The Feminine Mystique: Brienne of Tarth

When it comes to George R. R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire universe, there’s a hard and fast rule to play by: don’t get attached to anyone. At one point or another, your favorite is most likely going to die, or at least end up in some horrible, incorrigible mess.

Brienne of Tarth, image courtesy of Game of Thrones Wikia

Brienne of Tarth, via Game of Thrones Wikia

But, despite this constant vigilance, I found myself attached to a maiden with lovely sapphire blue eyes – the only child of Lord Selwyn Tarth of Evenfall, Brienne of Tarth, and thus must sing her praises. Not to fear, dear readers, this post is pretty safe to read in terms of spoilers – well, as far as Season 3 of the TV series goes, since I’ve not yet caught up on the current season.

Admittedly, I danced around Brienne when introduced to her initially. I’ve been burned before by the sometimes problematic “Strong Female Character” trope, one Brienne could seem to be a walking caricature of. She isn’t prone to dramatics, and when she expresses her feelings, she errs on the more surly, taciturn side. Brienne wields a sword and fights with the best of the men on the show, even besting Renly’s knights in tourneys and beating the crap out of the Kingslayer, Jaime Lannister, Sister-Lover. But when you look – and I mean really look – at Brienne of Tarth, you see she’s anything but “a woman playing at a man.” Continue reading

Posted in fantasy, television | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Geeking Out

  • The puppet version of MST3K classic, Manos: The Hands of Fate has reached its Kickstarter goal.
  • Gene Kim’s undergraduate thesis film for NYU Tisch features ballerinas and big guns.
  • Grumpy Cat movie: Is this how far we’ve come? Or fallen?
  • Anita Sarkeesian‘s second part of her Tropes vs. Women in Video Games series, Damsel in Distress, is up on YouTube (even after a failed attempt to get it taken down).
  • George RR Martin is making A Song of Ice and Fire coffee table book.
  • Dan Harmon may be returning to Community?
  • Facebook admits to having a poor handle on preventing hate speech on the network, particularly gender-based hate and glorification of violence against women.
  • Patrick Stewart continues to be an amazing man.
  • “Do you eat dog?” and other questionable racial queries.
  • A crushing reminder about inequity: when women earn less than men, it means their student debt is that much more staggering.
  • Hidden in a glacier scientists have found some 400+ yr old plants which regenerate spontaneously.
Posted in geeking out | Leave a comment

We’re No. 1! Heroines and Horrors

Up for a good scare? Then this is your week, with three new horror titles hitting the shelves. Along with that, we’ve got some new series by storied franchises and two new series hotly anticipated in the Twitterverse, including the first all female line-up of X-Men!

WKE_Cv1_SOLICIT_D There’s been major online buzz for the new series The Wake, by Scott Snyder (American Vampire, Batman) and artist Sean Murphy (Punk Rock Jesus) from Vertigo. Its hero is Marine Biologist Lee Archer, whose research with whale song has brought her to the attention of the Department of Homeland Security. Lee has a checkered past, it turns out, and she’s both struggling professionally and has lost permanent custody of her adoring son Parker. When the DHS asks her to analyze an unusual undersea recording she’s convinced this could be her chance to revive her floundering career. It turns out she’s gotten more than she bargained for, when she arrives at the mysterious DHS base to find it’s an undersea drilling platform at the bottom of the arctic ocean, and there’s a creature on board she never expected. The story has a fairly rote structure, taking a troubled hero and dropping them into a haunted house with a collection of fellow victims. Lee is an interesting character, but one with overt similarities to characters like Ellen Ripley of the Aliens franchise aren’t that difficult to miss. I did like that she is an accomplished person, a woman of science with strong convictions, and a mother with a tender side as well. This series also employs a very interesting narrative frame, beginning with a vignette 200 years in the dystopian future where cities are nearly underwater and man and dolphin work side by side technologically, and ending in pre-history, thousands of years in the past with a legendary creature who might be the key behind the entire tale. It’s a compelling read in that sense, for certain, and one to follow in the future. Continue reading

Posted in comic books, We're No. 1! | Leave a comment

Denver Comic Con!

Comic-Con-630x423

A reminder that Denver Comic Con is just around the corner, this coming weekend of May 31-June 2nd. Rick, one of our Staff Writers, will be part of a couple of panel discussions at the convention:

1pm, Saturday, June 1: The Boy Who Loved Superman

Every year, DCC puts one, special “Super Fan” in the spotlight – someone who exemplifies our Missions of Education, Community and Diversity.  This year we bring you Mike Meyer the World’s biggest Superman fan.  Mike was scammed out of his entire Superman memorabilia and comics collection (almost every issue, ever) and the comics community came to his aid and replaced most of it.  But that’s not all:  Mike is going to tell you all about his world-famous Superman collection!
Panelists: Mike Meyer, Rick Rivera

3pm, Saturday, June 1: Denver Public Library presents Out from Behind the Mask: Queer Heroes Among Us

Readers don’t need to hunt any longer for GLBT heroes and villains. These diverse characters and other worlds are creating change in this world. Both adults and teens are finding stories of acceptance and hope.  Our panel of super fans will share favorite comics, graphic novels and manga titles across the spectrum of sexual identity. Whether you are an ally, questioning or omnisexual, please join the discussion.
Panelists: Laurie Spurling, Wayne Markley, Rick Rivera, Becker Parkhurst-Strout

4:30pm, Sunday, June 2: Women in Comics

Women used to be an extreme rarity in comics – but times are changing.  Or are they?  Find out if things are any different, what are the unique challenges in comics these days, and what are the prospects like now?
Panelists: Ramona Fradon, Amy Reeder, Emily Martin, Rick Rivera 


The full convention schedule is available via Guidebook. So if you happen to be there, drop by one of the above panels!

Posted in events, updates | Leave a comment

Geeking Out

  • Steven Universe is Cartoon Network’s first series created by a woman, Rebecca Sugar, and it looks pretty awesome.
  • A mystery actresses on Game of Thrones has stated that she will not do anymore nude scenes for the show. (Link contains some S3 spoilers.)
  • Game of Thrones characters re-imagined in the 1990s. Who thinks of these things?
  • Amazon unveils a fanfiction publishing platform, Kindle Worlds,  but the reaction among commenters isn’t all that enthusiastic.
  • Christopher Lee is about to drop his second thrash metal album. Yes, that Christopher Lee.
  • Sony studio chief Amy Pascal answers some difficult questions about women in Hollywood.
  • A 3-D printer saved this baby’s life. Amazing.
  • An incredible analysis about women, internalized misogyny and Irene Adler on Elementary. Warning: big spoilers
  • We’re a few months behind, but we just discovered the 2013 Worlds Without End Women of Genre Fiction Reading Challenge. Join us!
  • This might be the best picture we’ve seen all week.
  • Awesome teen Kiera Wilmot, who faced ridiculous school administration charges, now gets a scholarship to the United States Advanced Space Academy.
  • Studies like this one, which shows gender bias in STEM, are important as they replace anecdotal evidence with hard facts.
  • Arrested Development and Sesame Street. Let’s say that again: ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT AND SESAME STREET.
  • Fans of coffee and cuteness will love these 3D latte foam art masterpieces.
Posted in geeking out | Leave a comment

We’re No. 1! Dollars to Dinosaurs

Issue1_Cover_Large_FINAL_SmlCertainly some of the most fun to be had this week comes with IDW’s Half Past Danger #1. Set during World War II, the book features the adventures of Sergeant Tommy “Irish” Flynn, who discovers an island in the war-torn Pacific that’s infested both with Nazis and dinosaurs! After the big lizards wipe out his squad, Flynn ends up (rather mysteriously) back home in America, drinking away his sorrows in a pub. He’s approached by British Agent Huntington-Moss and her counterparts: an American officer named John Noble (something even the obviously nicknamed “Irish” Flynn makes fun of) and the rather Kato-like Asian martial artist sidekick. These stereotypes apparently intend to force Flynn back into the War, and they destroy the tavern in a brawl while Agent Huntington-Moss smokes cigarettes and orders Pimm’s. Yet despite the rather stock characters (this felt a tiny bit like an Indiana Jones spin-off) the book works because of its quirkiness and fast paced adventure. The highlight, however, is the first half tale of soldiers versus dinosaurs, and I’m glad the series will be returning to that goldmine in future issues. Continue reading

