Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Happy birthday, Jim.

"Most legends have their basis in fact."

– Capt. James T. Kirk, Star Trek: And the Children Shall Lead
Today we wish a happy 91st birthday to William Shatner, a man who, as they say, needs no introduction.  And, in one of those odd moments when art imitates life, we also extend best wishes to James Tiberius Kirk, whose date of birth is also March 22 - albeit in the year 2233.*

This odd overlap between reality and fiction dates back to 1968 and the publication of The Making of Star Trek, written by series creator Gene Roddenberry.  It can't have been a coincidence that Kirk and Shatner share a birthday, but I wasn't able to find any kind of statement from Roddenberry regarding his choice of dates.

The small Iowa town of Riverside doubled down in 1985, decided to proclaim itself the future birthplace of Star Fleet's most illustrious officer, and contacted Gene Roddenberry for permission.  Roddenberry rewarded Riverside for its audacity by confirming their claim - he may well have felt that it was that kind of boldness and audacity that would characterize the career of Riverside's favorite son.

- Sid

* This date comes from Memory Alpha, the official Star Trek database.  Other sources say 2228, but at least they all agree on March 22nd.**

** That is, unless you're talking about the Abramsverse James T. Kirk, in which case he'll be born on January 4th, 2233 aboard a medical shuttle fleeing the destruction of the USS Kelvin, which results in the death of his father, Lieutenant Commander George Kirk.  Welcome to fandom: you pays your money and you takes your choice.

Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Thwip!

“The stories are all about Peter Parker, mask on or mask off.”

J. M. Matteis, Spider-Man writer

"I don't want to think of a thwipless world, Maureen."  

Dan Slott, Spider-Man writer and inventor of the Spider-Verse

Thanks to my Marvel Unlimited subscription, I'm attending Beyond Amazing: Celebrating 60 Years of Spider-Man, an online event celebrating the anniversary of Marvel’s friendly neighbourhood Spider-Man.  (To be completely accurate, Peter Parker’s alter ego makes his first appearance on June 5th, 1962, in Issue 15 of Amazing Fantasy, so we’re a bit early for his actual birthday, but what the heck, everyone loves a party.)

The event is competently and cleverly hosted by Marvel Creative Content Director and social media personality Lorraine Cink, and overall it’s certainly the best produced event that I’ve attended since the world made the move to virtual events two years ago.  

The theme music and sound effects are effective, the animated screen graphics are well designed, the format for the trivia questions is cleverly done, almost all of the presenters have good webcams, the audio is excellent, and Ms. Cink keeps the event moving along smoothly and professionally.  That being said, it's also just a fun and entertaining discussion, and the various participants - writers, artists, and editors - are uniformly dedicated, knowledgeable, enthusiastic and involved.

Spider-Man is arguably one of the best known Marvel Comics characters, and certainly one of the most popular.  Ignoring his movie career and his various animated television appearances*, there have been multiple comic book treatments of Marvel’s favourite web-slinger since his creation by writer Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko in 1962:  The Amazing Spider-Man, The Spectacular Spider-Man, Friendly Neighbourhood Spider-Man, The Avenging Spider-Man, The Sensational Spider-Man, Web of Spider-Man, Webspinners: Tales of Spider-Man, Giant-Size Spider-Man (the comic format, that is, not Spider-Man himself), Spider-Man Unlimited, Untold Tales of Spider-Man, The Superior Spider-Man (and Superior Spider-Man Team-Up), Spider-Man's Tangled Web, Marvel Knights: Spider-Man, Spider-Man Family, Spider-Man/Deadpool, and just plain Spider-Man.**

Radioactive spider-bite victim Peter Parker has undergone every possible change in his life:  he's been orphaned, married, divorced, rich, poor, cloned, mutated, vilified, hunted, hated, killed, reincarnated, possessed by an alien symbiote, turned into a cannibal zombie, made a deal with the Devil, gone public with his secret identity, and had his mind swapped with a dying Doctor Octopus.  Poor guy, no wonder he's a bit neurotic.

And yet, at his core, he's remained the same person: a bit clumsy, a bit socially challenged, concerned about doing the right thing, worried that he’s not the person he should be, and terribly, constantly aware that with great power comes great responsibility.

