elayna: (Keanu Whoa)
elayna ([personal profile] elayna) wrote2025-11-06 10:47 am

Scouts BSA

Younger nephew put this together... I'm really kinda amazed what the kids can do. I was in Video Production in high school, it was a Big Thing and I really enjoyed it, but what we created was definitely a lot simpler. Or at least, not near as tightly edited. Just one minute, quick to watch.

elayna: (Kirk kneel before God)
elayna ([personal profile] elayna) wrote2025-11-06 09:09 am

Fannish Fifty #35: Rewatching Star Trek... still going

So once again, I have let it get to November, still having 15 FFs to go... oops!

I'm still slowly rewatching Star Trek, now on ST:TNG season 7. And it's making me think of Trek's wokeness, and whether it's the characters or the audience learning the lesson, and when to my mind, Trek fails.

Like TOS episode The Cloud Minders, and Kirk physically makes the prime minister mine rocks, releasing the toxins, and making the PM realize the damage being caused, leading to an overhaul of the social system and social equality. Ultimate wokeness, the characters realize the bad that's happening and fix it. Yay!

Whereas TOS Let That Be Your Last Battlefield, the characters never accept that the racial division in their society is stupid and destructive, and the Enterprise leaves them to have their last fight. But IIRC, there's a certain amount of Kirk and the crew going, "OMG what?!? People used to believe this sort of stupid ideology but we've outgrown it!" Clearly the lesson is meant for the 1960's audience struggling with racial issues and telling them to do better. Yay wokeness!

So I watched ST:TNG Thine Own Self, which I didn't even remember. Data goes to a planet to retrieve radioactive rocks but loses his memory. The pre-space technology villagers take him in, but get sick from the rocks. Data recovers enough of himself to fix them, but they fear him and the illness he has caused and 'kill' him (he gets better). And it's... the characters don't learn anything. The villagers are satisfied that they've killed the scary visitor and that cured the illness he brought. One young girl is bummed. Crusher and Riker retrieve Data's body and learn two sentences about what's happened. Once restored, Data has forgotten his entire visit.

People can get scared and be shitty to strangers. I guess the audience learns that? I was in my 20s when ST:TNG aired, I was already plenty old enough to have that learned that lesson.

At this point I'm not going to go back and review all the ST:TNG eps, I need to move on to trying Discovery again, but I feel there were too many episodes that were just... yeah, people can be shitty but the Enterprise crew does what they need to do and then they leave. Yes, TOS can be overly simplistic and obvious, but ST:TNG can make me feel blank, not like I've seen something deep and meaningful.

Anyway, I got no final conclusion, just a ... I think it's interesting when a show is trying to get a message across and how that is communicated and who learns it.
isis: (raza)
Isis ([personal profile] isis) wrote2025-11-05 05:52 pm
Entry tags:

wednesday reads and things

What I've recently finished reading:

Europe at Dawn by Dave Hutchinson, and thus finishes the Fractured Europe Sequence. I enjoyed it a lot, though sometimes it made me feel as though I just wasn't smart enough for it; there are a lot of chapters which begin so completely in medias res that you just have to soldier on until you hit the background/flashback that explains what is going on. Although the last book ties up some of the loose ends, they are only loosely tied, so to speak, and it feels very open-ended. (To be fair, there was no overarching action plot here, just generally tying up ends and solving mysteries. Also I didn't realize for far too long that some of the POV chapters were actually in the past relative to present action (or rather, took place at the same time that some of the events in other books took place; time has passed.)

What I've recently finished listening to:

The Strange Case of Starship Iris wrapped up its final season a few weeks ago. I liked it overall, though I definitely preferred the political action/adventure parts more than the personal relationships parts, other than the general bonding of the crew as a unit. I also found it rather on the nose with respect to Current Political Events, but hey, it's not Jessica Best's fault that she wrote an SF podcast about freedom-fighting rebels up against a juggernaut of an iron-fisted government just when, you know. waves hand around helplessly

What I've recently finished playing:

Dragon Age: The Veilguard! I enjoyed playing but I was ready for it to be over. I (female Qunari mage) romanced Harding, but the romance content is -->.<-- (Though admittedly there was some nice emotional content relative to the romance near the end.) On the one hand, the fact that most of the decisions about what to do and say don't seem to have much effect on things made it feel less fraught and scary, like - I often look up spoilers for major decisions because I don't replay games and so I want to make sure I don't end up with some horrible ending. On the other hand, it probably contributed to me feeling less involved with the game on an emotional level.

