That is a deeply emotional off-the-cuff speech. And good for her. I don't think I've seen pics of her kids before - they're adorable.
That is a deeply emotional off-the-cuff speech. And good for her. I don't think I've seen pics of her kids before - they're adorable.
I keep being conflicted as to whether I want to see this film or not. *waffle*
not actually a #correction but you might want to mention the guide to pop culture references in the story which is the following entry in the middleblog.
FUCK YES MIDDLEMAN.
Speaking of Avengers, over on http://www.toddalcott.com/ Todd Alcott is doing a great big bang-up analysis of the script and the movie.
I love how his husband Brian keeps showing up in these little videos.
It doesn't look like this collection is out in ebook form (at least not yet), but there are all manner of circlet press ebooks available via the circlet site and the amazon kindle store.
Oh my God, the Sendak mix-up is terrible! I can only imagine the awesomeness of an edition of The Hobbit fully illustrated by Sendak.
Outstanding. Well done JSC nerds!
I happened to be riding my motorcycle the day I saw "Matrix:Reloaded".
Okay, that's wonderful.
Bring back flophouses and murphy beds!
He was older than stainless steel.
No love for the most recent Eureka holiday special?
SciFi/SyFy has spent its entire 20 years lurching between "Let's appeal to somewhat think-y adults" and "Let's appeal to 11 year old boys!"
1. This is good. More folks in STEM is good, and having Deaf folks getting more involved in STEM (particularly things that enable Deaf folks to have an easier time doing so) is awesome. And go Gallaudet! 2. Yay Lydia Callis!
I was hoping that at the end they'd dissolve to the actual picture.
Fuck yes! This was a good solid low budget zombie film (admittedly filmed in some very very expensive sets). And it sounds like they managed to make a film even cheaper than the Primer folks did. (Always nice when "write to use the shooting locations you have available" means you can shoot at CERN, though...)
I've been thinking about "Person of Interest" as far as the narrative structure it uses. Normally, in procedurals, computers and geeks are the Greek chorus who provide exposition to the audience and the characters. But in PoI, with magic cellphone pairing and hacking stuff, we've shifted to not just the audience…
Hell yeah.