It's this aspect of the character that the first segment of the event addresses, as Ms. Cink questions Marvel VP and executive editor Tom Brevoort, editor Steve Wacker, and Spider-Man writer J. M. Matteis (clockwise from top left) about Spider-Man’s origins and their perception of what makes the character tick.

For Matteis, Spider-Man is a profoundly personal character.  “The essence of Spider-Man was right there in that first Romita story that I read. Huge story, but the stakes were personal - it was about Peter Parker.”  

Wacker comments that it was Peter Parker’s youth that resonated with him, that he wasn’t a sidekick, but the main character, and that in spite of his youth he was responsible for his Aunt May.  Breevort found that the relatability of the early Spider-Man stories are what made the connection to the character for him, that Spider-Man was the first superhero who was the audience. “Peter Parker was just this stupid kid trying to make something good out of this weird accident that happened to him.”  

The other panelists agree that the story isn’t really about Spider-Man, it’s about Peter Parker, his problems and his struggles, which made the comic an intensely personal experience. Wacker adds that Spider-Man’s well-known tendency to make jokes is anchored in his back story:  “Comedy is the way we deal with tragedy.”

When asked to sum up Spider-Man in one word, Tom Brevoort says, “Amazing”, Steve Wacker chooses “Everyman”, and J. M. Matteis simply says, “Human”.

There’s a brief break for some trivia and a give-away (sadly restricted to the US attendees) and we’re back for Part 2 – Spider-Man Beyond, featuring Spider-Man artists Joe Quesada and Humberto Ramos, and the legendary John Romita Jr., son of the equally legendary John Romita Sr., whose signature artwork on Spider-Man defined the character and his world.

Romita Senior’s artwork is in some ways the basis for the conversation, as the artists discuss the classic look of the Spider-Man costume and the way in which it’s changed (and remained the same) over 60 years.

Quesada and Ramos concur that the most distinctive thing about drawing Spider-Man is the character’s ability to emote through his mask.  For Romita, it’s the character’s lack of grace – as Quesada points out, there’s a kind of creepiness to the way that original Spider-Man artist Steve Ditko drew the character.  Quesada also adds that whenever he draws the the original costume, he curses Ditko for his use of the webbing pattern  - "It's like a math problem, I hate that."

John Romita Jr. is very much the focus of this portion of the event.  Cink asks what keeps drawing*** him back to Spider-Man, and he replies that, “It reminds me of family. He felt like a family member.”  As a second-generation Marvel artist, Romita has a unique legacy: he relates how when he was young, his father would explain what Stan Lee was doing that morning to describe a story, and remembers actually seeing Ditko drawing Spider-Man. 

He describes Spider-Man as “...the greatest character. He's Stan Lee’s antithesis to Superman - he's not perfect.  He gets beaten up, he catches a cold, he loses. It’s the greatest character of all time.” He adds  that Stan Lee once said that the balance of fantasy and reality is what makes a character great.

To conclude their segment, Cink asks the artists who their most influential artist is.  For Ramos, it's the two men he's sharing the screen with; for Quesada, it's John Romita Sr., who "took Spider-Man and made him an icon." Romita not surprisingly also says that it was his father. “I saw all of his work, but when he did Spider-Man, it sang to me." 

The third segment lightheartedly looks at the Spider-Men (and Women) who are spinoffs (no pun intended) from the Peter Parker storyline, as represented by Maureen Goo, who writes the Korean-American character Silk, Spider-Woman writer Karla Pacheco, and Dan Slott, inventor of the Spider-Verse: or, as Cink cheerfully describes them, the trouble-maker group, a sentiment that they eagerly echo.

Cink asks this group what they think makes for "a truly great Spider character?" For Dan Slott, the answer is simple: "They're like you and me - they screw up all the time!", with the subsequent obligation of then fixing their mistakes.  Maureen Goo feels that it's "their heart (that) stands out - it may lead to good or bad decisions, but that's their compass."

Karla Pacheco agrees with both of these observations:  "There's a very human and relatable aspect to Spidey-characters - the most fallible in ways, the most "normal" if that makes sense. That's why the character has endured so long."

The final question for this group is what sound effect they would use if Spider-Man's distinctive webshooter "thwip"**** was banned. After they earnestly discuss options like "Weeebbbbbbb", Dan Slott wraps up the conversation by saying, "I don't want to think of a thwipless world, Maureen."  

