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The place you keep returning to even when the hat store becomes a moving castle.
Jul. 19th, 2009 @ 07:03 pm just a couple of links
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
Torchwood fan? Feeling sad after Children of Earth? Here, have a Torchwood fan video with lots of blooper material, set to "Yatta". Very happymaking.

***

In other news, a church that seems to think it's a computer game. It's stuff like this that makes me convinced the satire of Saved! is actually an understatement.
Jul. 19th, 2009 @ 10:05 am watch out for the subtitles!
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
[info]morthel asked me to post this as a warning to everyone, and so I will.

Now, the Swedish vampire film Let the Right One In is pretty much brilliant, and you all should see it, preferably before the Yanks make their own version where they change the names of Oskar and Eli to Owen and Abby. (Yes, they're really going to do that.) However.

The Fright website has a comparison between the theatrical and DVD subtitles, and if their account is accurate, then the DVD subtitles are... very weird indeed. Therefore, if you plan on seeing this film, do wait until you can get your hands on the new and improved DVD they're sending out (because of the bad feedback) with the theatrical subtitles.

This is a public service message brought to you by patriotism. :-)
Jul. 17th, 2009 @ 12:28 am I made someone boggle!
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
I was browsing google links, looking for various things people had said about the word "squick", and ran into an old discussion on the whys and hows of fanfic in Teresa Nielsen Hayden's blog. (I apologize for linking to that person, but, well, I've linked to worse.) It was from the perspective of non-ficcers, yet not hostile, so I read the comments with antropological interest. :-)

And then I bumped into this comment (concerning fanfic expanding on minor characters):

#220 ::: Tom Whitmore ::: (view all by) ::: December 10, 2004, 04:40 PM:

Then there's the Angel/Diskworld crossover short story featuring Nanny Ogg's cat....


Now, that simply has to refer to An Encounter With Death. Which means a fic I wrote in 2000 was still on someone's mind in 2004. Yay!

And to make it even better:

#262 ::: Michelle ::: (view all by) ::: December 13, 2004, 01:24 PM:

Tom Whitmore said:
Then there's the Angel/Diskworld crossover short story featuring Nanny Ogg's cat....

(boggle)

You're kidding? You have to be kidding. I can't even comprehend, no less imagine.

#263 ::: Tom Whitmore ::: (view all by) ::: December 13, 2004, 08:46 PM:

When I'm kidding, I'll let you know. You now join with Mike Glicksohn in completely disbelieving some of the things I run across (he thought "Raiders of the Lost Basement" was fanfic).


I made someone boggle! *dances around* If it were a recent fanfic, that would probably cause me all kinds of insecurities, but since AEWD is such an old fic (only two years younger than my horrible pseudo-Western original novella which NO YOU CAN'T READ), I find it completely delightful.
Jul. 13th, 2009 @ 10:40 pm random stuff, part 2: DumbStruck, or why Maria Gripe rocks
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
While writing Convictions, I thought some about the various ways Zorro has a bunch of decent cards that it uses badly. That's a post for another day, if ever, but among other things, I thought of the way Felipe's muteness is treated in "The Word" - that is to say, the show finds no problem with incorporating in the same ep the sentences, said by the same character: "A handicap doesn't have to be an impediment" and "if you let go of the past, I know that you can speak again." FFS, pick a moral and stick with it.

Which in turn reminded me of how much I hate that muteness so often in fiction is caused by trauma (and yes, I wrote a bunch of the examples on that site), because it means that a relatively moderate disability becomes This Tragic Thing: having it means the character is traumatized, being cured from it means the character is now well. It's significant that in the RL example I included on that site, Torey Hayden's Murphy's Boy, getting Kevin to speak is only an early part of the long, complicated struggle of getting him functional. Most of the fictional examples don't hide under tables, and yet OMGIT'SSOTRAGIC.

One fictional example of this, though, pretty much works for me, and it's Rosilda in Maria Gripe's Shadow series. English-speaking people, you're missing out, the books are available in Swedish and Spanish but not English. (Don't ask me why. Too much philosophy? Too much magical realism? Too genderbendy?) For you, and for others who haven't read the books (or seen the miniseries), a summary of Rosilda's arc (not spoiler cutting, because it's 23 years old and the Swedes who haven't read it probably aren't interested):

The whole family mess starts with (not in the novels themselves) the grandmother Clara de Leto, a narcissist who raises her daughter Lydia to be a "pure soul", making her completely neurotic in the process. Lydia grows up to marry cheerful soldier Maximilian, but his coarse ways upset her, and they split up. The twin children, Arild and Rosilda, resent Lydia for making their father leave. Clara is dead at this point, but Lydia thinks her mother's ghost is haunting them, which in combination with her failed family life drives her to suicide. (Or not quite... but we get to that.) Rosilda stops speaking, Arild becomes even more neurotic than his mother, and they grow up in the creepy old castle, haunted by their memories and possibly their relatives, and with only a bunch of servants to care for them.