I didn't like that the choice of race and faction didn't have a whole lot to do with anything. I mean, I had extra Shadow Dragons dialogue, but mostly I didn't know anything extra about Minrathous. And I was Qunari - but an adopted war orphan with zero connection to anything remotely Qun, so I felt really dumb talking to Taash (and especially Shathann) about Qunari customs.

I did really love the graphics, and all the very interesting landscapes, the different cities and landscapes (the Ossuary!!!) and especially the Crossroads. The companion banter is super fun and I sort of wanted to set them all up with each other! I especially loved Taash and Lucanis talking about capes, hee. I did everybody's quests, of course, and got everyone to Hero status, and all my factions to three stars.

I did the Regrets of the Dread Wolf questline and met Mythal, and...I really tried to give good answers, but every time I failed, to the point where I figured there was no way of avoiding the fight. So I ended up having to fight her and hoo boy that was tough. And then! I looked at an "endings" walkthrough and it said I had to have resolved the quest peacefully to get the best ending, so I resigned myself to having screwed up, but haha it turns out they recommended that only because that is such a tough fight, yay, I got the best ending.

(I did not look up spoilers for the rest of the endgame, but fortunately I managed to not get my sweetheart killed.)

Anyway, it was fun, but when I finished I didn't want to jump into another epic right away, so I started playing Monument Valley, which several of you had recommended to me - and that was delightful! It's like, what if M. C. Escher had designed a puzzle game? I finished the first game and am now doing the "appendices". I also have the second game, so that's probably next.

B is playing Horizon Forbidden West, and I can't resist looking over his shoulder every once in a while. The Horizon games are still my favorites! (He's still in early days, not yet to the Embassy, just doing stuff in Chainscrape.)
isis: Kamala poster with text: Strong Female Character (kamala)
Isis ([personal profile] isis) wrote2025-10-29 07:04 pm
Entry tags:

wednesday reads and things

What I've recently finished reading:

Europe at Midnight and Europe in Winter, the second and third of the Fractured Europe Sequence by Dave Hutchinson. The first was a reread (and again, I was surprised at how much I'd forgotten in the 10 years since I read it the first time), but I really enjoyed the SF aspect of
spoiler for the cool reveal at the end of the first book, which is explored in the second book the Community existing as a private England overlaying Europe in another dimension; the idea of the map (somehow) becoming the territory is just fascinating!
The third book went into more detail about Rudi's family background, and about how the actual mechanism of [spoiler] is basically the biggest and most important secret in the world, and about the Coureurs and their function.

I actually requested this for Yuletide, and one of my prompts was "worldbuilding - what's happening in the US?" and...one character meets with someone who has a Texas passport, so, there's a whole lot hinted at by that tiny detail right there!

What I'm currently reading:

Europe at Dawn, the finale of the series. This one feels more like various vignettes set in this universe, though I expect everything will come together eventually. I do like how the Situations that the Coureurs handle are all matter-of-fact cloak-and-dagger: a woman walks up to our POV character and says something fairly banal, and he responds with a similar sentence; when she's gone, he finds a slip of paper in his pocket with the name of a hotel in another city; he goes there and checks in, and there's another slip of paper in the bedside Bible; he finds the car with the number plate on that paper and he gets in and drives across the border and leaves it in the parking lot of a certain cafe, then he takes the train home. It's all very mysterious! and fun! (and leaves me wondering why go to all that trouble to hide things in places in so many steps, but...)

(B is reading the Fourth Wing series and enjoying it. I'm kind of gobsmacked.)

What I started watching and abandoned:

The Fall of the House of Usher, which, okay I liked the transposition to a very modern gothic story about the Sackler pharmaceutical empire a family which developed and heavily marketed an extremely addictive opioid, but I am not a fan of horror and gore and shows in which everybody is a horrible person. We lasted 3 episodes.

What I'm watching now:

Season 3 of The Diplomat, which got off to a magnificent and twisty-turny start!
elayna: (Danno barely breathing)
elayna ([personal profile] elayna) wrote2025-10-23 05:05 pm
Entry tags:

sad news

For anyone who may know Obi-Ki from the Master_Apprentice list, her son Alan passed away yesterday evening after battling stomach cancer most of this year. He fought hard but cancer sucks.

Please send sympathetic thoughts toward Obi-Ki and her entire family.