 
In the final section of the event, we take a look at what's next for Spider-Man under the guidance of Nick Lowe, Vice President of Content and Executive Editor at Marvel Comics, and C.B. Cebulski, Editor in Chief.  Lowe brings a sort of exuberant over-the-top Stan Lee energy to the conversation, which is probably not the worst reference for a Marvel Comics executive.

It's a bit of a marketing moment, but that's understandable under the circumstances, and fans do like to know what's coming up for their favourite characters. 

Based on the catalogue of publications that Marvel has planned, 2022 is very much Spider-Man's year:  several new comics, including one drawn by John Romita Jr.; and Issue 900 of Spider-Man, which will essentially be a graphic novel featuring Spider-Man in combat with with all of his traditional enemies as combined in classic Marvel villain the Adaptoid. 

C. B.'s final statement provides the perfect summary of the character of Spider-Man to end the event:  "Under that superhuman mask is the human."

- Sid

* The less said about his failed Broadway appearance the better.

** Not including Spider-Man 2099, the Miles Morales Spider-Man, Mary-Jane, Spider-Gwen, the graphic novels, mini-series, one-offs, guest appearances, or any of the Marvel Age/Marvel Adventures comics aimed at a younger audience, which I gather aren't part of the standard continuity.

*** Apparently no pun was intended.

**** In the Spider-Verse animated movie, Peter Parker also uses this word as a verb when attempting to teach Miles Morales the fundamentals of web-slinging, it's obviously a key term in Spider-lore.

Thursday, March 3, 2022

UK 2022: Snapshots.

Some bits and pieces from the UK 2022 trip:

Browsing the Fanasy section at the Notting Hill Comic Exchange – which may even contain some myffic fanasy*, if I’m lucky.

Dear Hamleys' Toy Shop, I was wondering what a three meter Optimus Prime with glowing eyes would cost?  Asking for a friend.

To my surprise, Jelly Babies are COMPLETELY different than Gummy Bears!!!  How could I not know this after so many years of Doctor Who?

I'm sorry to say this, but I saw far too many ten-year-old English boys who reminded me of Edmund Pevensie from The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe:  sullen, pouty, a little spoiled, and inexplicably red-cheeked.

All the tables were all numbered 42, apparently it was the pub from The Hitch-hikers Guide to the Galaxy.

Shopping again at the Forbidden Planet London Megastore - the geek equivalent of drinking out of the firehose.

...where I bought a couple of books, a 2000AD comic, and a long LONG overdue TARDIS pin!


As we wandered along the South Bank on our last day in London, our unplanned stroll took us into a branch of Foyles Bookshop.  Until that moment, I was completely unaware of Foyles, let alone the almost cult status conveyed upon it in the past due to its archaic (and anarchic) business practices for much of its lifespan. 

It's now owned by Waterstones, and whatever its past sins, I found it to be a well-stocked and pleasant shopping spot - as well as offering one final opportunity to spend money on books before heading home.

All in all, our first pandemic trip went surprisingly well, although we sadly decided to forgo our usual restaurant research in favour of take-out - and one cautious afternoon visit to an almost empty pub for a pint and some onion rings.  As always, Karli was the ideal travel companion for a week of Britannic shopping and sightseeing: Sherlock Holmes, Albert's Hall**, Brompton Cemetery, the Beatles***, Marks & Spencer, West End theatre, Jack the Ripper, Portobello Road, and, of course, Doctor Who.  Thank you again for agreeing to join me, my love!

- Sid

* “But I was thinking, you're in trouble now, Mrs Ogg, 'cos it'd all gone myffic.'

'Mythic?' said schoolteacher Susan.

"Yep. With extra myff. And you can get into big trouble, with myffic.”

Terry Pratchett, Thief of Time

** Apparently I'm the only person in the world who remembers the line about "Now they know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall" from A Day In The Life by The Beatles. 

*** I bought a mug and a T-shirt, it's not always about science fiction.

 


Wednesday, March 2, 2022

UK 2022: Infinite London.

"London goes beyond any boundary or convention. It contains every wish or word ever spoken, every action or gesture ever made, every harsh or noble statement ever expressed. It is illimitable. It is Infinite London.” 

