John Farrier's Blog Posts
Comics Alliance editor Chris Sims (whose work we've previously featured) created a periodic table of superpowers, divided into the categories of origin stories, physical abilities, and mental abilities.
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Shoyuken member NeoBlood took an old fashioned Royal Companion mechanical typewriter and turned it into a functional PC gaming peripheral with a joystick and working keys. You can view in-process photos at the link.
http://shoryuken.com/showthread.php?t=234472 via Gizmodo
deviantART user gavacho13 made a set of illustrations mashing up Sesame Street and Street Fighter. Pictured above is Cookie Monster presented as Sumo wrestler E. Honda. You can view a gallery of these illustrations at the link.
Link | deviantART Profile
Poor Aquaman -- he's the joke of the Justice League. "Oooh, aliens are invading the Earth. Let's go talk to some fish!" His TV show never even made it past the pilot.
Comic by Zach Cranor.
via Awesomesauce | Artist's Site
It's often said that Futurama was one of the most scientifically accurate science fiction television shows ever produced, what with the Adolf Hitler shark and Nibbler's dark matter poop. So now that the show has been revived, the producers naturally hired David X. Cohen, a graduate student in physics, to be a writer. Cohen recently gave an interview about his work on Futurama:
His veiled mathematical homages are usually in the background, and are done mostly “to amuse ourselves,” he says. One of his favorite clandestine operations was an allusion to Fermat’s Last Theorem in an episode of The Simpsons entitled “Homer3.” In the name of entertainment, he wrote a computer program to search for very near misses of the theorem, and found some so close that they could not be invalidated by a standard 8-digit calculator.[...]
Despite his passion for burying physics treasure in a trove of episodes, Cohen, along with Matt Groening (creator of The Simpsons, and Executive Producer along with Cohen of Futurama), made the conscious decision early on that “we would make sure that the story and the humor would take the first position and science would take the second position. As much respect as we have for science, we have to make the show entertaining.” This requires Cohen to bend natural laws, but “we try to come up with an explanation that will amuse scientists, even if it is bogus,” he says.
For example, since the show’s universe requires travel faster than the speed of light, “we stuck something in one episode where we stated that the characters weren’t actually traveling faster than light, but that scientists had in fact managed to increase the speed of light,” Cohen explains. “We like to at least acknowledge it when we know we’re wrong.”
Link via Gizmodo | Image: Fox
The Dublin art studio Robo Steel makes elaborate and totally kick-ass sculptures out of scrap metal. Here's their Predator sculpture made from "sheet metal, washers, chain, bicycle spokes and other bits of recycles steel." Over at Neatorama, we've previously featured an Alien sculpture that they made.
http://www.robosteel.com/sculptures/predator/predator-1-2m-carrying-alien-head.html via Great White Snark
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Some clever fellow remixed the many sound effects in Street Fighter II to play the theme song (below) to Doraemon, a long-running anime series. (via Kotaku)
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Zach Weiner, the cartoonist who creates Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal, also produces comedy sketches for a program called SMBC Theater. In the most recent episode, the entire world becomes addicted to a massively multiplayer online game (MMO). What is the unique allure of this game? Can humanity be saved from it? Only one hero can deliver the human race from imminent extinction.
Another excellent episode: Time Traveling Geek
In an inexcusable and inexplicable insult, Wikipedia has removed the Klingon character from its logo.
Heghlu'meH QaQ jajvam.
http://tumblr.quisby.net/post/595497448 via Urlesque
Etsy seller Monsters Domesticated made this chess set with figures from the Cthulhu mythos out of polymer clay:
We consider the black pieces to be the Cthulhoid forces, with dread Cthulhu itself as king, and menacing Dagon as swift and malevolent queen, and the mouldering green pieces to be led by Yog-Sothoth as king, in all its gibbering madness, and primordial Ubbo-Sathla as queen. Of course, you're the cultist, so you're entitled to assign whatever mythos iconography you like. The interpretations, fortunately for all life in this dimension, are loose.
The bishops of each side are mad alien priests, the knights grotesque mounts with vile curved spines, the rooks writhe horribly within their blasted towers. The black pawns are sinister, writhing spawn of dread Cthulhu, and the green pawns mocking little tentacular skulls.
Link via technabob
Swedish cartoonist Mattias Adolfosson has created several watercolor images depicting Star Wars if it had been made in the 17th Century. Pictured above is Boba Fett, whose jetpack has been replaced with a hot air balloon.
http://www.behance.net/Gallery/StarWars-the-baroque-version/146136 via Boing Boing
Etsy seller NESharmonica converts old Nintendo video game cartridges into functional harmonicas:
The NES came out in 1985. I was born in 1983, so I grew up in the NES's heyday. I remember blowing into those games like it was yesterday. To me, reminiscing about the cartridge blow is like a secret handshake. When you meet someone who knows what you are talking about when you mention blowing into a cartridge, you know you have met another classic gamer. That is why I make these harmonicas, it is a way to remember that old gamers ritual while having a good laugh at the same time.
Link via CrunchGear
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