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Courtney Hoskins

Writer/Director

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The Evil League of Evil

It's pretty safe to assume that when I do not update my blog regularly, it is because I am working on a project.  There have been quite a few things I've wanted to write about: how disappointed I am in this new season of Heroes (and conversely, how NOT disappointed I've been in Fringe), how excited I am that the winter constellations/Messier objects are coming back, how much I LOVE my new PS3 (favorite games so far: Everyday Shooter, Ninja Gaiden Sigma, Echochrome and Stuntman: Ignition. I have others, but I haven't had time to really play them enough to know if I "love" them. Oh, and the Blu-Ray player is pretty nice, too.)   Ahem.  Yes, all of this and more has been on my mind lately. I find it hard to write coherently when something "big" is occupying my thoughts, however.  Lately, that's been quite a bit.  I injured my foot, which, despite the fact that it is purple and swollen and painful, my doctors have assured me is "nothing to be concerned about."  Whew!  All I have to do is stop using it ever.  While I don't invest heavily in the stock market, the financial weather has kept me patiently sitting at home, doubting my desire to just jump into L.A. in the immediate future.  That's fine.  In fact, it's so fine that I've signed a 1-year lease for a new bachelorette pad here in Boulder, not that such a thing cannot be broken if Pixar decides to hire me (which wouldn't be L.A. anyway, but that's beside the point).  My workload at my day job ballooned last week.  I've also just purchased a new (and by new, I always mean "used") car from a friend who is currently in Europe.  Oh, and I'm officially "single" again, which has been a strange realization.  To summarize: breaking up, buying a car from someone in Italy, busy at work,  moving, foot injury, and working on a new project (in addition to planning a website overhaul, but I'll save that story for later).

Now for the Project:

I would hope that the people who read my blog have seen Joss Whedon's "Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog" by now.  If you haven't, go watch it for free from hulu.  It's three 15-minute episodes.  Go ahead.  I'll wait.

You back?  Cool.  Fantastic, wasn't it?  What an outstanding trio of talent, guided by that Whedonesque sensibility!

So, now that you have the background, I will give you the scoop:  The DVD version of this "show" is going to be coming out relatively soon.  The creators have decided to hold a video contest in which we must make our argument for why we should be included in the Evil League of Evil.  The winners will be featured on the DVD and viewed by dozens and dozens of geeks worldwide!  I wrote and directed the below video and made it with my friend Robert Bowen, who is probably a bigger fan than even I am.  Camera and sound (and fancy equipment) by Carl Fuermann.

Oh, and there is some vocabulary you should be aware of:

Deus Ex Machina: any artificial or improbable device resolving the difficulties of a plot. Perepeteia: a sudden turn of events or an unexpected reversal. Anagnorisis: the critical moment of recognition or discovery, esp. preceding peripeteia.

All three will make an appearance...

tags: dr horrible, evil league of evil, felicia day, joss whedon, nathan fillion, neil patrick harris, nph, video contest
categories: film and television, web development
Wednesday 10.15.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
Comments: 2
 

An Open Love Letter

Dear Los Angeles, Hi.  Remember me?  Um... Gosh.  Where to begin?  I'm not good at this, so I'll just cut to the chase:  I know I've been flirting with you a lot over the past few years.  You probably think I'm just a tease, but I've been thinking a lot about you lately.

I've tried to make things work with other cities, denying that I secretly long for the embrace of your sandy shores, the comfort of your warm sunlight and the stimulation of your huge... film industry.  I crave your music, art, film and media scenes.  I even think I could put up with your fickle geologic temperament and abusive traffic jams, if it meant that I could walk along your beaches and watch a classic film on one of your many movie screens.

I know a lot of people don't like you.  They say your traffic jams and colorful inhabitants make you a hard city in which to live.  I say, let the naysayers keep their New York City with its turtlenecks and dress suits!  I'll take your baseball caps and bikinis any day of the year (and I almost could in your gentle clime).

L.A., I just can't help thinking, well... maybe I should move in?  Is that too direct?  I know you've had some rough times lately, but we all have our ups and downs.  I know we could find a way to make it work.  I think it's time for us to consider a long-term relationship.  Just think about it.

Well, those are my thoughts.  I'm here if you need me (really, I'm here if you need me: a job would be a nice engagement gift, ahem...)

Love, Courtney

P.S.  It bein' International Talk Like a Pirate Day, I just have to add a gratuitous "arrr!"

tags: comedy, los angeles, love letter
categories: ufos
Friday 09.19.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

The Toaster Incident

No, this is not a Battlestar Gallactica post. Once upon a time, I fell in love with a boy.  This was my freshman year in college and I was a bit naive.  He was an RA and the "contrary" type, so he decided to organize a group spring break trip to Canada, rather than follow the crowds to Mexico.  I eagerly signed up for this trip.  It turned out I was his only taker, which was fine by me.  My mind began making the situation terribly romantic.

I had never traveled to a foreign country at this point.  This boy advised me not to change any money (you get ripped off), not to worry about traveler's checks, and that it was probably just fine that I didn't have a credit card, that cashing a check at a bank would probably be good enough.  Like I said, I was a bit naive, so I just believed him.  After all, he told everyone he was Canadian, so he must know (he was not).  And with as much planning as that, we were on our way to Toronto.

We arrived on a Saturday- just late enough for the banks to have closed.  Canadian banks, like US banks, are closed on Sundays, and Monday was a holiday.  We were returning Tuesday morning.  In short, I was broke and totally dependent on the finances of this guy, who had only really planned to pay for himself.  This made me feel more like an obligation than a romantic traveling companion, and a complete idiot for not having done the research myself.