Peter Ackroyd

"I do love London, so many cameras."

Miss Kizlet, The Bells of Saint Johns, Doctor Who

It's hard not to love London.  On our last day in England, we took advantage of beautiful weather and made our way down to Embankment Station for a farewell walk along the Thames.  We took an obligatory selfie with a newly restored and regilded Big Ben, crossed Westminster Bridge, and made our way back along the water to Jubilee Bridge.

 

As we wandered along the south bank, I realized that we had reached the spot where the Doctor and Clara amaze the passing pedestrians by making a blue police box appear from nowhere in Episode 6 of Doctor Who's seventh season, The Bells of St. John. This episode marks the third appearance of Clara Oswald, the Impossible Girl, and introduces her as the Doctor's new companion.

It's a fun, fast-paced and well-written episode, but it's also a bit of a love letter to London, as the Doctor and Clara make their magical South Bank manifestation, zoom across Westminster Bridge on a motorcycle, pass Horse Guards, and cruise through Admiralty Arch to enjoy breakfast at Grange St. Paul's Hotel rooftop patio near St. Paul's Cathedral*, after which the Doctor rides up the side of the Shard to invade the headquarters of the wifi soul stealers and restore Clara's mind to her body.

The Doctor explains all this as protecting the TARDIS from falling into the wrong hands, but really, it's just to show off some London scenery.  That's the one shortcoming of the TARDIS:  yes, all of time and space, bigger on the inside, but no windows.

- Sid

* Ever since I saw this episode I've wanted to have breakfast at that restaurant, and to my intense happiness I stumbled across the shooting location in the process of researching this posting - that's now on the list for the NEXT visit to London. 


Tuesday, March 1, 2022

UK 2022: Time Loop.

YOU SAVED THE UNIVERSE – Fancy saving it again?

U.N.I.T need you to step up, be the hero and earn your stripes at Doctor Who: Time Fracture as you return to help save the Universe.

As a returning hero, all repeat bookers are entitled to the Returning Hero Badge. Bring this e-mail with you on your next visit to collect your Returning Hero ID Card, obtain your initial two stamps and claim your first exclusive pin badge to show off your outstanding heroism. Then, for every second future return visit, you will be rewarded with another unique badge to add to your collection.

The world is safe for now, or is it? After all, history has a way of repeating itself...
See you on the next mission, recruit!

In my posting on the Doctor Who Time Fracture immersive experience, I speculated that if I had the opportunity, I might well attend the event again, perhaps more than once, so as to fill in some of the gaps in the narrative.  Little did I realize that this was one of those situations where life was far ahead of art in terms of concept.  

Three days after attending the event, I received an e-mail from the ticketing company suggesting that I might well want to do exactly that - attend multiple times - to the point where special pin badges for numbers up to ten visits are available to repeating clients. Given that tickets are running at about $67 CAD, I think that well before I'd attended ten times, I'd be content to let someone else save the universe once or twice without me.

- Sid

Thursday, February 24, 2022

UK 2022: Time to save the world.

Wednesday afternoon, and Karli and I are approaching the entrance to the UNified Intelligence Taskforce  (UNIT) headquarters on Davies Mews in London for the Doctor Who: Time Fracture event: it's show time.  I'm a bit apprehensive - no pun intended, but it's been a long time coming, and expectations are high.

Two and a quarter hours later (plus some time for the gift shop) and we're done - we've saved the universe, and we have the gratitude of the Doctors, all of them.

Overall, Time Fracture is good, but sadly, it's not great - which is a shame, because the framework for greatness is certainly there. 

It's surprisingly like being in an episode of the series: time travel, aliens, inexplicable technologies, historical figures, Cybermen, Weeping Angels, saving the world, and, of course, Daleks - what would a Doctor Who event even be without a Dalek or two?

The immersive aspect of the event gives every attendee a unique experience, and it's VERY immersive - how often do you attend a theatrical event where you're so much a part of the performance that you have lines and talk to the performers?  The Time Fracture performers themselves deliver uniformly impressive performances that give the show its energy and focus. However, there are some serious problems with the show's pacing, and it could stand some upgrades to its practical effects.

