more hidden/embedded forms.
Then again remember when people were calling Battlestar Galactica misogynistic because there was rape in it? Yeah. Wow. Even when they get a deluge of strong female characters (both classic mode, a la Starbuck and Roslin, and unconventional, a la Sharon, Six, Dee, and yes, Callie) they're still not satisfied.
Anyway, thank God for this commenter:
So that's the show. I really like it. I think it's extremely clever and well-written. But you know me and small towns, religion, family relationships, and "politicking". That's just me all over.
Anyway, Stanley Fish is writing about it for some reason, so I read his column (mostly for the updates about season 3, because I don't have access to HBO anymore... cry) and then I read the comments below. Here's a sampling:
Oh, Stanley, your patriarchy is showing. “Big Love” is the cliche man-as-the-center-of-the universe social construct. I’m big on family, and most of my writing (plays, other) is about family, and maybe if this tv series were about Big Mama with her stable of servile male sex partners and her progeny with her last name, I might enjoy it. But since woman-in-charge is only man-in-charge in drag, I doubt it. Good night, Stanley, and go read “The Feminine Mystique.”
I find nothing at all to love about “Big Love.” It is weird, unrealistic and decidedly misogynistic. Not until the “sister-wives” stop acting like Stepford wives and get themselves some “brother-husbands” will this show hold any interest for me. totally unrealistic and decidely misogynist.
I also watch Big Love, but I find it disturbing as it tries to make me comfortable with polygamy.
Big Love sends the message that men can treat women like a smorgassbord and expect their undying love and loyalty, and it tells women to expect a fractional return at best on the love they give in marriage.
But there is still something distasteful about the show because of the way it portrays the women who live vicariously. My own view is that polygamy would only be acceptable if I didn’t love my husband, and was actually repelled by him. This show just seems completely psychologically unrealistic.
In my opinion, “Big Love” is the Morman version of “The Color Purple” with patriarchal domination and chiild sexual abuse so rationalized it’s unremarkable. These characters are only likeable because their self-delusion is almost total. The women don’t know what it’s like to have a mental fredom to choose... Yes, there are many different kinds of families and marriages, but let’s hope that this series doesn’t make polygamy more popular, socially acceptable, or legal.
I don’t enjoy watching women compete endlessly, and miserably, for a man’s attention, their ‘turn’ with him the high point of their existence, especially when the man is as bland and paternalistic as Bill. I kept waiting for a scene where one of them packed a suitcase and slipped away in the night–if just for a break and some privacy. The fact is that this show portrays a lifestyle that, at least according to girls who have a been subjected to it and run away, relies on oppression, not love, to exist.
I watched an episode in horror. I wanted to shake all of those women and tell them to snap out of it!
Now, marrying several men…
I find nothing at all to love about “Big Love.” It is weird, unrealistic and decidedly misogynistic. Not until the “sister-wives” stop acting like Stepford wives and get themselves some “brother-husbands” will this show hold any interest for me. totally unrealistic and decidely misogynist.
I also watch Big Love, but I find it disturbing as it tries to make me comfortable with polygamy.
Big Love sends the message that men can treat women like a smorgassbord and expect their undying love and loyalty, and it tells women to expect a fractional return at best on the love they give in marriage.
But there is still something distasteful about the show because of the way it portrays the women who live vicariously. My own view is that polygamy would only be acceptable if I didn’t love my husband, and was actually repelled by him. This show just seems completely psychologically unrealistic.
In my opinion, “Big Love” is the Morman version of “The Color Purple” with patriarchal domination and chiild sexual abuse so rationalized it’s unremarkable. These characters are only likeable because their self-delusion is almost total. The women don’t know what it’s like to have a mental fredom to choose... Yes, there are many different kinds of families and marriages, but let’s hope that this series doesn’t make polygamy more popular, socially acceptable, or legal.
I don’t enjoy watching women compete endlessly, and miserably, for a man’s attention, their ‘turn’ with him the high point of their existence, especially when the man is as bland and paternalistic as Bill. I kept waiting for a scene where one of them packed a suitcase and slipped away in the night–if just for a break and some privacy. The fact is that this show portrays a lifestyle that, at least according to girls who have a been subjected to it and run away, relies on oppression, not love, to exist.
I watched an episode in horror. I wanted to shake all of those women and tell them to snap out of it!