At this point, the actual protagonists, Caroline (in disguise as Carl) and Berta enter the story, as companions for the twins – i.e. some normal young people for them to hang out with. For the purpose of this post, we can skip most of the plot and fast-forward to the bit where Berta discovers that Lydia is in fact alive and only pretended that the suicide attempt was succesful, so that she could flee the creepy castle and try to build a new life. She's still attached to the kids, though, and "haunts" the castle from time to time to look out for them. Not the most healthy situation.

Caught in a fire, Lydia's presence and living status is revealed, and Rosilda begins to speak again.

Now, why does this work for me when other examples don't? Several reasons:

1.Rosilda's muteness is not only tied to Lydia's death; it's implied that she's half-consciously imposing it on herself as a sort of punishment, both against herself for being mean to her mother, and against Lydia for deserting them through death. It makes sense for her to start speaking when her mother turns out to be alive.

2.Compared to her brother, and even to some other characters in the book, Rosilda is remarkably sane and happy, with her feet more or less on the ground (except when she doesn't want them to be). Yes, she has issues, but considering that she's stuck in magical realism with gothic overtones, it'd be stranger if she didn't.

3.In a strange way – and this is in line with the self-punishment – Rosilda is proud of her muteness. At one point in the books, she's sent to see some specialists, who claim that they can't cure her until she wants to be cured. Caroline and Berta discuss this between themselves, with Berta upset that Rosilda would "ruin her life" like this and Caroline pointing out that only Rosilda can decide whether it's a ruin or an improvement. Rosilda also keeps all the writing pads she uses, and boasts that her words don't disappear like other people's words do. She comes off rather as someone who's trying to hold on to her integrity, yet has such limited opportunities that this drastic method is the best she can do.

4.When she does start talking again, it doesn't cause any hallelujahs: She has found Lydia during the fire, right before the wall collapses, and is digging through the rubble crying, "Mommy, mommy, don't die!" Thus, when the others arrive, the first thoughts of Berta as the narrator are horror and concern for Lydia's safety – only later does she realize that Rosilda is talking again.

5.Rosilda is weirded out by her own adult voice and doesn't know what to do with it, occasionally even returning to her writing pads. This strikes me as a more credible reaction after a decade of silence than unmixed joy.

6.The situation at the castle is deeply unhealthy, and Rosilda's muteness is one of many symptoms of this. At the end of the third book, the characters are given a chance to reinvent themselves, with the castle burning, Lydia stepping up to take responsibility, Caroline revealing herself as a girl (and thus also showing the twins' crushes on her as being based on their own dreams and imaginations of the outer world), Berta finally not having to keep everybody's secrets – Rosilda is just one of many people being liberated.

7. And finally – magical realism with gothic overtones. :-) The books are full of symbols, intertextual echoes, and seamless blending of reality and melodrama, that Rosilda fits right into the genre. (I even half suspect that she knows this...)
Jul. 13th, 2009 @ 09:20 pm random stuff, part 1
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
My sister's family is in town, which means a lot of hanging out with the whole clan/circus. Awesome and exhausting at once. Gabriel is now 10 ½ months old and has a new favourite phrase: "Nanoo!" It amuses the rest of us very much, and as my sister puts it, he must be convinced by now that ”nanoo nanoo” really means something, considering how many times we repeat it back to him.

My other nephews have decided that I am Batgirl, using this YouTube clip as proof. I am wholly on board this idea. I don't even read DC comics and even I know Babs is awesome. I have even made [info]nfalkestav agree to being Oracle, so we can be the same person. :-)

***

Thanks to [info]nam_jai, this hilarious take on Supernatural. Example quote:

"After an awful-yet-badass car crash, John Winchester, the boys’ father, tries to make a deal with the show's Big Bad, the Yellow Eyed Demon, offering him his soul if the demon will save his mortally wounded son’s life. The demon makes him an even better offer, which is to give him an actual acting career if he leaves Supernatural. He accepts it."

