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35 posts from April 2008

Geek Tour reminder: San Diego May 3-4

The 2008 Geek Tour rolls out of Los Angeles this weekend and into San Diego!

Saturday, I'll be reading from The Happiest Days of Our Lives (and signing all of my books) at Mysterious Galaxy Books:

Join us on Saturday, May 3, at 2:00 PM, when we host Wil Wheaton for his new collection of essays, The Happiest Days of Our Lives. Maryelizabeth's review below of The Happiest Days of Our Lives reads in part: "Whether he is writing about subjects one can identify with or less familiar topics, Wil's stories are truthful, insightful, and above all, entertaining." Join Wil in celebrating life as a writer, a parent, and a proud geek. And don't forget to stop by Comickaze to check out Wil's contribution to Star Trek: The Manga, and take part in Free Comic Book Day.

Mysterious Galaxy is an indie booke shoppe that specializes in Science Fiction and Fantasy. I went there with Just a Geek, and this will be my first time back since then. I think 30 or 40 people came out last time, making a great audience for the reading, while still being small enough that I could talk to everyone who was there.

Sunday, I head up to North County for a stop at the Stone Brewing World Bistro and Gardens:

To boldly go where no book club has gone before (er, except for ours, that is), Stone Brewing Co. proudly announces another season of Book & A Beer Club…On the Grass!

Once again we are inviting beer geeks and bookworms alike to participate in a monthly meeting that pairs awesome beer with lively intellectual discussion. The premise is simple: read a book and have some great conversation—and great beer!—in a beautiful outdoor setting.

Wil’s most recent book, The Happiest Days of Our Lives, will be up for discussion, and this evening’s event is sure to be provocative, fun and enlightening.

Guests are welcome to bring their own lawn chairs, and blankets will be provided for those without to keep you from grass-staining your chinos. An RSVP is appreciated (though not required) at 760.471.4999 x1700.

Some of my favorite beers in the world are crafted by Stone, and Stone's owner, Greg Koch, has a lot of the same beliefs about marketing and making stuff that is awesome that I do. At his brewery in Escondido (in North San Diego County) he has an incredible restaurant and gorgeous beer garden. A few times a year, he invites authors to come out for something he calls Book and a Beer, which is exactly what it sounds like. We'll have Stone Pale Ale, Stone IPA, Arrogant Bastard, and all sorts of non-beer drinks if beer isn't your cup of tea. I suspect this will be an intimate gathering, but it will most certainly be an awesome one. If you've ever wanted to have a beer with your old pal Wil, now you can do eet.

I am so looking forward to this weekend. I can't wait to get my geek and beer on!

Dear Lazy Web: Video Cameras?

Dear Lazy Web: I'm thinking about getting an inexpensive (<$300) (Let's go $400-$450. I guess <$300 isn't realistic for the features I want) small video camera to take with me on all my Geek Tour stops this summer, starting with Mysterious Galaxy and the Stone World Bistro this weekend.

I haven't had time to do the normal amount of research I'd like to do, but I'm sure at least one of you out there on the interweebs has.

The only thing I know I do not want is something that records onto DVDs. We reviewed lots of those on inDigital, and they all sucked out loud. I think I want something that records to a hard drive or solid state memory instead of tapes. HD isn't that important to me if it adds too much to the price, and I don't have a particular brand loyalty or aversion. I assume that whatever I get will play nice with iMovie. Oh, and I need to be able to pick it up by Friday.

If you've got a suggestion on something to consider or avoid at all costs, would you leave a comment? Maybe we'll have the bonus side effect of building a useful list for other people, too.

KTHXBAI.

regarding GTA IV and the morality patrol

With GTA IV coming out tomorrow, the usual gang of idiots are up in arms about how this game will lead to the end of civilization as we know it, dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria, etc. As I said in my PAX keynote, this sort of moralistic chest-thumping makes me a little stabby:

Whenever I hear [Hillary Clinton, Jack Thompson, etc.] pontificate about how dangerous and antisocial and devoid of redeeming qualities video games are, I get a little stabby, because these games we love to play are much, much more than the simplistic bloodbaths Mass Media likes to portray them as during May sweeps.