Now, marrying several men…
Now, Stanley Fish's odd comparison to The Waltons aside - never watched The Waltons and I don't think that Big Love is sentimental at all, though I agree that the characters are likable (likability to me =/= sentimental, something that people all over the column seem to not be getting) - are you joking? Of all the television shows I have watched (and they are many), Big Love is like the last show I would classify as "misogynistic". Yes, it depicts a patriarchal situation. News flash: they're Mormon. They're fundamentalist Mormon. Probably some of the most overtly patriarchal people in the U.S. So of course that's how they live. Brother-husbands? Servile male sex partners? Slipping away for the night? You're talking about a different religion, one that I have never heard of (check out Xena: Warrior Princess? Maybe? No wait, they're Amazons).
So yeah. They're living in a patriarchal society. But they all still behave in very human ways. Barb and Nicki and Margene are all fully developed characters, as is Bill, for that matter (the psychologically unrealistic angle is so self-obsessed I don't want to go into it). The fact I enjoy the show does not mean I want to participate in polygamy. In fact, anybody that thinks this show glorifies polygamy has severe problems with their critical thinking faculties. It actually depicts polygamy as having serious fucking issues, but it doesn't clobber you with a moral hammer, it just shows, okay, here's a family that's polygamous. This is what could happen, given that these people are real human beings and not allegorical symbols of Certain Values. Very God starts the world running and just lets it go style of storytelling, not God is hanging over you with a thunderbolt or God is directing your every move to make an example out of you. It's a very, very difficult style of storytelling, but I admire the hell out of people who can do it.
Actually, Big Love doesn't glorify anything (where Stanley Fish is wrong) - and I wish people would stop trying to find moral compasses in fucking television shows! I'm looking at you, fucking Oscar Committee. So you find polygamy creepy? You don't like that Nicki is being pressured to have more children? News flash: that's allowed. You're allowed to not like what the characters do. That may mean you dislike the characters for a while (hell, I certainly go through those phases with BSG, which is why I have a love/hate relationship with pretty much everybody except Sharon, Helo, Baltar, and Six, who I love unconditionally - whoa, just now realized I have a thing for Cylon woman/human man couples), but so what? Are you watching the show as a replacement for your Sunday sermon? As a replacement for your friends? If it makes you uncomfortable to watch characters do what you don't want them to do, maybe you need to go into a little box by yourself, because you're clearly not ready for mass media. Or the world.
And as for this obsession with "strong female characters"... I just want strong characters. Whether they're male or female doesn't matter (then again, I am very opposed to gender quotas in legislatures; talk about your classic 3rd-world-tries-to-emulate-1st-world-and-lands-on-its-fucking-face). Now I think a tv show with no women at all is unrealistic, but on a slight tangent, the insertion of female characters for the sake of having female characters is beyond dumb. They have no chance of being strong characters - and I don't mean strong in the sense of oo-rah, I have a gun and control over people, which is what most people seem to want in their "strong female characters", I mean strong as in, fully-developed, three-dimensional, realistic, flawed, a character you can tell apart and not by a stereotype, a character who makes decisions, whether or not they're the right ones or for the right reasons. A character that has discernable reasons.
Unless we're just going to say that no television show should depict an extreme patriarchy. Is that what this is about? Because that makes more sense logically, but sucks even harder. Cuz guess what, guys? Patriarchy (and extreme patriarchy) exists. Just like sadness and death and prison and the mafia. And you know, patriarchy exists too... everywhere. Just in milder, more hidden/embedded forms.
Then again remember when people were calling Battlestar Galactica misogynistic because there was rape in it? Yeah. Wow. Even when they get a deluge of strong female characters (both classic mode, a la Starbuck and Roslin, and unconventional, a la Sharon, Six, Dee, and yes, Callie) they're still not satisfied.
Anyway, thank God for this commenter:
Dr. Fish, for an English Professor you seem oddly (in this case, anyway) oblivious to irony, as are most of the commenters thus far. Only one comment has noted the similarity of Big Love to The Sopranos, which leads to the point you have missed. The subversive appeal of Big Love is that, like The Sopranos, it takes a bizarre American family and suggests how it is a distillation of the “normal” American family itself: hierarchical, superstitious, corrupt, and hypocritical at the same time that it is, as you point out, loving, solicitous, and loyal. This family’s religion is–shall we say?–weird. So is that of nearly all American families. This family is over its head in debt. So are nearly all American families. This family claims to be utterly devoted to the welfare of its children yet the oldest daughter is pregnant and lonely (gee, where have we heard that before?). I could go on.
I had this dream last night where I was four months pregnant (by an unnamed Pittsburgh Steeler, at that) and freaking out, so my mother "strongly encouraged" me to get a late-term abortion... which I did. I'm pretty sure I've interpreted it to satisfaction. It's not as disturbing as it sounds, except for the Pittsburgh Steeler part. I hate the Steelers.
