Scott Bakula

shaternbakula

I had a dual package which is still cool. Next time I’ll get a separate Bakula.

For my generation he is more famous for being Dr. Sam Beckett, the hero from Quantum Leap, a show I never saw much of but I knew its premise pretty well. Maybe I should watch that…now it’s my Netflix queue.

Back to Scott!

I went to see him at Comic Con last week because he was Captain John Archer, commander of the first USS Enterprise. Despite all the continuity nitpicking I have shared in over the years regarding Enterprise (I refuse to put Star Trek in front of the title since I’m not a moron), the cast’s acting, characterizations and whatever else were never a problem. They got off to a rough start during the first season which is par for the course with all the other franchises but then boom! I was cool.

What I liked most about Archer was his dog Porthos, it gave him a relatable trait for us 20th/21st Century people. We would travel interstellar space with our pets! Bakula was a good choice too. I recall there was some backlash yet it worked out, the guy has a great Sci-Fi resume.

My facetime with Scott Bakula was awesome. He was smiling and super nice. I let him know outside of his famous stuff, I did enjoy Lord of Illusions, especially when his character discovers that the magic is real! I was surprised he didn’t know about the Futurama gag they at his expense in Bender’s Game. He found it funny and said he would have to ask George Takei about it.

bakulaautographThe guy is a class act all the way and I would pay money to see him again no matter what he is promoting. I did explain how I got the ticket through Kristin, she couldn’t go due to having a baby (pffbt, wimp!). Bakula did a special autograph for our friend, said he could relate, his wife had difficulty giving birth to one of their children.

Three captains down, two to go!

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Try not to tailgate this driver

squirrel

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The Looney Tunes crew are back on a shirt!

partylooneyIt doesn’t quite follow the redesigned characters based upon The Looney Tunes Show but I think the design is relatively recent. How? The glasses on Bugs were seen over the last several years on Hipsters. Then again, the boom box is an Eighties/early Nineties relic

I’m not really too concerned. I just glad to score this design at the convention last week.

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Bruce Campbell

brucecampbell

He said, let’s be casual dude!

One of the greatest genre, character and bit actors in my lifetime. Bruce has starred in Army of Darkness, Evil Dead, The Man with the Screaming Brain and A Man Called Bruce. Plus memorable roles in Escape from LA, The Hudsucker Proxy, Congo, all three Sam Raimi Spider-Man flicks, Bubba-hotep and Cars 2. Lets not forget all his TV: Brisco County Jr., Xena, Jack of All Trades, Burn Notice and Hercules. I’ll spare you the voice acting. Now you can’t forget those Old Spice commercials! I love how the painting just kept going and going while he walked.

Somara and I have met Bruce before, his book signing about a decade ago at Book People. He is a regular visitor to Austin as well, often doing a live commentary to Evil Dead 2 every few years.

I just never had a picture with Bruce. This convention was my opportunity to add Ash/Autolycus/Bruce/Elvis to my collection. As you can see from the pose, he didn’t disappoint! Now to keep my fingers crossed for Army of Darkness 2.

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Happy Birthday Nick!

Fifteen years ago this little dude joined the relatively small Maggi Clan. It’s a bummer his b-day is during Thanksgiving but at least he doesn’t have to go to school today!

Nick is now getting into the thick of being a teenager. I hope to catch ’em before he’s a college student. His card will be late as always. I’ll bundle everything together with his Christmas present or whatever Brian’s family is cool with.

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William Shatner

williamshatner

The man, the myth, the legend! Sure people ridicule him but he is laughing all the way to the bank and having the time of his life. I personally think Shatner enjoys the work, especially after he was typecast by Star Trek like all his co-stars and things were tough.

It was a thrill to finally see Shatner in person. I’ve been a fan of Star Trek ever since I was a kid in the late Seventies. I can thank Star Wars for fueling it because that hit movie fueled all the demand for more Sci-Fi/Space Opera and Shatner’s signature role was syndicated practically on every channel up through the late Eighties. As I’ve grown older, he has been a role model/reminder about not giving up, telling your critics to get lost, failure is better than being an armchair quarterback.

One of my most prized autographs!

One of my most prized autographs!

I had the great fortune of acquiring two special tickets which is why I received a second autograph/facetime opportunity (more on this later). Saturday was the bigger day see him anyway. During my brief window, I thanked Shatner for his small part in fighting American racism through this incident on Star Trek. I only hope I get to do the same opportunity to share my thanks with Nichelle Nichols, she endured more grief over it if you read the linked article.

Our tenth wedding anniversary gift! A picture with a shared Sci-Fi actor.

Our tenth wedding anniversary gift! A picture with a shared favorite!