Just as the multiplayer games are social activities, so are the single-player games narrative works of art, and they should be treated that way.

The hysteria surrounding the release of GTA IV has officially crossed into the realm of the absurd as moralizing groups of busybodies lead (shockingly) by Fox News successfully forced the transit authorities in Chicago to pull GTA IV ads from their buses. In Miami, professional attention whore Jack Thompson forced the Miami-Dade transit authority to yank GTA IV ads from bus shelters.

Can I just take a moment and point out how insane this is? This type of hysterical overreaction to a video game is completely out of proportion to any alleged harm it could inflict on anyone, but is accepted because it is done, as it always is, in the name of protecting The Children.

Yeah, it's always about protecting The Children, which leads me to wonder where The Parents are, and if these people are so serious about making the world better for The Children, why they don't invest the same amount of energy and resources into securing quality healthcare and world-class education for them as they spend wringing their hands over video games that aren't even supposed to be played by The Children in the first place.

As numerous others have pointed out, there was nothing offensive or suggestive in the ads that were pulled, but the spineless cowards responsible for running them instantly caved to the slightest pressure from the self-appointed morality patrol. I wonder how much revenue these cities lost because of this? GTA IV is rated M, the equivalent of R, so does that mean that all these cities will start removing advertising for movies that aren't appropriate for children? What about advertising for fast food and junk food and alcohol? Surely those are all things which could cause harm to children, right? If they don't instantly remove all the advertising from city buses that may offend anyone, what will we tell The Children?!

Surely, I'm not the only guy in the room who sees how absurd this whole thing is, right? Please tell me that I'm not, and I'll stop calling you Shirley.

I've said that this behavior can be equated to the Satanic Panic of the 80s. Leslie Benzies, the president of Rockstar North, took it even further back and said that all this hysteria is just like the Elvis Panic of the 50s:

[GTA IV critics are] the same kind of people who complained about Elvis… There is a big fear factor here. It’s [like] the coming of the railways, it’s Elvis shaking his hips. It’s cars going over 25 miles per hour and making people explode.

We’ve had such a beating over the past three years, by the US government, the British government, the Daily Mail. ‘You kill prostitutes’ – that’s usually the objection. I ask if they’ve ever played the game. Invariably they haven’t.

In my PAX Keynote, I said:

Speaking of parents and children and video games and opportunistic, pandering politicians: it’s none of their fucking business what I choose to play with my kids, and I wish they’d stop trying to tell me – and everyone else by extension – what my kids can and can’t play. I didn’t let my kids play violent or graphic games when they were too young to understand what the game was about because I’m a good parent who is involved in his kids’ lives, not because some idiot politician tried to score easy political points with the authoritarian 20 percenters who think censorship is totally awesome.

Let me point you to a great bit of satire, Celebrating 30 years of video games killing children. It starts with Space Invaders ("This will clearly make children think they can get another life after they die, thereby causing kids to start killing themselves in droves thinking that they can instantly come back to life!") and ends with GTA IV:

Studies now show that the average video game player is not a child at all and that their average age is actually 34. Considering this alarming data -- along with our history of pandering for votes by portraying gamers as evil, psychopathic, nut jobs for more than a quarter of a century now -- we have determined the obvious course of action: To protect our political careers, it is imperative that we raise the voting age to 35!

That's what this usually comes down to: people who genuinely don't understand what's going on having their fears exploited by people with an authoritarian agenda, who really aren't as interested in protecting The Children as they are in expanding and strengthening their power. That offends me even more than the spineless cowards who are letting people like Jack Thompson set the agenda for the rest of us.

According to Richard Bartle, though, the age of pandering politicians attacking video games and video gamers to score points with those 20 percenters isn't just coming to an end, it's already over :

We've Won. Get Over It.
I'm talking to you, you self-righteous politicians and newspaper columnists, you relics who beat on computer games: you've already lost. Enjoy your carping while you can, because tomorrow you're gone.

[...]

