Print Story I work in Accounts Payable. I make sure everyone gets what's coming to them.
Diary
By TheophileEscargot (Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 02:28:27 AM EST) Reading, Watching, Museums, MLP (all tags)
Reading: "Welcome to the Jungle". Watching. Museums. Web.


What I'm Reading
Getting a little antsy from Dresden Files deprivation (next novel "Turn Coat" isn't out till April), so I got one of the spin-off comics: Welcome to the Jungle It's written by Jim Butcher, who turns out to be a bit of a comics fan.

Works well. Harry's trademark laconic one-liners fit neatly into comic panels. Also interesting to see the props from the book illustrated: the TV series was all very well, but a hockey stick is no blasting rod. Looks a lot creepier than in the novels where everything is seen through Harry's matter-of-fact eyes: even ordinary exposition from Bob the glowing-eyed skull looks a bit weird.

The storyline takes place shortly before the book series began. Harry seems strangely underpowered at first: no Soulfire, no Hellfire, no Little Chicago, no demon in the head, the old puny shield, and just one kinetic ring, but it's nice to get back to basics. Explains everything from the start: you wouldn't need to have read any of the books to make sense of it.

Artwork (by some newcomer called Ardian Siaf) seems decent enough. Compositions not particularly exceptional, some of the panel layouts look a bit odd, like when there are three small consecutive panels showing a face with the same expression. Liked the character designs though: Murphy in particular has just the right cute/tough look. No gratuitous T&A here though: I think the urban fantasy genre has a fair proportion of female readers.

Overall, worth a look if you're desperate for a Dresden Files fix. Would probably be fairly entertaining for anyone else, but not mindblowingly brilliant.

What I'm Watching
Saw Woody Allen movie Hannah and Her Sisters on DVD. Had seen it before, more recently than I thought. Pretty good, got a bit bored by the relationship against, but some of the characters are sharply drawn, especially the more annoying ones, and there are some very funny lines buried in the dialogue.

It's frightening how old 1986 looks now: it really seems like a period piece with phones and grimy old pre-Giuliani NYC.

Museums
Dropped in at the National Portrait Gallery, mostly be accident as I got some times wrong. Saw the Annie Leibovitz exhibition. I'm not much of a judge of photography, but wasn't too impressed by it. The celebrity stuff seems like standard cheesecake, lots of pouting and flexing muscles; while the personal stuff pretty much looks like anyone else's snapshots.

However, it's pretty big, and they've got some rooms practically papered with small pictures, some postcard size, so you're certainly not shortchanged in quantity. Pretty steep at £11 to get in though.

Also wandered quickly through the Photographic Portrait Prize: that was free, but very crowded. A few interesting things their like the Swedish fighter (stupid Flash assortment).

They also had a collection of pictures of top athletes, but I found that strangely uninvolving. They just don't look sufficiently like human beings, more like machines made of muscle and sinew.

Web
Biography of a New York taxicab.

Video. Flight of the Bumblebee on Marimba.

Alaska study says higher alcohol prices save lives.

Obama should learn from Eisenhower and Nixon.

Tory lead down from 19% to 5%

< Yet another troll | Painful Apotheosis Immanent >
I work in Accounts Payable. I make sure everyone gets what's coming to them. | 10 comments (10 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback
Your poll by nebbish (4.00 / 1) #1 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 05:12:31 AM EST
Erm you know where you're posting this diary to don't you?

--------
It's political correctness gone mad!


I had to vote "yes"... by Metatone (4.00 / 2) #2 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 05:50:55 AM EST
as it might help me drink less... ;-)


[ Parent ]

I would just by nebbish (4.00 / 3) #3 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 06:00:25 AM EST
become scruffy and malnourished...

--------
It's political correctness gone mad!
[ Parent ]

There is something in that by Herring (4.00 / 1) #5 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 06:59:12 AM EST
When you see in the supermarket stuff like 10 cans of Stella for £5, well then you end up drinking 10 cans of Stella and that's not always a good thing.

I have noticed that supermarkets are doing that less with beer now, although Asda's 3 bottles of OK wine for £10 has caused the odd hangover.

Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge - Charles Darwin
[ Parent ]

I'm cynical about it as a social policy... by Metatone (4.00 / 2) #6 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 08:01:21 AM EST
because if you're truly out to get lathered, there's always White Lightning.

But, on a personal front, the availability of palatable bottles of wine on sale at Morrisons... yeah... not always helpful...

As an aside... most of the figures quoted for increased consumption don't seem to be accurate. As far as I can tell they are taking total consumption and then dividing by the adult population. This ignores the studies which seem to show that there's been a significant rise in the effective regular drinking population... but I haven't had time to really work through it.


[ Parent ]

Annie Leibovitz... by Metatone (4.00 / 2) #4 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 06:04:27 AM EST
is so overrated it's difficult to think of a comparison. At first I was going to say "most overrated since Patrick Lichfield" but that seems unfair to Lichfield, his sixties outdoor and candid work had something more to it than I've ever seen from Leibovitz.

I suppose it's not her fault, she is an excellent celebrity propagandist. It's just annoying to see "art curators" fail to try and put it in context. I'm assuming they recognize it, but put the shows on so they can charge £11 and get good attendance figures - but they could work a bit harder on providing something more than yet another platform for vapidity.




Alcohol and foreign policy by ucblockhead (4.00 / 1) #7 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 12:09:39 PM EST
I suspect you'd get a similar effect by either banning or heavily taxing just the "low end" drinks favored by the homeless.

I suspect that the differences between today and either 1952 or 1968 outweigh the similarities.  Obama doesn't have to deal with another superpower in the foreign wars, but unlike either Korea or Vietnam, the wars he has to deal with have global components.
----
ウセーバラケダ


No to punitive taxation by Alan Crowe (4.00 / 1) #8 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 02:10:00 PM EST
I'm T-total. I protect myself from the demon drink by saying no. That works well, so I'm against raising alcohol taxes.

Since I don't buy alcohol it looks like I don't have a dog in this fight but that takes an overly specific view. First they came for the pot smokers and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a pot smoker. Then they came for the drinkers and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a drinker .... I'll stop before reaching the specifics of my own unspeakable vice. Obviously against 'ealth and safety.



That would be great if everybody was you. by Tonatiuh (2.00 / 0) #9 Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 03:59:25 PM EST
But since that is not the case, the government should protect the rest of the population from the irresponsible and the addicted.


[ Parent ]

Lets be more specific by codemonkey uk (4.00 / 1) #10 Tue Nov 18, 2008 at 07:30:02 AM EST
I want protecting from idiot binge drinkers, I don't give a flying fuck if the young-poor-and-bored want to waste their money and destroy their lives, but ultimately I end paying for their excess in increased Police and Healthcare costs, and what's more, drunks are a danger to innocent bystanders.  So I'm all for increased tax on alcoholic.  I drink, I enjoy the occasional glass of wine, or a cold refreshing beer once in a while, but if increased prices there will keep my tax bill down elsewhere, I'm all for it.

--- Thad ---
developer of ... ?
[ Parent ]

I work in Accounts Payable. I make sure everyone gets what's coming to them. | 10 comments (10 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback