Disappear here.

You know what they say, man: Whatever happened, happened.

Some quick thoughts on last night’s Lost:

And Commander Light kind of confirmed for me what I was thinking here, that this was just a little bit of a bland episode, yeah (it was a Kate episode, after all)(but I am glad to see the return of the single character-centric flashback/forward format), but man… even the dullest episode of this show (and no episode is exactly what I would call “dull,” but even if it was) just needs a little appearance by Richard Alpert to turn it all around.

Not only is this guy slick and cool at an almost Sayid-esque level, but he just exudes mystery. And answers. That you’re not gonna get from him.

A guy with a torch who says “Fuck you and your sonic fence,” isn’t going to be the most forthcoming expositional figure. Who says the stong, silent types are a thing of the past? But, then again, this is 1977 after all.

Okay, back to those quick thoughts:

Kate. Seemed like she kinda had her life together, but then reset to being the fuck and run gal she’s gotten too comfortable being. She says she’s coming back to find Claire (to which the audience says, “Who? Ohhhhh, right. Her.”), which I don’t think any of us really believe, but then again, I’m glad she didn’t say it was about Sawyer alone. I’m glad that he’s just a part of it.

Sawyer. Possibly the most positive and upwardly mobile character development on the show?  You know, maybe. I was joking with someone the other day that I can’t wait til we get those Lost action figures where you press the button on their back and they spout out one of several different catch phrases. All of Sawyer’s will just be, “Son of a bitch!”

Juliet. I still love her. And the thing about Juliet, especially evident in this episode, is what I’ve been saying about her all along: The creators have clearly given this character all the DNA of a tough, strong person who is both resilient and fragile at times, a go getter, and someone who can make things happen. The catch is with her always being the fourth wobbly leg on the love triangle table, she can only show these sexy lioness qualities when somebody is off in the jungle delivering Hitler, Jr. to the Others.

Jack. I kinda feel Jack here. He kind of drops some real talk on Kate, harshly, but it needs to be harsh. He loves her, and because of that, both her and he have turned him into a welcome mat. And now… well, now, he’s basically Locke. He doesn’t know what the fuck he’s doing or why he’s there, but he’s strong in the idea that there is a purpose out there for him and he’ll find it. And until then, he’s going to make some sandwiches and maybe take a quick shower if you don’t mind.

Ultimate Wolverine vs. Hulk. Wait… what? The third issue of this miniseries written by Lost‘s Damon Lindelof came out this past week, following hot on the heels of the riveting issue #2, which came out like… three years ago? Just reading this thing I can tell you right now with some certainty that Lindelof is the guy who rights a majority Ben’s dialogue. This whole issue (and series so far) has his beats and his cadence can be imagined a little too easily as the “conversations” progress. Also, it starts off with a man being torn in half, which is always nice.

Hurley and Miles. Coupla post modern Cassandras, am I right? Two things here. First: The characters have been through so many crazy shit moments that I think they kind of accept some of it a little too easily. And thusly, when they try to reason out the logic of, you know, shit like time travel, they come off as idiots. And by idiot, I’m really specifically referring to Hurley here, though I like his reference to Back To The Future (an important collection of pro tips when one is doing the temporal quantum nasty). Thankfully we had Miles sitting in for Faraday, who I have to say, is sorely missed.

Secondly, Miles proves here what I’ve been saying about him for a while: He’s totally Charlie 2.0, but with a much cooler and heretofore far too underused ability.

Little Ben/Hitler, Jr. You know, I liked this kid better when he was laying face down in the mud, and before his gaping bullet wound changed ventricles, but hey, whatever. Now he’s… about to be changed? The not remembering anything that happened, well, that just makes sense, and the “always be one of us,” yeah, that too, but what fascinates me is Richard’s saying: “He’ll lose his innocence.” Oh? Really?

My theory: Remember when those wacky French kids got sucked down that Cerebrus vent a few episodes back right outside that simply fascinating fucking temple that we’ve seen far too little of? And later Rousseau accuses her lover at gunpoint of having been changed by the Monster (which he claims is not a monster, but the temple’s security system)? I think that whatever is about to happen to Ben is along those lines. I think that’s why Ben is able to slip off into the hieroglyphic room during Keamy’s siege last year and summon the Monster.