:-) :-) :-) And yes, being a John fan, I'm biased to anyone who calls him cool, but it's fun for the whole fandom.

***

Speaking of SPN, Henry Jenkins' old blog post on the subject made me miss season 1:

"A real strength of the series is the construction of female secondary characters, all the more unusual in a series which is so centrally about its core male leads. But each week, we seem to introduce one or two women who are struggling not only against supernatural forces but against the circumstances life has thrown their way. [...] These women sometimes surface as romantic interests for Sam and Dean but more often, they are extensions of their emotional drama: that is to say, each of them is dealing with some aspect of family drama which strongly parallels the issues which Sam and Dean are grappling with in their own lives. The men do not so much desire them as romantic or sex objects as they use them as mirrors to see into their own and each other's souls. Each woman teaches them something they need to learn before they can become emotionally whole again and in the process, each teaches the viewer something about the men that we would not know otherwise. The show never patronizes the women, never denies them their core humanity, and indeed, often, it is clear that the men admire the women's courage, intelligence, integrity, and passion. The result are some of the most compelling male/female relationships I've seen on prime time network television."

As [info]jadelennox pointed out, it's not entirely complimentary that women exist for the benefit of men's mental health, but still, there was a time when the awesome women on the show (and there ARE some awesome women still) didn't get killed off.

***

Belated thoughts on Torchwood, under the cut:

Hey, the so-called adult show is actually starting to grow up for real! )

***

Before I leave the topic of Torchwood – now, I'm not in the habit of deriding badfic in my LJ, but WTF is this? I'd expect a person old enough to watch Children of Earth to either know how to use basic grammar or know how to use a spellcheck. The Pit of Voles doesn't sink to these depths!

***

The post is getting very long and crowded, so I'll just post this now and the rest when I'm finished writing it.
Jul. 10th, 2009 @ 07:51 pm Zorro fanfic: Conviction
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
Tags: , ,
Title: Conviction
Fandom: Zorro (the New World series)
Rating: R
Warnings: Rape, gore, general violence, sensory deprivation. Take caution of this before reading.
Summary: Even Zorro can't always protect the people he loves. Diego knows what once happened to Felipe, but Mendoza's slip of the tongue makes him realize it's even worse than he thought.

Diego listened to Sergeant Mendoza telling of the alcalde's newest taxes, and he shook his head... )
Jul. 9th, 2009 @ 09:57 pm Here, have a new nickname!
About this Entry
feelings - embarrassed or laughing, QC saving lol
Tags: ,
[info]morthel and I were discussing crappy Internet nicknames, and we started making a Bingo card with the most common components (Midnight, Wolf, Raven, Magic, etc.) but unfortunately, there turned out to be too damned many of them. I had to sign off, and this evening I was met with a "FINALLY!" from [info]morthel on IM.

Ladies and gentlemen, she has instead created a generator:

Internet Nickname generator

I am now suggesting new things to put in (like the boys of Supernatural). :-)
Jul. 7th, 2009 @ 11:25 am What I Did During My Weekend, by Katta. :-)
About this Entry
DWJ Chrestomanci, feelings - underdressed, DW kimono
I'm back from the Diana Wynne Jones conference in Bristol. I tried to talk as little as possible about Bristol before I went, in part not to jinx it, and in part because I'm always afraid that if I speak on the internet about leaving my home, burglars will show up. Irrational, but there you have it.

Anyway. It's over now, so I feel free to talk about it, though I'm not sure what to say. It was great, I can start there. I met new people. I got to put faces to the names of people I already knew. I re-watched Archer's Goon on a big screen, in a room full of DWJ fans. I listened to a lot of really intelligent papers on various aspects of Diana Wynne Jones, and as someone (Gili?) put it, how awesome is it that everyone had read the books? The person reading the paper could say ”Awful” or ”Querida” or ”Cat” and there was no need to explain further, we all knew. :-)

I think my favourite paper was Helgard Fischer's ”A Theory of Magic: The Year of the Griffin ”, because I'm not a scientist and therefore the thoughts she presented were thoughts I couldn't have been thinking myself. The same goes for Jenni Tyynelä's ”The Worlds of Chrestomanci and David Lewis's Worlds of Modality”, though there I couldn't quite figure out why we can't branch into separate versions of ourselves. True, we don't remember doing so, but there are a lot of things that happened to me that I don't remember. I half suspected it was something in the line of CJ on West Wing with the maps: "You can't do that." "Why not?" "Because it freaks me out." Or maybe I'm just stupid. (I didn't even dare to ask!) If there's any other paper you want to know about, just ask, though I didn't hear them all (and had to leave early). There's talk of putting them up on YouTube, or making a book/collection – I fully support both ideas.

