December 2010

SF/F Commentary

The Skiffy and Fanty Show #28b (An Interview w/ Celine Kiernan) and Charity Note

First things first:  The author of Publetariat is having an awful year financially, medically, and personally; if you can spare a couple bucks over the holidays, you’d be doing someone a great deal of good.  You can read about what has happened and donate here. Episode 28b contains the last half of the interview with Celine Kiernan, author of The Poison Throne, and a new question of the week: Did you like the first season of The Walking Dead? Feel free to check out the page for the episode to listen to the show and leave your response to the question of the week. Thanks for listening! P.S.:  You can listen to the first half of the interview here.

SF/F Commentary

Politics: A Critique Deconstructed (Part Two)

(See Part One here.) Part Two IV. Global Warming Ain’t Real The title of this section basically sums up Wrighton’s argument.  Of course, he has no citations, so I have no idea where he is hearing about all the lies.  I suspect FOX News, but that’s because that network is sort of like McCain:  really happy to talk about what supports his opinion, but suddenly screaming “BIAS” when something doesn’t. Finish him! As for global warming evidence:  a handful of bumps doesn’t prove something wrong.  Facts speak for themselves.  Well, unless you think National Geographic and NASA are making it all up.  Just like they did with the Moon Landing, right? V.  Racism Against the Whites Whether Affirmative Action is the right approach to preventing racism or sexism from being institutionalized at a jobs level is certainly worth debating, but it is currently the only reasonable system by which we can prevent people of color and women from being actively discriminated against (rather than for).  Wrighton makes an indirect argument that whites are actively discriminated against because colleges and employers look at one’s skin color or gender and select people based on that rather than on test scores.  While this is true in part (as per AA and other policies), it completely ignores the socio-economic factors that contribute to poor test scores and performance (the same problems caused by underfunded schools)–not to mention that it ignores how utterly useless test scores really are (I’m a college teacher, and people who do well on the tests are still ridiculously disadvantaged in things like writing, etc.).  If we went only by test scores, pretty much everyone going to college would be white, with the exception of those entering sports programs.  David Duke would be very proud of this line of thinking. This is what the inside of Atlanta’s airport looks like.  Only, you know, inside. Likewise, his point doesn’t deal with the fact that even with AA pushing more diversity into schools and jobs, both women and people of color are underpaid and prevented from rising up in the ranks even when they are just as qualified as white men; in fact, his point ignores it, instead opting for the “white men are being discriminated against” argument instead of actually looking at the problem.  But this is all part of a problem that is too big to take on in a post like this.  I just hope that Wrighton isn’t making the “let economics decide” argument for dealing with racism/sexism. VI.  Keep Your Government Hands Off My Healthcare I’m going to break these apart piece by piece: “[Government] run health care does not work.” People who have such systems would be surprised to hear that, since it works a hell of a lot better for them than our private healthcare system works for us. “Look at the wait times for doctors in places like France and Canada.” Most of these wait times are myths or manipulations of statistics.  People who oppose universal healthcare often take one bad statistic in one specific place (like Paris, a very large city in France) and then apply that to every single situation in the country.  But then they also conveniently ignore the fact that we have wait times in parts of the U.S. (not all parts).  I know from personal experience of having to wait three weeks to get an appointment with my general practitioner and having to wait upwards of six hours in the emergency room with a serious respiratory problem (it turned out I had cancer around my airways and my aorta). But then there are the two times in my life when I received free health insurance and access to a government-funded, university-run clinic.  In my current situation, I can get an appointment with my doctor tomorrow, and pay next to nothing for it (free for appointments; $25 for medications).  Fun how that works, no? But socialism is evil! “There are two choices to make here. We use the free market to regulate the cost, thus granting access to everyone willing to pay, or we make it a “public” controlled system, and institute rationing, where only certain people gain access.” Wrighton seems to think that the free market hasn’t been in control of the system to begin with, and that they haven’t been regulating costs in their benefit for the last thirty or so years (then again, he seems libertarian, so he might suggest that any government regulation is bad, thus believing that people who run corporations must be trustworthy by default–you’d have to in order to be truly free market).  He gets his information from some Austrian institution I’ve never heard of, but since said institution seems to think the government involvement in making employer-provided health insurance tax free is the same as the government subsidizing health insurance, it’s really hard to take them seriously (they basically don’t understand the employer-provided health insurance system). In any case, there are problems with this logic.  First, it offers a false dichotomy–i.e. an either/or that is intentionally limiting and fallacious at best.  The RNC mastered this when the health debate was in full swing.  It also is hilarious for trying to apply to the “public option” things that already exist for the magic “private market.”  Rationing is already occurring.  It’s called socio-economic rationing.  People who can’t afford health insurance or healthcare don’t get it.  Fuck the poor, right?  It’s not always about being willing to pay, and trying to simplify the argument to money is really just a lame way of avoiding dealing with the human aspect. But then Wrighton says that cheap healthcare for all will never happen, which tells me he’s already given in to the idea that some people just aren’t important enough to care about.  Fuck the poor, again, right? Like I said.  Socialism is evil!  Screw Little Timmy! Now, I’m not suggesting that universal healthcare is perfect.  It’s not.  No system is perfect.  If there was a perfect system,

