Entry for January 25, 2007 — niece, pool, SFTV, and games

Friends, I was going to post about my musical preferences, but there has been enough other news in the meantime that the topic will have to wait. On Monday, 22 January 2007, my younger brother Peter's wife Kelly gave birth to their second daughter, Liliana Rose D.!

She joins sister Ava Sophia D., who is almost two years old, as well as six more nieces and nephews on Janice's side of the family! Mother and child are doing well, and my parents and Kelly's mother have already visited their new grandchild. Janice and I hope to get down to Virginia in the next few months. It's hard to believe that Peter & Kelly celebrated their fourth wedding anniversary last week!

Backing up a bit, I got some bad news at a dental checkup last week–decay in a right top molar will require breaking up my 20-year-old bridge to repair, and I'll need a cap on a worn lower rear tooth. The procedure is scheduled for next month, but I have yet to hear back from my health insurance provider or my doctor on the details. I've also finally signed up for a 401(k) retirement plan at work.

On a lighter note, I'm the only person in CW's editorial division to advance to the second round in our first pool tournament. I should practice some billiards in the coming week or so, but I would do better at Ping-Pong or foosball. A few of us met former co-worker Jacqui M.D. at the Newton Marriott before going to dinner at "Margarita's" in Waltham, Massachusetts, last night.

Last Saturday, after breakfast at the International House of Pancakes, Janice and I picked up some clothing, DVDs, books, and magazines in Norwood, Mass. We then had dinner at Mandarin Cuisine on the Needham/Newton line. Janice and I also caught up by telephone with "Liberators" alumni Mark A.S. & Ann W., who live with their two children, John and Brianna, in New Zealand.

On Sunday, we avoided the cold weather and stayed indoors (see the latest photo from my computer room). Unfortunately, the New England Patriots lost in the playoffs to the Indianapolis Colts, but I can't begrudge the latter football team its victory as it prepares to face the Chicago Bears in the Super Bowl.

On the genre entertainment front, I've been pleased with the latest episodes of "Smallville" (featuring a proto-Justice League), quirky sleuth "Psych," and superpowered ensemble drama "Heroes." Among several of my friends lately, "Heroes" is the most anticipated television show each week.

The paranormal private investigator and more episodic plot (vs. longer arcs) of "The Dresden Files" look promising. "The Dresden Files" is also reminiscent of Joss Whedon's "Angel," but I'm still unsure of whether the revisionist "Battlestar Galactica" can transcend its recent soap opera in space storylines and declining ratings. I recently bought some nice die-cast Colonial Viper fighter craft for my miniature fleet.

I've been recording the misadventures of young-adult sleuth "Veronica Mars," but the remastered classic "Star Trek" and animated "Afro Samurai" have slipped from my viewing schedule. There's only so much I can watch in a given week, so TiVo or Netflix will have to wait for now. Speaking of which, Thomas K.Y. hopes to get together for "A Scanner Darkly" this coming weekend.

In addition to the regular Tuesday night D&D3.5 "Vanished Lands: the Broken Chains" Arabian fantasy sessions, I played "City of Heroes" on Thursday night and Sunday morning. As discussed on the "Dimension Corps Online" Web club and elsewhere, David I.S./"the Excoriator," Kim A.G./"Lady Bewilder" and I (as "Nightfall IIb") need to take our time and improve our teamwork. We also still hope that our tactics will improve when and if Steve M.R./"the Blazing Corona" and Thomas/"the Righteous Fist" join us online.

Byron V.O. wasn't available as "Ibrahim" or "Kemosh" for teleconferencing this past week, but he, Dexter V.H./"Faelonia," and I plan to have regular audio D&D3.5 sessions on Sunday evenings. I've been turning away prospective role-players for the face-to-face game, but with Brian W./"Mumtaz" and Doug H./"Dimgo" out this week and Paul J./"Rache" and Bre/"Rhiannen" returning to college next week, we'll see how that settles out.

