Wait, What? Ep. 143: The Score | Savage Critics
Wait, What? Ep. 143: The Score | Savage Critics
Simpsons Alan Moore: Knows it; wishes to settle it. Happy New Year, fellow Whatnauts!
Even though Jeff is sick, he still manages to get a new podcast up – and one that was extremely problematic to record, thanks to the Internet/Skype deciding to fuck us over on a regular basis last Thursday.
I find myself regretting a bunch of things I said from this one, mostly around the Alan Moore interview. I re-read the interview that night and realized that putting Moore’s paranoid down to senility was (a) facile and (b) arguably too nice to Moore. If we’d recorded it the next day, I would’ve been far grumpier/meaner about the whole thing. Maybe it’s better that we didn’t, in that case?
Nonetheless – Jeff has a bunch of interesting things to say. So go listen!
Pass, Flunk or Incomplete? WIRED Gives 10 Fall Shows A Midterm Exam
Pass, Flunk or Incomplete? WIRED Gives 10 Fall Shows A Midterm Exam
From Brooklyn Nine Nine to Agents of SHIELD, which of last fall’s new shows have held up since their pilot episodes? We give 10 shows a midterm examination.
Catching up from last week, here’s something I write up for Wired that ran last Friday. Surprise of the 10 shows I revisited? Probably Trophy Wife, which turned out to be better than I’d expected. That or Dads, which inexplicably was even worse than the pilot.
The issue with the picture isn’t that Image Comics is against diversity. The problem is the picture makes it look like they don’t care about it. And I know that isn’t true. I also know a number of the creative teams DO have gender parity AND are racially diverse. But here’s the big but…
Those men and women weren’t up on stage and possibly not even in San Francisco for the event.
The whole event is essentially a giant ad for Image, spotlighting the people who make the books to help sell them and promote the Image brand. Shouldn’t we see a more realistic snapshot of what that Image family looks like? And shouldn’t that family look like ALL of us? Shouldn’t it be that way at every publisher?
The path from The Boys on the Bus to Playbook is not a straight line. The evolution must obviously account for the anarchic environment of the Internet, the perpetual nature of today’s news cycle, and the rise of ideological journalism, all of which [Mike] Allen incorporates into his daily e-mail. The “pack” still exists, in other words, it’s just bigger and more diverse.
But the one-world notion of the “pack” remains unchanged. Whether journalists are gathered on a physical bus or reading a virtual document, it is a shared space. They are encountering the same names and characters and, after a while, acquiring a shared language and sensibility. “If there was a consensus,” Crouse wrote, “it was simply because all the national political reporters lived in Washington, saw the same people, used the same sources, belonged to the same background groups, and swore by the same omens.”
Woke up this morning, my website was gone.
Well, that’s the worst blues song ever.
Nonetheless, it’s true – I woke up to a barrage if emails from the host of TheWorldThatsComing.com telling me that my account had been suspended, suspended and then suspended again due to a high level of attacks from malicious IPs overnight.
Right now, it’s still down as they try to work out what can be done, and ask me if I know why it’s under such attack. Beyond the “Well, I work on the Internet so maybe karma?” nature of things, I couldn’t answer that. Instead, I hope there’s an answer out there and contemplate just moving to Tumblr full time, instead.
Anyway: Sorry to anyone/everyone who might have tried to go to the site. Normal service may be resumed at some point…?