Here's how events unfold:  

In 1942, an unknown device detonates in the center of London, creating a rift in time - the time fracture of the title.  The experience starts with the attendees entering a large black ops laboratory that UNIT has set up to monitor the fracture, where we are informed by UNIT scientists that recent spikes in energy readings indicate that a catastrophic event is approaching.  The Doctor has given our names to UNIT, and Chief Scientist Kate Lethbridge Stewart makes a video appearance, inviting us to volunteer to help solve the mystery behind the fracture and save all of time and space from disaster.  However, as the UNIT science team is preparing to send two of us through the fracture, Daleks attack the lab. The Doctor is able to intervene and temporarily protect us, but all the volunteers are forced to flee through the time fracture instead of just two.

On the other side of the fracture, we find ourselves in a nexus of disjointed locations in time and space, where we are split into small groups under the leadership of guides, each of whom has a particular goal to accomplish with our help.  Our group finds itself paired with Zoria, an intense young woman with a piercingly direct stare, dressed all in red and armed with a futuristic blast pistol, who asks us to become her Agents as we seek out the components of the Time Disruptor that caused* the fracture.

Her mission takes us to a variety of historical periods in different side rooms, travelling through liminal spaces that act as conduits to the different periods: corridors, foyers, galleries, and so on.

Our first stop was Broll's Salvage and Import Export Emporium, where I was tasked with asking Brolls, the pig-headed (literally) dealer in obscure and hard to find items, what he would do if the item we needed was illegal. I took my cue, asked my question, and that set the tone for the middle sections of the experience, as we run from Broll's future to Da Vinci's Italy, and from Elizabethan England to a 1920s Torchwood outpost that had somehow been merged with one of its future incarnations.

I had an extended argument with Captain Stephen Davies in the Torchwood section - Zoria told us to enter his headquarters and to immediately find out who was in charge and to demand the Key, which was actually part of the Disruptor. (At one point Davies dryly observed that I was from "across the pond", which I thought a good improv moment.)   I don't know if people were relieved or frustrated that I took the lead on our conversation with Davies, but it was fun - and we were on the clock, someone had to do it.

As we collect the pieces of the Disruptor, it becomes evident that some of the group leaders, including Zoria, are Time Lords (for all we know, the same Time Lord, it's not impossible). 

Apparently there are 14 separate plot streams during this section of the experience, and under different circumstances I'd very likely attend the show again, perhaps more than once, just to fill in some of the plot gaps.  For example, only through online research did I discover that Brian, the Ood who is one of the group leaders, has been hired to kill Zoria - it's a tie-in with the Time Lord Victorious series, where Brian accompanies the 10th Doctor through most of his battle against the Kotturuh in the Dark Times.  There's apparently also an extended subplot involving Davros, founder of the Daleks; Queen Elizabeth marries one of the volunteers; and River Song, played by Alex Kingston, makes an appearance at Torchwood via video. 

I enjoyed this section quite a bit - for me, it was the most interesting part of the event, and I wish there had been more of it.  The actors do a brilliant job, both in their performances and their timing.  I can only imagine the challenges of juggling three or four different conversations and storylines as volunteers run in and out of rooms, and I was quite impressed that Zoria got us back to Brolls exactly in time for the auction of the last remaining piece of the Time Disruptor, just before marauding Cybermen chased us out of the nexus.

And then they lost all the momentum and excitement that they'd built up by dumping us into a room where we sat for 35 minutes and listened to a blue lounge singer.  

I don't know what was happening behind the scenes during that 35 minutes.  Were they resetting the staging?  Reloading the smoke machines in the Gallifrey High Council room?  Changing costumes? Disinfecting the seats?

Whatever the reason or reasoning was, it was a mistake. Thirty-five minutes is far too long an interval:  if you've only got 135 minutes in total, there's no desire to spend almost a quarter of your time cooling your heels in a space bar.

Admittedly, there were some bits of extraneous business in an attempt to liven things up - Zoria exchanges shots across the room with someone, and one of the group leaders convinces the captain of the ship to detour to Gallifrey, the home of the Time Lords, but really, it was 35 minutes of sitting and wondering what we were supposed to be doing.

We could see some of the volunteers exiting through the rear of the room, and finally the last of us were ushered out through a gauntlet of Weeping Angels to the chambers of the High Council of Gallifrey, already locked in debate as we enter the room.