Dwell on this, you smug, out-of-touch, proud-to-be-innumerate fossils: half the UK population thinks games are fun and cool, and you don't. Those born in 1990 get the vote this year.

[...]

This anxiety you sense, this fear of what you don't comprehend: hey, it's OK. Parents who didn't play computer games do feel alienated, do feel isolated from their children; they do feel frightened, and naturally so, because they can't keep their children safe if they don't understand what they're keeping them safe from.

GTA IV will be officially available in about 7 hours here in Los Angeles, but is just 4 terrifying hours away in New York. How will our nation survive this great terror? Will we be able to Keep Calm and Carry On?

Rockstar's Dan Houser:

The ‘controversy’ story gets a bit frustrating… if this was a movie, a book, or a TV show, we wouldn’t be having this conversation. We’re an easy enemy to divert everyone’s attention from the stuff that really matters.

There’s an argument that video games have caused this massive upsurge in youth violence–they haven’t, it’s actually gone down. So it’s got nothing to do with the content; it’s to do with the medium.

So the self-proclaimed morality police can just calm down. Relax. The Children are going to be just fine, no thanks to them . . .  especially the ones whose parents have responsibly taken an active role in their lives.

Code of Honor Review at TV Squad

You may have already heard a little bit of this review on Radio Free Burrito Episode 11, but now you can experience the entire thing for yourself as Wil Wheaton reviews Code of Honor at TV Squad:

When they get to the planet, Lutan introduces his lovely wife Yareena, who is seriously rockin’ the Rick James hairdo and wants to party all the time.

Picard acknowledges that she is quite the Superfreak, but he really wants to see Tasha. Lutan relents, and we learn a little bit more about Ligonian culture, and the importance they place on honor and ritual. If you’ll allow me to stop snarking again for a moment, this is also a decent scene – grading, as always, on a steep curve – where we see Picard’s diplomacy and strength on full display. Oh! Snark back on: It’s too bad he can’t seem to access this particular skill when dealing with Doctor Crusher and Wesley. Maybe he constantly fails his save vs. hot redheads with boobies. Thank you. Snark off. The writing in this scene isn’t horrible, and the acting is quite good, so what could be painful exposition is instead a chance for the characters to develop while we all learn something together. Also, this is great misdirection. As we’ll see in a few minutes, Lutan isn’t interested in counting coup at all, and actually just wants all of Yareena’s money and power (hey, it’s just like John Kerry! Wait. McCain? Tell you what: apply your own politics, and have a good laugh at the other side.)

Tasha shows up, and though she is clearly unhappy with the whole “hey, I was just kidnapped by the 7*UP guy” thing, she’s obviously okay. Which may explain why, even though she has her damn communicator on, she never once tried to contact the Enterprise so she could be safely beamed away.

After a few tense moments of delicate diplomacy, Picard and Lutan agree to chill out for a little bit, until they can have a little party, where he swears to Zombie Jesus he’ll give up Tasha and the vaccine.

The party is a high class function. Food is served, and Picard’s stone cold munchin’. Tasha walks in at the end of the show, and sits next to Lutan , who’s sportin’ a really sweet ’fro. She’s dressed in yellow, she says “Hello, beam me the hell out of here you fine fellow.” Picard does his best to incite the groove, but Lutan won’t let him bust a move.

Er, what I mean is, they have their banquet. When it’s over, with great dignity and grace, Picard follows Ligonian custom, and asks – politely and with great humility – for Lutan to let him take Tasha back to the Enterprise.

The thing is, Lutan isn’t all that interested in letting Tasha go, because he’s got Jungle Fever.

Yareena thinks Mandingo is a little out of line, so she says, “Hey! I have a great idea! Since TNG is only three episodes old, and we’ve only rehashed one original series episode so far, let’s do it again! A show of hands: who here has seen ‘Amok Time’?”

This isn't my strongest review to date, and I'm not sure of that's because the humor well is running dry (I certainly hope not) or because it was really hard (like it was with Angel One) to come up with lots of different jokes and different ways of saying "Oh my god this is crap." I think the funny bits are pretty funny, though, and make up for the not-so-funny bits that tie them together.