SF/F Commentary

Christmas Gifts For 2010: Favorite SF/F Reads in 2010

I’ve already done a podcasting kit for authors and like-minded individuals, but no discussion of Christmas gifts in the SF/F world should leave out books and magazines.  So, below are my favorite reads for 2010 (so far, anyway, what with there being another 15 days left). Here goes: Fiction — Top Picks The Reapers Are the Angels by Alden Bell Badass of the Year:  Temple A lot of books came out this year, and at the top of my list is Alden Bell’s post-apocalypse literary zombie novel.  Check out my review to see why I loved it so much.  Oh, and we interviewed Mr. Bell here. This World We Live In by Susan Beth Pfeffer The end of the world always has tornadoes… I was sad to see this series end, but Pfeffer did a fine job pulling everything together in the third of her post-apocalyptic YA novels.  Told in the form of journal entries, it follows a young girl and her extended family as they try to survive in world changed by a massive impact on the moon, which pushes it into a closer orbit around the Earth.  My review can be found here, and I’ve interviewed her two times, in case you’re interested. City of Saints and Madmen by Jeff VanderMeer An oldie, but definitely one of the most enjoyable and fascinating books I’ve read this year.  Whether you want to call VanderMeer a New Weird writer, or something else entirely, his fiction is fantastic.  City of Saints and Madmen is a prime example of the man’s talent, moving through various literary styles and modes with a uniquely categorical attention to detail.  The novel reads almost like a catalogue of Ambergrisian wonder.  If you’re going to get an oldie for Christmas, this should be it. Graphic Novels — Top Pick Mouse Guard:  Fall 1152 by David Petersen Better than Brian Jacques… A beautifully drawn animal fantasy tale with an entertaining story.  It’s like Duncton Wood meets Narnia.  Fun, adventurous, and cute (yes, cute, because even kickass ninja mice are adorable).  Give it a shot if you’re up for a little adventure. Non-fiction — Top Picks Colonialism and the Emergence of Science Fiction by John Rieder Ew!  Colonialism! If you’re going to choose a critical text about science fiction this year, then Rieder’s book is the one to go with.  We read this book for my Utopia/SF course and it has become one of my favorite theoretical works in the class.  If you’re interested in how colonialism informs and is tied into the very structure of SF as a genre, this is a book worth reading. Rogues by Jacques Derrida Will the real rogue state please stand up! Nothing like a little political philosophy to get your day going, right?  The good news is that this is one of Derrida’s shortest and most coherent works, which deals specifically with the idea of the “rogue state.”  And, of course, as Derrida always does, he deconstructs the term to explain its ambiguities, eccentricities, and so forth.  There’s a lot of useful stuff in here for worldbuilding if you ask me. Magazine — Top Pick Interzone Magazine from TTA Press The only magazine worth subscribing to… Best.  Magazine.  Period.  Subscribe. And there you go. Which books and magazines would you recommend for Christmas and why?  Let me know in the comments!