This wasn't the end of the world.  While the situation was not ideal, it was okay.  At least, it was okay until we got to the hotel.  The White House hotel: a two star hotel/restaurant (the latter had been boarded up) located in the heart of the... something... district.  It had that "check the sheets" feel to it.  There was a half-kitchen in the room and a television chained to the dresser.  I was reminded of Josh's (Tom Hanks) first hotel experience in "Big."  Suddenly, I wished that my love interest was maybe just a little bit of a conformist.  Cancun was sounding kind of nice.

Still, we can trudge through a lot for love (and we often put up with more than we should).  That first night, we saw a movie together:  "Fargo."  Romantic it weren't.  How can you hold someone's hand through a movie in which a guy kidnaps his own wife and someone gets put through a wood chipper?  The next day, we explored Toronto (great city, by the way- I've since been three times) and had dinner at a pizza place, where, being the legal drinking age in Canada, he had wine while I stood by my "I don't drink" philosophy.  The next morning, he became violently ill.  Having never really been drunk in my life at that point, I assumed it was a hangover and let him be.  It became evident, however, that this was more than a simple hangover.  I blame the sausage he had ordered on his side of the pizza.

I watched this boy become more and more ill and started growing concerned (he was also the "I will die before I go to the doctor/hospital" type, so I was getting worried).  I suddenly saw myself alone and penniless in Canada.  We spent most of Monday in the hotel, where I feared he would die.  I read "James and the Giant Peach," sketched, and watched curling on television (those wacky Canadians).  At about 7PM, "Batman Returns" came on and the sun started going down.  I decided that I needed to eat something and had to harass my ill hotel mate for some cash.  We needed money for the cab back to the airport the next day, so he could only afford to give me about $5.

I trotted to the sketchy convenience store down the street and got a can of soup and a couple of popsicles, both of which I thought my slowly-recovering crush could eat, as well.  I figured I could cook the soup on the stove in our room, which suddenly seemed a lot less pointless.  It wasn't much of a dinner and with an empty, angry stomach, I suddenly understood how people end up asking strangers for money.

I returned to the hotel and asked the "concierge" (who, when I left, was "chatting" with the police about an "incident") for a can opener and perhaps some spoons, a pot... anything with which to make/eat soup.  He led me to the dilapidated restaurant where he pulled his only utensil- a large fork- out of a fairly raw-looking piece of meat.  I kindly refused, smiled, thanked him and headed back to the room.

I looked around the kitchenette for a pot.  No luck.  It didn't matter, though.  I was a Girl Scout.  I could cook the soup in the can.  I figured we could also use the plastic courtesy cups in the room as "bowls."  I opened the can using a large knife that I had found.  I was feeling pretty clever until I tried to turn the stove on.  Of course, it didn't work.  My mind went into overdrive as I tried to imagine how I would heat the soup.  I didn't want to re-poison the boy.  Suddenly, I remembered having seen a toaster when I was looking for a pot.  Toasters get hot.  Could I cook soup in a toaster, though?  Before I got my hopes up, I pulled it out, plugged it in, crossed my fingers and turned it on.  Success!  Heat!  Heat can cook!  I placed the metal can of soup on top of one of the slots of the toaster and smiled it as it gradually got hotter.

The only problem with this plan was that the heating wires in toasters tend to turn themselves off at certain temperatures.  This is great if you are avoiding burnt toast, not so great when you are playing MacGyver.  My solution: cool the toaster coils on the side that was not cooking the soup so that it would never overheat.  My method for doing so was blowing on it (fanning it would have cooled both sides and the soup, which was not what I wanted).  While I nearly hyperventilated, my idea worked.  The soup became nice and hot and we had our "dinner." Still somewhat hungry, I curled myself up in a ball and went to sleep, eager to catch our plane the next morning (by which time, thankfully, the boy was on the mend).

Here's the funny thing about life: you have to open yourself to what the world is trying to tell you, even if it's not what you want to hear.  I had imagined myself dependent upon this boy and ended up taking care of him in the end.  Even though the romantic getaway that I had imagined did not transpire, I learned that I have the patience of a saint, that cleverness is more valuable than money and that the romantic mind is capable of placing the scent of roses over the stench of danger.  It took a long time for this lesson to sink in, but I go back to this moment in time every time I feel incapable of solving a problem.

I will never forget the day I successfully cooked soup with a toaster.

tags: canada, college crush, how to cook soup in a toaster, macgyver, spring break, toronto
categories: stories
Sunday 09.14.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
Comments: 1
 

Dreams

While talking to a friend the other night, I realized that I could probably keep my blog nicely filled out by writing about some of the dreams I have. I remember my dreams almost every morning. Some of them are mundane and not really worth repeating. For example, when I've taken Ambien, I usually dream about not being able to fall asleep, being hungry, or going to work (though in my waking moments on that drug, I battle flatscreen television-stealing gypsies with my broadsword and swim with talking sharks- go figure). Most of my dreams, however, have been fodder for screenplays and short films. And a few of them are so bizarre, they wouldn't even be re-creatable with today's modern cinematic technology. The dream I recounted for him was on the cinematic side.

The background: I had just returned from Comic-Con, with geek pop culture fresh on my mind. Rising to the top of my thoughts, of course, was Lost. I had an initial suspicion that the current viral marketing campaign was part of a contest of sorts (I've since kind of given up on that idea). My hope/dream/thought was that the winner might win a walk-on spot, based on the fact that we had to do video "interviews" for "recruitment."

The dream: I was on a plane to... somewhere overseas... to audition for Lost. I had to get off the plane because I somehow didn't have my boarding pass. I went to go stand in line and realized I didn't have my passport, either. Two guys in front of me took my place on the plane (I don't do math in my dreams), and I was forced to wait for the next flight. Luckily, there was a group of Lost folk in the airport, and they were practicing for the upcoming auditions. I decided to join them. Josh Holloway was there and decided he was going to help me get the role (despite my massive crush on Sawyer, that's about as racy as it got).