Posted in comic books, We're No. 1! | Leave a comment

Q&A with Max Brooks

Writer Max BMaxBrooks1rooks knows a thing or two about the Undead. The author of The Zombie Survival Guide and the novel World War Z has been dubbed the “Studs Terkel of Zombie journalism.” Now he’s taking on even more of the Undead in his new comic series Extinction Parade, from Avatar Press. The series is about a post apocalyptic world where Zombies stalk the human population, and the Vampires who’ve lived in secret for years are faced with a new threat – the extinction of their food source. (That would be us!) We asked Mr. Brooks a few questions about this all out War of the Undead, and what cultural and ethical issues he hopes to address with his new book.

ExtinctionParade1End

Geekquality: An early look at Extinction Parade seems to suggest that female vampires play a large role in the story.  What can you tell us about their character, and why did you choose to center the story on them?

Max Brooks: Our two main characters are Min and Laila, two female Euro-Chinese vampires living in what is now Malaysia. Initially they are thrilled at the rise of what they call the ‘subdead’. They love that the zombie-fueled chaos is breaking down all the barriers of human civilization that were increasingly constricting their actions. In the beginning it’s nothing short of Mardi Gras, a feeding frenzy where they get to kill anyone they want. Only later, as the crisis sweeps across the entire planet, do they realize that this is not just some passing blip. Suddenly they understand that the human race, and consequently their own race as well, now hangs in the balance.

With a story like Extinction Parade, there are obvious metaphors of inequality going on, be they racial or socioeconomic. Were any of those issues something that you intentionally wanted to address with this book? 

Inequality is exactly what I was exploring in this story, specifically the notion of privilege. When everything is handed to you, when you don’t have to struggle for anything, it leaves you dangerously dependent and vulnerable. To me that’s vampires: parasites on the dog of humanity, who’ve been handed all these wondrous gifts; strength, speed, agility, immortality, even anonymity. They think they’re at the top of the food chain, and, until the zombies come along, they are. Then one day that chain is being eaten away from the ground up and suddenly they have to confront the fact that they are in a war of survival that they’ve neither imagined, nor prepared for.

You’ve previously discussed a childhood fear of zombies being like “a plague”, rather than a predator.  Now you seem to be pitting one against the other, Zombies against Vampires. In light of recent events like mass shootings in Colorado and Connecticut and the tragedy in Boston, are you seeing a more violent world, and is that an underlying theme in your new story?

I don’t think the world is more violent now. On the contrary, it’s statistically pretty peaceful when you compare it to, say, 1916 or 1943. What makes this time we’re living in now so special (and frightening) is that there are very few local problems anymore. We’re all so interdependent on each other that what affects some of us will send ripples through all of us.

ExtinctionParade1WrapExtinction Parade will be available in comic shops everywhere on Wednesday June 19th, just two days before the release of World War Z.  We’ll have a review of the first issue, and all the latest on new stories in comics, right here in our weekly feature “We’re No.1!