Two captains down, three to go and I got to meet the actor who laid down the standard.

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Thor, the Dark World: Worth Seeing

thor2

I still stand by recommendation of the first Thor movie but I’ve always felt it was the weakest of the other Avengers movies. The hero’s journey part was cool. The letdown was the threat…a giant furnace monster. When the supporting characters steal the movie, that’s another sign of trouble.

This time Thor has a true threat, Malekith and his dark elves. Once again the movie opens with some drawn-out exposition which explains how Malekith attempted to destroy reality only to be defeated by Thor’s grandfather. After the final battle, everybody believed all the elves were killed or died in a desperate suicidal push near the end. Obviously not. Malekith and a handful of his followers used the others’ sacrifice to go into hiding for millennia.

Enter Dr. Jane Foster, again. Now she’s in London because the weird Asgardian energy readings are turning up there like they did in New Mexico. Instead she finds a different weirdness and it alerts Malekith.

See the movie if you want to know how it pans out.

Dark is superior to the first movie. More Loki. More magic as technology (I love the singularity grenades). Better battles. Elements of this year’s Iron Man 3 bleeding over, pay attention to how the Kurse creatures operate. It bore some resemblance to the Mandarin’s healing chemicals. As always, the cameos and ending credits keep you excited about what will happen next in Captain America: Winter Soldier and the still congealing Avengers 2. This movie’s violence is less disturbing for little kids than Iron Man 3 or Man of Steel too.

Sadly, the Alamo Drafthouse’s pre-show features were the same as they were two years ago. I would’ve hoped they found some new silliness regarding the golden-tressed thunder-god. The 3-D element was decent, namely during the Asgard sequences plus it includes a six-minute preview of Captain America‘s sequel next April, 2-D doesn’t have it.

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Walter Mosley

waltermosleyThe next installment of Brushes with Greatness Week is my Summer encounter with (primarily hard-boiled detective) writer Walter Mosley. You may recognize his novel Devil in a Blue Dress which was made into a movie with Denzel Washington around 1995. President Clinton gave him a career boost back in the early Nineties when the prez said Mosley was one of his favorite authors. I think Mr. Mosley would’ve come to prominence eventually because he’s a solid scribe and a terrific speaker.

Turnout at Book People was excellent. I love it when I’m on the left-side of the age curve! As for ethnicity, there was a good mix of people since your color doesn’t matter when it comes to enjoying a great story. Mr. Mosley brought his book tour to Austin to promote the latest adventure of his signature character “Easy” Rawlins; it’s called Little Green and its set in the Sixties so “Easy” is getting up there, the first story was set in 1948.

Q&A segments are when guests get to shine. Mr. Mosley did not disappoint! I loved how he abruptly answered a young (likely aspiring) writer asking, “What’s the hardest part about your novels? Is it characters, motivation, plot…” with “Publishing.” With how the Internet has changed things, not all for the better, even an established author like him has trouble getting new books released. The bigger issue he said was pigeonholing. Once a mystery writer, always a mystery write in the minds of publishing companies. He has written for other genres yet everybody wants more “Easy” or Fearless Jones books.

Another point of contention he wanted to explain was something he once said that the Right takes out of context: If a Black man wants to succeed, he needs a White man in his basement to give advice. There was no endorsement of kidnapping plus his explanation made it for what it really was, a tongue-in-cheek thing. He gave an example of how a Black man is irked over not getting a promotion from his boss after five years. The White man asks, “Well, have you ever played golf with your boss?” I think Mr. Mosley gave me some solid advice!

I scored the new adventures of “Easy” and a copy of Devil, need to have a starting point, otherwise Green would be equal to seeing Return of the Jedi before Star Wars or Empire.

He was equally delightful to speak with. My face time entailed asking him if he ever considered doing a team-up with James Ellroy. Mr. Mosley just laughed and said how he loves Ellroy’s work but they would get along like oil and water. Oh well, “Easy” Rawlins and say David Klein working a case, reading the story from their points of view will have to stay in the fantasy camp for me.

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Kirk Fu!

kirkfuThe perfect shirt to wear when meeting William Shatner!

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I declare this week, Brushes with Greatness week

hasbeenautographedThis year’s Comic Con is over, finally. The horrible weather made it somewhat of a chore but next year, it will be held during the first weekend of October. Before all the ACL Fest and F1 crap.

Besides us spending too much money, a lucky several will be getting cool gifts from us and I want to share all our booty online. I also decided this would be the opportunity to catch up on all the famous people I’ve met over the last 13 months yet never got around to posting, especially the core cast from Star Trek: The Next Generation.

I figured the short workweek would be good, many of you will need to be entertained and I get a couple days off myself.