I talked to a whole bunch of nice people, and would love to friend them, except I have no idea what LJ names fit which RL name. (And, uh, if you're on my flist, were in Bristol, and have reason to believe I don't realize this, please speak up!) At least there's email, and Facebook, and the mailing list, where people use their real names.

I also bought Changeover, since it's one of very few DWJ books I haven't read. People gave me very funny looks when I showed it to them. Apparently it's not entirely reputable. :-) Having read it, I can see why, though I enjoyed the story. It's different from her other books in a number of ways: It's not fantasy. It's for adults (or so I assumed until a footnote explained the system of white supremacy in South Africa, as if the reader had never heard of such a thing), and all the characters are adults too. It's set in the fictional African country Nmkwami, rather than Britain or Fantasyland. It doesn't have a protagonist – actually, in that, it rather reminded me of Witch Week. The setup is also rather similar to Witch Week, with all the rumours spreading, though instead of witchcraft, we here have a feared terrorist threat being built up from the misunderstood phrase ”Mark Changeover.”

Basically, it's a political game of telephone with far-reaching consequences, and as such it's quite entertaining, poking fun at the number of pompous high-ups and nervous assistants trying to save face by pretending to know more than they do. Ultimately, though, I felt that she kept the game going for too long without adding in enough other ideas – oh, there are new people added in all the time, and with them complications, but it's all pretty much based on the same ”here's some complications regarding Mark Changeover, based on facts that I misheard/misunderstood/pulled from my ass.” Ultimately, it gets a bit tiresome, and the story could also probably have benefited from having about half as many characters getting twice the development. Bits of it are brilliant, though – in general, I'd say I liked it better than Witch Week and perhaps slightly less than A Sudden Wild Magic, which also has that sprawling characters setup.

As for the journey itself, the less said about it the better. I hate travelling. I feel sick, I get nervous, and something always goes wrong. (This time, among other things, I had accidentally ordered train tickets from the wrong airport.) A quick word of advice for the first-time UK train travellers: Don't ever eat their cheeseburgers. It was one of the most vile meals I've had ever. Possibly the most vile. I had no idea you could fit that many sinews into a burger. Fortunately, the food at the campus itself was good, and the rest of the travel food at least not uneatable.

One good thing about the journey, though, was that I got about 1300 words written on a new story. As if I really need more unfinished fic. :-) This one is Supernatural/Joan of Arcadia. I had some trouble deciding whether Joan should be the age she is in the series or the age she would be now. Finally I decided to age her up. Which unfortunately brings the question of what she'd be studying in college. The whole subdefective thing was a major theme, after all. What's the least impressive thing you can study while still being in college?

Yesterday I basically just slept a lot. Well, I did type up what I'd written of the story, though I didn't write any more – I meant to, but got distracted by thoughts of angels and watched Der Himmel über Berlin,/Wings of Desire instead. It's a very nice film, though a bit slow at times. (I also watched the TV adaptation of Why Didn't They Ask Evans, which was... not really an adaptation. I have no idea what was going on half the time, except they seemed to put in pieces of The Mousetrap to... I don't know, stop it from being too obvious? WDTAE isn't one of Christie's best-plotted books, but I'm still a bit weirded out by how different this was.)

And today... well, today I haven't really done anything yet. Plenty of time to remedy that, though! :-)
Jul. 2nd, 2009 @ 07:41 pm Way to creep me out, Joan of Arcadia
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
You know, it's weird enough finding out that Spoilers for aired eps of Lost and unaired eps of Supernatural ) (though kind of awesome too), but learning that Sylar is God? That's just plain creepy.
Jul. 1st, 2009 @ 12:48 pm That's not so bloody hard!
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
Anders & Måns solve the theodicy problem. So. Much Love.

For the Swedish-impaired among you:

”Do you know something, Måns? Do you know what I really like? Text messaging. Being able to send messages like that, I think it’s great. Do you know something else I really like? Fruit. But! Which is the best?”

“...”

“That’s an interesting philosophical question, isn’t it?”

