Friday, December 31, 2004
Daisy Kutter and New Year's wishes
The books themselves are black and white with very nice color covers. Rumor has it the graphic novel will include about 40 extra pages featuring more artwork and some of the process Kazu used in creating the series. I wish I'd known that a little earlier... If you're looking around for something new to try in the comic world, this is definitely a worthy read.
Hope every one has a nice New Year's. There's a lot going on in the world right now, so take a moment to remember the things that you take for granted and the people around you that make life wonderful. And if you're separated from those people, may they be safe.
Thursday, December 30, 2004
Ah the 80s
I've got a bit of a love/hate relationship with black comedies. I suppose it depends on the subject matter. I absolutely loathed The War of the Roses, but Falling Down was pretty good. Roses just depressed me. I couldn't stand watching them fall out of love and destroy each other. Marriage means enough to me that the humor was lost and it just became depressing and vulgar. Falling Down however did a decent job of showing us the ordinary guy just losing it completely.
When I was in college I took a class on humor my senior year. It was an interesting class and it covered a few varieties of humor including black comedy. In fact, I want to say that Heathers was at least touched on during that portion. Humor is one of those things that people really only sort of understand. While it has admittedly been a while since the class, I don't remember thinking we ever had a real definite statement as to what humor was, or what made something funny. I think that's one of the most important aspects of humor. It tends to arise from a sudden unexpected event, but you can't really pin it down too well. It's like the old adage - you kill a joke by explaining it. Humor suffers something from trying to understand it too much. The joke is dead, long live the joke...
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
Hoity Toity
I've now managed to pick up the fourth Daisy Kutter so in the next few days I'll be able to talk about the series as a whole. And Flight, Volume 2 is set to come out pretty soon as well. I wouldn't mind snagging a copy of that also, but we'll see...
I'm really tired of Blade Trinity commercials. #1 action movie eh? Up against what exactly? And you can't claim #1 movie spot why? Oh that's right, you're not even in the top 10... Boy those advertisers know how to spin things.
Tuesday, December 28, 2004
Middle age zen and Harry Potter Candy
Of course, you do learn to cherish some of those little moments. If you're smart, you write them down or obtain future blackmail evidence in the form of photos or video. Favorite mispronounced words, strange little habits that are peculiar to each child, the first time your three year old daughter button mashes her way to victory in Soul Calibur 2 despite your halfhearted efforts - or your six year old beating you despite the fact that you're actually trying... Not that I have any experience with that. They become the little milestones that mark the years instead of birthdays and random holidays.
I have to admit a new fondness for Chocolate Frogs. I've tried most (if not all) of the Harry Potter candy and they're probably my favorite. Admittedly they have a bit of an advantage being chocolate, but the cards are fun and the chocolate isn't too bad. Droobles Best Blowing Gum is probably my next favorite followed by the Ice Mice and the Jelly Slugs. The Fizzing Whizbees and Bertie Botts Beans come in at the bottom of the pack. Only kids could love Bertie Botts Beans. Mostly because half the time they don't realize what they're eating. I took one of the newer batches in to work a few weeks ago and we goaded each other into trying some of the less savory flavors. I swear, Harry Potter has secretly fulfilled some guy's dream over there at Jelly Belly. You just know there's one guy that always wanted to make a vomit flavored jelly bean and now he has an excuse.
Monday, December 27, 2004
Death Knell
The holidays were enjoyable - we all had a great Christmas. We are now the proud owners of a Casio Exilim, so expect slightly more frequent photo evidence of whatever oddities occur locally. The girls are going slightly stir crazy - I don't envy my wife's job this week as McKenna is out of school for the Christmas break holiday. I suspect it's entirely possible that by the end of the week the number of people in our family will be reduced by one or two...
The fine fellows over at Penny Arcade have just wrapped up their Cthulhu Christmas story, so feel free to go check that out. It was a nice horrific little holiday tale. I really need to snag one of those plush Cthulhu toys running around the net...