Let’s start with the first thing I got signed by William Shatner, the reason for the season! This is my favorite of four known albums he has done. While signing Has Been, he asked me if I hard heard his latest, Ponder the Mystery. I said I bought it but haven’t gotten around to listening. He said, “Check it out. You may change your mind.” Pretty funny.

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Happy 50th birthday Doctor Who

Cut my story some slack for a couple reasons: I’m exhausted from Comic Con/Wizard World Austin and the UK is six hours ahead. If anybody spoils the special for me, so help me…Nelson, I’m looking in your direction ever since BSG.

On to the heart of the post…

Being almost a generation older, the definitive actor to play the Doctor will always be Tom Baker, aka The Fourth Doctor, and the person to actively hold the role the longest; eight seasons. Tom’s run is probably when most Americans got wind of the show through various PBS stations carrying it. I readily admit David Tennant definitely put his mark upon the well-loved character yet he belongs to the newer, younger fans. Let’s just say Tom v. David is the UK’s version of Shatner v. Stewart with America’s obsession franchise.

I stumbled upon Doctor Who sometime after we moved to Houston. Enthralled by our new 36-channel cable TV system, I was lounging around one Saturday morning surfing because MTV wasn’t holding my interest for once. Then I saw something involving shooting, a robot dog and a scantily clad lady. (It was an episode with Leela and K-9 accompanying Tom Baker.) I recall cheesy laser effects and I could hear the British accents but I changed the channel quickly due to it looking super lame; compared to Battlestar Galactica and Buck Rogers’ special effects’ budgets.

After we moved to Indianapolis, Doctor Who returned on my personal radar. There non-PBS stations carried it. A couple other kids at school explained the show’s premise and still I thought, “It looks rather crappy yet it is very British.” However, I would skim over TV Guide, check for any episodes with at least an interesting premise whenever I was bored and desperate to watch TV.

The first placed I resided where I found a dedicated, better-educated fan base was Philly. Before the Russell Davies’ reboot, Doctor Who seemed to be an British-Canadian-East Coast thing. The show’s base weakened as you travelled west in my experience. The Summer of 1987 with my parents in Philly strengthened my understanding. I also got hooked watching the daily serials (most stories were broken up into four or six-parts of almost 30 minutes) or weekend “movies.” The majority were Tom Baker runs with some Peter Davison.

I continued to follow the Doctor but he was pretty low on my Sci-Fi radar compared to Star Trek in the Eighties. Its two cancellations were a shame was my reaction yet it would be one more thing Thatcher could be blamed for; she despised the BBC.

Fox’s attempt to re-invigorate Doctor Who in the mid-Nineties was flawed despite having it open with Sylvester McCoy’s “death.” Whoever was in charge didn’t know the source material well and you can tell it was done on the cheap for an American production:

  • Vancouver bears little resemblance to San Francisco.
  • I like Eric Roberts but having him as the Master was a stretch.
  • Replacing McCoy with even lesser-known Paul McGann probably puzzled audiences on both sides of the Atlantic.

I missed seeing its debut in 1996 to boot. Sci-Fi/SyFy re-aired when the Davies stuff took off. The only good thing to say…Paul McGann as the eighth doctor is cannon.

After the Nineties, I concluded that the only way to bring Doctor Who back would be to widen its audience, namely get Americans to like it beyond PBS viewers. The first step involved casting a Brit many Americans knew, say Rowan Atkinson; his comedy bit as the Doctor was clever. Second step required a larger budget to have effects on par with the weekly Star Trek shows; by partnering with a major US network, this could be easily achieved.

It’s a good thing the BBC ignored my advice! They did follow it a tad with the budget by having it co-funded through three, maybe four networks if your cable bill chips in via BBC America. I’m glad the show runners were able to keep Doctor Who distinctly British with the principal casting. It’s their program much like Star Trek is ours.

What I’m impressed with is how well they’ve integrated the new, current run with the enormous legacy it has. New fans don’t have to absorb the previous stuff to understand how the story goes. Old fans (like myself) don’t feel like the previous eight doctors were erased or retconned out. It’s similar to the Bond reboot until Skyfall (did Bond come full circle or start over, I side with the former). Meanwhile, American franchises be they comics, TV or film, keep fumbling the ball. All often I see DC and Marvel comics jettison the past half-heartedly, depending upon the character. Doctor Who was rebooted well. The past stuff is there, on a shelf if you want to refer to it, see it or sometimes it is brought out in small servings (Cybermen, Daleks, Nimons, Sontarans). It just isn’t ditched or dumped on top with a huge backstory before the show gets rolling.

The BBC took the best lessons from American and British storytelling. Not every episode is a winner yet it remains compelling.