There was an obstacle course that we needed to get through.  After a bit of coaching by Sawyer, I took off.  I ran across a tropical field to a sort of Mayan temple.  I had to scale the side of the temple.  I was surprised by how quickly I was able to get to my goal: a large wax candle.  My mission was to bring the melted wax of this candle back down to the ground.

I scooped the wax up in my hand.  This presented a problem: the temple was suddenly quite steep and there was no way I would be able to make it back down using only one hand.  I decided the only solution was to hold the wax in my mouth.  I ladled the warm wax into my mouth, where it began to solidify.  I feared that I would choke, but I climbed back down.  At the bottom, I handed off the wax, which at this point had turned to a kind of glowing piece of amber, and boarded the plane, now confident in my ability to get the role.

This next part happens quite often in my dreams: the plane began taxiing, but could not take off (if you ask me, that's a pretty lazy metaphor that my mind has concocted for my film career, but I'll take it).  We wound our way through the streets of Manhattan in this jumbo jet, never quite able to get enough runway for liftoff.

Somehow, my friend and I were in... some tropical location (Hawaii, maybe).  He confessed to me that he was actually one of the co-creators of Lost, but that J.J. Abrams, Carlton Cuse, and Damon Lindelof kind of cut him out of the picture.  He proved this by revealing where the show was headed (and curses!  I don't remember what he said!  Guess I will have to keep watching...)  I asked if he was upset.  He confessed that he initially was, but that he was too excited about his latest project (more on that soon) to let it really bother him.

After that, things either got too blurry to recall or I woke up...

tags: airplane, dream, josh holloway, lost, mayan, sawyer
categories: Uncategorized
Saturday 09.13.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Difficulty Keeping Up

I've had trouble keeping my blog in step with my life lately.  I made a deal with myself about two months ago that I need to write at least one post every week. I've wanted to write about all sorts of things, but I get pretty easily distracted when I sit at the computer and my iPhone is not the ideal way to write (hey, Apple- when is the iPhone keyboard going to be available?)  Every time I get an idea to write about something, it is gone by the time I sit at the computer.  I had a great idea, though.  I think I can solve my writing problem once and for all.  Bear with me, now, for I'm about to go "fringe:" I need a device that I can carry with me at all times.  One that is always at hand if I get an idea and will never need charging.  Now, ideally, this device would be small, could open and close and could be used for jotting down words AND sketches.  The device must be virus and hacker proof and have a simple UI.  I know I'm asking for a lot already, but I need even more... Since this device is going to be small, I need a convenient input gadget.  I don't want to have to carry anything too bulky (no keyboards, for example).  I'm thinking of a kind of stylus- a "smart" stylus that knows how to turn my hand movements into actual letters and/or pictures that I can understand.

Here is my 3D mock-up of the device:

Radical?  Perhaps.  Crazy?  Yes.  Genius?  Almost certainly.  Now, I'm thinking if I could get some R&D money, I could really perfect this idea.  Just think:  The freedom to write whatever you want wherever you are!  I was thinking of calling it a "notebook," but that might get confusing for people, seeing as how a notebook is a kind of laptop.

categories: ufos
Friday 09.12.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Firefly

summer.png

That was a great show, wasn't it? It made me love Summer Glau, who I've mentioned before on this blog. Her ballet performance as Cameron in "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" was way cool. Add that to her awesome butt-whooping scene in "Serenity" and it equals me as an uberfan. Any female who loves ballet and can kick major ass at martial arts ("sci-fi" martial arts, to boot) is a person I'd like to meet in real life someday. Alas, I didn't make it to her panel at Comic-Con (where I'm sure we would have met, had coffee, discussed politics and martial arts, exchanged phone numbers and like totally become BFFs- or not). The awesomeness of Summer aside, I'm not talking about that Firefly right now. I'm talking about the one that is in the upper right quadrant of this blog. It's a pretty cool little application. Well, it's not really "cool" on my blog (yet, anyway), but go to their website at firef.ly and play around with it a bit. Basically, if you turn it on, you can "tag" my page with graffiti or chat with other users (all one of you). Go ahead, try it out. You can "rewind" the history to see what others have said. "Others" being mostly me and any friends I've forced to use it. You can even send anything you write on my page to your Twitter account. Tight.

Speaking of Twitter, I have been pretty much obsessed with it lately. If you feel that I don't update my blog often enough, just check out that little orange bubble in the sidebar for 140 character (or less) blurbs of randomness 5-10 times per day or "follow" me. Another cool social networking application is last.fm, also on the sidebar menu. It lets you listen to what I (or other users) are listening to, create playlists of your favorite artists and discover new artists that you might like. Finally, the thing I've been using to pull it all together is friendfeed. This application lets you pool all of your social networking tools into one place and gives you updates when your friends post something to flickr, twitter, youtube, delicious, digg, or even when they add new movies to their netflix cue!

I bet hardcore stalkers are a little miffed right now. I mean, it's not that hard to figure out what people are doing at all hours of the day- it doesn't take the skilz it once did. We're pretty much just telling you. I was reluctant to do all of this for a while after someone broke the "online/real life" code of conduct and kind of freaked me out, but I figure psychos will always be out there and it's fun to network with the sane people.

Not only that, but jeeze! What else could I possibly tell you about myself? I'm pretty much telling you everything I do, eat, dream about... "Get out of my tree. Get into my blog!" Could be a catchy tune...

tags: chat, firefly, geek, summer glau
categories: ufos, web development
Wednesday 08.27.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Geek Guide to Dating

This was a Comic-Con afterthought, based on my interactions (or lack thereof) with the opposite sex there. I've had a few of my geekier friends lament about why-oh-why they can't seem to get a date. I've compiled a "Top Ten" list of observations and advice, at least from the female (read: my) perspective:

1. Don't be a jerk. So the girl you're talking to doesn't know the details of the color palette used in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer comic book. She's at Comic-Con. She's at the Joss Whedon panel. She knows every episode of Buffy by heart and loved Dr. Horrible. Also, she's talking to you. Don't call her stupid.