“No...”

“A bit like the classical theodicy problem. If God exists and is good, then why is fruit so expensive?”

“No, it goes like this: If God exists and is good, then why is there so much evil in the world? That’s how it goes.”

“So much evil fruit.”

“No.”

“No... So much good fruit, that’s how it goes!”

“No, because that’s not a problem! ‘If God exists and is good, then why is there so much good fruit’ – that’s not a problem!”

“No, you’re right! That’s solved, then! That’s not so bloody hard. Why have they harped on about that for thousands of years?”
Jun. 25th, 2009 @ 09:57 pm meme: platonic male/female relationships
About this Entry
feelings - friendly, Anne of GG kindred spirits
Gacked from [info]musesfool[info]selenak, [info]taraljc, and possibly others.

List 10 (or however many) platonic male/female relationships in fiction that you enjoy. My attempt at rules:

1. They interact in canon, preferably in a significant (apply your own interpretation of such) way.
2. They are not related. They can, however, view each other as surrogate family.
3. Neither has confessed or implied romantic love for the other in canon.
4. They have not dated, been married, had sex, or made out in canon, on purpose, and of their own free will.
5. A popular fanon ship is ok (though preferably not your ship) but a canon pairing you wish were just friends is out.
6. Try to avoid using the same character or series twice.
7. They don’t have to be friends.


The two first examples on my list were a given, the rest had a hard fight to make the list – and even so, I ended up with a dozen instead of ten. In a some cases, the people mentioned are representatives of their whole canon. To begin with, I only listed friendships, but then some names popped up who just wanted to be included despite not being friends.

1.Modesty Blaise and Willie Garvin, Modesty Blaise
When it comes to nonsexual love between men and women, Modesty and Willie are a classic item. It's even hard to find anyone to compare them to – the best explanation might be that they're like one of the classic slash pairings, but without the subtext. Or rather, the subtext is repeatedly brought to the surface by people who just can't believe that they're not sleeping with each other. But they're not. They will happily sleep with others, though, even if it's rarely serious – in one instance, Modesty's boyfriend and Willie's girlfriend end up dating each other, bonding over the fact that neither can cope with the kind of lifestyle Modesty and Willie lead.

Both characters rock separately, but together, they make me purr. :-)

2.Lynda Day and Kenny Philips, Press Gang
Lynda didn't make a lot of friends, mainly because she was a complete bitch, but Lynda and Kenny were an unbreakable friendship for three seasons of PG. (The only reason it broke after that was because Lee Ross quit, meaning Kenny moved to Australia.) They quarrelled, sniped, said horrible things to each other, but through it all ran this brother-sister vibe that was just plain adorable. When it was revealed that they had known each other since they were five, and behaved exactly the same, even then, I can't imagine anyone was surprised. (And now I feel like uploading ”Going Back to Jasper Street”, to share the squee. Not sure anyone would care, though.)

3.The Doctor and Donna Noble, Doctor Who
This is a typical example of a relationship being representative of a whole canon. The whoniverse is full of great male/female friendships (The Doctor and Ace/Leela/Tegan/etc, Mickey and Jackie, Jack and Martha, the entire cast of the Sarah Jane Adventures), but the Doctordonna is still special – maybe because it reaches the level where it's actually canonically called the Doctordonna. :-) Donna's along for the ride, all the way, but doesn't hesitate to chew the Doctor out when he needs it, and the result is one of the best Doctor/companion teamups, ever. (It's funny – while I'll happily pair the Doctor and other Who characters in fanfic, I really don't much care for the canon pairings. Well, apart from Ian/Barbara. Shut up, that is SO canon!)

4.Hercule Poirot and Ariadne Oliver, Cards on the Table et.al.
Ariadne Oliver is a very entertaining character in her own right, since it's hard not to see her as a rather unflattering author avatar. Paired up with Poirot, she's even more fun, countering his perfectionist fussiness with scatter-brained guesses, ”intuition”, and complaints about how life isn't like a detective story. While poor Hastings often comes off as a blockhead, Ariadne is such a forceful personality that she feels like Poirot's equal even though she only very rarely manages to find a clue.

5.Daniel Meade and Wilhelmina Slater, Ugly Betty
UB is another canon full of great male/female platonic relationships (not least of which Daniel's with the protagonist), but the animosity between Daniel and Wili was juicy even when they were simple antagonists, and even better now that they sometimes get to have a common goal – even though Wilhelmina is still as evil, and Daniel just as dim, as ever. The scene where they were set up on a blind date might even be called... sweet.