Posted in comic books, interview | Leave a comment

Geeking Out

  • A Medieval Times movie is in development, and pretty much everyone agrees it won’t fly on brand alone. Here’s hoping it’s not too terrible?
  • NBC is rebooting Dracula with Jonathan Rhys Meyers in the title role, directed by Steve Shill (The Tudors, Dexter). The series looks like it’s attempting to appeal to the Downton Abbey crowd, but with a bit of a violent twist.
  • Representation of women in speaking roles in film was under 30% last year, a number which has dropped in the last three years. So let’s hear again those arguments about how sexism is over.
  • A shipping error led to some fans receiving Doctor Who DVDs that included the season finale. BBC Worldwide urged those lucky fans: “No spoilers!”
  • Sabeen Mahmud is leading Pakistan’s first hackathon, kind of a badass.
  • Chris Pine and Jake Gyllenhaal are expected to receive offers to star as the two Princes in Into the Woods on Broadway. The project already boasts Meryl Streep, Johnny Depp, and James Corden.
  • There’s an official, full trailer for Agents of SHIELD, and it looks pretty awesome!
  • Have you wondered where Twitter hate speech originates? Dr. Monica Stephens of Humboldt State University mapped certain terms, used derogatorily.
  • 15 reasons why Jean Ralphio from Parks & Rec is A+.
  • The trailer for new series Sleepy Hollow is intriguing, but we’re really excited that a WOC (Nicole Beharie) gets to be a lead, and a potential romantic interest.
  • There was also much collective squealing over Karl Urban and Michael Ealy in the trailer for Almost Human.
  • In the week’s Arrested Development news, Recurring Developments maps every recurring joke on the show.
  • Related: insert me anywhere, an acting portfolio by Tobias Funke, Analrapist.
  • Queer in STEM is looking for LGBTQ professionals to take their survey. We’re looking forward to the findings.
  • Trans scientists have little visibility in STEM, but  here is a short list.
  • We talk a lot about historical women in STEM. Here are nine women currently shining in their respective  fields.
  • Tested.com recruits superstar chef David Chang (Momofuku in NY) to devise some better tasting space food for astronaut Chris Hadfield.
Posted in geeking out | Leave a comment

We’re No. 1! New Dreams and Nightmares

Nightmares and dreaming are the big themes this week in #1 issues, as are old memories. We’ve got a nightmarish version of Edgar Allen Poe, a reboot of a golden sci-fi classic, two different tales of dangerous dreams invading real life, and a little bit of the Avengers, to boot!

dreammerchantFirst up this week is Dream Merchant #1 from Nathan Edmondson (Olympus, Who is Jake Ellis?) and new artist Konstantin Novosadov. When Winslow was young, he had a vivid recurring dream that he was flying across a fantastical barren landscape. As he grew into a young man, he had a harder and harder time telling when he was dreaming this amazing dream and when he was awake. Now living in a mental hospital, Winslow’s life is suddenly shattered when nightmarish figures from his dreams emerge in real life and try to destroy him. Forced to go on the run, he’s joined by a young hospital worker, Anne, a rather naive young woman who describes herself as a former “juvenile delinquent.” She and Winslow have been having a bit of a jailhouse flirtation, and when he comes under attack she is all too eager to help him, just for “the adventure.” The main flaw with Anne seems to stem not from the way the character is written, but how she’s drawn. Winslow is tall, gaunt, and rarely smiling, and has a haunted appearance, as well he should. Anne is rather mousy, drawn with bobbed short hair and a fashion sense like a woman much older than her. Her look doesn’t seem to fit a wild child, free spirit she claims to be, ready to take an escaped patient on an adventure through a lucid dream. Overall, it is difficult to understand her motivations. The two are joined by The Dream Merchant, they mysterious old man who promises to explain all and teach Winslow to “hide in his dreams.” The Dream Merchant is a Jungian figure, managing to be both mysterious and frightening, and his unusual presence helps shape the books climactic ending.  This double sized issue was gripping, if a little off center, and will be one worth following. Continue reading

Posted in comic books, We're No. 1! | Leave a comment

Rediscovering TV Fandom in the Social Media Age

I wrote fan fiction before I even knew it had a name, and before I had the Internet. In notebooks or on a hand-me-down laptop with Word Perfect and Paint, I wrote terrible self-insertion Charmed fic. Later, when I did get online, I found the official message board for the short-lived show Birds of Prey. It was amazing: I could share fanfic, play RPGs, rehash its thirteen episodes again and again. Shortly after, came Mutant X and I started posting to a few more message boards, even moderating and creating my own ones. To say I was a fangirl would have been an understatement. I spent hours and hours editing clips of season 3 of Mutant X to my favorite songs, even before YouTube. I had to send these videos to a friend who could afford to pay for a domain. Looking back, I am really impressed with my young self. These days, I don’t have the patience to make videos, or even wallpapers.

Birds of Prey, from Wikipedia

Birds of Prey, image via Wikipedia

I’m not sure when my attention to these shows started to dwindle. I visited fewer and fewer message boards, abandoned my fanfics, and my friend let her domain expire, losing all my carefully crafted vids. At that point, even though I was still a fan, my tastes had changed. I became obsessed with The West Wing and, for some odd reason, films from the 1940s. I made videos about George Lucas and Aaron Sorkin for school projects, and made Studio 60 t-shirts with my best friend. So much of how we express our fandom experience is about connecting with other people. Perhaps, as I found friends offline with whom I could talk about my favorite TV shows and movies, that was why I wasn’t drawn to FF.net anymore.