I am really stoked about catching Matt Smith’s final season on NetFlix, the special and the debut of Peter Capaldi.

Share your memories of how you discovered the show. I know I have a couple cousins I want to hear from!

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Texas SBOE’s contrite approval…

…of Science textbooks has occurred but they promise more shenanigans to impose their knuckle-dragging perspective on Texas’ students. This affects the rest of America since the book publishers cater to the larger states/populations. I thought California still had some pull.

All the more reason the campaign to turn Texas Blue or a bluish hue of purple. The mainstream GOP is reaping the what they’ve sown in courting the nut jobs since the Seventies just to win elections. These people will destroy our nation’s educational advantage and the economy all in the name of their literal interpretations.

I can’t wait to hear who their experts will be to dispute Evolution, Climate Change and Hydraulic Fracturing (aka Fracking). 

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1963: JFK Assassination

I too grow tired of the conspiracy theories, the “what ifs” should the guy lived and this nonsense about him being a Liberal. Bill Clinton, crony of the GOP Lite DLC was more liberal than Kennedy!

However, coming from a Catholic family with an Irish faction, the man was the second coming to Grandma. As my old man (who’s Italian) said, “Your grandmother thinks the Kennedys can walk on water.” The sickening reverence JFK received was a major reason why I didn’t want Romney elected plus the Mormons are even bigger gloaters; their five Senate seats is too much representation anyway. When I was a kid, I bought into the fuss. By the time I got to Marquette, I learned more about the reality, namely how most legislation was bottlenecked in Congress. He also ran a more hawkish campaign against the Soviet Union than Tricky Dick. More consistent Liberal publications like The Nation reluctantly endorsed JFK in 1960 because veep had a more egregious public record.

In his defense though Kennedy did represent a watershed moment. He was the first 20th-century born president, he was first true WWII vet (Ike was a candy-ass general who slept with his female aides) and his Catholic background did represent a power shift in the Democratic Party that began with Al Smith’s 1928 nomination. America was finally accepting a group who’d been a sizable population since the Irish Diaspora; Latin Americans are due in another century if the nation follows the same pattern. He did seem to have the Baby Boomers enraptured should the retrospectives be credible. Even if they’re inflated, JFK’s assassination did hurt the nation’s psyche thanks to it being the first presidential murder in 62 years. We figured this kind of crap happened in less politically stable countries.

Know-nothing blowhard Nick Gillespie of the ironically titled Reason magazine, the Randroids’ version of Time, was more scathing. Last weekend he claimed all the JFK stuff was just more Baby Boomer navel gazing and self-importance being imposed on America. Well, it’s the pot calling the kettle black when it comes to those accusations. A more balanced and truthful retrospective should be in order. OTM shouldn’t have wasted the electrons on such a jackass. I do agree with Gillespie about a bigger spotlight being shined on Eisenhower and the Dulles Brothers. They’re mostly responsible for our ongoing foreign policy problems: overthrowing legitimate governments in Iran, Guatemala and elsewhere in favor of “anti-Communist” dictators.

Enough there…

Another quick reason why I’m wasting my (and probably your) electrons over this would be my own experience 19 years ago. While I was moving down to Austin, I made a brief detour in Dallas to check out the infamous book depository. Oliver Stone’s movie was still fresh within most people’s memory along with fresh conspiracy theories. It is pretty hard to believe Oswald succeeded since the street below curves and goes down hill. Yet he  probably got lucky. The grassy knoll is implausible, it’s too close for the nearby witnesses not to notice another shooter. I seriously doubt the Mafia was involved, this would draw too much attention. The CIA and FBI couldn’t pour piss out of a boot with the instructions on the toe as the Bay of Pigs proved, thus they didn’t do it. I recall my grandmother accusing LBJ. Not likely and not his style. The list goes on. After 50 years, JFK’s presidency fades into a footnote, dwarfed by the accomplishments and failures LBJ ushered.

In closing, one major matter that hasn’t changed after 50 years is the South’s intransigence and racism. The party affiliation and the “otherness” of the current president are different but it’s the same old bigoted Christian Dominion (a great term a friend gave me) their failed antebellum dystopia promotes.

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Cartoon quiz, match the voice with the toon

I aced this which will surprise noone, even with the several I have never (nor have any interest) seen. Take your best shot and let me know your score.

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A little bit of good news last night

Somara received an e-mail from our insurance carrier. They’re sending a check for $500 to reimburse us over the deductible on the repair because it wasn’t our fault, no kidding!

Now to recoup the rental-car money from the moron who hit us which I roughly estimate at $1200. She’s lucky we went with the cheapest things both companies had on the lot. We’re not monsters.

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