SF/F Commentary

Christmas Gifts For 2010: A Podcasting Kit For Authors/Editors/etc.

Christmas is almost here and one thing every SF/F author needs is the the ability to do interviews and online discussions without sounding like they’ve been living in a broken WW2 submarine in the Mariana Trench.  Well, having spent a good portion of the year doing The Skiffy and Fanty Show, I have a good idea what would make the perfect podcasting gift for any author, editor, or blogger.  And the best thing about the Podcasting Kit below is that it can all be used for a variety of things other than podcasting. So, without further delay, here is my podcasting kit for authors and other creative individuals: The Hardware 1.  Freetalk Everyman Headset If you’re going to buy any headset on the low end of the price scale, this is the one to get.  I’ve been using it for months and the audio quality is fantastic.  It’s easy to use (plug’n’play via USB) and, in my opinion, the best low-cost headset out there. I look cute in black… Pro:  Easy to use and great audio quality. Con:  It is limited by your computer and ports.  Some computers will create some barely audible fuzz, which can be cut out in post-production. Tip:  Don’t put the microphone too close to your mouth or nose.  Keep it above and away from your face.  Why?  Because when you make certain kinds of sounds (like hard Ss and Ps), your microphone will pick it up and leave an annoying breathing “pah” on your audio recording.  Keeping it away from your face limits the impact of these sounds and makes it so you don’t have to buy or make your own pop filter (which professionals use). Cost:  $29.88 + shipping (sometimes it’s on sale) 2.  A Computer (Optional) If you’re a writer, you probably already have a computer.  Depending on the computer you have, however, you might need to get a new one.  Most desktops are pretty cheap these days, depending on what you want them to do.  For podcasting, you don’t need much more than a basic unit.  Every computer comes with USB ports, and you can get computers with any operating system you desire.  I prefer Windows (though I can’t speak to anything after Vista), but if you’re a Mac person, that works too. Sexy computers are hard to come by. Pro:  It’s a computer.  Take your pick. Con:  Ditto. Tip:  Avoid overpriced computers and useless software packages.  Do your research on the various brands.  I’ve had good experience with HPs (desktops and notebooks), but all of my computers are over 2 years old, and, thus, might not represent HP quality today.  Just do your research. Cost:  $400-$1200 (depending on the specs and the type–notebook vs. desktop) The Software 1.  Skype The majority of podcasts use Skype for all of their recordings, even when they call you via phone.  Why?  Because Skype is free between users, and it’s cheap or everything else.  Plus, it’s a fantastic little piece of software that works almost perfectly almost all of the time, and because it’s common among podcasters, you absolutely need Skype if you want to do interviews. There is a logical reason for the blue logo.  Liberals. Pro:  Easy to use and good audio quality. Con:  The program is limited by the Internet and PC power of the people using it. Tip:  Turn off all non-essential programs that use the Internet, such as messenger programs, Tweetdeck, and even smaller programs that have automatic update checkups.  Leave antivirus programs and the like on, though.  The fewer Internet-using programs you have on, the greater your ability to avoid cylonifying yourself or others (i.e. when your voice or theirs goes crazy robot and comprehension drops to zero). Cost:  Free (download at the link above) 2.  Audacity If you’re planning to edit any recordings of your own, you’ll need Audacity to do so.  The newest beta is one of the best versions so far released, and includes everything from noise removal to voice manipulators (you know, for making your voice sound like an alien or a robot).  While Audacity takes a little time learning how to use, it does have a shallow learning curve compared to other kinds of audio editing software. Apparently it put radioactive audio waves into your brain… Pro:  Relatively easy to use for most tools and very effective. Con:  It is notoriously difficult to use as a recording device for conversations.  It works great for recording yourself, though. Tip:  Noise removal is a useful tool, but don’t go overboard.  Removing too much “noise” can actually warp your audio.  Try low pass and high pass filters, too (the latest beta comes with them pre-installed). Cost:  Free (download at the link above) 3.  MP3 Skype Recorder While the name is obviously not all that original, it is a very useful little tool for recording Skype conversations.  It takes very little time to set up (you open it, you click the settings you want, and you press record) and usually only fails when you’ve done something wrong (like not pressing “record”). It’s like a malformed Mickey Mouse. Pro:  Easy to use. Con:  It’s a little annoying to close, since clicking the “x” doesn’t actually shut the program down. Tip:  You know it’s recording if a little window temporarily pops up and tells you so. Cost:  Free (download at the link above) Total $29.88 + shipping ($35, roughly) w/o new computer $429.88 to $1229.88 + shipping (varies depending on where you get your computer) w/ computer Likely cost?  $35. Let’s face it:  if you’re a writer, you probably have a computer, and if you don’t, then you probably aren’t going to be doing audio interviews online anyway–in which case, this whole post is meaningless to you.  For the rest of you author types, you can see how easy it is to do podcast interviews for dirt cheap.  $35 is very little to ask for from Santa, after all. Now I throw it out to all of you.  What little