With our support, the Council votes to resurrect Rassilon, the founder of the Time Lords. (Interestingly, research reveals that Rassilon resurrects as either male or female, depending on what day it is.) Reborn, Rassilon decides to detonate the Time Disruptor, ensuring Gallifrey's ascendance over all of time and space.

The Doctor shields the council chambers in an attempt to protect the rest of the universe from the temporal detonation, but the volunteers are able to use the residual artron energy that they've accumulated during the experience to defuse the Disruptor and save the universe.  The volunteers return to UNIT to celebrate, and the experience comes to an end. 

So, what would I have done to improve Time Fracture?

I would have told it as more of a unified story, gradually pulling all the threads together to bring everyone together on Gallifrey and giving the plotline more structure and closure so that everyone knows what's happening.

I would have skipped the lounge entirely, and brought each of the groups into the Council Chambers as a logical extension of the storyline - Zoria takes her Agents there after finding all the components of the Disruptor, the other Time Lords find out and pursue her, one of the other groups obtains the Crescent of Rassilon that Queen Elizabeth I is wearing as a crown and delivers it to to the High Council for the resurrection, Brian the Ood and his group pursue Zoria to Gallifrey for a climactic showdown - I'm even willing to have one group get there via the starship, albeit a lot faster than in the current arrangement. 

I would have had Zoria be part of the Council - it's well and good that she runs away shouting that the Council will be sorry after they reject her, but it would have made so much more sense to involve her in the finale, rather than a bunch of Time Lords that we haven't seen. In fact, all the Time Lord group leaders should be part of the council, it would have tied things together more logically.

I can also think of half a dozen different ways to enhance things on the practical effects level.  Many years ago, there was a 3D ride at the CN Tower in Toronto.  At one point during the preparation for boarding the ship, a blast of air innoculated travellers for the trip - a simple idea but very effective, and that sort of effect would have greatly improved things at Time Fracture.

In the UNIT lab, we were told to brace ourselves several times, but nothing happened.  Okay - if you can't afford a motion platform for the room (or don't want one for safety reasons), at least get some IMAX-level woofers with the kind of bass that make things vibrate.

Let's make the various time portals more, well, portally.  Flashing lights are all very well and good, but let's put some fans in there, or jets of compressed air, rumbling bass sounds, something to make me feel like I'm going through a rift in time and space, rather than down a flight of stairs. Similarly, the portals between areas in the second part of the experience are heavy plastic slats and plastic tubes, something less prosaic would have enhanced the experience.**

A couple of small Van De Graff generators concealed close to the Time Disruptor would have made saving the universe more dramatic - good grief, a good disco ball would have made it more dramatic, or even some focused high powered lighting effects.  As it was, it was hard to tell whether anything was actually happening or not during the climactic event of the experience, which is unfortunate.  In fact, if I had to sum up that aspect of the show, it completely lacked any "wow" moments - wouldn't it have been better to have something happen that makes the audience gasp at the end?

I walked away with two t-shirts to commemorate Time Fracture - I do like a t-shirt - and some mild regret at the unrealized potential in the show.  That being said, ultimately, I'm glad that I went. It was a unique experience, in spite of its shortcomings - and hey, we saved the universe!

- Sid

* Or will cause - wibbly wobbly, timey wimey.

** It's surprising that the doorways are so basic, considering how incredible the rest of the set is in terms of detail and quality.  I suppose they wanted the doorways to be more durable than decorative, but they might have gone a bit too far in dumbing them down.


Wednesday, February 23, 2022

UK 2022: Stage Fright.

 
 
It's been a long time coming, but it's finally the day - we're in London, and we have tickets for the sold out 12:45 show of the immersive Doctor Who: Time Fracture event today.  However, I'm surprised to realize that I'm inexplicably nervous about it.

I'm not sure why.  The show is well reviewed (although I haven't done too much research so as to avoid spoilers), I was reassured via e-mail that the venue would accept whatever COVID-19 documentation we used to get into the UK*, I brought my Angels have the Phone Box t-shirt, we've got the London Underground pretty well figured out,  it's close enough that if something went very wrong with the Tube at the last minute we could actually walk there (although it would be a bit of a hike), I've already picked out the t-shirts I want to buy, it would all seem to be under control, but I'm still a bit on edge.