The most interesting thing to me, though, is that after watching this episode for the first time in 25 years, it's not nearly as overtly racist as I thought it was when I was younger (certainly not as racist as Angel One is sexist.) However, let's put the episode into context:

This is only our third episode, and as I mockingly pointed out in the synopsis, it borrows way too heavily from "Amok Time," immediately after an episode that was essentially a rewrite of another TOS classic. We were still proving that we deserved the right to carry the Star Trek mantle, and when I look back at "Code of Honor" and see that it came between "The Naked Now" and "The Last Outpost," I'm astonished that we weren't canceled by mid-season. In fact, if we hadn't been first-run syndication, and if the core audience of Trekkies hadn't been as patient as the Ligonians – not to mention incredibly forgiving – we almost certainly would have been.

As I said in my podcast, I'd completely forgotten I was even in this episode, which is why I skipped it back when I started writing these reviews for TV Squad. After watching it, I can see why it was such a forgettable experience for me, since I probably worked half a day on the whole thing. But if I can be completely and embarrassingly honest for a moment: even though it's fucking retarded to put Wesley on the bridge the way they did, when I watched Code of Honor last week, I remembered how cool I thought it was that I got to sit on the bridge, at Ops, no less. As I write about it now, I can feel the butterflies in my stomach that I got every time I got to work there, or the transporter room, or sickbay, or engineering, or . . well, any of the sets that were iconic Star Trek sets. I thought it was so cool back then to be part of it, I didn't care how horrible the scripts were, as long as I got to be on the spaceship.

Watching the show now as a fan, I can see why everyone hated that shit so much. Hell, I agree with them. But as an adult looking back on his 14 year-old self, I feel a great deal of affection for that kid, who is so obviously excited to hang out with the grown ups on the space ship, he doesn't care how lame his dialog is.

Introducing Lego Wesley Crusher

Yeah, I have a custom LEGO Wesley figure

This was given to me as a gift at the Phoenix Comicon. Isn't it cool?

Sometimes, I sit here and look at it, and I'm tempted to call up my friends and say, "Hey, I was just wondering if you have a customized Lego figure of your Star Trek character on your desk." Then I realize how pathetic that sounds, and I just get drunk instead, crying softly into my beer.

Lego Wesley has a little Lego stein, though, so I'm not drinking alone, which would indicate "a problem."

Lego Wesley can put away at least two thimbles of drinks when we have our Tibetan drinking contests, but I've won a few times.

Lego Wesley never cries when he drinks.

Lego Wesley is hardcore like that.

(Lego Wesley auditioned for Lego Star Wars Two, but lost the gig to Lego Han Solo. He's a little sensitive about it.)

Radio Free Burrito Episode 11

Holy crap!

Look out the window for restless horsemen . . . it's a new episode of Radio Free Burrito, less than a week after the last one!

Show Notes

  • I think we should just go ahead and give this podcast the [Explicit] label, if it doesn't have it already. Consider yourself warned.
  • The logo was designed by WWdN:iX reader Marc, who asked that I not link to his "in progress" website. Thanks, Marc!
  • Episode X let me get my podcasting legs back, so I felt much better with this one, even when I had to stall while trying to splat-tab into Firefox, where I saw that I hadn't pre-loaded my blog. Whoops.
  • I put chapters, links, and images in this one. Yay!
  • The full Code of Honor review isn't up yet, but you can read all of my TNG Reviews at TV Squad if you haven't already.
  • When I mentioned all the great blogs at Wired that people may not know about, I forgot to mention GeekDad. It's not because I don't think it's a great blog, but because I took for granted that everyone reads it already. I also mentioned Underwire, Listening Post and Threat Level.
  • Here's the offending Alt Text column. Here's my Tweet. Here's my facepalm.
  • You know you want to learn more about fabulous Palm Springs.
  • Brad Sucks does not suck. You can listen to the album I Don't Know What I'm Doing at Magnatune.
  • Mister Bungle is a shame, because he spoils lunchtime.
  • I really do appreciate feedback; it makes me feel like I'm not broadcasting into an empty box.
  • Radio Free Burrito is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License.
  • This show is 18 minutes long, and weighs in at 16.6 MB.
  • As always, let me know if you decide to mirror the show, and I'll update this post.