Anyway, enjoy the lull week between Christmas and New Years. The start of 2005 and regular work schedules are waiting just around the corner to mug us all.
Thursday, December 23, 2004
Christopher Walken Christmas Letters and Holiday Sentiments
I don't know that I ever wrote a letter to someone famous. I have vague memories of writing the hostages that came home in the early 80s (it might even have been 1980). The only reason I remember that is that I got to help deliver the letters from our class. I wrote William Goldman to request the two page "reunion scene" from The Princess Bride. That was a clever bit of trickery. I suspect famous people get some truly interesting letters.
And the Christmas holiday weekend begins. The girls are currently at Defcon 2, itching to up the stakes. We're letting them watch The Santa Clause at the moment. While not my favorite Christmas movie, they enjoy it and it has its moments. There are certainly worse choices. I admit a certain loyalty to It's a Wonderful Life. I don't have to watch it every year, but I do have some small amount of affection for it. A Christmas Story also helps ring in the Christmas season. Although ever since that 24 hour marathon a few years ago I haven't felt a burning desire to watch it again... Holiday movies are strange creatures. They subsist almost entirely on emotional manipulation and nostalgia, and yet they certainly help define who we are. And what's a little emotional blackmail between friends anyway. ^_^ Actually holiday movies can provide a nice bit of catharsis and remind us of the things that make life worth living. But then, most of the fine arts can do that - music, art, literature, film. It's amazing how they can bind themselves to little pieces of our lives and forevermore remind us of those things regardless of time or distance.
I hope you all have a wonderful holiday and can spend some time with those you hold dear.
Wednesday, December 22, 2004
Biting humor
Switching gears, we watched House last night (the new medical show on Fox, not the great cheesy horror flick from the 80s). It was quite nice. House himself reminds me of Perry from Scrubs with a little less restraint. I plan on checking it out again.
Tuesday, December 21, 2004
Survival of the least annoying
Today my wife and I went through the girls' room and culled some of the accumulated clutter in preparation for Christmas. We try to do this every so often in order to prevent death by assorted odds and ends. It's pretty amazing how much stuff two little girls can horde away. Well, amazing or terrifying, your call... This morning was trial by garbage bag. Based on highly tuned parent gut reaction we scoured their room and the life of each stuffed animal, each piece of dress up clothing hung in the balance. It was quite satsisfying. Unfortunately, we really only managed to bring the level of kipple (thanks PK Dick for such a wonderful word) back to normal. We really should have strived for less than normal in anticipation of Christmas, but we'll re-calibrate once the presents are opened and we know where we stand. Oddest thing found this morning - a receipt. I don't recall what it was for. And I certainly have no idea why McKenna thought it was necessary to hold on to it.
A couple more days to go this week and then it's a nice four day weekend. Actually, I'm just trying to make it through tomorrow and then the rest of the week will be pretty easy. At least tomorrow night is game night. That will help kick things off right. We have recently acquired Munchkin Bites and Hoity Toity. Expect reviews in the not too distant future. The Munchkin series is well loved around here. Between the letter 'r' and I we have managed to gather all the variations. They're quite fun and each new installment tends to tweak things just enough to emphasize a certain aspect of gameplay. That and the cards are hilarious. Munchkin Bites tackles the horror genre, so I suspect I'm in for a treat.
Monday, December 20, 2004
Short week
Actually, this should be a pretty good Christmas. The girls are at the age where they really get into it and one of the presents under the tree this year is quite nice. So hopefully I can manage to put the other stuff behind me and focus on family and friends and fun. Of course, my wife still hasn't figured out what she's getting me for Christmas, so there are a few opportunties for some good natured teasing as well. That always helps. ^_^
And alas, I believe today was the day they were announcing the winners of the Metroid Prime Haiku contest and I failed to receive that e-mail or phone call letting me know that I'd won the grand prize. How inconsiderate of them. I fail to acknowledge the possibility that someone else created a finer haiku. I'm sure the computer in charge of the random drawing was biased in some way...
