alixtii: The five-pointed sleeping thing from Dollhouse. (Dollhouse)
I have the first disc of season 2 from Netflix. And it's strange--it used to be that Helo was the guy who I could never recognize, the one with undistinct features whose face I could never remember, who faded into the crowd and had me going, "Who's he, again?"

Now he's that guy from Dollhouse. It makes it a lot easier.

VMars

Jan. 24th, 2007 12:35 am
alixtii: Mac and Cassidy. Text: "*squee!* (Cindy Mackenzie)
I think tonight's Gilmore Girls was a rerun? Or maybe not. I only caught the tail end, waiting for VMars. In any case April remains the most adorable thing (erm, person? character?) ever. And Alexis is stil hot.

Is there GG fic which focuses on the interactions--in a gen way, I swear!--between Rory, Gigi, and April? Because I want that. Alongside BSG Cally/Gaius, of course. (Or Cally/anybody. Rec me good Cally fic?)

Tina Majorino: still teh awesome )

In short, I loved everything about this episode except for the plot, and I didn't hate that either.

Netflix!

Jan. 20th, 2007 10:03 pm
alixtii: Mac and Cassidy. Text: "*squee!* (Cindy Mackenzie)
My brother and I have been, since Christmas, sharng a Netflix account.

*

Battlestar Galactica (The Miniseries, and Season 1 Disc 1)

Very slow-paced, and alternating between bits which are extremely will-to-powery (Roslin!) and those which aren't. Mostly, I've spent most of the time lusting after Specialist Cally. I mean, seriously.

Specialist Cally picspam )

Will definitely keep watching, if only for Specialist Cally. ETA: And BSG is totally Harry Potter in space.

*

Big Love (Season 1 Disc 1)

It's like a freaky Veronica Mars AU. Not really my thing, although of course Tina Majorino is teh awesome, but there's enough to keep me interested.

*

Arrested Developement (Season 1 Discs 1+2)

A wonderful tale about a boy in love with his cousin. Wait, what do you mean there are other plotlines?

*

The DaVinci Code

Better movie than for which it seemed to be given credit. Audrey Tatou's and Ian McKellan's performances were of course excellent. Taking anything out of a Dan Brown novel seriously is a little silly, but I respect the intent. The foolishness from Holy Blood, Holy Grail--which in the novel never struck me as anything more than a convenient McGuffin--was certainly taken far too seriously. And the vibes of anti-Catholicism I never got from the book did suddenly seem to be present. Still, I mostly liked it.

*

Over the Hedge

William Shatner and Avril Lavigne make the most adorablest father/daughter pair ever. Maybe even more than Keith/Veronica.
alixtii: Player from <i>Where on Earth Is Carmen Sandiego?</i> playing the game. (Default)
People who follow this journal but not [livejournal.com profile] jennyo's needs to get over there and read this post. It's on what I've been calling monsters in this journal (and [livejournal.com profile] jennyo even uses that term herself): those characters who do some pretty major evil while willing good. For [livejournal.com profile] jennyo the archetypal monster is Laura Roslin; for me it is my fanon Dawn; in canon we see traits of monstrosity in Rupert Giles and full-blown monsterhood in Serenity's Operative.

[livejournal.com profile] jennyo just nails how these characters are at once exciting, alluring, and extremely scary--and God knows that in real life there is nothing more dangerous than someone who is certain that they are right and won't respect any limits on doing what they feel they need to do. The only difference, I suppose, is that in fiction we can be sure that our Mary Sues really are always right, at least in the moral order in which we read out of (or into) the text. But is this really all that separates a Roslin from an Operative? And what does that say (if anything) about real-world ethics? (And if ethics sometimes falls to the exigencies of a crisis, when is that crisis, and who draws the line? Some would claim we--meaning "the United States of America" or perhaps even "Western Civilization"--have already fallen into that sort of crisis.)

These are themes to which I constantly return in my fiction, particularly in my Watcher!verse!Dawn stories, and in my meta, and are ones about which I have been (if you haven't noticed) somewhat conflicted given my own political convictions.

How can I squee like crazy over the pure will-to-poweriness of a show like Commander-in-Chief, and yet at the same time agree 100% with the political reasoning in an article like this one ("Geena Davis Is Not My President"): "Geena Davis looks terrific, but we might do better with an awkward fat man"?

Using Roslin, [livejournal.com profile] jennyo explores the various implications of such a character in her most in-depth post on the subject yet as she notes that she "always find[s] it kind of surprising when people point out something incredibly wrong that Laura Roslin is doing and then wonder, 'she shouldn't be doing that, and why are we cheering her on?'." I'm tempted to provide some more quotes, but really I have to recommend that you read the whole thing.

* * * *

An article from the NYT on Google and its rôle in various legal battle arising from the way it manages the flow of information on the internet, including its acquisition of YouTube: We're Google. So Sue Us. My stance as usual is that information should be free (except where the equivalent of a flock is utilized, and even then . . .) and, whenever necessary, supported by advertising rather than charging the consumer directly.