2. You don't always have to be right. Sometimes, you're not. Deal with it.

3. Related to #2: while you can "agree" and "disagree," there is no "right" or "wrong" to personal taste. Trying to convince someone that they are "wrong" for liking a certain television show or programming language is only going to piss them off and is about as effective as trying to argue someone out of liking the color blue, even if you HATE Lost blue. Grr.

4. When someone pays you a compliment, return it. Particularly if you've failed at tips 1-3. Regardless of gender, this takes all geeks some effort (we are rarely complimented by the outside world, let alone the opposite sex), but it can be done. For example: "Wow! Cool lightsaber!" Right response: "Thanks! I like your Slusho shirt!" Wrong response: anything involving listing other ways in which you think you are cool and/or going into the soldering techniques used to make said saber. Actually, if you are talking to me, you can go into the soldering techniques. But ONLY after you have complimented my Slusho shirt, dammit.

5. On that note, if someone pays you a compliment, accept it. Constantly saying how ugly/fat/stupid/short/geeky/etc. you think you are is NOT the same thing as complimenting the other person. Nor is it a good way to show how "modest" you are. It is a good way to make you seem less attractive (and baggage-laden). Which is generally not good.

6. "Realistic standards" is a concept people who spend a lot of time in the fantasy realm have trouble dealing with. That being said, Wil Wheaton/Summer Glau are probably not going to call you tomorrow night, nor is the Norwegian guy (happily living in Norway) whose blog you read, along with 600 other people. Realizing this early on will save you a lot of wasted time waiting (or a restraining order, depending on how much trouble you have with "realistic standards") and will open up a world of dating possibilities.

7. If you like someone, you've gotta let them know. If that seems too frightening, at least talk to them every once in a while. This is my major fail point. Unfortunately, "I'm afraid I will say something stupid" and "I hate you" are two brands of silence that are so similar in flavor that you might as well just say something stupid. Otherwise that cute guy in your martial arts class is just going to think you're a jerk who hates everyone (ahem).

8. That person that you just said "I can't find a date to prom" or "why won't anyone go on a date with me" to? They were hoping you would ask them. Now they feel like crap because you've evidentially asked everyone else (including their best friend), but you STILL AREN'T ASKING THEM! Yeah, David, you! Stupid boy. (sorry, teenage flashback moment)

9. Sarcasm is nice and often a good way to show off your wit. After a while, though, it's as bad as silence. If you don't really hate everything, stop saying that you do every thirty seconds. Ahem, again me=fail!

10. Take heart! You are not the only geek in the world (see Comic-Con photos below). There is someone out there with a similar mix of geek tastes/faults. And they are looking for you, too!*

*Er... They are not looking for you through my blog, however, so if you found this through a "dating" search, please keep searching.

tags: comic-con, dating guide, geek
categories: ufos
Thursday 08.21.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
Comments: 2
 

Comic-Con Wrapup: Sunday Success!

I was completely trashed by Sunday. I could feel the fever coming on and the muscle relaxers had created... undesirable... digestive problems, but still, I soldiered on. Today was the day I'd get my Dharma Initiative test. It was now or never. Besides, my flight didn't leave until 7pm. I got up early, scoped the place out, asked dozens of people the same questions about the fastest way to get in (there was a bit of a secret to it), and raced to the booth.

thesethings-032.jpg

"Congratualtions," said the blonde-haired Australian woman I had harangued all weekend. "You're just in time!" I felt ill, yet thrilled. I didn't know a whole lot about the tests, but I did know (from having walked by the booth a million times) that you were videotaped during the interview. I had also heard that there was a live feed of said video on the internets somewhere. I wasn't exactly happy that I was going to be recorded and broadcast in a state of fever and bloatedness, but, eh. I put on a little lip gloss and got over it! I was just happy to get in (by my calculations, only 400-500 people out of over 100,000 got to take this test there... unless, of course, they were able to use their time travel mojo to fit more people into the time slots).

I had to sign a doozy of a disclaimer, signing away the rights to my likeness and whatnot. I even had to sign away the rights to my signing voice. I don't think I've ever signed anything with my voice before! ;) Still, all of this wording was kind of feeding my original suspicion: the winner of this "recruitment" program might get to be an extra on the show (or something like that, anyway- total speculation).

The test was... interesting. Despite my theories, I have NO idea what this is going to end up being about. I found it interesting, though, that the tests were given names and that you could choose which one you were going to take. Maybe that in and of itself is not interesting, but I thought it was very cool that they were all named after moons of Jupiter- most notably, the Galilean Satellites- my most ambitious experimental liquid crystal film project to date! How serendipitous! I chose "Callisto."

I was hoping that the name of the test meant that we'd be quizzed on our knowledge of said moon/mythological figure. I would have swept it! Alas, it was more of a psychological test. Needless to say, my psyche wasn't in the best condition, but I sucked it up and put on a happy Dharma face.

I was ushered into a booth by a hot guy (no pics, sorry). There was another cute guy in the booth. Forgive me for being shallow for a moment, but Comic-Con isn't exactly filled with smiling male hotness, so it kind of stands out. To be fair, the Dharma women were also very beautiful, as you can (kind of ) see in the pic. Fantastic. Two hot guys and a potential "audition" taping of sorts and I feel like crap!

They were very friendly, though. I tried not to be nervous. I sat down... in the wrong chair. D'oh! I sat down again. Okay. First objective met: sit! Before I even started answering questions, guy #2 observed and took notes (I shall call him "The Silent One" because he said almost nothing the whole time). Guy #1 explained how everything was going to go down.