6.George, Annie, and Mitchell, Being Human
Oh, come on, you can't expect me to pick two out of these three. They form such a comfortable, well-balanced, touching friendship, with lightness and laughter as well as fears and tears. (And while Mitchell and Annie kissed at one point, it was an accident and treated with the kind of teasing accidental kissing between friends deserves.) Six hours is more than enough to sell me on this team – I'm waiting eagerly for season 2.

7.Jed Bartlet and Delores Landingham, West Wing
Originally, I had this as Charlie and Mrs. Landingham. Well, originally originally, I had it as CJ and Toby. Because this is another one of those canons with lots of great male/female non-sexual relationships. But when you get down to it, there's somethingvery awesome about the president bantering with his secretary and losing - especially when the president is Martin Sheen and the secretary is God.

Speaking of God...

8.Grace Polk and Adam Rove, Joan of Arcadia
I've been rewatching JoA, and it does so many things right that I've considered making a whole post just listing all the things it does right. And in the midst of all that, the Grace and Adam friendship kind of escaped me the first time around. This time, I'm enjoying it full-strength. It's very low-key, with few moments between just the two of them, but it's very relaxed and dependable; they get each other. And I think that maybe because it's so low-key, the way their chemistry works is more magic to me than relationships that are more in focus, like Adam and Helen or Toni and Will.

9.George Lass and Rube Sofer, Dead Like Me
Again, they work as representatives for the entire canon – DLM is full of great characters interacting in great ways. Rube's no-nonsense approach to taking care of George was a joy to see, sometimes sympathetic, sometimes ”like a volcano” to use Mason's words for it. One of the many things I missed in the movie.

10.Claire Fraser and John Grey, the Outlander series
Not friends, but the tentative almost-approval forming between the two of them is fascinating to watch. They're not quite rivals, but Claire's suspicion and John's envy serves as background to something that, had not Jamie existed, most likely would be a friendship.

11.Louise Becket and Kyle Duarte, Jake 2.0
In a worse written show, Lou and Kyle might have been backdrop characters, but instead they really conveyed a sense of common history. They often shared an attitude towards Jake, being the NSA base for his geekery, but also his bulwarks against the higher-ups, while having enough tussles to be individualized.

12.Juliet O'Hara and Carlton Lassiter, Psych
Everyone on Psych are total dorks, and these two are no exceptions. Their dorkishness are so different that you'd think they'd hate each other – Jules's cheerful friendliness and Lassie's pissy red-tapism – but instead, they end up completing each other in a very entertaining way, just like the Psych boys themselves.
Jun. 21st, 2009 @ 09:33 pm Uhura plushie
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
My plushie-mania continues, and now I'm finished with Uhura. (No, I don't intend to make the whole Star Trek team. Next one will either be Cyclops or Donna Noble. For Cyclops I'll need more brown and black, and I'm not sure how to fix Donna's hair - or her clothes, for that matter.)

"Captain? Captain please stop playing with the plushifier before someone else gets h... AAAAH!"

wee little plushie Uhura

More and larger Uhura plushie images under the cut. )
Jun. 18th, 2009 @ 11:33 pm Letting my Freak Flag fly
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
Tags: ,


Your result for The Brutally Honest Personality Test...

Freak- INFJ

Freak proof under the cut. )


Yeah, if I weren't pleased with that result, I wouldn't be me. :-) Though I've never been called a psychic - on the contrary, as a kid I often suspected that everyone EXCEPT me was a psychic. Don't know what that's symptom of.
Jun. 17th, 2009 @ 06:05 pm some days I don't know what to feel
About this Entry
Gaiman Delirium, feelings - incoherent
Tags:
I got a bouquet of flowers from a teacher today; that's really sweet of her. Unfortunately, I was so tired on the bus that I couldn't think straight, and the effort of remembering the flowers meant I forgot my backpack. Not sure if it was on the local or regional bus, I've called both companies and there's nothing found so far. Will try again tomorrow.

There wasn't much in it, fortunately, just some my umbrella, a thriftstore copy of Iron Giant, and some empty lunch boxes - plus of course the badges outside it. But damn it, I like my backpack. I've already lost one by forgotting it somewhere due to sleepiness, I don't want to lose another one. At least there weren't any library books in it, which is good.