* * * * *

An article, this one from the LA Times, on Stephen Colbert and his effect on Congressional House races: Running for office? Better run from Colbert. (Hat tip to my brother.)

* * * * *

*waits for Torchwood to download appear on the BBC3 station which just now magically appeared on my television?*
alixtii: Mal and Kaylee, from Serenity the Movie. Text: "I Love My Captain." (iluvmycaptain)
Here are twenty-five favorite characters from twenty-five different shows, in no particular order.

1. Dawn Summers (Michelle Trachtenbeg) from Buffy the Vampire Slayer
2. Fred Burkle (Amy Acker) from Angel
Bonus! Drusilla (Juliet Landau) from Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel
3. River Tam (Summer Glau) from Firefly

Is there really anything else to be said about the above?

4. Player (Justin Shenkarow, Jeffrey Tucker, Joanie Pleasant) from Where on Earth is Carmen Sandiego? Commentary )
5. Dr. Olga Vukavitch (Justina Vail) from Seven Days Commentary )
6. Morgan Matthews (Lily Nicksay, Lindsay Ridgeway) from Boy Meets World Commentary )
7. Capt. Kathryn Janeway (Kate Mulgrew) from Star Trek: Voyager Commentary )
8. Cindy Mackenzie (Tina Majorino) from Veronica Mars Commentary )
9. President Mackenzie Allen (Geena Davis) in Commander-in-ChiefCommentary )
10. Donna Moss (Janel Moloney) from The West Wing Commentary )
11A. Tess Doerner (Summer Glau) from The 4400 Commentary )
11B. Maia Skouris née Rutlidge (Conchita Campbell) from The 4400 Commentary )
12. Clarissa Darling (Melissa Joan Hart) from Clarissa Explains It All Commentary )
13. Alex Mack (Larissa Oleynik) from The Secret World of Alex Mack Commentary )
14. Fred Rogers (Himself) from Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood Commentary )
15. Nona Mecklenberg (Michelle Trachtenberg) from The Adventures of Pete and Pete Commentary )
16. Rogue (Lenora Zann) from X-Men (90's cartoon) Commentary )
17. Kitty Pryde (Maggie Blue O'Hara) from X-Men Evolution Commentary )
18. Jan Brady (Eve Plumb) from The Brady Bunch Commentary )
19. Wednesday Addams from The Addams Family Commentary )
20. The Doctor (Christopher Eccleston, David Tennant) from Doctor Who Commentary )
21. Dr. Leonard "Bones" McCoy (DeForest Kelly) from Star Trek: The Original Series Commentary )
22. Col. Saul Tigh (Michael Hogan) from Battlestar Galactica (2003) Commentary )
23. Rita Repulsa (Barbara Goodson, Carla Pérez, Machiko Soga) from Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers Commentary )
24. Ezri Dax (Nicole de Boer) from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Commentary )
25. Rory Gilmore (Alexis Beidel) from Gilmore Girls Commentary )

Ari wondered what it meant that she guessed that most of my favorites were female. It means that she knows me well, because most of my favorites--all but four, plus the ambiguously-gendered Player--are female. Which is interesting, because many of these relate to early childhood, when my heterosexuality wouldn't have been a factor (right?). I'm not sure what it says that I've always found it easier to identify with (or at least be interested in) female characters than male ones, but I think it's pretty clearly true.
alixtii: Summer pulling off the strap to her dress, in a very glitzy and model-y image. (River)
At least I'm not the only one struggling with these philosophical questions.

Seriously, I seem to not be able to decide whether I want to be a pragmatist or not. Foundationalism has always struck me as anti-feminist, but relativism can't support feminism either. Ideally pragmatism provides a way out of the dilemma, with feminism being more or less the equivalent of "weaponized kissing," but is it really any better than relativism at making normative claims? *is torn*

ETA: Maia at Capitalism Bad, Tree Pretty has posted about serial storytelling, lamenting that one can't find it much outside television any more and giving it the credit for the popularity of the Harry Potter series. She says a lot of intelligent things, and of course pretty much everything she says is twice as applicable to fanfiction. For example:
at the end of the Prom on Buffy - where Jonathon gives her the umbrella, and Angel comes and dances with her. Those moments work because you know what she's been through the last three years - you know what this means, you know who Jonathon is (although not what he will be - but telvision shows turning to custard is not the current topic).
Or this:
The other thing I love about serial storytelling is that it is a very social art-form from the viewing end. Part of the whole episodic nature means that you share it with other people - you talk about it with other people, because you're waiting for what is going to happen next.
Of course the serial nature of fanfiction is one of its characteristics that gets at least as much criticism as love: who hasn't heard someone ranting against WIPs, or wondering why someone would post an already-completed story in installments (as I did with, say, Divine Interventions).

ETA2: "Catholicism: Maybe Think About It?"

ETA3: I really love it when my favorite academic blog ([livejournal.com profile] languagelog) cites Television Without Pity.