But in the last few years, I started getting sucked back into the online fandom experience, just as it was starting to get huge. Instead of instant messages and discussion boards, fans now have Twitter and Tumblr to process various obsessions. Twitter makes watching TV shows live more fun with specialty hashtags, some so popular that even the show runners and writers of some shows use the hashtags in their tweets. Continue reading

Posted in guest post, television | 2 Comments

Geeking Out

  • Disney attempted to trademark “Día de los Muertos” for an upcoming Pixar movie. The Internet took care of that real quick.
  • Setting aside our feelings about Orson Scott Card, here’s the trailer for Ender’s Game.
  • This made our week: The IT Crowd is coming back to film a finale episode.
  • Aisha Tyler sounds off on sexism and harassment in gaming, and what could be done to help confront it.
  • What if your favorite Game of Thrones characters were university students? Check out these advising notes on Sansa, Margaery, and Tyrion.
  • NYCers! Look out for a Bluth Frozen Banana Stand, coming real soon to you.
  • Beautiful infographic of the week: 19 emotions that English has no words for.
  • 50 Tattoos inspired by literature. And only one “so it goes” tattoo!
  • Just two words: Bog people. :(
  • A pilot project in Maryland uses the cloud to encourage STEM study in lower-income schools.
  • What does the shakeup in US STEM education mean?
  • Jennie Lamure: the 17-year old girl who kicked ass at a hack event and can save you from inadvertently reading spoilers on Twitter.
  • 2013 is a big year for geek anniversaries, with 50 years since the first woman in space and the start of Doctor Who, among others.
  • And, as we like to save the best for last, Ryan Gosling refusing to eat cereal is (yes, we’ll say it) the best thing ever.
Posted in geeking out | Leave a comment

We’re No. 1! Mobsters, Magic, and Misogyny

rhw01aZenescope are at it again with Robyn Hood: Wanted #1, kicking off the second arc of Robyn Locksley’s tale. Robyn is a woman from our world, who’s been transported to the magical realm of Myst and becomes the female version of the famous archer. What’s so disappointing about this book, though, isn’t the storytelling or the way the female lead is treated. The narrative here is well crafted, written exactly the way the beginning of a sequel should be. Robyn has returned to Earth after defeating the evil King John, but here she’s a hunted woman, wanted for murder by people who don’t understand her true heroic nature. Writer Patrick Shand (Angel, Godstorm) has created a warrior with a lot of pent up anger, which she directs at her long abusive father. Artist Larry Watts draws Robyn as a gritty young woman with little flash, more a compact blond ball of anger than a bombshell in the traditional sense.  Zenescope’s standard, sexualized treatment of its characters is present, largely on the cover of the book, but it’s all made worse by the incentive covers gallery, featuring a limited edition cover picturing Robyn completely nude except for her bow and arrow.  This kind of marketing makes it hard to take an otherwise OK book seriously. Continue reading

Posted in comic books, We're No. 1! | 2 Comments

We’re FREE! The Best of Free Comic Book Day

What’s the best day of the year? FREE Comic Book Day! Over 50 different, free comics were available this past Saturday, but which ones really stood out? That’s what we’re here for, my fellow geeks!

TheSteamEnginesOfOz_FCBD

Arcana Comics had one of the best female characters of the day in The Steam Engines of Oz. Victoria lives deep in the bowels of The Emerald City of the Future, where she helps keep the cogs clean and the gears running smoothly for the great city, now ruled by The Tin Man. But is he the kind and loving fellow we remember? Victoria is also something of a jailer, bringing food and comforts to several unique characters living in cells far beneath the city. But when the (maybe good, maybe not) Witch of the North shows Victoria the ever-expanding Emerald City metropolis destroying the Land of Oz, she persuades Victoria to try and get the Tin Man to see reason. Victoria is an intelligent and resourceful young woman, who is rapidly losing the naivete of youth as her adventure shows her that the darkness below the streets of the Emerald City extends to the land above. Continue reading