The teacher also gave me some candy. I think I need some now.
Jun. 16th, 2009 @ 08:40 pm culture clashes
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
Through the [info]where_no_woman comm, I found a Star Trek reboot fic called Lunch and other obscenities, by [info]rheanna27. It's a Uhura&Gaila friendship story with some Uhura/Spock to it, and it focuses on culture clashes, especially what happens if one culture is fine with food but has taboos against public sex, and the other is fine with sex but has taboos against public eating. I found it absolutely delightful.

***

It wasn't actually that fic that had me thinking about Swedish fish; I started thinking about it this morning, for some reason. Specifically, the mere idea that these fish would somehow deserve the term "Swedish fish", as if they were a Swedish representation of candy somewhat in the line of the Swedish flag and the Swedish hockey team, amuses me to no end. I mean, they're eaten here and all, but just... *laughs* To put them in the correct perspective, I tried to explain to my mom what kind of candy Swedish fish were, and she couldn't even muster up the correct mental image.

And so I started thinking of which Swedish candies I care more about than Swedish fish (pretty much all of them), and making a list of Swedish candy that makes me nostalgic, and then I found The Northener: The Swedish Tobacconist, which has almost all the candies of my childhood.

Specifically, these kinds make me nostalgic:

Marabou chocolates:
Mjölkchoklad (milk chocolate)
Schweizernöt (milk chocolate with hazelnut)
Daim (milk chocolate with hard toffee)
Aladdin (mixed chocolate box)
Twist (mixed chocolate bag)

Others
Ahlgrens bilar (small marshmallow cars)
Lakritsbåtar/Hallonbåtar (sweet liquorice/raspberry jelly boats)
Gott & blandat (mixed jelly drops, ranging from sweet to salt, different colours)
Svarta katten/Djungelvrål (various kinds of salt liquorice)
Zoo (very similar to raspberry boats, but in the shape of apes)
Polkagrisar (striped peppermint)
Kick/Käck (sweet liquorice, changed its name since Kick is more international)
Läkerol (cough drops, in various flavours)
Violtabletter (violet pastilles)

I think the only candies that I'm nostalgic about which aren't on that site are Salmiak (salt liquorice), Drutten (sugarfree fruit pastilles based on a Soviet TV doll), Emser (sugarfreemint pastilles) and the expensive old-fashioned hard candy I got at Christmas every year. :-)

But not Swedish fish. Swedish fish are waaaaay down the list.

***

To make this post complete in the culture clashes department, I read a Fannie Flagg book today, which always makes me feel like I'm in Weirdwille. In a totally charmed, fascinated way, but still Weirdville. (And I always get the impression that it's inconceivable to her that some people, myself included, would find it terrifying, not only short-term but especially long-term, to live in a small town surrounded by happy, helpful, curious neighbours.)

It's funny, you'd think after a lifetime of reading about white Americans and watching them on television, I'd find it all common as dirt now, but no, there are still books that make me go OMGTHISISSOEXOTIC. The first ones to come to mind are, apart from every single Fannie Flagg book ever:

Joshilyn Jackson: Gods in Alabama
Curtis Sittenfeld: Prep
SE Hinton: Outsiders
Evan Rhodes: Central Park
Stephen King: The Stand (and no, I don't mean the post-Plague stuff, Jesus...)
Katherine Paterson: Jacob Have I Loved

I'm sure I could think of more if I gave it more than a moment's thought, but this post is long and elaborate enough as it is. :-)
Jun. 14th, 2009 @ 10:34 pm Chekov: The Plushie
About this Entry
J20 talk geeky to me, adorkable Diane
A while ago, someone in [info]metaquotes mentioned a Star Trek movie reviewer saying that, "Chekov is so adorable his action figure will have to be a plushie."

Obviously, I took this as a challenge. The only question was, what kind of plushie? At first I thought maybe a knitted one. Then I wondered if perhaps I could use this as an opportunity to teach myself how to crochet. But then there was a post over on [info]crafty_tardis with a Fifth Doctor Plushie, and a link to the pattern used, and since said Fifth Doctor Plushie was freaking adorable I decided to make a felt plushie.