Also, Ellie and Widmore (whom Richard Alpert does not answer to, he tells us). I’m fascinated to see what Widmore is up to at this point (I kind of assume that he’s the leader of the Others somewhere around this point in time) but am I the only person who has no problem seeing (1950s) Ellie again?

Oh, and that ending… Man, what a wonderful reminder of why we all love Locke, whom I feel shines possibly his brightest in his moments playing off of Ben. “Welcome back to the land of the living… you bug-eyed son of a bitch.”

Next week: The mother fucking Temple! And quite possibly the answer to whether or not Ben’s violently murdered Desmond’s family! See you in another week, brotha!

It’s going to be a long December.

Despite my best efforts it’s Monday again, and to make it even worst, it’s the first fucking day of December. Jesus Christ, you know what I mean?

Deepak Chopra suggests that America is to blame for the Mumbai attacks and that the media should look within to try and understand the sick delusions of the terrorists involved. That’s Deepak Chopra, new age healer and philospher, advocate of aromatherapy and regular enemas, and terror expert. (I make fun, but he actually does bring up one or two interesting points.)

There’s also the possibility that the United States warned India that such an attack was very possible and maybe even probable about a month ago.

The 50 best websites of 2008, according to Time. There’s even a tumblr for the list (even though Tumblr isn’t on the list.) I’m sure Counterforce is #51.

Obama unveiled his national security team today, including Hillary Clinton as Secretary Of State. It’s the end of the world as we know it… and I feel fine.

Oh, and apparently we’re officially in a recession now?

Well, since the economy’s bad, and you’re having a hard time finding something fun to do that doesn’t cost a lost of money, right? Have sex! It’s fun! It’s free!

Maureen Dowd on Tina Fey. Tina doesn’t like the bad boys. 

A nine year old Chinese girl, caught up in a U.S. custody battle and raised in America, is now having to forcibly readjust to life in China.

The anti-terror law requires that God be acknowledged.

The 6 most inappropiate porn character professions.

Brains of autistic children slower at processing sound.

A woman disappeared in Goblin Valley. What a cool headline.

Bad Santas!

Two words I’ve always wanted to rhyme together: Wombat combat!

The Merriam-Webster word of 2008 is: Bailout.

Check out these badass pictures of angry looking clouds gathering over Greenland. They’re like beautiful, pissed off oil painting clouds.

The best female bloggers of 2008.

Just interesting: The dancing plague of 1518. Really interesting, fascinating stuff.

Lifehacker’s top 20 Top Ten lists of 2008.

I should point out here that all the rest of the photos in this post are going to come from this article on lions that I just read. Why? Because it’s fucking lions, man!

For some reason this morning, my alarm clock was on this morning and went off at a certain time blaring the radio into my unusually serene slumber. I haven’t actually heard the radio in… well, it’s been a long fucking time. And, I shit you not, the song playing was “A Long December” by the Counting Crows.

 That was a bizarre and slightly horrible jaunt down memory lane but it made me think a little more about how as we near the end of this decade and we have a political change in Washington, we’re going to start ending our collective psuedo-80s flashback and… what, do a little retread of the 90s? I see more and more 90s nostalgia cropping up here and there and to be honest with you, I’m kind of curious to see how that decade would replay itself in our culture now. How does the most post modern and “homage” and referential-heavy decade rebirth itself into this day and age?

Totally unrelated, but speaking of time capsule bands from the 90s, have you ever listened to the lyrics of “December” by Collective Soul? What the fuck are they talking about?

Oh, hey, today is World AIDS day.

Oh, and it was on December 1, 1955 that Rosa Parks refused to give up her bus seat to a white man in Montogomery, Alabama.

The 1824 presidential election was deadlocked between John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, William H. Crawford, and Henry Clay, and on December 1 of that year, it was turned over to the U. S. House Of Representatives. Adams ended up the winner.

And December 1, 1992 is the day that Amy Fisher was sentenced to 5 to 15 years for shooting Joey Buttafuoco’s wife in the head. She ended up serving 7 years.

Woody Allen is 73 today. Sarah Silverman is 38. And Nestor Carbonell (Richard Alpert on Lost!) is 41. Though, really, he’s actually hundreds of years old. You know, cause of the island. And shit.

God, that show can’t come back fast enough.