Saturday, December 18, 2004
Santa Graeme
Santa Graeme
Originally uploaded by dkun.
Need to get this up before I forget. This was almost the Christmas card we sent out. If I'd had a bit more time and an unlimited supply of ink I would have.
My mother and wife went out shopping one afternoon and came back with this outfit. Terribly shameful I must admit. They wasted absolutely no time in getting it on him and taking pictures for future blackmail purposes. My folks had a picture they wanted to try and use as a Christmas card so I dummied one up for them real fast. When I snagged the photo from them and some of the others that were ours, I realized I had to make a card for us as well. The idea of a gangster Santa just appealed to me for some reason...
The funny thing is that it's such an accidental shot. Of course, those always end up being the best. All I have to say is that Santa is ready to bust some heads if you're on his "naughty" list!
Friday, December 17, 2004
Thursday, December 16, 2004
That kind of day
Mixing paint fumes and sinus medicine isn't really all that good an idea.
I really need to locate a spare 4 hours or so to watch the extended Return of the King... I may attempt to do that tomorrow - I've managed to snag another 3 day weekend. This could have turned into quite the party weekend. Tonight was the company Christmas party, tomorrow is the church party and Friday we're getting together with a good friend. We skipped the work party due to the newborn. We'll see what happens tomorrow. I tend to prefer smaller get togethers with people I know.
My wife has made friends with the librarian responsible for the graphic novel section. This is a good thing. We've put in a few suggestions for things the library really can't do without. Hopefully they will make their way to the shelves. Apparently she's also a fan of the Gamecube. It's good to see Nintendo's little box of joy gaining more favor. I probably should have linked to this yesterday, but I didn't. It's an alright little piece about the 'cube.
Well, I'm starting to see blue bunny rabbits so I better go operate some heavy machinery.
Wednesday, December 15, 2004
fuzzy logic
I would start pointing you to other places of interest now (in fact, I'm sure I had a few I meant to mention) but my current mental state really isn't going to allow that. I should just curl up with the new extended edition of Return of the King and visit Middle Earth for a bit.
Tuesday, December 14, 2004
800 lb. Gorilla
Sounds like a bunch of game magazines are getting the axe. GMR and XBN and one other one I can't recall (it's mentioned on GAF's main page if you went to check out the EA story). I like magazines. We currently only subscribe to a couple. I'm always on the lookout for something new to peruse though. I used to subscribe to a game magazine. (OPM if you're that curious) It was interesting for a while. Game journalism is a tricky thing. Reviews are odd things - they're barely more than hype - occasionally you'll find a reviewer you can trust, but it's a rare thing. Previews are really nothing but hype, and the game industry itself (while getting more interesting) certainly lacks the appeal of something like Hollywood or the political arena. So that leaves not too much more than the ads - which game magazines are chock full of as well. (Not that there are many magazines that aren't mostly ads...) There have been some interesting pieces on the state of game journalism and where it needs to head. Who knows, it might even get there some day. It's sad that more magazines are disappearing though. I suspect it's pretty hard for magazines to survive. I think the internet has hurt them slightly more than things like newspapers or books. Magazines tend to be pretty specialized, and while there's something satisfying about the physical aspect of a magazine, the net has the potential (and the reality) to be a lot more specialized than a magazine.
Monday, December 13, 2004
And we're back
Spiderman offered little in the way of surprises, but was a decent sequel. Far too much time was spent on drumming into the audience how much it sucks to be Peter Parker, but the villain was enjoyable and the last third or so of the film was fun to watch. I must say that either Tobey Maguire wanted much more of his face seen in this movie or there are far too many people who now know who Spiderman is. I'm not a huge Spidey fan (that honor belongs to my wife) so I don't know if Harry Osborne knows that he's Spiderman or not, but it just seems that he was far too willing to walk around saying, "Hey! Look, it's me Spiderman!"
Friday, December 10, 2004
Ah, the weekend
The War of the Worlds teaser is running around as well. You can find that one on your own. It has summer blockbuster written all over it. I suspect it will be a decent popcorn movie. And that's not really anything to be too ashamed of.