ETA4: Speaking of [livejournal.com profile] languagelog, Arnold Zwicky has a post entitled "Goram Motherfrakking!" on fake and made-up curses in science fiction, with a focus on Battlestar Galactica and Firefly.
alixtii: Dawn Summers, w/ books and candles. Image from when Michelle hosted that ghost show. Text: "Dawn Summers / High Watcher. (Dawn)
Mark Liberman at [livejournal.com profile] languagelog has made a post discussing the use of the phrase "harm's way" in which he actually mentions the season 5 Angel episode. Also relating to linguistic issues, I've had a long discussion today [this part of the post was written a couple of days ago--ed.] with an international student who was visiting the appartment over our frustration with any and all attempts to parse sentences of the type
Who(m) was spoken to?
Yeah, I'm a geek.

[livejournal.com profile] ajhalluk has a post that was metafandommed on how literary characters aren't real people, and thus our moral obligations to respond to them aren't the same as they would be to real rapists, child molesters, etc. This links in to a flocked discussion [livejournal.com profile] cathexys has been hosting on ethical responsibilities in literature, especially in response to Holocaust depiction. It also connects to my flocked post in which I answer "Whom would I shag" with TMI and overthinkiness, the upshot being (for those I haven't friended) that treating fictional characters as real people (even just to question whether one would sleep with them) results in a lot of unforseen complications.

What I found most interesting about [livejournal.com profile] ajhalluk was the way in which her(?) post parallels the whole train of thought I've had recently over the concept of "monsters"--i.e. those characters who do evil in the service of good. "[H]eroes can get away with murder," she notes. "And frequently do." Jossverse canon is full of examples: BtVS Season 5 spoilers ) And I know that Battlestar Galactica isn't lacking in that category either; nor are Firefly and Serenity.

By writing about monsters--indeed by glorifying in their will to power--am I condoning their actions? Am I condoning that is acceptable to infringe on human freedoms in the name of security, in defiance of the one principle which I hold most dear? The answer to that strikes me as unequivocately no; none of these stories come with disclaimers saying "The behavior in this story is morally acceptable." They are fantasy and wish-fulfillment, not how I really want the world to be but how I sometimes like to pretend it is (or could be). But neither do they (nor should they) come with disclaimers saying "The views expressed by this fic are not necessarily those of the author." We should take responsibility for our creations.

Ethics and aesthetics interact in complex ways, a fact that was reinforced for me as I was doing my reasearch for my thesis. Our moral commitments determine how we approach a text; this is the entire problem (or pseudo-problem) of imaginative resistance. I literally cannot watch police procedurals, for they invariably contain scenes of police personnel cutting corners or not going to extremes to protect their suspects' civil liberties, and the invitation to imagine our world being like that provokes not only resistance in me but outright paranoia and hysterical fear. Monsters like Giles or Buffy are larger-than-life and thus safe; these creatures are far more urbane and thus in their way much more scary. (How do I know these things--which the texts seem to treat as perfectly fine--aren't being done on a regular basis? What could I possibly do to stop it, beyond renewing my ACLU registration?) Me being political )

As a critic and a writer, I am two minds of how my ethics should affect how I approach a text. My politics, metaphysics, and theology are all radically contingent upon my feminist ethics. It seems odd that aesthetics should be exempt, but grounding aesthetics in ethics just rubs me the wrong way in a way that grounding theology in ethics just doesn't--in analytic philosopher-speak, it contradicts my intuitions.

I guess the real problem is that when I am writing I become, in contradiction to everything I consciously believe, a Platonist or perhaps even a Moorean. I can feel aesthetic Good as if it existed outside of me; therefore it is free of all commitments, including moral ones. This is perhaps a necessary antinomy for the sake of artistic production; but once I have taken off my writer's hat and, as critic, approached what I have created, what is my responsibity to it?

* * *

I wanted to say more, but I graduate in a couple of days (note to self: return library books) and I have a dozen other things to do. [Thus the update window sitting open on my computer since Sunday morning--ed.] I actually have two ficathon stories due on the day I graduate, which shouldn't have been a problem since I've had this entire week off, but I just can't come up with a suitable plot for one of them. And the story is actually for one of y'all, and you deserve the best, flist.
alixtii: Mal and Kaylee, from Serenity the Movie. Text: "I Love My Captain." (iluvmycaptain)
Even with my Lenten restrictions on flist reading, I've managed to do catch up on a lot of people.I've found that doing less reading allows meto more writing--some on more thesis, and some meta.

I saw the Battlestar Galattica season finale, and my thoughts went right to my meta on monsters. Which is hardly surprising, because--as I note in that post--the category which I call "monstrous" is the same that [livejournal.com profile] jennyo calls "on the very outside edge of ambiguous." She places Laura Roslin and Rupert Giles in this category, and I added the Operative from Serenity. These are characters who knowingly do evil while willing good, because someone has to do the dirty work.

Spoilers for the BSG episode, and Buffy S5 )

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