Then I had a dream about inducting my father into some hall of fame for the dead and getting into a bitchslapping fight with one of his younger sisters about who had the right to talk about him. That one I'm having more trouble interpreting. But I'm feeling strangely about everything lately. Sort of like Starbuck after she comes back from the dead. If you haven't seen "The Ties That Bind", then nevermind.
Anyway. As crazy and psycho as I am right now, I think I'm actually starting to see some semblance of clarity. Some light at the end of the tunnel. I'll write more about it at some hypothetical future-point, when I have "time". And no, I won't quit school. It wouldn't be Ganzian. Speaking of whom, I was looking through Tim Griffin's Big 12 updates for the past month and guess who's at the top of his "big 12 bowl observations". THAT'S RIGHT, BITCH. Despite the factual error in there (concussion =/= bum shoulder), Tim Griffin is the man.
( the pigskin review )
Then I had a dream about inducting my father into some hall of fame for the dead and getting into a bitchslapping fight with one of his younger sisters about who had the right to talk about him. That one I'm having more trouble interpreting. But I'm feeling strangely about everything lately. Sort of like Starbuck after she comes back from the dead. If you haven't seen "The Ties That Bind", then nevermind.
Anyway. As crazy and psycho as I am right now, I think I'm actually starting to see some semblance of clarity. Some light at the end of the tunnel. I'll write more about it at some hypothetical future-point, when I have "time". And no, I won't quit school. It wouldn't be Ganzian. Speaking of whom, I was looking through Tim Griffin's Big 12 updates for the past month and guess who's at the top of his "big 12 bowl observations". THAT'S RIGHT, BITCH. Despite the factual error in there (concussion =/= bum shoulder), Tim Griffin is the man.
( the pigskin review )
The title is inspired by me and Lucia watching Charmed today and me accidentally saying, "You see, I make a great source"... I meant a resource on Charmed timelines, but The Source is short for The Source of All Evil in the Charmed universe, so of course that made for a funny five minutes. Lucia said, "You know, now I think you are the Source," and seeing as how I've been telling my mother how I'm always more sympathetic to the Devil in movies than God...
... there are reasons for that, people. Memnoch was definitely the most sympathetic character in Memnoch the Devil. When we got to God and we the readers were all supposed to bow down and be amazed, I was just like, "what? you're a bastard." I'm like a Cormac McCarthy priest. I'm the one in the broken house with a one-eyed cat, shaking my fist at God.
Uh, okay. Battlestar Galactica first.
( spoilery thoughts )
Apparently I'm moving to Canada. In all seriousness, though, the football business is fucked the fuck up if they have people like Missouri's back-up quarterback getting invited to an all-star game and not Ganz. If you invite the guy with a pass efficiency ranked 93rd nationally and not the guy whose pass efficiency is 14th. Or how about the quarterback that was outplayed in the bowl game and clearly could not handle pressure getting invited over the quarterback that won the game and was named the game MVP? WHAT THE FUCK. Jesus, yes, height and how far you can throw the ball is "not really what being a quarterback's about." Of course, tell that to Rex "I-Like-Throwing-The-Ball-Long" Grossman, but we start to see what makes - or rather, what doesn't make - a dick-quarterback, don't we. A lot of us in fandom didn't think he'd get drafted because of the whole build thing - and the fact that Nebraska is getting snubbed nationally in revenge for the '90s - but when you compare him to the people that probably will get drafted, it looks ridiculous. Cullen Harper! Why!
I know that football's a bloodsport and all, but this is starting to piss me off. I wonder sometimes if this overall attitude has anything to do with why we suck as a society overall. I'm into judging a society on how it treats its children - and this has something to do with that, too - but obviously there's something to be said for judging a society based on what it wants in its leaders. Football fails both gauges. For having such illusions of patriotism and godliness and health and community, it's pretty pathetic.
But how strange, right, he's only nine inches taller than me. God, I'm such a selfish fuck.
... there are reasons for that, people. Memnoch was definitely the most sympathetic character in Memnoch the Devil. When we got to God and we the readers were all supposed to bow down and be amazed, I was just like, "what? you're a bastard." I'm like a Cormac McCarthy priest. I'm the one in the broken house with a one-eyed cat, shaking my fist at God.
Uh, okay. Battlestar Galactica first.