SF/F Commentary

Politics: A Critique Deconstructed (Part One)

I’ve been critiqued!  On politics, if the title of this post didn’t make that obvious.  Stephen Wrighton of KrashPad has written in response to my post in September on what it would take for Republicans to earn my vote, and according to Law One of the Internet, I am going to respond (Law One, if you didn’t know, is as follows:  “If someone is wrong on the Internet, you must correct them”).  I’m going to make this a series of three posts, though, since what I’ve written is quite extensive and, thus, too damn large for one single post. Part One The first thing to do is throw out the stuff that I don’t think needs to be addressed at length.  There are certainly things to be said about how Wrighton shortens my list–namely, that he unfairly reduces my list to talking points, which is not what I initially offered–but what I want to focus on are the real meat and potatoes of his post, which I will take down methodically below. I.  Political Slurs I am always amused by the way political discussions are often reduced to single terms as if the terms themselves represent a negative.  In the case of Wrighton, he refers to my thoughts as being “leftist” and “liberal,” both of which have been used by politicians (specifically those opposed to the imaginary picture of “leftists” and “liberals” they have in their heads) to destroy the credibility of the “enemy.”  The problem?  Doing so is a clear attempt to avoid dealing with what is actually being said.  Wrighton, of course, does try to address my points, but by starting out with references to political negatives, he immediately colors what follows in his post. What isn’t asked when someone says “liberal” or “leftist” is whether what is being identified by those terms is actually right.  There are no absolutes in politics.  People from any of the “sides” are not infallible, nor are they wrong all the time.  Being “liberal” doesn’t mean one is necessarily wrong.  Nor is being “conservative.”  But we’ll get into that a bit another day, since there is much more to say. II.  The Economy Wrighton responds to my call for a change in Republican economic policies (which you can read at the link above) by saying the following: First, the economic policy. It’s a great thing, to believe that the government can be some grand equalizer, sharing out wealth and handing out bags of gold and food to everyone who stops by. But, that’s an unsustainable form of growth. Government can not create wealth. It cannot create jobs, and it cannot do anything but take money from those who do create wealth and jobs, and hand it out to others. Typically and traditionally, we call those who take things they have not earned thieves, and those who wait with open hands for handouts beggars, yet when Congress is involved, we call them the Taxman and Welfare Recipients. But, in a sense, he is right, in that we do not need an economic policy revolving around extending Bush-era tax cuts. After all, those did not go nearly far enough. Instead, we need to cut taxes even more, and do away with un-Constitutional programs and departments. Taxes and Government spending only removes capital resources from out economy. There are a lot of fairly obvious untruths here: The government can and does create jobs.  Millions of them, actually (that link is for State and local governments).  We can argue about whether these are “good” jobs, but the fact remains that most of these jobs would not exist without the government (note also that most of the jobs created are for the public good). The government can and does create wealth.  World War Two.  Look it up.  One of the largest federal spending periods in history (because of the war) and the result from 1940 to 1948?  An increase in personal income, massive job creation, and so forth.  And we seemed to have come out of that quite well considering… There seems to be an assumption here that people who benefit from tax dollars, such as unemployed people, poor people, and so on, are beggars.  Or perhaps Wrighton is just talking about the massive debt owned by the fed.  Either way, the first is a lie and the second is oversimplified.  People who ask for help from the government are just asking for what they paid their taxes for (unemployment benefits and so on are paid for in our taxes dollars).  There’s a lot more to say about this point, but that would take all week.  (To be fair, some people don’t pay taxes, and some people do get more back than they put in–though the government makes interest on the money paid in–but anyone who is legally employed pays into the unemployment pool.) Wrighton assumes that cutting taxes more than they are already will actually do something beneficial for the economy.  The interesting thing?  History proves otherwise.  Trickle-down economics has never worked the way people wish it did.  If companies were willing to take the massive profits they pull in from what they sell to everyone else and trickle that down to, well, everyone else, then America would not have as much unemployment as it did pre-Recession.  The reality?  The tax cuts and Bush’s various other policies have actually drastically increased the gap between the rich and the poor.  Median income has remained the same for those in the bottom 40%, while the top 10% have actually acquired more wealth than they ever had before (close to 70% of all wealth in the country).  Where is the trickling happening? There are also a few differences to mention here.  The first is that the government is not like a thief.  A thief uses the things s/he steals for personal gain, while the government uses the money they acquire from taxes in order to serve the public good.  That includes maintaining forces to protect the nation from