I was given a set of headphones and told to watch a television screen. A female voice spoke to me. I was told to hold a number up to the camera and state my full name, looking into the camera. I noticed that the camera I was told to speak to was NOT the one doing the recording- there were two other cameras on either side. If this had been an actual interview, I'd have freaked out completely. Who was on the other side of those cameras?

A countdown commenced. I was asked to say the word "continuum" three times, louder with each iteration. I was asked how I felt. The test continued with other questions ("If anything is possible, is nothing also possible?") and a series of images for which I had to say the first word that came to mind. The test ended by asking me what peace sounded like. I think it was peace, anyway. Something tranquil. "Water" was my answer. Most of this test is available online at www.dharmawantsyou.com for anyone who wants to play along. The only real difference is the pressure. The online test is multiple choice and NOT videotaped. Also, I think there is only one test.

I passed! Okay, I haven't heard of anyone not passing, but I was told that they liked that I seemed confident in most of my answers. Yay me! I was given a card with a number and a bar code. I was told I was not to show anyone the card or the number, and that if I did, I would be disqualified. I have used the number so far to register on the site, but the bar code has not come in handy yet.

I had decided to head to the airport immediately after my test so that I could try to get on an earlier flight, or, failing that, at least sit still and watch some videos for a while. I ended up sitting at the terminal for several hours and finally arriving in Denver at midnight. By the time I got home, I felt awful. I basically slept for the next three days. Oh, and I made an origami crane out of the Dharma flyers from Comic-Con (instructions for doing so were printed on the back):

Dharma Initiative recruitment flyer origami crane

Dharma Initiative recruitment flyer origami crane

Namaste!

(For those who don't watch "Lost," the Dharma Initiative is a group that is associated with that show and this is part of an ARG/viral marketing campaign for the next season.)

tags: arg, comic-con, dharma, dharma initiative, lost, recruitment, viral marketing
categories: stories, ufos
Friday 08.15.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Comic Con: Saturday Afternoon Panels

I love Battlestar Galactica. I had a few reservations about attending the panel, however. I don't watch the shows "live," I get them on DVD (no cable) and I don't like spoilers. None of that mattered, though. Despite the fact that I stood in line for an hour and a half, I wound up being about 20 people away from getting through the door. I just sat on the floor and watched the Lost panel on my iPhone (yes, it went online that fast) and playing Aurora Feint (obsessed) while I waited for the next panel: Chuck.

I keep getting stuck with Chuck! It's an interesting show and all, but I just haven't been sucked into it. And yet here I was watching the panel. It turned out to be entertaining, so I didn't mind sitting through it to secure a seat. I was really only hoping to be present for the final panel of the day: Fringe!

Fringe panel at Comic Con - J. J. Abrams, Roberto Orci, Alex Kurtzman, Bryan Burk, Jeff Pinkner, Anna Torv, Josh Jackson, and John Noble at the "Fringe" panel

Fringe panel at Comic Con - J. J. Abrams, Roberto Orci, Alex Kurtzman, Bryan Burk, Jeff Pinkner, Anna Torv, Josh Jackson, and John Noble at the "Fringe" panel

I'm totally excited for this show, I can't help it! The viral marketing has totally sucked me in (as has the fact that the team that created "Alias" is behind it). Unfortunately, I missed out on a massive Fringe-themed scavenger hunt that took place after the panel. D'oh! By the time I realized that the swag they handed me was actually a clue, I was already on the trolley out of town. Of course, when I went to seek clue #2 the next day it was over. By that time, though, I was feeling pretty rotten, so it was probably better that I'd slept.

J.J. Abrams is one cool guy. I like almost everything he's ever been involved with (and of course, he gave me the coolest laptop ever). Most of the panel questions were directed at him (it's hard to come up with questions for a show you haven't seen yet and for which they will offer no spoilers). He talked about his love of fan involvement in the form of mystery solving (duh) and how much he enjoyed finding the "Nina's" in Al Hirschfeld cartoons. He certainly offers his fans plenty of Nina's! He also told the story of the "mystery box:" His uncle (? I think) used to take him to a magic shop. They sold something called a "mystery box." It was a box that cost $15 and they promised that there was about $75 worth of stuff in it (these are the numbers I remember- don't kill me if they aren't accurate). He saved up the $15 and bought the box, but found that the mystery was more compelling than the actual booty inside. He has yet to open the box. Yeah, he's kind of my hero!

Fringe at Comc-Con - J. J. Abrams, Roberto Orci, and Alex Kurtzman

Fringe at Comc-Con - J. J. Abrams, Roberto Orci, and Alex Kurtzman

I still don't know a whole lot about the show. I didn't see the premiere, but I got to see enough at this panel to know that it is not an "X-files" ripoff, as some have suggested. I also know that Anna Torv is one of the most compelling people to look at. She didn't say a lot, but she kept catching my attention. She's gorgeous and has a "deep in thought" sort of aire. Josh Jackson and John Noble also have that feel to them. You know that thing where you see someone in a store and you think "wow, that guy looks like he could be an interesting character in a movie. He seems shrouded in mystery. Maybe he leads a double life! Yeah, he's a spy or a brilliant scientist whose views are too far-out for the mainstream scientific community, but he's actually got information that could save us all..." (Or am I the only one who sizes people up in this way?) Whoever is in charge of casting for his shows is brilliant, IMO.

Fringe at Comic-Con - Anna Torv and Josh Jackson

Fringe at Comic-Con - Anna Torv and Josh Jackson

tags: anna torv, comic-con, fringe, jj abrams, josh jackson, scavenger hunt
categories: stories, ufos
Wednesday 08.13.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Comic-Con: Saturday Morning Cartoons

Turns out that missing the "Lost" panel was a good thing. It was on youtube later (no surprises there). Of course, Matthew Fox was there (drool), but he probably would have been a mere speck on the stage, so faint that like a distant Messier object, one would only have been able to see him by not looking directly at the stage. I digress. This thing is about comics anyway, right? Sheesh. I decided to go see the "Tori Amos: Comic Book Tattoo" panel instead. I now had plenty of time to stand in line and Tori is one of my personal heroes. We share a birthday and a mutual long-term relationship with the piano.