It may just be the weight of expectation.  We've come a long way, spent a lot of money, and exposed ourselves to some COVID-19 risk for this**, and it would be devastating if something went wrong. 

Well, as I like to say, we're here now - it's time to be the hero.

- Sid

* "If it's good enough for them, it's good enough for us."

** I have nothing but praise and gratitude for Karli in all of this.  Imagine flying a quarter of the way around the planet wearing a mask so that your husband can go to a two and a quarter hour fan event - I'm not sure I deserve that degree of love.

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

UK 2022: Tomorrow's the Day.

You know, it never occurred to me that there would be actual ads in London for the Doctor Who: Time Fracture event - when you're researching something 7500 kilometers away, it all seems so much more abstract than that.

- Sid

Sunday, February 20, 2022

UK 2022: 221B


We start our first full day in London with a visit to the Sherlock Holmes Museum, located not quite at 221B Baker Street, a fictitious address even when Sir Arthur Conan Doyle originally introduced the character of the world's most famous detective. (Fortunately, the museum has been kind enough to fake up a doorway for the Instagram crowd.)

The museum combines a fascinatingly detailed recreation of Holmes and Watson's bachelor residence with set pieces recreating their most famous cases. The recreation hits the high notes from the stories such the tobacco filled Persian slipper on the mantle and the queen's initials punched out on the wall in bullet-holes (one would expect the neighbours to complain about this sort of thing) and fills in the rest with appropriate and authentic artifacts from the era.

Although Sherlock Holmes doesn't identify as either SF or fantasy, it's hard to ignore how frequently he shows up in one form or another in genre literature: revealed as the nephew of Vlad Tepes in The Holmes-Dracula File, the second book in Fred Saberhagen's Dracula series; crosscast as queer black FBI agent Sara Holmes in Claire O'Dell's near-future Janet Watson Chronicles; investigating the Great Old Ones for James Lovegrove in The Cthulhu Casebooks; mismanaging magical investigations in the Warlock Holmes series, by G. S. Denning; and in innumerable other novels, short stories, guest appearances, and offstage references.

For conveniently short examples, the curious reader can sample Poul Anderson's The Martian Crown Jewels, featuring Martian consulting detective Syaloch, whose second floor lodging is located on The Street of Those Who Prepare Nourishment in Ovens, and Neil Gaiman's Hugo-winning A Study in Emerald, featuring a consulting detective, a wounded Afghanistan war veteran, and a queen named Victoria, none of whom are who you think they are.

- Sid

Friday, February 18, 2022

UK 2022: The Pandemic Run.

In four hours, Karli and I leave for London. It's our first trip by airplane since February 7th, 2020, when we returned from Disneyland, just under the wire before the pandemic clamped down on international travel and only a few weeks before we all started working virtually via VPN and Zoom - at least, all of us who were lucky enough to be able to do so.

The UK has removed a lot of its restrictions, but we're still treating London as hostile territory, at least in terms of the pandemic. It all feels a bit like a near-future cyberpunk scenario written by William Gibson - masking up for the airport and the flight, producing our vaccine passports along with our regular passports, certifying that we haven't visited any red zones before our entry into England, and planning COVID-19 tests so that we can persuade Customs and Immigration to let us back into Canada in a week. (Although, given that the United Kingdom is currently being battered by one of the worse storms in 30 years, comparisons to Bruce Sterling's Heavy Weather are equally appropriate.)

Cue the techno theme music - we're starting our run. 

- Sid

Friday, February 11, 2022

"Would you like a jelly baby?"

One week to go before we depart on our trip to England, and at the moment we are still planning to do the trip.  In preparation, I asked an English co-worker if she'd like me to bring anything back for her - crisps, chocolate bars, cheap tights from Primark*, anything like that.

She thought for a moment and asked for jelly babies.  Sadly, in spite of her English origins, she was unaware that the offer of a jelly baby was the characteristic conversational gambit of Tom Baker's 4th Doctor**.  Fortunately someone has already created collated evidence of this very English approach to breaking the ice:

- Sid

P.S.  It turns out that my co-worker had never seen Tom Baker as the Doctor, arguably the most popular of the portrayals of the last Time Lord - sic transit gloria mundi


* As recommended by another English employee when Karli and I were in London for our honeymoon.

** And, apparently, a number of other Doctors at least once.