Anyways, it’s the first day of the week and the first of December. It’s time for Christmas shopping (holiday shopping, sorry), panicking about being able to afford Christmas shopping (again, holiday shopping), deciding who’s not even worth worrying about how you’re going to afford to get them something for the holidays (Christmas, Kwanzaa, Hanukkah, all that shit). Get excited.

Oh, and Festivus too!

All the best and weirdest shit is happening on the Fringe, baby.

Thirty five minutes into the pilot of one of the most anticipated shows of the summer, one of the main characters says, “I just pissed myself. Just a squirt.” I’d say that line accurately sums up my excitement level for this show and it’s succeeding payoff.

A confession: I’m a fan of the big and the weird. I mean, how can you not be? Fringe science, more accurately and typically called psuedoscience usually (or junk science, if you’re a cynic), on which the show is reportedly based, is my guilty little pleasure (though I don’t feel that guilty about it). In fact, I’m almost a Fortean nut for it. Remember old Michael Crichton? Before he became a nutjob asshole? Back when he represented classic, smart speculative fiction that bled pure sci-fi wonderment, heavy on the science? Good times, am I right? You get glimpses of it these days in the work of authors like Warren Ellis and Neal Stephenson, but it’s fleeting and you don’t see it out there too much more.

Which is why I’m incredibly excited about a show like Fringe coming on the air, and on a major network (though with that major network being Fox, I have to wonder if there’s a looming countdown to it’s inevitable cancellation) with major network budgeting and ability to do justice to imaginative scope of such ideas. Finally, the return of big weird sci fi on TV! Speaking of ideas, let’s talk about the first episode…

You’re looking at those flashlights and you’re thinking that this show is already ripping off the X-Files big time, but you’d be only half right on it’s source material, because in what has to be a slight nod to it’s spiritual cousin Lost, the show starts with Glatterglug (which translates as “smooth flight,” how ironic) Flight 627, en route from Hamburg to Logan Airport, in Boston. Something goes wrong, horribly and wonderfully wrong and the end result is that people’s faces start melting off. It’s creepy as hell, but in that vein, it’s so, so cool.

From there, we go to our main character, FBI agent Olivia Dunham (played by Anna Torv, an Australian actress who’s done just about nothing before this, and further proving that J. J. Abrams knows how to pick excellent leading ladies for his projects), who’s tucked away in a motel with her secret boyfriend, a fellow FBI agent. She’s our update of Agent Scully for 2008: Just as sexy and smart, but taller, blonde, and right at the beginning, she’s inviting and shows us her heart, especially when it comes to her lame secret boyfriend. Their post-coital one sided “I love you’s” are interrupted by a call from their superiors about the plane landing at Logan. An inter-agency task force is being set up to investigate the incident, headed by a Homeland Security agent played by the brilliant, stone-like, and enigmatic Lance Reddick, who’s got a bit of a prior beek with Dunham (and the first of several incredibly sexist characters, I was surprised to notice). Anyways, shenanigans happen, and a chase after a suspect (the eerie twin brother of a man who was on the plane) leads to an explosion in a lab that seriously injures Secret FBI Boyfriend, leaving him so badly burned and exposed to the chemicals in such lab that his skin turns translucent and he has to be placed in an immediate coma. This gives opportunity for a wonderful cameo by Peter Outerbridge, who was an asshole FBI agent in the last season of Millennium and starred in a Canadian science drama called Regenesis which I’ve grown to love, as Secret Boyfriend’s doctor.

Dunham’s search for anything similar to WTF she’s just witnessed leads her to one man: a scientist named Bishop who was set up by the government to do WTFever he wanted in the 70s, but was locked away in a mental institute for the past two decades. She needs him, but the terms of his incarceration state that he can only receive visits from immediate family members. Sure, she’s a G-man and could go in waving the Patriot Act all over the place, but Matthew Abaddon tells her to play it cool and just find Bishop’s last surviving immediate family member: Pacey.

Pacey‘s character is both a highlight and a serious lowlight of this opener, typically getting all the best lines, but playing the cliched loner with the genius IQ, but who dropped out of high school and has spent his years kind of roughing it, doing every job imaginable, including some time as a wild land fireman, cargo pilot, and a few months as a chemistry professor (We’re told that he falsified a degree from MIT for that one and even got a few papers published before he was found out). I think the key to his character, especially in the scenes with the female FBI agent and the scenes with his father, is not that he’s a cool leading man type, but rather that he’s a snarky asshole. He’ll either become highly watchable as the show progresses or the most insipid character on television. Plus, he speaks Farsi.

