This link is more for me to go back for than any other reason. Someone named Dorothy Lamour has put 1940s science fiction comic books on the web. They look great, ray guns and green guys with clubs and bug-eyed monsters.
Tuesday, January 20, 2004
Girl, 6, found dead in motel and an exorcism is suspected as the reason. The girl had a broken back and, according to this article, was stabbed. That's some pretty severe demons. Oh, and the adults and two children were found outside, in the snow, naked.
Posted by
Brian
at
12:40 PM
0
comments
Sunday, January 18, 2004
There's a new blog called Boomer Deathwatch and it's something to see, especially by people of my generation. They take all the angst about the selfishness and screwed-upness of baby boomers and print it in great detail. I'm not sure I feel as strongly as they do, but I'm sure enjoying the bile. I like their disclaimer too:
"And if you're in any way offended by the content or message of Boomer Deathwatch, sorry, but we really don't care. Seriously. We'll probably just post your pissy e-mail and make fun of it, so don't bother."
Posted by
Brian
at
3:21 PM
0
comments
Saturday, January 17, 2004
Friday, January 16, 2004
Starfish Invasion Reported In Volusia. Reminds me of the beginning of "Rebirth of Mothra II," with the red starfish attacking everything.
Posted by
Brian
at
12:57 PM
0
comments
Big fish that turned up on Philippine beach is either a giant dolphin or a small whale. This might clear things up: "'Dolphins are small whales, whales are big dolphins. This one is a giant dolphin so it must be a whale,' Avila said."
Posted by
Brian
at
12:51 PM
0
comments
An explorer has bought a Russian icebreaker and is heading out to the North Pole to determine if the Earth is hollow. Here's the pitch from Steve Currey's Expedition Company - Voyage to Our Hollow Earth: "Don't miss this chance to personally visit that paradise within our earth via the North Polar Opening and meet the highly advanced, friendly people who live there. We are of the opinion that they are the lengendary Lost Tribes of Israel who migrated into the North Country over 2,500 years ago and literally became lost to the knowledge of mankind. "
Posted by
Brian
at
12:20 PM
0
comments
Check out the video on this page (you'll need Quicktime.) It's fun with electricity! (Link found via Cylindrical Primate Storage Unit, which I love more and more every day.)
Posted by
Brian
at
12:15 PM
0
comments
Thursday, January 15, 2004
'Hole in sky' amazes scientists, with picture. (Link via The Anomalist, from who I steal many links.)
Posted by
Brian
at
3:05 PM
0
comments
Gottfried Benn was a poet and a doctor. He seems to have combined those interests in some very odd ways. I just downloaded his poems from this site and they are grotesque in the best sense. Try this poem:
Little Aster
A drowned beer hauler was heaved onto the slab.
Someone had heaved a lavender aster
between his teeth.
As I reached through the chest
under the skin
with a long knife
to cut out the tongue and palate
I must have bumped the flower, for it slid
into the brain lying alongside.
I packed it into the chest cavity
with the sawdust
as we sewed up.
Drink your fill in that vase!
Rest in peace,
little aster!
That comes from a collection called "Morgue," which you can dowload as a pdf at the link. Enjoy.
Posted by
Brian
at
12:36 PM
0
comments
Wednesday, January 14, 2004
This post from Tequila Mockingbird is not the normal thing I post. But it is so well written and so touching, I can't help myself. Just read it.
Posted by
Brian
at
2:25 PM
0
comments
Isn't cool enough when you find a Roman-era wooden anchor on the shores of the Dead Sea? Why make claims for it being King Herod's yacht anchor, when you don't even know if Herod had a boat? Silly, silly archaeologist.
Posted by
Brian
at
12:52 PM
0
comments
Neil Gaiman recently made mention of Harry Stephen Keeler and linked to Ramble House, who are currently republishing his novels.
So, looking further, I found this page: Harry Stephen Keeler Home Page. Read this page. This guy sounds crazy and wonderful. I want to buy his books. Here's a good passage from that page:
"In one novel, there's a character named Suing Sophie. Sophie goes on transpacific cruise ships, striking up an acquaintance with a single man on board. When the ship gets into port, Sophie bids her male friend farewell by loudly exclaiming, "Yes! I'll marry you!" then rushing off. Now the man has not proposed marriage. But Sophie has made sure that there are plenty of witnesses to her farewell. Soon afterward, the man is greeted with a breach of promise lawsuit for failing to marry Sophie. In the settlement, Sophie collects a huge award, which she then uses to travel to the cannibal isles of the South Pacific; specifically to islands whose inhabitants have recently been converted by Christian missionaries. There Sophie convinces them of the errors of their recent conversion, and reconverts them as practicing Jews.
"You know all this and more about Sophie; before it's over, Keeler probably gets more plot mileage out of Sophie than Flaubert does out of Emma Bovary. The difference is that Sophie does not appear in the action of Keeler's novel at all. Other characters just allude to her."
Posted by
Brian
at
11:53 AM
0
comments
Tuesday, January 13, 2004
A Ghost ship found more than a year ago off the coast of Australia will be sunk as an artificial reef. I love stories of people just disappearing, like the crew of this ship or the residents of Roanoke. There's probably reasonable explanations, but I like the far flung theories I can come up with instead.
Posted by
Brian
at
2:07 PM
0
comments
Here's a decent Donnie Darko FAQ, although most of this information can be gleaned from the DVD and the Donnie Darko Web site. Still, it's nice to have it all in one place.
Posted by
Brian
at
2:04 PM
0
comments
Zagat's outtakes, including gems like:
"Too snooty, but so am I."
"Even Jesus would have a hard time getting at table on Saturday night."
"The stench of testosterone and desperation doesn't quite cover up the fact that this place stinks."
Posted by
Brian
at
1:49 PM
0
comments