I got there pretty early and there was no line, so I decided to sit in on the Ralph Bakshi panel. Sadly, it was pretty empty for being one of the more inspirational and interesting panels there. I probably enjoyed it much more than I would have enjoyed the "Heroes" panel, to be quite honest (and I haven't seen it on youtube yet). This guy is one of the big "oldschool" animators. He directed "Fritz the Cat" and the animation for "Cool World." He's a feisty New Yorker with a serious hatred for the current presidential regime administration. He seems optimistic about the medium of animation and offered advice on how to overcome financial limitations, even arguing that they essentially make you a better filmmaker! What a cool panel!

The Tori panel was even more inspirational! "Comic Book Tattoo" is an anthology of comics. Each comic is drawn by a different artist and makes up a story for songs that she has written. One needed to purchase said book in order to get an autograph from the artists and Tori later on, but it is about 490 pages and my back hurt. I've never been big on autographs and there was other stuff I wanted to see. Amazon.com it is (still waiting for it).

Several of the artists were there, Tori, of course, was there- and in an outrageous outfit, to boot (don't worry. I'm not going to offend your eyes with another blurry, bright and distant photo)! It was a very open panel, with each artist talking about their fears and struggles as an artist, even Tori. It made me want to tackle all of my projects and feel... not so insane (and not so guilty for the break I've taken from the heaviness lately). I can't wait to take a look at the book.

tags: comic book tattoo, comic-con, ralph bakshi, tori amos
categories: animation, stories, ufos
Monday 08.11.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Comic-Con: Saturday Insanity

This was when I started feeling like crap. I attributed it to the muscle relaxers I was taking for a back injury, so I stopped taking them, which, of course, made me feel even more uncomfortable. Still, I got up at 5:30 so that I could go stand in line for the "Lost" panel. The "Heroes" panel was right before it and I saw that all of the stars were going to be there. They don't clear out the rooms between panels, so you kind of need to get into the panel before it if you really want a chance to be there. I like "Heroes," so I didn't mind, but it meant that I needed to get there early. The room seats 6,500 people, but you are competing with 200,000.

I got there at 7:30. This was about three hours before the "Heroes" panel. Turned out that wasn't early enough. This is what I saw:

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(many thanks to the rooftop security guards for taking this picture for me- they were super nice)

To give you an idea of the ridiculousness of this, the San Diego convention center is large enough to need two train station stops. This line went along the last eighth of this in the front. Not so bad, right? Well the snakey line in my picture looped around about 15 times. THEN, the line ran along the ENTIRE LENGTH of the back of the convention center, and ended at Seaport Village... at the ocean! Holy s*%t!!  Later, I heard that the line was estimated to be two and a half miles long!

Now, I'm a fan of the show, sure. But to stand in a line like this for over two hours with a bum back and the beginnings of a fever and maybe not even get into the panel seemed a little crazy to me. Particularly when I knew perfectly well that I wouldn't get a good seat and that the entire thing would be thrown up all over the internets within a matter of minutes. I decided to give the Dharma testing booth a chance. While there was a line to get to the exhibition floor, it wasn't nearly as long. I stood in line for about an hour and a half before the hall opened... and STILL I was too late to get a test! With one day left in the convention, I was beginning to think that it wouldn't happen.

tags: comic-con, dharma initiative, heroes, lost, people standing in line
categories: stories, ufos
Monday 08.11.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Comic-Con: Friday Fun Stuff

I feel like a dork for posting these things so late. I missed so much work being sick and whatnot that it's been kind of crazy for me to try to catch up. Anyway, I got to meet Lloyd Kaufmann (president of Troma films) at Cannes this year. My friend Pericles (director of "Loop," for which I made some 3D helicopters and various other fun things) directed a film for them several years ago- "Redneck Zombies" and introduced us. He sent me an e-mail informing me that Lloyd would be there at the Troma booth. I stopped by about a dozen times throughout the conference, but no luck. Llyod was never there. However, I did find a copy of Pericles's film!

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(Peri's film is on the lower right. Right above it is the film the South Park guys made while they went to my school. Special guest star: Stan Brakhage! Did you also know that he is the guy for whom Stan of South Park is named? The more you know...)

I also wandered around the exhibition space (oh yeah, I was once again too late to test for the Dharma Initiative recruitment program). I found an interesting little... seemed like a scavenger hunt of some kind. There was a card with a staticy pattern printed on it. You had to take a plastic sheet and place it over the card in order to decode it.

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(My phone has been acting up lately. It's very slow at doing everything, including taking pictures, which means the shutter stays open too long and blurs everything. Blah.)

I can only focus on one or two ARGs at a time and right now, I'm giving my love to Lost (though it's kind of trying our patience at the moment, I'm betting it will be fun once it gets going) and Fringe (more on that one later). I was interested in this one, though, because of the "seek the six" message. The Oceanic Six (a Lost reference)? Was it a Fringe reference (there's a six fingered hand print in some of the advertisements)? Later, I saw some cool sky writing:

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Okay, cool. I was intrigued enough to start the game. Turns out it's a reference to "The Prisoner," which they are going to be remaking. I'll watch it, but I'm not interested enough in the game to continue.