Posted in comic books, We're No. 1! | Leave a comment

Geeking Out

  • If you have the time, watch all of these Assassin’s Creed movie clips edited together.
  • Anders Holm talks The Mindy Project, Chris Messina’s magic eyes, and Mindy Kaling’s aggressive charm in this interview with Vulture
  • Omar Sy confirmed (or so it seems) as Bishop in the latest X-Men offering.
  • The first clip of footage for Bong Joon-ho’s Snowpiercer is out, with this behind the scenes Korean trailer. And guys? It looks good.
  • Some cool shots of Anthony Mackie as Falcon in the next Captain America movie.
  • Jamie Foxx is in talks to star in the new Annie alongside Quvenzhané Wallis as the new Daddy Warbucks, Benjamin Stacks.
  • Michael Bay says the new Ninja Turtles are not going to be aliens anymore, and that they never were? Not really sure what’s going to happen with the upcoming TMNT reboot, but at least this seems like a step in the right direction.
  • Artist Nina Levy draws superheroes (and super dogs), monsters, and more on napkins for her sons’ lunches!
  • Check out this heartwarming video of Wil Wheaton explaining to a fan’s newborn daughter why being a nerd is so awesome.
  • Insects wearing water droplets as hats. You are welcome.
  • 11 Classic rock songs, covered by Mariachi bands.
  • 10 Best Selling Infomercial Products. A mostly surprising list, if you expected to see your faves, like the Bumpit, Booty Pop, and SLAP CHOP.
  • Shopgibberish has some great science-themed handmade gifts
  • Aisha Tyler’s response to the outcry about her role presenting at the 2012 Ubisoft E3 press conference has made the rounds before, but it’s seeing another resurgence and bears repeated linking. Because it is magnificent.
  • And last but not least, groove into the weekend with the amazing new video from our favorite android queen Janelle Monáe, featuring Erykah Badu:

Posted in geeking out | Leave a comment

We’re No. 1! Superteens and Lost Souls

It’s an exciting week for lovers of comics, with our favorite holiday happening tomorrow, Free Comic Book Day! In the run up, there are loads of new #1 issues on the shelves. Which ones will you shell out cash for, alongside your ample pile of freebies this weekend? Let’s take a look at what’s worth your money, and what isn’t.

Victories The indie producers are hitting solid home-runs this week, with Dark Horse leading the pack. Their first is the best offering this week, Michael Avon Oeming’s The Victories #1, and if that sounds familiar, it’s because I’ve reviewed this once before! Or have I? After the previous success of the miniseries and the Victories’ appearances in Dark Horse Presents, Oeming (co-creator of Powers) is bringing his dark cast of super heroes to their own ongoing monthly series. Here, the darkness just gets darker, in a very literal sense: the lights have gone out across most of the world, as power shortages leave humanity in the darkest of new ages. The Victories have taken to the streets to protect the innocent, and old enemies are waiting for them. This new story is focused on a different member of The Victories than the original mini-series, which delved into the troubled past of the young hero known as Faustus. Here, we get a very personal insight into the young heroine D.D. Mau. Like Faustus, she is dealing with deep personal insecurities that affect her heroic exploits. D.D.’s super human abilities make her strong and incredibly fast, but if she rests – even to sleep- she undergoes enormous weight gain. Every morning, she must get back to super heroic activity as quickly as possible to restore herself to what she thinks she should look like. Oeming’s single portrayal of D.D. at her heaviest is shown only in a mirrored reflection, fully illustrating the sadness she feels over her physical condition. The visual brings home the term “body image” in a solemn way, but D.D. is in something of a state of denial. She’s content to run off her excess weight day after day, knowing that pushing her super abilities is likely to get her killed. D.D. just doesn’t have herself or the world figured out yet, a young woman who’s brash, foulmouthed, and even a touch homophobic. Her previously depicted sexual trysts with Faustus are as much an escape from herself and reality for her as we saw them to be for Faustus, in the previous series. Ultimately, she’s a flawed and very human super hero, and just the type of character we’d expect from Oeming’s gritty exploration of the genre. Continue reading

Posted in comic books, We're No. 1! | Leave a comment