( spoilery thoughts )
Apparently I'm moving to Canada. In all seriousness, though, the football business is fucked the fuck up if they have people like Missouri's back-up quarterback getting invited to an all-star game and not Ganz. If you invite the guy with a pass efficiency ranked 93rd nationally and not the guy whose pass efficiency is 14th. Or how about the quarterback that was outplayed in the bowl game and clearly could not handle pressure getting invited over the quarterback that won the game and was named the game MVP? WHAT THE FUCK. Jesus, yes, height and how far you can throw the ball is "not really what being a quarterback's about." Of course, tell that to Rex "I-Like-Throwing-The-Ball-Long" Grossman, but we start to see what makes - or rather, what doesn't make - a dick-quarterback, don't we. A lot of us in fandom didn't think he'd get drafted because of the whole build thing - and the fact that Nebraska is getting snubbed nationally in revenge for the '90s - but when you compare him to the people that probably will get drafted, it looks ridiculous. Cullen Harper! Why!
I know that football's a bloodsport and all, but this is starting to piss me off. I wonder sometimes if this overall attitude has anything to do with why we suck as a society overall. I'm into judging a society on how it treats its children - and this has something to do with that, too - but obviously there's something to be said for judging a society based on what it wants in its leaders. Football fails both gauges. For having such illusions of patriotism and godliness and health and community, it's pretty pathetic.
But how strange, right, he's only nine inches taller than me. God, I'm such a selfish fuck.
Thoughts on Battlestar Galactica's newest episode.
( spoilers )

Research scientist: Oh man, what is happening to us? The family of man is hurting each other, stealing from each other...
Stottlemeyer: The family of man's starting to sound like a real family.
- Monk
( spoilers )

Research scientist: Oh man, what is happening to us? The family of man is hurting each other, stealing from each other...
Stottlemeyer: The family of man's starting to sound like a real family.
- Monk
the girl who loved joe ganz
Jan. 12th, 2009 11:52 pmexcerpted from the Stephen King novel, The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon:

So I introduced my mom to Battlestar Galactica tonight - we watched the three-hour miniseries, all the way through. It was wonderful. My mom's not a sci-fi type exactly (neither am I for that matter) but she admits she got into it. BSG is just impossible not to get into, not to sink your teeth into. At the end when they reveal "Sharon" to be a Cylon model she was like, "ohhh" in a sad voice. Ha ha ha, me and my mom. I wish I had a huge television to watch it on, though. The battles in the miniseries are amazing, especially lined with drums. BSG is like a war dance; I think that's why I love it.
Pete liked Mo Vaughn, and their Mom was partial to Nomar Garciaparra, but Tom Gordon was Trisha's and her Dad's favorite Red Sox player. Tom Gordon was the Red Sox closer; he came on in the eighth or ninth inning when the game was close but the Sox were still on top. Her Dad admired Gordon because he never seemed to lose his nerve -- "Flash has got icewater in his veins," Larry McFarland liked to say -- and Trisha always said the same thing, sometimes adding that she liked Gordon because he had the guts to throw a curve on three-and-oh (this was something her father had read to her in a Boston Globe column). Only to Moanie Balogna and (once) to her girlfriend, Pepsi Robichaud, had she said more. She told Pepsi she thought Tom Gordon was "pretty good-looking." To Mona she threw caution entirely to the winds, saying that Number 36 was the handsomest man alive, and if he ever touched her hand she'd faint. If he ever kissed her, even on the cheek, she thought she'd probably die.

So I introduced my mom to Battlestar Galactica tonight - we watched the three-hour miniseries, all the way through. It was wonderful. My mom's not a sci-fi type exactly (neither am I for that matter) but she admits she got into it. BSG is just impossible not to get into, not to sink your teeth into. At the end when they reveal "Sharon" to be a Cylon model she was like, "ohhh" in a sad voice. Ha ha ha, me and my mom. I wish I had a huge television to watch it on, though. The battles in the miniseries are amazing, especially lined with drums. BSG is like a war dance; I think that's why I love it.
completely frakked
Aug. 24th, 2008 02:02 amThis is one of the best television shows I have ever seen. And this video by freelancerxo02 - every episode in seasons 1-3 in 5 minutes - shows why. It's sex, violence, politics, and a surprising number of kick-ass (not spunky) female characters. There aren't very many good BSG AMVs (they're either sappy and couples-centric or devoid of characters and battle-centric), and this one is disguised as a "trailer". Ha! If every AMV was like this I'd be in YouTube Heaven. I just had to share.
Video: Battlestar Galactica ; Audio: "Feel So Numb" - Rob Zombie
Also, I have a real bone to pick against people who make comments like this: "Don't think I would call it poignant though. It's science fiction." God, opinions like these are really starting to wear on me.