Seems there was something else I meant to call attention to, but it has wandered out of my conscious mind looking for greener pastures. So, you'll just have to wonder what it was.
Thursday, December 09, 2004
Anime Thursday
So far, we've watched the first four episodes of FMA and the first three of GitS:SAC. FMA tugs pretty hard on the heart strings. You can sense just what the main characters are going through as they search for a way to right something that went horribly wrong in their past. A cross between a morality play and a redemption tale, FMA explores pretty deep themes while managing to be funny and serious, often at the same time.
On the other hand GitS:SAC is more action with occasional humor. Based in pieces on the original Shirow manga and the film, it actually manages to walk the line paying homage to both. I was surprised at just how well some of the stories felt like they came from Shirow's manga series while the slightly more philosophical nature of the movie is there in the background peeking out at you every so often. It still deals with the themes of humanity and technology while keeping the action/political thriller trappings.
There's certainly a lot of room for growth in both series and I look forward to seeing where they go.
Wednesday, December 08, 2004
Yellowstone
yellowstone tree
Originally uploaded by dkun.
This is the photo set I've begun for the Yellowstone trip we took last winter.
Yellowstone is such a stark, beautiful place in the winter. It's also just about impossible to get into and out of (especially when you decide to travel on the days the two worst storms of the year occur...).
I remember when my wife mentioned that we were going up to Yellowstone with her family (her folks and her sister's family), I wasn't initially all that thrilled. I had my own suspicions about what the trip would be like (and the travelling part was frighteningly accurate) but I also had some ideas about what the park itself would be like (which, fortunately, were also accurate). But, there wasn't really all that much that I could do about it. I knew we were going, so it was just a matter of getting there. At the time, we just had our trusty little Saturn, so driving up was an experience. I think I should just leave it at that. There were moments when we were certainly lucky we made it in one piece. As mentioned, one of the worst storms we had had up to that point decided to take place the day we drove up.
But West Yellowstone and the park were certainly worth the trouble it took. My wife had decided to do the snowmobile tour and I opted for the snow cat tour. The snow cat tour was great. My in-laws and I took that trip and we got pretty lucky - there were only two other people on the same tour. They try and pack you in those things like sardines, but the rest of the people that were supposed to be in the group never showed. So we had a great guide in one of the better vehicles with just the right number of people.
One of the things the guide said still sticks with me. I asked him if he liked Yellowstone better in the summer or the winter. He replied, "Winter. There's nothing convenient about Yellowstone in the winter. The people that come to the park want to be there." It's really true. There is absolutely nothing convenient about Yellowstone in the winter. But it is definitely worth the trip.
Monday, December 06, 2004
Random Monday
Oddly enough that flash animation pretty well encapsulates my day. The same thing over and over. Contractor failed to show and also failed to call to explain lack of showing; that seems to be par for the course. Work is, well, work. And the kids are refusing to go to bed. I think I may have to call Santa and have a little chat about the Christmas presents the kids are allowed to get. Pity we don't have a coal stove. I foresee a large amount of it in their futures...
At any rate, I meant to post a few things about Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (yes the older one), but that will have to wait for another day. Instead, contemplate this little tidbit: Tales of Symphonia is an interesting take on the action RPG. The plot, so far, is hitting all the right
Saturday, December 04, 2004
National Treasure
Aside from the fact that it is a long weekend for me, it's felt like a long weekend. And not entirely in the, oh goody, I have three days off sort of sense. I'm being forced out of my comfort zone and I'm rather cranky about it...
We finally heard from the contractor and on Monday we should be entering the (hopefully) last phase of the whole leaking pipe debacle.
Friday, December 03, 2004
Thursday, December 02, 2004
Oh the humanities...
Wednesday, December 01, 2004
Use the Helmet, Luke
Darth Vader Voice Changer Helmet. Let that sink in for a moment. Then read Chatchi's review of the product. I think that's all that needs to be said...
This was stolen shamelessly from Tea for One