If the Doctor’s name means anything, it is that in a story about a woman who is raped he will be the figure who helps her to heal. If there is to be a Doctor Who story about rape then that story has to be one that is about the victim. It has to be one about her agency and her identity. One in which she is not an object, and more to the point one that rejects the entire ideology that would treat her as one. A Doctor Who story about rape isn’t about vengeance, but reparation. And that, of course, is what River offers. Amy is not all right, but she will be. The horrible things that have happened to her cannot be undone. Not with a magic wand, and not with an army. But she can heal. She can have her daughter, and love her.

The wonderful, must-read Philip Sandifer writes about “A Good Man Goes to War,” and the whole Doctor Who reveal that River Song is actually Amy and Rory’s daughter.

It’s an interesting take, if one that I don’t really agree with or embrace; I think Steven Moffat really dropped the ball with the resolution of this storyline – for all that he clearly wants to explain away/fix the violation of Amy’s pregnancy happening without her knowledge and the subsequent kidnapping of her child (and he definitely does, hence the whole, awkward insert of “Mels,” the pre-regeneration River), the show not only utterly fails at doing so, it also fails at dealing with the inevitable emotional aftermath that said events should have had on the characters; sure, it happens off-camera, to some extent, but still. It’s a terrible fumble at best.

(It’s also a surprising fumble, in many ways; Moffat’s first season as showrunner was so well done in terms of emotion, but the second – and definitely his third – are far too focused on the intellectual sleight of hand instead of the emotional truth of the characters. He didn’t really returned to the heights of his first season in charge until “The Day of the Doctor,” for me, and even that was followed by “The Time of the Doctor.”)

In the Marvel movie universe, a straight white guy has played some part in saving the world 20 times in the past nine years. With The Amazing Spiderman 2 opening today, we’re up to 21. On the pages of Marvel’s comic books though, a different story is unfolding.

The company has, in the last few months, been aggressive in giving women and minority superheroes starring roles. That means solo books for heroes like Captain Marvel, She-Hulk, and Black Widow; the launch and re-imagining of the Ms. Marvel as a teenage Muslim-American girl; an all-female X-Men title; a new solo series for Storm; and perhaps most excitingly, the formation of The Ultimates, a superhero team comprised of women and minorities.

Reason Number 23 Why DC’s PR Sucks*: The publisher has been leagues ahead of Marvel in terms of female-led books (and, arguably, books with non-white-straight-leads…? I’m less sure about that one, to be honest, although it feels right) for years, and yet Marvel’s canny PR team is able to score headlines and stories like this one in Vox when it finally gets around to parity, making it seem like the leader in the area.

(* Reasons Number 1 Through 22 are pretty much the ones you think they are.)

Also, I was trying to remember all the in-continuity Wolverine deaths. I know there was Uncanny X-Men Annual #11, Wolverine #20 (Marvel Knights series) and Wolverine #57 (Again, Marvel Knights). Then there are the two “deaths” in Astonishing X-Men #3 (2nd series) and Age of Ultron #9. I’m not trying to be snarky, I am genuinely curious as to how many times Logan has died so far.

A Marvel fan highlights the unintentional comedy of Marvel’s Death of Wolverine series and promotion as a “big event.” Then again, another fan in the same thread seems genuinely upset that Marvel is “going to really go through with it,” so clearly someone’s convinced by the hype.

Recently Pandora CEO admitted that Pandora have stopped paying performers royalties on their pre-1972 recordings. (BTW this is a guy who received $29,000,000 in executive compensation last year.)

Sirius apparently never paid artists on pre-1972 recordings. So it’s unlikely they have ever paid these performers either. How is this fair? How does this happen in this country in this day and age? How do these companies get away with this?

Well both of these multi-billion dollar public listed companies have taken a novel legal approach to pre-1972 recordings. Because pre-1972 recordings are covered by a patchwork of state rather than federal copyright law (or at least that’s Pandora’s and Sirius’s interpretation) these two companies claim they don’t have to pay performers royalties on these recordings. Understand–it’s not that these recordings are not protected at all, it’s that federal copyright protection for sound recordings started on February 15, 1972 and the performance royalty is in the federal Copyright Act. There is nothing in the Copyright Act that excludes pre-72 recordings.

Breaking a work-imposed Tumblr silence (Blame the deadlines, sorry) to post this because seriously what the fuck.