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SciFi Snapshot: Fringe

09.15.2008 by Susan Getgood //

The way things have been going, it seems highly unlikely that I will be able to keep to my desired Sunday schedule for my sci fi post. In part because Sunday seems to have blurred into a work day around here and in part because starting this coming weekend, I will be traveling pretty much every weekend through mid-October.

The fall TV season has started, and so far it looks promising. There are quite a fews shows I might actually remember to watch or record, which is good news for my exercise regime as I generally watch taped shows while jogging on the treadmill.

Here’s what we’ll be watching

  • Bones
  • Fringe
  • Chuck
  • Ugly Betty
  • Stargate Atlantis (out of loyalty more than anything, this season is not very good.)
  • Burn Notice (has to go on the list even though last ep is this coming Thursday. Hint hint USA Network we want more)
  • Lost (maybe)
  • Boston Legal (maybe)
  • Sarah Connor Chronicles (from time to time)
  • Torchwood (maybe, depends on new cast)

And of course waiting for the final episodes of Battlestar Galactica and expected mid-season replacement The Dollhouse.

Now for my thoughts on the new show in this list, Fringe. All in all I thought it was pretty good. It started with a horrifying bang, times two, and then slowed down quite a bit with a great deal of story exposition. Very talky. I know a lot of folks don’t like quite so much explaining of things before we get down to the action, but I’m not sure how you could have done it any other way.

I absolutely loved the interaction among the principals. I’ve never seen the young leads Anna Torv or Joshua Jackson in anything prior to this. (Yes I am among the few who never saw a single episode of Dawson’s Creek. ) John Noble, who plays the mad scientist, played the equally mad Denethor in The Lord of the Rings.

Everyone was quite believable in their roles, even poor Mark Valley who spent most of the pilot on his back in one way or the other. I particularly enjoyed the relationship between the Bishops father and son. It would have been so easy to slip into a stereotypical angry young man, resentful of his father, etc. etc. but Jackson avoids that. Yes, he plays the resentment, but underneath it you can see the affection the character has for his father and perhaps his pleasure that his father (not to mention Olivia) needs him.

And big bonus – we’ve got a very promising villain, even if we don’t know much about it yet.

So, I plan to stick with it and hope it stays as good as it started.

[tags] Fringe [/tags]

Categories // Science Fiction, TV/Film

First Day of School

09.08.2008 by Susan Getgood //

IMG_2952
Douglas, First Day of Third Grade, September 3, 2008

More pictures from Labor Day weekend on Flickr

Categories // Douglas

Sarah Palin for VP???

09.04.2008 by Susan Getgood //

I’m a lifelong Democrat and have been pretty vocal this summer about my disappointment at the way my political party selected its nominee for president.  I’ve said it here, and on comments on other blogs: I think the Democratic party machine was more interested in not having Senator Clinton than anything else. I don’t think they had the confidence that a woman could win the general election.  Obama, and his charisma, presented the best, possibly most malleable, alternative. His (?) VP choice Joe Biden is a distinctly uninspired but necessary choice to counter Obama’s lack of foreign policy experience.

Nevertheless, even though I will never think that the Democrats fielded the best candidate they could, I will vote for Obama and Biden this fall. They are a much better choice than McCain and whoever ends up as his running mate.

Sarah Palin? I don’t think she’s going to make til the end of September. I’ll be surprised if she lasts until next week.

Even before I read Tim Rutten’s column from  yesterday’s LA Times, in which he invokes Thomas Eagleton’s short tenure as George McGovern’s running mate in 1972, I had started to wonder if she would make the mission.

And I can’t help but ask — could that have been John McCain’s plan from the very start?

Bear with me for a moment.
May 07 VT, Field Trip 074

Sarah Palin is not qualified to be president of the United States, and we should never put someone in the VP slot who cannot assume the duties of president, immediately if necessary.

It has absolutely nothing to do with her family status or children, or even her political views, most of which I personally find abhorrent. I could list them here, but Gloria Steinem did a much better job than I could ever do in today’s LA Times.

But, there are some interesting angles that make her an appealing choice for a running mate. Or at least a first choice. Starting with her gender and her family history, up to and including the pregnant teenage daughter and soon-to-deploy son. Right now, we’ve got a full-scale version of the “mommy wars” raging on the Internet, with people on all sides criticizing her for her choices. Different criticisms of course, but criticism nonetheless.

Which provides a total distraction from the real issue – her political opinions and qualifications for the job. She’s not qualified, but not because she’s a woman or because of the choices she’s made as a parent. The only people who have the right to decide whether she’s a good mother are her children; quite frankly, I don’t care one way or the other. Ditto all the speculation about her youngest child and how soon she returned to work. Distraction.

She’s not qualified. Full stop. She doesn’t have any national experience. Obama doesn’t have much, but he’s been in the Senate and the long primary season afforded him the opportunity to at least think about international issues. Palin freely admits she hasn’t thought much about Iraq…

And the real concern are her political views, and how they would impact this country should McCain be elected and die in office. He’s 72. It could happen.

Writes Steinem:

“She opposes just about every issue that women support by a majority or plurality. She believes that creationism should be taught in public schools but disbelieves global warming; she opposes gun control but supports government control of women’s wombs; she opposes stem cell research but approves “abstinence-only” programs, which increase unwanted births, sexually transmitted diseases and abortions; she tried to use taxpayers’ millions for a state program to shoot wolves from the air but didn’t spend enough money to fix a state school system with the lowest high-school graduation rate in the nation; she runs with a candidate who opposes the Fair Pay Act but supports $500 million in subsidies for a natural gas pipeline across Alaska; she supports drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve, though even McCain has opted for the lesser evil of offshore drilling. She is Phyllis Schlafly, only younger.”

Steinem argues, and I believe she’s right, that Palin was a choice to please the far-right, Christian conservative wing of the Republican Party.

But what if McCain picked her knowing that she wouldn’t last, that she’d have to bow out. Leaving him free to pick a more middle-of-the-road candidate?

Sinister? Machiavellian? Yup. And I could be wrong, very wrong. Maybe McCain didn’t do it on purpose.

But I’m still betting she won’t be his running mate for too long.

Because she won’t bring the female vote. Many disillusioned Clinton supporters who were considering McCain are far less likely to do so now. Once we get over the mommy war segment of the program, they’ll quickly come to the realization, as Steinem put it:

“To vote in protest for McCain/Palin would be like saying, “Somebody stole my shoes, so I’ll amputate my legs.”

Now, maybe the GOP leadership knew that she wouldn’t bring the Clinton vote, but thought she’d appeal to a different segment of the female voting population, as PunditMom suggests. Who knows…

But I’m still betting she doesn’t last.

[tags] Sarah Palin, presidential election [/tags]

Categories // Gender, Politics

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