Thanks for listening!

Download radio_free_burrito_episode_11.mp3

MIRRORS

Radio Free Burrito Episode 11 from Brian

Radio Free Burrito Episode 11 from Media Pundit

Radio Free Burrito Episode 11 from Craig Steffen

Torrents from our good friend Brian May

High (orig):
http://athena.unearthed.org/torrents/radio_free_burrito_episode_11.mp3.torrent

Low (mono, VBR bit rate range 0-24, 3.1 MB):
http://athena.unearthed.org/torrents/radio_free_burrito_episode_11-low.mp3.torrent

anne and wil's excellent new york adventure, part three

Recently, on anne and wil's excellent new york adventure . . .

I reclined my seat to the maximum four degrees allowed, put on a silly eye mask, and settled in for a few hours of sleep.

That's when the turbulence started. Seriously! It was like the air was just waiting for me to close my eyes so it could start shaking the plane. Imagine that you're starting to fall asleep, and someone comes up and shakes your chair: "Hey! Wake up! Dude! Wake up!"

Yeah, it's hilarious now, but at the time? Not that funny.

--

"Strange things are afoot at the Circle K, Ted."

--

"I really want to see the Flatiron building," I said.

"I really wish you wouldn't talk in hyperlinks," Anne said.

"Sorry. I'm a blogger. I can't help it."

--

"It's people! It's people! Soylent Green is people!"

--

"Okay, we just have to walk up one more block, and then you'll totally recognize it," I said.

One block later, Anne said, "Hey! I totally recognize this building!"

"I know it's stupid to walk all the way up here just to look at a building with a funny shape," I said, "but since we never do authentically 'touristy' things, I thought this was a better plan than going to the Hard Rock."

--

"The blue wire? The blue wire?! Which one is the fucking blue wire?!

--

"Just stop it. This conversation isn't even happening. You're just making it up to amuse yourself."

It was true.

"How am I doing?"

"The real me would probably make a comment that's a lot funnier than anything you can come up with, and since you're putting words into my mouth anyway, I'm just going to say that you're handsome, suave and charming."

"Oh go on," I said.

"Also, when we get home, you should buy several classic game cabinets and put them in your office."

"You're the boss, dear," I said.

--

And now, part three.

The sun was setting as we walked downtown on Park. It threw pink light on the sides of buildings, turning West-facing windows into little pots of golden fire. At street level, we were covered in cooling shadows. We were expecting cold weather, but thanks to the myth of climate change, New York was enjoying an unseasonably warm day, with temperatures in the upper 70s. Sidewalk cafes were filling up as we passed them, music and people spilled out of every bar we passed.

We got to Galaxy the same time Kathleen and Atom arrived with Atom's friend Sheena, who I quickly learned was awesome. Though it was the day before their wedding, Kat and Atom were completely relaxed. I remembered how stressed out Anne and I were the day before our wedding, and admired them both. Maybe I envied them, just a little bit, but I kept that to myself.

Galaxy was awesome, and I ate my weight in incredible vegetarian food. After we were done, we walked them back to their apartment.

"I just love how all the sidewalk cafes are open tonight," Atom said.

"Yeah," I said, "the energy and sense of community they create is really cool. We don't have anything quite like this where we live." I thought for a moment. "Well, not that's close enough to walk to, or stays open late."

Kathleen and Atom have been bi-costal for about a year, but they recently decided to permanently move to New York, and after just a couple of hours in their neighborhood, I could completely understand why.

We spent a little time at their apartment, where we did not subject my wife to a furious Guitar Hero III battle betwixt Atom and myself on their Wii. "I'm trying real hard to keep the massive geeking out to a minimum on this trip," I said, "so it will also be a vacation for Anne."

The controller glowed with a seductive light that only I could see. I turned my back to it and pretended it wasn't there. Nobody asked me why I was flushed and sweating. I wouldn't have been able to tell them why if they did.