Through Pacey‘s character, we get his father, the now mentally damaged scientist who had his finger delved deep into the scary and weird, and who may be the heart of this show in a cracked sort of way. He supplies the hard fringe. He’s fascinated by the perspective delivered in Spongebob, and when it comes to a matter of needing to find the suspect who got away but coming up short because the only person who can identify him is Secret Boyfriend in the coma, he comes up with the simple answer: Load up Dunham with ketamine and lysergic acid diethylamide, then strip her down (fondly recalling the X-Files pilot) and put her in an isolation tank (Altered States!) and synchronize her brain waves with Secret Boyfriend in the coma and he can share with her the suspect’s face via synaptic transfer. And quite frankly, it’s not nearly enough in TV these days that you get to hear a character gleefully say, “Excellent. Let’s make some LSD!”

Does it work? Fuck yeah, it works, man (though the special effects in that sequence are not terrible, they’re certainly the weakest of the episode and remind one of VR5). Just like Bishop told us it would (you can use the same method to question a corpse too, he assures us, within the first six hours of it’s death, a detail that becomes very important later, we find out). Despite his wandering mind and his questionable bladder control, Bishop will be the element to watch on this show, I believe. Dunham provides us with the coolness of Scully, but with a more relaxed believer in the Mulder archetype, and Pacey provides us the everyman rational asshole perspective, but the Bishop character… Well, I’ll just refer you back to when Dunham fills Pacey in on just a few of the things his father was involved in researching back in his heyday: Mind control, teleportation, astral projection, invisibility, genetic mutation, and also reanimation.

Oh, and don’t let me forget that the episode also includes the hint of an evil Bill Gates type looming on the horizon, some kind of super evil mega corporation (and possibly more out there than the Hanso Foundation) with their (advanced robotic, on the level of Terminator-esque advanced) fingers in everything, including “The Pattern…”

The Pattern! More on that later, but the real question you’re asking yourself is, “Is this a good pilot?” Yes, for the most part. It’s not as good as Abram’s Lost pilot, which was pure perfection in retrospect, and may or may not as good as the pilot for Alias (the Bishop character would have to be a modern day equivalent of Milo Rambaldi, that show’s seer/inventor/wunderkind macguffin, and I could easily see this show copy that series’ breezy blue collar sci fi vibe), but there is quality here. They put $10 million into this hour and a half, and it shows (the only downside to the look of the show, and it’s not that big of a deal is that it was clearly shot in Toronto). Plus, this is just a simple aesthetic thing, but I love the location chyrons that are huge and 3D in each new locale and seem to float right at the camera as if they were living architecture (and they very much appear to be in the Baghdad scene). That said, more than this initial episode itself, you definitely get a feeling that you’re being handed a laundry list of (like any good pilot does) what’s to come as far as big wild weirdness.

Beyond anything else though, this is easily the best new show of the fall and one of the best on TV currently.

I’ve said a lot about the show as it is, and my perspective is completely clouded by the possibility of this being a show that scratches me right where I itch. Is Fringe a little too out there for you? Understandable, but I implore you to give it a try… while you can. It’s on Fox, people. You know the executives are just masturbating at the idea of canceling this and Dollhouse already.

Hawking bets that CERN mega-machine won’t find “God’s Particle.”

Speaking of which, has the LHC destroyed the Earth yet? The answer is no, not yet.

Neal Stephenson: Science Fiction as a literary genre.

The Committee for Skeptical Inquiry.

I forgot to mention that during the “limited commercial interruptions” during Fringe, they played the commercial version of the new Quantum Of Solace trailer. It’s not bad at all.

How to disappear in America without a trace.

The new EP by Stars is excellent.

Is Kim Jong Il?

Giant penis needs re-chalking, please.

How would the U.S. military fight a zombie army?

I guess it’s official, Shirley Manson’s a Terminator. Lord knows she’s already terminated my heart. And stuff.

Jesus was a community organizer, and Pontius Pilate was a governor. Sigh.

Matt Damon on Sarah Palin.

Speaking of the hotness of Shirley Manson and the villainy of Sarah Palin, robots are coming to replace us all!

The triumph of fringe science!

TV On The RadioHalfway Home (from their new album Dear Science)