I’ve Been Seduced By ‘Almost Human’


download (1)I know for certain that my friend Ryan (whose nickname in college was Satan) watches this show. I haven’t spoken to him about it, but he has a pact with his namesake, requiring him to watch every science fiction show and movie that comes out. So surely he’s watched this.

The two leads have good chemistry. The ‘human’ lead I think of particularly fondly, mainly because he was in The Lord of the Rings, playing Eomer. Rather like Kiefer Sutherland, who had such success with the right wing, masturbatory fantasy, 24, Karl Urban is maybe not a big enough presence for movies, but is just right for a television show that aims big.

The little touches of advanced technology that are added in, without detracting from the human element (or human-like elements; after all, the premise is that cops have androids for partners) remind one of William Gibson’s best work.

Anyway. I’m hooked. Along with Castle, this should keep me entertained on my Monday nights.

Midweek Staff Meeting – CPA


Prose-1 (1)Not ‘certified public accountant,’ ‘continuous partial attention,’ the internet affliction.

The god of writers. My totem would be an etching of the prophet Gad, one of the prophets who advised King David. He appears briefly in the Book of Samuel, but there is supposed to be a lost book called ‘The Book of Gad the Seer’ that is mentioned in the Chronicles, but which no one has seen since before… well, a long a freaking time. Gad stopped a plague once, apparently, but really doesn’t have much association with writing. Heck, we don’t even has his book.

We still don’t have a philosopher-king (or philosopher-prime minister, but that’s partly because we don’t have prime ministers in America, which, we possibly should, but that’s another discussion, the advantages and disadvantages of the parliamentary versus presidential systems; could one describe [depict?] Obama as a sort of philosopher-president; maybe, but, as much as he’s mocked as an egghead, he’s really more in the evangelical of the educated preacher, rather than the public intellectual; no, you’d have to go back to founding figures like Thomas Jefferson and James Madison to find our philosopoher-presidents, I think). But I do remember reading Michael Ignatieff’s editorials. I don’t remember being impressed. If I recall, he had kind of a Thomas Friedman thing going on, and, really, for pundits, is there any more grievous insult than being compared to Thomas Friedman. I mean, without getting deep into the downright idiotic chaff, like Ross ‘the neckbeard’ Douthat or ridiculously stupid and offensive figures like Cohen.

A cri de coeur for a return to polymathy. No. Seriously. Which is cool, because I’m probably closer to being a polymath than I am to being a specialist.

Happiness sucks. There. I’ve said it.

I’m just getting started!

Spoiler Alert!


Tom Baker has a surprise appearance in The Day of the Doctor!

Matt Smith was talking, when you could hear a voice behind him. I thought, is that? Could it be? Please!

And there he was!

In a brief little featurette (their word, not mine), Steve Moffatt said something along the lines of ‘There was the Doctor [meaning Matt Smith, the actor currently playing the Doctor] and then there’s THE DOCTOR [meaning Tom Baker, who is still the gold standard and really, the person you mean, or the person you should mean, when you talk about ‘The Doctor’ in singular] walking up behind him.’

This is the first time Tom Baker has appeared in a Doctor Who episode since leaving the show (in stories like The Five Doctors, he declined to participate and stock footage was used to explain away his absence).

504x_tom-baker1

 

C.S. Lewis Just Died


C.S._LewisWell, we just had the anniversary of his death, if you want to nitpick. The fiftieth anniversary to be precise.

So… read this stuff I wrote about C.S. Lewis last year.

coffeephilosopher.com/2012/11/29/happy-birthday-c-s-lewis/

Weekend Reading – A Place For The Soul


Milton thought that books made better receptacles for human souls than bodies.

The innocence of 1939.

What is he worth? Who decides?

‘The Bell Jar’ By Sylvia Plath (New Year’s Resolution, Book Thirty-Nine)


I almost bought this book a month or so ago. I had read a review of a new book about Plath’s time in New York City as a fellow/intern/whatever at Mademoiselle. Unfortunately, when I browsed, all I could find was a copy with a pink cover. I wasn’t ready to go that far.

Fortunately, my mother had a copy at home and mailed it to me. ‘W Honey’ was written in blue ink from a ballpoint pen on the inside cover.

The style initially appears as being Heminway-esqeu; clipped, staccato, declarative.

But rather than being used to express masculinity, Plath uses it to express the first person narrator’s negative emotional affect (and also help establish her as a somewhat unreliable narrator).

The_Bell_Jar_Harper_71When I was younger, guys would talk about this novel in horror. It was boring. A slog. And I’m pretty sure none of us had actually read it.

The famed crack up, when it happens, feels very sudden. Or, at least, it did to me. Is that how such things really happen? That’s an actual question. I don’t know the answer.

Sex is pretty big in this big. Not much of it actually happens, but Esther (the narrator) is constantly thinking about it. Which, I guess, is pretty normal for a nineteen year old.

This is something I have noted in books from and about this period (and also implied in movies), which is an oddly more permissive attitude towards casual sex. A one time, casual encounter seems preferable in the literature. Sex being something to get gotten out of the way and separate from ‘marriageable’ relationships.

Of course, when Esther finally does have sex, it goes tragically and medically wrong (some hemorrhaging due to an unlikely bit of bad luck that requires some emergency treatment). Unlike Hemingway, though, this is emphatically not portrayed a punishment. Rather, it is the culmination of the somewhat bad luck Esther has had trying to get laid for the first time. A couple of failed efforts, ending with some spectacularly bad sex and bad luck.

Monday Morning Staff Meeting – Translating Tradition


downloadStrategizing ways to export Korean writers.

Reading about the bad deeds of good poets never fails to titillate.

Fashioning the self.

Weekend Reading – Howling At The Moon


A history of werewolves.

Hannah Arendt’s circle.

A poet’s family.

Is he back… or did he never really leave?

Day Of The Doctor


Why yes! Yes, I am going to see the fiftieth anniversary special, Day of the Doctor in 3D at Georgetown on Monday, November 25th. Why do you ask?

And for all those who don’t know me and haven’t figured it out yet… we are talking about Doctor Who here.

‘The Kindly Ones’ By Anthony Powell (New Year’s Resolution, Book Thirty-Eight)


9780226677163_p0_v1_s260x420The Kindly Ones of the title are the Furies of Greek Mythology. There’s a reference to them in a painting early on, but I suspect the symbolism – if there is any – relates to the approach of the Second World War (the end of the book has Nicholas Jenkins, the narrator, managing to find a connection to provide him with an officer’s commission for the not yet exploded war).

The premonition that Widmerpool would become the villain of the novels is coming true, as he malignly scuppers some work relating to metal trading with Turkey that would have benefited England just so as to screw with a character he didn’t like.

That character was Bob Duport, the now ex-husband of Jenkins’ former lover, Jean Duport, née Templer (the sister of his school days friend, Peter Templer).

I have said before and I have said again, Jean was Jenkins’ great love. He seems scarcely to care about his wife. She is someone he married because he ought to have gotten married. But it’s the memory of Jean who keeps haunting him.

Bob reveals that she had another lover at the same time she was involved with Nicholas, and that this other man was more likely the truer focus of her affections. In fact, she left Nicholas to meet her then still husband in South American, so Bob says, because it would actually have been easier to keep carrying on with the other fellow over there. Finally, he adds that Jean is now remarried and living in Argentina.

Nicholas is clearly rocked by these revelations and I can’t but think (and also to hope) that Jean keeps reappearing in some fashion, even if only as a phantom memory.