Friday night ended with the best solo dinner I've ever had: Nobu "The Sake" Jyunmai Daijingo and edamame followed by the black cod with miso at Nobu. It was SO good that I didn't even care that I was dining alone. The cod was the consistency of butter and just fell off in perfect bite-sized pieces. The miso sauce was just sweet and crispy enough... heaven.

tags: arg, args, comic-con, lloyd kaufmann, loop, pericles lewnes, redneck zombies, seek the six, south park, stan brakhage, the prisoner
categories: stories, ufos
Sunday 08.10.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Comic-Con: Friday Panels

Friday was my favorite day. It was the last day I remember actually feeling well before coming down with West Nile or adult onset mono or whatever the hell it was I ended up getting sick with. Today I learned how to be a panel camper. I'm a Joss Whedon fan, so I wanted to make sure I got a good seat for his panel. I wanted to stay for the two that followed- Seth MacFarlane 'toons. This was my first Comic-Con, but one doesn't need to be a seasoned geek veteran to know that such things might be popular and it might be necessary to show up early. It does help when one wants to cut in line, though. I didn't really know that I had, but the next day, I discovered that I had accidentally cut hours of standing out of my day. I'm a lousy liar, so my real ignorance helped me pull off such a feat.

Though I got to sit down, I have to admit, I was mostly texting friends throughout the "Stargate" panels that preceded. I just haven't gotten into that show (but I liked the movie). Anything that comes on Sunday afternoons on Fox makes me feel a little ill. I don't have cable, either, so that's the only version of the show I have seen. Still, the actors were pretty funny. Most of the jokes they were making were broad enough to be funny to anyone, so I was satisfied.

The Joss Whedon panel was excellent. The writers and stars of "Dr. Horrible's Sing Along Blog" were there. If you aren't familiar with it, get familiar with it. Trust me. I am now an adorer of Felicia Day. Halfway through the panel, she admitted that she was "twittering under the table." Of course, this was sex joke kindling and the panel burst into teasing, which I'm sure was quite embarrassing. Besides feeling her pain*, I thought "how cool!" Since I've been back, I've looked her up on facebook and twitter and imdb and... Turns out that she is also a geek goddess: musician, mathematician, gamer, web designer, actress, filmmaker... She might be our queen, in fact. I am now a fan. The panel was just plain fun. I was relatively close to the stage, but my iPhone took better pictures of the screen:

Joss Whedon

Joss Whedon

Dr. Horrible Comic Con Panel - Joss Whedon, Simon Helberg (Moist), Felicia Day (Penny), Neil Patrick Harris (Dr. Horrible) and Nathan Filion (Captain Hammer)

Dr. Horrible Comic Con Panel - Joss Whedon, Simon Helberg (Moist), Felicia Day (Penny), Neil Patrick Harris (Dr. Horrible) and Nathan Filion (Captain Hammer)

(they are all so pensive, n'est-ce pas?)

The following panel consisted of the cast of "American Dad." You can clearly see all of them in the below photos, right?

American Dad panel at Comic Con

American Dad panel at Comic Con

It doesn't matter. They're cartoon voices. You probably don't even know what they look like. Should've done a sound recording. Anyway, I was like a giddy kid at this panel. It was split into three parts. The first part consisted of a table read (almost as sexy as a dance, but more implicit). Seeing real people do the voices of the characters I loved was like magic. It was particularly cool to see Seth McFarlane do several voices (including Patrick Stewart, who was not there to do Deputy Director Bullock). Cool and weired. It's strange to hear cartoon voices come out of real people.

The second part of the panel consisted of the voices set to animatics (rough black and white sketches- kind of like moving storyboards). The final part was the completed thing- colors, music and all. As an animation geek, I thoroughly enjoyed it.

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The last panel of the day was for "Family Guy." The cast was there (Seth Green!) and did the voices, but kind of randomly. I like that show better, but I thought the American Dad panel was more interesting. They also showed a trailer for "The Cleveland Show." Eh. I feel it's kind of pushing it. But I'll probably end up watching it. The funniest moment for me was when Mike Henry, who does several voices on the show, did an impression of his character Fouad, "that foreign guy at work" who helped Peter understand humor. He's one of my favorite randomly recurring characters because of his "ability" to point out obvious jokes. Example:

Peter: I think Fouad is an illegal immigrant, and I cannot stand by while he steals wages and opportunities from citizens. I mean, this is an American company! You don't see Nike or Microsoft or General Motors or Ford or Boeing or Coca-Cola or Kellogg's profiting from non-American labor.

Fouad: [in the hallway] Oh-ho-ho! Is funny because they all do! Oh-ho-ho!

Seth Green took a photo of the audience and asked us to raise our hands. He said he would e-mail it to us. "Fouad" replied, "Oh-ho-ho! Is funny because there’s no way he can!"

*I was on a press screening panel once for the New York Film Festival. A fellow filmmaker (and friend, so I will not name names) told the press that my films were "what they might show in insane asylums on Mars." I was kind of speechless. I just leaned into the microphone and said, "thanks... I think." I think I turned about 20 shades of red. Turns out she meant it as a compliment (?) Later, the New York times wrote that my film series was "Churning and relentlessly, abstract, it's not easy to watch." Which, apart from being an oddly constructed sentence, sucked (especially since they reviewed the next film as "cinematic poetry"). I'm not blaming. I'm just sayin'...

tags: american dad, comic-con, dr horrible, family guy, felicia day, geek girls, joss whedon, nathan filion, neil patrick harris, nph, seth green, seth macfarlane, simon helberg
categories: ufos
Thursday 08.07.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Comic-Con: Thursday

I got a late start on Thursday. All of those little details like getting to the airport, getting the car, finding your friend's sister's house, finding the trolley car station, finding a printer to print your stupid registration code because you left it on your desk at work... My first impressions of the whole event were "wow, that's a whole lotta people" and "does this building ever end?" In other words: big! At the very minimum, there were 135,000 people there. Some reports claim that there were 200,000. Even at the lower end, that's more than the entire population of the city in which I live. It's even more than Gorilla City (not the city in which I live)!