The process was not without its problems (I accidentally printed the pattern at 84%, couldn't turn the arms right side out, sewed a foot on back to front, the cheek marks looked so silly I removed them again...) but eventually I did indeed manage to make a Chekov plushie. Even if my mom, when I showed her a pic of Anton Yelchin, laughed and said, "They look nothing alike!" Wow, thanks mom. :-)

Chekov plushie pictures )
Jun. 9th, 2009 @ 09:46 pm Head Bitch in Charge
About this Entry
PG Lynda, feelings - bitchy
LYNDA DAY is the ultimate HBIC


[info]yetanothermask linked me to this meme, and I think she wanted me to vote for Angela Petrelli, but I kept reading the comments and realizing just how very many lovely ladies were on it. So at first I said I wouldn't vote. Then I realized Lynda Day hadn't been nominated. That's right - the meme had Rose Tyler and Mary Poppins, but not Lynda freaking Day, also known as Vampira, Attila the Skirt, and "Boss". We can't have that. So, I've nominated her. Now go vote - preferably for Lynda, but if you'd rather not, there are other worthy candidates too.
Jun. 8th, 2009 @ 07:51 pm I'll give this idea a one-handed applause
About this Entry
feelings - embarrassed or laughing, QC saving lol
Tags:
I got a ff.net message saying that there's some sort of petition to create a radio play reunion of the New World Zorro series, and would I like to sign it. First I thought, hm, do I actually care whether or not there's a Zorro reunion? Then I thought, hang on, radio play. Voices. Yeah, definitely not interested. :-)

I am kind of amused that he even bothered to ask me, considering that the Felipe fic is the only Zorro fic I have up on ff.net. But hey, at least it reminded me to get back to the rapefic I'm writing.
Jun. 8th, 2009 @ 11:00 am new multifandom video: You Can't Keep a Good Woman Down
About this Entry
thinky - feminist extremist
You Can't Keep a Good Woman Down
Multifandom music video celebrating women who may no longer be young, but are more awesome than ever.

Performed by Cyndee Peters.

Thanks to: [info]bookelfe and [info]roseveare for the beta - [info]bookelfe in particular was subjected to so many drafts I'm surprised she's still talking to me.

Source material from: Doctor Who, Billy Elliot, The Others, Judging Amy, Being Human, Anne of Green Gables, Steel Magnolias, Carnivale, Playing by Heart, Lilo &Stitch, Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, The Station Agent, Dead Like Me, Moonstruck, Smiles of a Summer Night, Primary Colors, Road to Avonlea, Addams Family Values, Death Becomes Her, Volvér, Roseanne, Inkheart, Marple, Press Gang, The Golden Girls, House MD, Star Trek: The Next Generation, SeaQuest DSV, Jake 2.0, Jekyll, Heroes, Fame, Boston Public, I Claudius, Rome, Ugly Betty, Äppelkriget, Gilmore Girls, Dharma & Greg, Archer's Goon, Psych, Discworld: Wyrd Sisters, Sleeping Beauty, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Twelfth Night, Fanny och Alexander, Cinderella, Shakespeare in Love, Gösta Berlings saga, Lost in Austen, Reuter & Skoog, Absolutely Fabulous, Svea Hund, Cactus Flower, My So-Called Life, Sister Act, Mamma Mia!, The West Wing, 90210, Leverage, Better Than Chocolate, Shirley Valentine, The African Queen, Dolores Claiborne, Little Mosque on the Prairie, Dead Man Walking, Vicar of Dibley, Mysterious Ways, Supernatural, Star Trek: Voyager, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, Ronja Rövardotter, The Sarah Jane Adventures, The 4400, Mulán, Joan of Arcadia, Lois & Clark.

Size: 3.39 minutes, 35.7 mb wmv.

Watch on YouTube
Watch on iMeem
Download wmv (right click and save)


Thoughts on the making of this vid, with statistics. )
Jun. 5th, 2009 @ 10:10 pm thinky thoughts on Obama's Cairo speech
About this Entry
thinky - religious yay, JoA goth god approves, feelings - approval
Tags: ,
So, Obama's speech in Cairo knocked my socks off, and I sent it over to my dad, and it knocked his socks off (and it should be noted that my dad is quite the pessimist), and he passed it on to my brother and it knocked his socks off too.

Here be the links if you haven't already seen them (and thank you [info]ladycat777 for alerting me to their existance in the first place):
Obama's speech in text.
Obama's speech in video.

More thoughts of mine are under the cut, and let me start off by saying that if you hated the speech, I don't want to hear it. Let me have my socks-knocked-off feeling in peace.

And in return, I'll put my thoughts under a cut so no one has to read them who doesn't want to. )