Entertainment

South Park's amusement factor has been up and down for me, but I may have to make an effort to catch this evening's episode. Cartman's plan to propel himself into the future goes horribly wrong. South Park Elementary faces strong opposition to the topic of evolution being taught to the 4th graders, especially from Ms. Garrison who has to teach it. Eric Cartman can't be bothered with what's going on in class. He's busy manipulating his own personal time-line to align with the precise release date of the newest, hottest game.
Female Science Professor is polling her readers on what's on their computer desktop. It's not a weird question pulled out of thin air: she noted that male professors may be more comfortable showing pictures of their families than females, who have to be more sensitive to the stereotypes. It's not a scientific poll in any sense of the word, but just out of curiousity, let's see what emerges. My answer was "Other." My desktop image right now is of a hypothetical cephalopod-like alien swimming in a methane sea beneath an orange-red sky. What would fit her hypothesis, though, is that my desk has…
For those who were as appalled at yesterday's anatomically bizarre comic book squid as I was, G. Tingey sent me a scan of a palate-cleansing, nicely done image from a Dan Dare comic book. You can click on it to see the whole page (about 200K, though). That's a much better drawn squid. It seems to be another example of the poor beast presumed to be a man-eater, though.
…until cheap-ass animation was replaced by machinima.
This morning, I'm off to the Unitarian Church of Willmar to talk about creationism. I'll be back later, but 'til then, you kiddies can watch some TV. Flea has David Rakoff, if you want to laugh at the inanity of the right wing, while Crooks and Liars hosts the latest Olbermann, if you're more in the mood for tragedy, in this case the unraveling of the Constitution.
Uh-oh. Apparently, there was some TV premiere that I missed last night that I'm seeing discussed all over the Intarwubs. I'd let it slide, but Scott McLemee said this: Looking back, it was probably Tim Burke’s recommendation that made me give the remake a try. He called himself “probably the last geek out there to discover Battlestar Galactica” but actually, no, a few of us were left to follow in his wake. Yep, that's me, one of the last geeks to see this thing. I saw one episode a year or so ago…and I wasn't impressed (it would take a fair amount of dazzle to overcome the hurdle put up by…
We're hoping he'll announce that he's going to run against Coleman in 2008 from the stage here at Morris—he was playing coy with Jon Stewart because, pffft, you want to make such important statements in places that matter, that have resonance.
You may recall that I reviewed Flock of Dodos last week—it's good, you should all see it if you can. The movie now has a distributor, so maybe you can. Unfortunately, this isn't a release for private use yet, so what you need to do is get an institution to fork over $345. Yeah, that's steep, but it includes public performance rights. Maybe you could convince your local university to get it for a Darwin Day showing…? Recoup the cost by selling tickets?
Once again this year, I'm setting up our Café Scientifique-Morris, which is going to be held on the last Tuesday of each month of the university school year. This time around, that means the first one falls on…Halloween! So we're going to do something fun for that one: maybe some costumes, lots of clips from classic horror movies, I definitely think we're going to need some bubbling retorts of colored fluids, and the chemistry department is tentatively going to provide some treats (ice cream made with liquid nitrogen—chemistry and treats don't usually go together in people's heads, I know.)…
($1.93? Can you get them cheaper if you buy them in bulk at Costco or Walmart?)
This has been a bountiful week at Chez Pharyngula, and I have received generous gifts from several readers. A full accounting lies below the fold. Why, yes. Yes, I do. Readers from Winnipeg visited the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre and reported on what they found there…and they sent me a t-shirt! The sentiment is perfect, and I know you're all jealous now. Hmmm. Winnipeg isn't that far from Morris, and I know lots of the faculty here make trips up that way (especially for the folk festival). Now I've got a few more reasons to pay a visit, even if it is the Bible Belt of Canada. Has anyone…
True confession: I try to watch the medical drama House when I can. It's lead character is an acerbic and brilliant atheist M.D. (played by Hugh Laurie, a comedic actor—which was a smart casting decision), and the humor is snarky and dark. That's just the kind of thing I enjoy. It's been going downhill, I think, because the episodes have gotten far too predictable—there's always a weird illness which is handled via increasingly wild semi-random diagnoses that always, and I definitely mean always, ends with the complete cure of the patient. The infallibility is wearing a little thin. Last…
The Scienceblogs Nerd-off contest should have this for a new theme song: Weird Al's "White and Nerdy". First in my class here at MIT Drop skills, I'm a champion at D&D M.C. Escher, that's my favorite MC Keep your 40, I'll just have an Earl Grey tea My rims never spin, to the contrary You'll find that they're quite stationary All of my action figures are cherry Stephen Hawking's in my library My MySpace page is all totally pimped out Got people bangin' for my top eight spaces Yo, I know pi to a thousand places Ain't got grills but I still wear braces I order all of my sandwiches with…
Since I saw this meme at Dr Crazy's place, I thought I'd toss it up here for the commenters to make suggestions. " If I were designing a Pharyngula Halloween costume, it would consist of..." It's actually relevant. I just put out a call at my university for volunteers for Cafe Scientifique, which we will be holding on the last Tuesday of each month…and the October calendar puts that on Halloween. I'm going to be trying to organize a panel session on "Mad Scientists and Monsters" as the topic that day, and ask the panelists to show up in costume. So let's see what suggestions you might come up…
I'm having second thoughts about the virtues of proximity to my colleagues of that other discipline after watching this video of people plunking alkali metals into water. Cesium looks…interesting. Fortunately, my chemistry pals aren't British, or I might have trouble understanding their comments. What the heck does "the dog's nuts of the periodic table" mean, anyway?
So…when is this play, Darwin in Malibu, going on tour? I'd see it.
The BIG fair, the Minnesota state fair, is going on right now, and Karina Hill is letting people vote on exactly which repellent Midwestern grease lump on a stick she should eat. Here's the menu: Fried cheese puffs Cajun Season Alligator Sausage on-a-stick Deep Fried Cheese on a stick Jerk pork chop drummy Pancake wrapped around sausage on-a-stick Uffda Treat Belgium waffle on-a-stick Australian Battered Potatoes Cheese-burger calzones on-a-stick Wild Rice corndogs Key Lime Pie on-a-stick Dogzilla Egg-roll on-a-stick Fried-Egg Bagel Sandwich Pizza on-a-stick Political pop Deep…
I've been picking up some old movies on DVD lately to improve my education in the classics: specifically, an old favorite, the Hammer horror films. Yesterday, to take a break from class prep, I watched one I hadn't seen before, Curse of the Werewolf. It has an interesting plot, a bit more thoughtful and melancholy than your usual monster movie, but what really wakes up the show is the actor in the lead: Oliver Reed. Whoa. I swear, I really am a boringly straight guy and wholeheartedly monogamous to boot, but Reed was one scarily, dangerously, manly fellow. He's intense, tormented, and even…
I don't know who this guy Evil Bobby is, but he has distracted me a couple of times these last few days with collections of weird Russian pop videos. Isn't that what the internets are all about, stumbling into strange things you'd never look up yourself?
This is the week of the Stevens County Fair, right here in bucolic Morris, Minnesota. It starts on Wednesday, 9 August and runs through Sunday the 13th, so you all still have time to start heading out this way. It's your classic rural fair: there will be accordions, deep-fried anything on a stick, pig-judging, carnies, a demolition derby, country-western music, lawn mower races, 4H kids, and tractors, snowmobiles, and ice houses for sale. You have not lived until you have experience a midwestern county fair. (Oh, and don't eat the food if you want to continue living. It's like jabbing your…