Eventually, it was time for us to leave and let them get some rest, since they were, you know, getting married and everything in less than 24 hours.

We passed the same sidewalk cafes and several bars on our way back to the hotel. I lingered by one of them and said to Anne, "I think we should stop here and have a beer, on principle."

"On principle?"

"Yeah, on principle. How often do we get to just walk into a bar that's filled with people and music, have a beer, and then walk right back out to  . . . well, not to home, but to where we're sleeping. What I mean is --"

"Stop." She said. "You had me at 'beer.'"

My wife is awesome.

We went inside, and found two seats at the end of the bar, near the door. I couldn't believe our luck; the place was packed, standing-room only, and we'd gotten two great seats, right when we walked in . . . underneath the freezing air conditioner, which was pouring -- no, blasting -- down on the two seats.

We ordered two Sierra Nevadas and sat there, in the frozen air, on principle. Our good luck continued, when, after just a few minutes, the air either switched off, or was deflected away by my +3 field of awesome or we just got used to it, or something.

The Mets and the Yankees were both playing, and the games were on several televisions hanging over the patrons, who weren't shy about declaring their loyalty. It was loud in the bar, but not obnoxious.

Well, not until the three Wall Street guys and their Princess friend from Long Island showed up. Wall Street Guy Number One called the bartender over, and asked him for a Coors Light on draft.

I bit my beer snob lip and kept quiet. The bartender told Wall Street Guy Number One that they didn't have Coors Light on draft, only Bud Light.

This is when Wall Street Guy Number One smacked his open palm down on the bar, hard, to express his displeasure at this most distressing news.

"Fine," he said, "I'll just have a Stella."

I bit my lip a little harder.

For the next fifteen minutes or so, we couldn't help but listen to these guys play a verbal game of "Who has the biggest dick in the room?" It was incredibly amusing, and everything made sense when Wall Street Guy Number Three revealed that they were all in the same fraternity together. This supports my theory that, even when you're in your mid-twenties, out of college and working for The Man, you can still be a Frat Guy.

We finished our beer, and -- as so often happens when we sit down for 'just a beer' -- I wanted another.

Anne said, "Do you want one more before we go?"

"It's getting a little obnoxious in here," I said. "Let's go down the block and find someplace else."

"Are you suggesting we go . . ." she paused, and tilted her head to one side as she raised an eyebrow. ". . . bar-hopping?"

I caught the bartender's eye, and waved my hand in the universal gesture for "check please." I hoped he wouldn't noticed that we'd kept a tab open, and put exactly one beer each on it.

"Well, I guess since we're moving from one bar to another, it's technically bar-hopping," I said, "but isn't it more like three or four before you're officially doing it?"

"No," she said, "that's when you're on a pub crawl."

The bartender dropped off our bill and I signed for it.

"Well, I guess we're bar-hopping then," I said. "On principle."

We stood up. As I attempted to navigate my way around the Frat Guys, the girl with them tossed her hair back, sniffed dramatically and said, "Well, I just don't like to hang out with people who are more attractive than I am."

"You must not have too many friends," I thought, and gave myself a mental high-five.

We walked down a block and found another bar. This one was quieter and not nearly as crowded. The bartender spoke in an Irish brogue that was too thick to be a put on.  I was surprised to see that they had Mirror Pond Pale Ale on draft, so I asked for a pint.

He looked at Anne.

"Make it two," she said.

This bar was way more our speed, and before we knew it, we were into our second pint. That's when I overheard the following bit of conversation from behind us:

Guy 1: Isn't Thailand the place to get, like, 10 year-old boys?
Guy 2: Why would you even want that?
Guy 1: I don't! I'm just saying that --
Guy 2: What's wrong with you?
Guy 1: I'm just saying that if that's what you wanted, Thailand is the place to go.
Guy 2: I can't be associated with you.

Before you wig, there wasn't even a hint of seriousness in the conversation, which I dutifully recorded on a cocktail napkin, having left my little notebook that I carry for recording exactly this sort of thing in my backpack. You know, so I wouldn't lose it.