While I think I've been successful as a Game Master in restraining the amount of magic and overall power levels in the latest D&D3.5 "Vanished Lands: Halmed Desert" party, I now hope to shift the focus from combat with various monsters toward Player Character development, plot, and diplomacy. I'm also still absorbing the latest background information and rules from sourcebooks I've recently gotten. I've become fond of Green Ronin's "True 20" system.

Steve M.R. has posted some analysis of the latest State of the Union Address and environmental politics on his Web log, so see my responses there. For those of you who have visited my profiles on Yahoo, MySpace.com, Netscape, Google, Classmates.com, or Meetup.com, please note that this is my primary blog. Feel free to post or contact me directly if you have questions or suggestions! Take it easy, -Gene

Entry for January 15, 2007 — politics, “Pan’s Labyrinth,” and role-playing

Friends, I hope you had a good long Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. weekend and that his ideals of universal brotherhood (and sisterhood) through the use of nonviolent protest can still inspire the disenfranchised today.

Jim J.D'B. and I have been debating U.S. foreign policy again, but aside from agreeing on the need to protect U.S. interests and address conflict in the Middle East, we have different assumptions and goals. Some friends, such as Steve A.L. and liberal Democrats in Congress, prefer peaceful disengagement, arguing that we've overstayed our welcome and effectiveness. Others, such as Erik B.L. and me, recommend international protection of the rights of ethnic minorities and women while clamping down on violence, preferably through the U.N. and similar multinational institutions.

Some conservative Republicans such as Jim and Ron J.K. share the president's determination to use the U.S. military to try to gain control of the situation in Iraq, Afghanistan, and hopefully the entire region (including Iran). While I respectfully disagree, we do need to support the troops now or soon to be overseas and devise a more comprehensive policy to deal with terrorism and its causes.

Alas, the proper conditions and political will for nation-building are not present in the Near East, Middle East, or much of Africa right now. If the U.S. government has been too slow to rebuild New Orleans and too trusting of private contractors, the problem areas of the world will need more than our so-called leadership. Americans shouldn't expect to be popular abroad in light of such policies.

Last week was a bit sketchy at work. After taking a half day off on Monday, 8 January 2007, because of an intestinal bug, I was out another two days at midweek because of Janice. However, her parents did visit, and we received our new dining room set–a pub-height one.

Although selling our old table and six chairs initially seemed easy on CraigsList, the first three people who agreed to take them fell through on us. By the weekend, Janice and I were feeling well enough to venture out to Shopper's World near where I work in Framingham, Massachusetts. Service at "Olive Garden" was surprisingly slow at lunchtime.

We then met Beruk A. and Thomas K.Y. at the AMC Framingham 16 to screen "Pan's Labyrinth," which we mostly liked. Guillermo del Toro's modern fantasy set in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War had some nice surrealist elements and drew from the darker side of folkore, but it was a bit depressing. I'd give the film about an 8 out of 10. We then had a decent dinner at "Bugaboo Creek."

David I.S., Ron, Dexter V.H., and Steve M.R. all telephoned this past week, but there was relatively little news to share since the holidays. However, we're looking forward to birth announcements from Cliff & Eliza Y. and from Peter & Kelly. We're also concerned about the health of nieces on Janice's side, including Jessica W.

On Sunday, Jan. 14, I played "City of Heroes" solo. Actually, "Nightfall IIb" joined a party, but not the usual team of David I.S./"the Excoriator" and Kim M.E.A.G./"Lady Bewilder," who had helped "Gwydion" with a particularly difficult mission last Thursday night. We're still waiting for Steve and Thomas to come online.

Speaking of games, I again have an embarrassment of riches in my D&D3.5 "Vanished Lands: the Broken Chains" Arabian fantasy campaign on Tuesday nights, since I've had to again turn away prospective role-players! Both the Yahoo/eGroups Web club and Meetup.com site have been productive.