SF/F Commentary

Video Found: Elysium Teaser (Neill Blomkamp)

Rumor has it that the following video is part of the viral marketing campaign for Neill Blomkamp’s upcoming Elysium (a science fiction film).  This would be the second teaser to appear in video form in the last two months (unless I’ve missed anything).  I’ve included both videos in this post. First, the videos (after the fold): (New) (Old) My initial thoughts boil down to this conversation with myself: Fan Shaun:  OMFG!  This is the best thing that ever happened to me!  Critical Shaun:  To us, sir.  And of course it’s “OMFG.”  It’s freaking Neill Blomkamp.  He’s what Michael Bay can’t even dream of being anymore. FS:  I know!  It’s like science fiction just got a special idea pill delivered on a silver platter of South African awesome. CS:  A rectally administered pill. FS:  Wait, what?  Why would it be rectally administered? CS:  Because SF film has had its head so far up its own ass it can taste the chewed food before it reaches the stomach.  How else would you explain the atrocious quantity of pointless action films masquerading as science fiction?  The pill has to be administered in the most direct way possible to counteract the effects of film stupidity. FS:  Come on, they’re not all that bad… CS:  No?  How about Transformers 2? FS:  Okay, but… CS:  Star Trek? FS:  Yes, but… CS:  Avatar? FS:  Well, you might have a point there… CS:  2012? FS:  Okay, you win… CS:  Like I said, it must be administered rectally to have the greatest effect. FS:  Okay, but the point of all this is that Elysium is going to be awezum! CS:  Yes, I agree, which is why the teaser videos above have forced me to give birth to a tentacled science fiction baby. Long pause… FS:  There’s something wrong with you… CS:  Probably… Now, I’m sure there’s a very good reason why my fan self and my critical self both sound slightly insane, but it’s definitely not because I’m weird or anything.  Point is, Elysium is looking like it might very well be the injection of sensawunda that science fiction film needs these days.  We can only hope, right? What about you?  Are you looking forward to Blomkamp’s new flick?

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