The two guys began discussing their hatred of Facebook. The last thing I wrote down was, "Do not put me on Facebook! I will fucking kill you if you put me on Facebook. Get me the fuck off the Internet! Next time I'm on the Internet, it will be on Wikipedia."

Yeah, I don't know what he meant, either, but after three beers, it was funny enough for me to write it down.

It was getting late, and though our bodies thought it was three hours earlier, we'd still been up for about 14 hours on less than five hours of quality sleep. All of a sudden, we were exhausted, and ready to collapse like the Mets down the stretch.

I put some cash on the bar, and we walked back to our hotel. It was nearly midnight, but the city was still vibrant and alive around us.

As I fell into bed I thought, "Man, this city really never does sleep."

Seconds later, I was a Viking.

To be continued . . .

this is why i love twitter

Twitter haters are the new blog haters are the new 'zine haters are the new mixtape haters. You're so totally unimpressed. We get it.

Here is an example of why I love Twitter:

wilw: Say you are at a luncheon, stone cold munchin' . A girl starts talkin' while guys are gawkin'. This is the appropriate time to bust a move

scottarius: @wilw but I ate so much i nearly split my pants!

torgorama: @wilw You want it....you got it.

brlittle: @wilw though having been overly enthusiastic in your attentions the buffet, you may need to consider the likelihood of ripping your trousers

ShawnRC: @wilw Question: Do you check your libido before or after you stroll to the church in your new tuxedo?

My joke is moderately funny, but the responses elicited many LOLs. That's why Twitter is fun.

Look, Twitter haters: Don't make a fuss! I'll have your Twitter. I love it! I'm having Twitter, Twitter, Twitter, Twitter, Twitter, Twitter, Twitter, Twitter, Baked Beans, Twitter and Twitter.

Alan Moore reads Rorschach's Journal

I'm way late to the party on this one, and didn't even know it existed until about fifteen seconds ago.

Listening to it gave me chills. I want to go re-read Watchmen right now so I can hear Rorschach's real voice.

strength and courage

Every year, I get a few praying mantis egg cases, attach them to plants around the yard, and hope for the best. Other than about a dozen babies two years ago, though, I've never seen the anticipated explosion of little mantid babies running around, preparing for a summer of devouring nasty bugs and looking cool as hell as they do it.

So far this year, I've put two cases into the container garden we have on our patio. This morning, while I was watering, I noticed that one of them had hatched, and we had a flowering plant (I forget what it's called, so take away all of my ranks in Identify Plants) that was covered with tiny babies.

I took some pictures. None of them are particularly good (I'm try again tomorrow) but here's one of them:

Mantid Babies

In case you miss it at Flickr, I wanted to share this comment from Amanda Peckinpaw:

The Greeks attributed to them supernatural powers.

There's also this, "The mantis comes to us when we need peace, quiet and calm in our lives. Usually the mantis makes an appearance when we've flooded our lives with so much business, activity, or chaos that we can no longer hear the still small voice within us because of the external din we've created."

Chinese: strength and courage.

Because I have that thing in my brain that makes me an artist, I'm constantly looking for and often finding symbolism in pretty much everything in the world, but I didn't know about this particular one. I'm so glad Amanda shared it with me, because what I need more than anything else in my life right now are peace, quiet and calm. I'm going to need a lot of strength and courage to get there, so I'm happy to take some inspiration from the dozens and dozens of little baby bugs in my yard.

My Photo

The Happiest Days of Our Lives

  • These are the stories Wil loves to tell, because they are the closest to his heart: stories about being a huge geek, passing his geeky hobbies and values along to his own children, and vividly painting what it meant to grow up in the ’70s and come of age in the ’80s as part of the video game/D&D/BBS/Star Wars figures generation.

Buy Just A Geek: The Audiobook

  • "This journey is a fascinating read, made even more intimate and fulfilling by Wil's narrative. This is not just an audio book, it's a glimpse into the psyche of the man who considers himself . . . Just a Geek."

    Read more details here.

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