When Paul J./"Rache" and Brie/"Rhiannen" return to college, I may allow one into the current Boston-area group, although with Byron V.O./"Kemosh" participating by videoconference, most of the guys prefer to keep the party small. If any more potential female players come through, however, I'll welcome them, just to help round out the team.

Thanks to Paul, I did take advantage of online sales to replace more books lost in the basement floods of autumn 2005, as well as to pick up some miniatures and shadow boxes for my extensive action-figure collection (see photos). Now, all I have to do is file hundreds of photos and comic books! I did catch up on newspapers while in the waiting room last week and during this past weekend's football games–Go Patriots!

Speaking of superheroes, in addition to playing "City of Heroes" and D20 "Mutants & Masterminds" 2nd Ed., reading comic books/graphic novels, and watching various genre movies, Janice and I caught up on some DVDs this past weekend. We watched the excellent animated "Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman," which had a strong voice cast, continued the style of the Paul Dini/Bruce Timm (et al.) cartoons from the 1990s, and had actual character development and plot. The "Chase Me" feature on the DVD was a fun wordless mini-episode.

Although I'm off today for the holiday, I've been busy with errands. I have a dental appointment before tomorrow's D&D3.5 session, and my annual review at work should be this week. In the meantime, take it easy… Next time: Music!

Entry for January 09, 2007 — bio, Avatar, and stomach bug

Friends, here's my latest autobiographical entry: As an earlier blog posting noted, I was born to international parents in 1968 in Manhattan. We moved to a larger apartment in Kingsbridge Heights in the Bronx about two years later. My father taught at Lehman College, and my mother was a nurse at the Jewish Home and Hospital for the Aged (near the Veterans Administration hospital). We lived near a reservoir and within walking distance to good schools, including Our Lady of Angels. My brother Peter arrived in 1973.

During the 1970s, the northwest Bronx was suffering from urban decay. As in many U.S. cities, the Jewish, Italian, and Irish middle class fled to the suburbs, as Eastern European, African American, and Latino people moved into New York's outer boroughs. Despite the civil rights progress of the previous decades, segregation and poverty, as well as the oil crises and political turmoil of the time, led to an increase in grime and crime, which were not the fault of certain ethnic groups but rather societal problems.

Still, I have fond memories of growing up in da Big Apple. More than my younger brother, I enjoy living in or near large cities, and I missed the multicultural atmosphere when we moved to a house in Yonkers in Westchester County in the late 1970s. My father was denied tenure and ended up teaching at Fordham and Pace Universities, and my mother still worked the night shift at the nursing home.

I was unpleasantly surprised to find more bigotry among some of my new, wealthier neighbors than I had found in the Bronx, feeling the sting of racial insults for the first time. As a Belgian/Filipino-American, I can only imagine how more identifiable minorities must have felt. My interest in social justice and later participation in College Democrat outreach to minority organizations stems from noticing the differences between my childhood in the Bronx and adolescence in Westchester.

Still, we had a yard and a playroom, kids about our own age to play with in the street, and a quieter neighborhood. We went to Saint John the Baptist elementary school (where I was a difficult student in terms of discipline) and Archbishop Stepinac High School in White Plains.

Time and nostalgia may have dimmed some of my memories, but I still consider myself a New Yorker, despite having spent most of the past 20 years away from the metropolis. Of course, more changes were to come, when I went to college in Upstate New York and graduate school in Washington D.C…

Back in the present, Janice and I had a productive weekend. On Saturday, we drove down to Stoughton and Avon, Massachusetts, to look for a new dining room set. We hadn't given each other anything for Christmas in the expectation of this expense. Our existing six chairs and table are getting rickety, and our relatively large eat-in kitchen provided some limitations in terms of available space.

After looking at Ikea, Jordan's Furniture, and Affordable Furniture to Go, we ended up buying a pub-style table and chairs (several inches higher off the floor, providing extra workspace) at Bob's Discount Furniture. They'll be delivered later this week.

