John Farrier's Blog Posts

Finding Geek Love Through Cthulhu Kisses


(Video Link)


In this sweet video, a man tells about how he captured the heart of the woman who would become his wife. It involves touching and romantic Cthulhu references, of course. You'd have to roll save vs. insanity not to fall for such a gesture.

via Nerdcore

Previously:
Geeky Love Songs
Cthulhu-Themed Love Song

Let's Make Some Money

Okay, I've got a cunning idea....

Two days ago, over at our sister blog NeatoBambino, Alex posted about three unusual sperm banks. One's called "Beautiful People", and it's for only very physically attractive people. Another has a feature called "Donor Look-A-Likes", which provides donors who resemble celebrities. And finally, there's one that accepts donations from only Nobel Prize winners. If you want your kid to be a genius, this might give him or her a leg up on the competition.

So Jill's post got me thinking about a business scheme: a geek sperm bank. You know, for women who want to be impregnated by Wil Wheaton, Jonathan Coulton, Ted Raimi, Stan Lee, etc.

I mean, there's got to be a market for this sort of thing, right? What do you think?

Image: NIH

Losing Your Star Trek Virginity

Redditor TheBishopsBane has a friend who has never watched Star Trek, but is willing to try out one episode from each series in order to be persuaded of the franchise's greatness. He asks commenters to suggest the best episodes for the task:

I have a friend who is a science fiction/fantasy fan but has never seen a single Trek episode or movie. He has become quite stubborn about it, but has agreed to watch a single episode from each series to give it a chance.

I'm looking for episodes which don't involve too much of the Trek universe's politics, don't require any prior knowledge of the characters or setting, and are just good, old fashioned story telling.


Here's my list:
The Original Series: City on the Edge of Forever
The Next Generation: Darmok
Deep Space Nine: Hard Time
Voyager: Blink of an Eye

These, I think, tell a fairly complete story and don't require as much background knowledge as other top episodes. I haven't watched past the first season of Enterprise, so I'll withhold a recommendation. And I think that The Animated Series is best forgotten, even though Memory Alpha regards it as canonical.

Which episodes would you suggest?

Link | Image: Paramount

Twenty Something Ninja Turtles


(YouTube Link)


A sketch by the comedy troupe Big Dog Eat Child. The Ninja Turtles are growing up and starting to move on with their lives. But Michelangelo still thinks that he's a teenager.

via Albotas | Official Website

Vuvuzela Doom


(YouTube Link)


YouTube user Ultraboy94fsr made a WAD modification to Doom so that he could use a vuvuzela as a weapon. At the video link, he provides a link to the file so that you can download it.

I promise that this might be my last vuvuzela post.

via Nerdcore

Massive, Detailed Futurama LEGO Diorama



Here's one section of a huge Futurama diorama that Pepa Quin made out of LEGOs:

This layout is the culmination of a work in progress for over two years. I started with the Planet Express and major characters back in February 2008. In December 2009 I expanded the building to include the sub pen, and built up a portion of the surrounding area. In late April through June 2010, I worked overtime to build an 80"x60" layout, ready in time for Brickworld 2010 on June 17th.


At the link, you can view the whole Flickr set.

The revived Futurama will debut tonight on Comedy Central. Do you plan to watch it?

Link via Sci Fi Wire

Scenes from a Lost 1975 Gene Roddenberry Pilot


(YouTube Link)


io9 has footage of the recently-released pilot for a 1975 science fiction television show called Strange New World. It was based on ideas by Gene Roddenberry, and as you can see from just the first few seconds of the video, it borrowed heavily from the library of Star Trek sound effects. io9 has information about the pilot as well as additional video:

In Strange New World, three astronauts are sent up to a space station for an experiment into suspended animation. Why do they have to be in space to be put into suspended animation? It's never entirely clear. But while they're asleep, meteors threaten to make the planet all but uninabitable. So NASA decides to extend their sleep remotely, to 180 years. (There's nobody on their space station who's not in suspended animation, because why would you do that?)

So our heroes wake up 180 years later to find an Earth that's been reduced to ruins. We find all this out in a three-minute prologue that feels like an extended opening credits. And then our heroes ride their shuttlecrafts down to Earth, where they have two adventures. We'll call them "Plato's Stepchildren with Clones," and "The Omega Glory with Tigers." In the first one, our heroes are dressed up in togas for no particular reason, and trapped in a perfect society, which has one evil secret — involving clones!! In the second one, two tribes are fighting a centuries-old conflict as they descend into barbarism — and one tribe has tigers!


Link

Heavy Rain Cosplay Includes Command Shortcuts



deviantART user DDRzukamori photographed this cosplayer at Anime Central 2010. It's of the character Norman Jayden, a FBI profiler from the film noir video game Heavy Rain. Just click on the function that you want to activate.

Link via Albotas

Why D&D Is So Much Better Than Fantasy Football



I wonder if there is some sort of LARPing equivalent for fantasy football. Like where players would go out and physically simulate the actions of football players on the field.

Sheldon Comics via reddit

The Design Evolution of the Lightsaber



This infographic, created by someone called "Pest", shows how the lightsaber changed over the years. I didn't realize that there were so many colors. I prefer the manly shade of red for my own sidearm.

via Sci Fi Wire

Darth Vader Does a Penalty Kick


(YouTube Link)


This is a commercial for, I guess, a telecommunications provider. Question: was it cheating for Vader to use the Force?

via Nerdcore

Incredible Hulk/Spider-Man Toilet Paper


(YouTube Link)


In 1979, Marvel printed an Incredible Hulk and Spider-Man comic book on toilet paper. I'm not sure if this is disgraceful or awesome, but I'm leaning toward the latter. io9 has selected sheets from the roll at the link.

Link

Sixteen-Year-Old Boys Make Poor Generals


(Video Link)


In this College Humor original video, brave soldiers find themselves at the mercy of a teenage boy playing Starcraft online. Poor bastards.

The Original Pac-Man Sketches



Toru Iwatani, the creator of Pac-Man, recently revealed a notebook of his original concept art behind the game. It dates back to 1979, and includes sketches on graph paper for the mazes and characters. You can view more images at the link.

Link via CrunchGear | Photo: 1UP

Milk Jug Cap Stop-Motion Animation


(YouTube Link)


A fellow named Matt made this stop-motion animated video using milk jug caps as his medium. He spray painted the caps the appropriate colors, placed LEGO blocks inside the caps, and then fixed them as needed onto a base board that likewise had flat LEGO blocks on the surface. The result was this nifty video illustrating several classic video games, including Pac-Man and Pong.

Link via Geekologie

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Profile for John Farrier

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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