On Sunday, I played "City of Heroes" online with Kim M.E.A.G., caught up on filing some comic books, and watched the first season of "Avatar: the Last Airbender" on DVD. Director M. Night Shyamalan plans to direct a live-action version of this fantasy series:

http://www.mania.com/53268.html
http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire/index.php?category=0&id=39434
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avatar:_The_Last_Airbender
http://www.nick.com/all_nick/tv_supersites/avatar2/

Janice and I would put this anime on the same level as "El Hazard/the Wanderers" or "Full-Metal Alchemist," but it's more family-friendy and is based on real-world Chinese mythology and martial arts.

Unfortunately, the stomach bug that kept my boss Michele L.D'F. home on Monday also forced me to take a half-day's sick leave. Despite the unseasonably warm weather, many co-workers have been ill lately. Let's hope I'm better (and not contagious) during tonight's D&D3.5 "Vanished Lands: the Broken Chains" game or during my in-laws' visit later this week. I'll have Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day off next Monday, so I may move my next heroic fantasy session…

Entry for January 05, 2007 — sites and genre

Friends, I've mentioned the following at the D&D3.5 "Vanished Lands," "Dimension Corps Online," and "Black SciFi/Horror/Fantasy Fan" Yahoo Web clubs (run by me, Steve M.R., and Cecil R.W., respectively), so I might as well gather them and discuss them here:

-Over New Year's weekend, David I.S. and I looked online to find when "Star Trek 2.0" is on television. Unfortunately, the remastered episodes of the classic 1960s space opera are airing in syndication late at night or early in the morning on weekends. We hope that Thomas K.Y. will be able to record some with his TiVo. http://www.startrek.com/startrek/view/news/article/25835.html

-Dave and I watched the Cartoon Network's rebroadcast of "Hellboy: Sword of Storms," which we liked. Mike Mignola's angular style is well-suited to animation (as in Disney's "Atlantis"), and we have "Hellboy: Blood and Iron" to look forward to before the next live-action horror/conspiracy sequel, "The Golden Army."

-Cecil R.W. and I liked the premiere of "Afro Samurai" on Spike TV. I found it to be violent, somewhat derivative in plot and cyberpunk setting, but well-voiced by Ron Perlman (of "Beauty and the Beast," "The Name of the Rose," "Teen Titans" and "Hellboy"), Samuel L. Jackson ("Pulp Fiction" and Mace Windu in the "Star Wars" prequels), and Kelly Hu ("Scorpion King"). The animation was reminiscent of some of the better work in "The Boondocks." http://www.afrosamurai.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/blackscifihorrorfantasyclub/?yguid=59168706

-Other upcoming animated direct-to-video adaptations of comic books include Marvel Comics' "Iron Man," the D.C. universe's "The New Frontier," plus another potential "Star Trek" cartoon (http://trekmovie.com/2006/12/13/cbs-considering-new-animated-trek-series/).

The "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle" computer-generated flick looks promising, with dark back-alley creatures, nicely choreographed martial arts, and some goofy humor. General anime news can be found through the links at http://www.mania.com/53221.html

-Of live-action genre trailers now available, Frank Miller's "300," a loose retelling of the battle of 300 Spartans against the Persian "Ten Thousand" at Thermopylae, looks to be as stylish and bloody as "Sin City," with computer-generated backgrounds like "Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow."

I also hope that "Day Watch," the second of three Russian horror films begun in "Night Watch," will be widely released. I expect "Ghost Rider" to be similar to spring genre flicks such as "Daredevil" in middling quality and box office. Speaking of modern fantasy, "Highlander: Origins" looks promising, if only to this fan of the first movie ("There can be only one!") and the well-made television series with Adrian Paul.

"Highlander: the Series" prefigured the story arcs, humor and drama, and writing of "Buffy: the Vampire Slayer" and the revived "Doctor Who," IMHO, just as "Hercules: the Legendary Journeys" and "Xena: Warrior Princess" helped develop the creative conditions for the current renaissance in fantasy (filming "Lord of the Rings" in New Zealand, for example) and comic book movie adaptations (director Sam Raimi went on to make "Spider-Man").

In the coming weeks, I look forward to the return of regular genre television, including "Heroes," "Smallville," and "Stargate SG1." Speaking of metahumans and adventurers, David I.S., Kim A.G., and I didn't play "City of Heroes" this past week, due to postholiday catching up on other things. Here's another shameless plug of a friend's Web sites: http://games.groups.yahoo.com/group/dimensionalcorpsonline/

On the other hand, the face-to-face D&D3.5 "Vanished Lands: Halmed Desert" fantasy game is back up to eight role-players, including Paul J./"Rache," his girlfriend Bre, and newbie Doug H./"Dimgo," who replaced Otis D./"Ali" and Robert F./"Ubat!"

Byron V.O./"Kemosh" has successfully participated via videoconferencing, and he and Dexter V.H./"Faelonia" have plans for side adventures, while Greg D.C./"Janus'" play by e-mail also continues. We'll see how much time I'll have for this component.

That's in addition to the other regular Tuesday night guys: Beruk A./"Kunal," Brian W./"Mumtaz," and James B./"Ib" (and Greg as "Killian"). For more "Broken Chains" updates, visit http://games.groups.yahoo.com/group/DnD3VanishedLands/

Janice and I have a relatively quiet weekend planned, since we've either been on the road or hosting friends and family every weekend for the past month or so! I'll try to discuss in greater depth my autobiographical information, genre preferences/reviews, and nongaming events in upcoming postings. Have a good weekend, -Gene

Entry for January 03, 2007–Likes and dislikes

Friends, after several conversations with David I.S. this past weekend, I came up with the following lists (in no particular order) of things we like and don't like:

We like:

-Healthy food that tastes good, and routine meals (i.e., "second breakfast").

-Ethnic restaurants that are nearby, varied, and most of all, cheap! (See Harvard Square's "Border Café.")

-Space opera, even if the subgenre ("Star Trek," "Star Wars") is not especially popular right now, in comparison with horror, comic book superheroes, or angst-ridden drama.

-Terry Gilliam's fantasy/comedy movies, such as "Time Bandits," "Brazil," and "The Adventures of Baron Munchausen."

-Television shows with speculative fiction elements, a strong story arc, and sympathetic characters (see "Stargate SG1," "Heroes," and "Doctor Who").

-The second movie in a superhero series (see the "Superman," "Spider-Man," and "X-Men" franchises for examples).

-Video/gaming/music stores for browsing, even in the age of Amazon.com.

-Women who like/tolerate games of all kinds, as well as varied subcultures (SF fanboy, neoGoth, techie, etc.).

-In-character role-playing conversations.

-Old friends who stay in touch but respect one's time.

We dislike:

-Unhealthy but ubiquitous food (like holiday snacks at the office).

-Unmarked roads, especially at night or during bad weather and heavy traffic.

-Employers that refuse to commit to long-term career development.

-Ripoffs by insurance companies, money managers, and utility providers.

-The fallacy that everyone can balance family, career, and hobbies equally well, and the assumption of shared lifestyle goals.

-People who hide behind religion to perpetuate hatred and violence.

-Cranky computers.

-Impatient gamers (in videogames and face-to-face role-playing).

-Disappointing third movies in superhero franchises (see "Batman," "Blade," "Superman," and "X-Men").

-Television networks and other media outlets that often try to get ratings at the expense of their identities (see wrestling on the SciFi Channel, live action on the Cartoon Network, reality show competitions on the History or Discovery channels).

-The premature cancellation of programs that we like (such as "Space: Above and Beyond").

What do you think? Do you have any likes/dislikes to add?