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My first stop was the Octagon Global Recruiting booth. Of course, there was no chance of getting "tested" this late in the day. I was told to come back earlier in the day. Which was either a hint at the time travel aspects of the show, or a suggestion that I return tomorrow. I assumed it was the time travel, but I left my flux capacitor at home, so...

Basically, I just explored the exhibition floor (about 616,000 square feet of space dedicated to advertising and comic art) and was overwhelmed with swag of the... unremarkable... type. I got to see Mike Nelson (of MST3K fame) and Richard Hatch (Battlestar Galactica- both incarnations) on the autograph floor (no cameras). The biggest surprise of the day was coming face-to-face with Lou Ferrigno (TV's Incredible Hulk), just... hanging out on the exhibition floor. The guy is huge:

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(bad picture, I know, but I feel strange taking people's pictures- is it just me, or does he look a little green and morphing in this photo?)

I pretty much spent the rest of the day figuring out what I was going to do with the rest of my time there and eating salad at the California Pizza Kitchen. Remarkable, I know. Hey, it was my first Comic-Con. Looking back, I realize how much I missed out on, but it takes a lot to orient oneself. Especially traveling alone.

tags: comic-con, lou ferrigno, thursday
categories: ufos
Tuesday 08.05.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Comic-Con Reflections

In many ways, I considered Comic-Con to be the anti-Cannes. Technically speaking, it's not a film festival, but it hosts a few (anime, children's films, along with nightly film screenings). I lump them together in a category I call "Geek Havens." Comic-Con is the geek winner, for sure. Many people go to Cannes without a real passion for movies, just a hope that they can sip champagne with someone famous. I think the Comic-Con goers were as interested in drinking champagne as the yacht-goers were in theorizing about Lost (oh, have I mentioned that Lost is my favorite television show of all time?) At Cannes, the rich and famous are the ones catered to. Everyone else has to shuffle along the sidelines, standing tip-toed to see the pretty people on the yachts. Well, at Comic-Con, the consumer is the one catered to. Whether you like a movie or not has no effect on its winning the Palme d'or, but it has a huge effect on profits. The companies at Comic-Con want nothing more than to make you happy so that you will go on to your blog and write about how much you can't wait for Fringe, how much you liked the pilot, and how it is nothing like the X-Files (ahem). The companies are scrutinizing and watching and surveying and sweating, hoping they can please the crowds. Superficially speaking, I don't fit the "demographic" so I like throwing wrenches into the works. I like discussing Herzog and Brakhage as much as I do pop culture. I liked and hated both Cannes and Comic-Con. Mostly for different reasons, but crowds were the common element of the "I want to go home" feeling.

I'll be posting some of my favorite (and least favorite) moments from Comic-Con over the next few days.

tags: comic-con, jj abrams, lost
categories: stories, ufos
Sunday 08.03.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

The Wait is Over

Let me offer up another excuse for not blogging. Uh... My dog ate it. Actually, my neighbor's dog ate it. I mean, just look at her, hiding her guilt:

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I can't blame an innocent dog. The truth lies somewhere between fever, an aching back and depression.

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Depression: So, I didn't get the apprenticeship. I'm sure it was a highly competitive program, but I really thought I could nail it. I don't have the "industry experience" to get a mid-level job and it seems that most entry-level positions have direct channels from film schools these days. Honestly, though, I don't feel that a 40K job warrants a 100K film school education. I'm "self-taught." Most people think I studied film in school, even film professors who work at the school from which I got my French degree. That's right, I have a degree in French. Remember the scene in "Groundhog Day" in which Rita (Andie MacDowell) admits that she has a degree in French? I believe Phil's (Bill Murray) response is, "Ha! What a waste of time! I mean... for someone else that would be an incredible waste of time. How... bold... of you to choose that..."

Yeah. Though I won't say it was a "waste of time," I also wouldn't say it was a "bold" choice. I did get to live in France and it comes in handy whenever I go to Cannes. However, recruiters do not value my broadened horizons as much as I do. They pretty much take Phil's point of view. I am 100% self-taught. I have never taken a software course, nor have I taken a film production course. And still, I've had films in most major film festivals. I've won awards and prizes and have made dozens of short films. I've taught myself After Effects, ZBrush and Maya (which is no small feat). I've taught myself how to shoot, edit and composite films. Yet I can't get a job in film! Honestly, I think the self-discipline it takes to do all of this on one's own far outweighs the production formulas one gleans from a film studies degree. What it doesn't outweigh is the connections or the standard VFX demo reel involving some sci-fi character walking down a city street, blowing something up and then flying away. Seriously, do a demo reel search someday...

Aching back: yeah, I frakked up my back. That's why there was no frakking blogging from Comic Con. I couldn't carry even my micro laptop. Though I did score a big frakkin bag:

Big frakkin bag

Big frakkin bag

Told you.

Fever: People are fond of saying "everything happens for a reason." Have you ever noticed that people only say this when bad stuff happens? Many people tried to reassure me that I didn't get this job for a reason (of course there was a reason, I'm just not convinced that it was a good one).

They estimate that close to 200,000 people attended Comic Con this year. I was holed up with them for four days. I wasn't too surprised to return with a viral infection (though it got a little scary and still might be lingering). Honestly, I couldn't move my eyes or look at a computer monitor. I did think it would be rather freaky to be alone in a new city (especially one as crazy as L.A.), vying for a highly competitive job with a 101 degree fever and uncertain health insurance status. Oh yeah, and then have to go through an earthquake on my second day there... Okay, maybe I'm a little happy I didn't get the job.

tags: apprenticeship, battlestar galactica, comic-con, cute dog, groundhog day, rhythm and hues
categories: ufos
Saturday 08.02.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
Comments: 2
 

The Waiting Game

So, I thought I would give my blog readers a little glimpse of what I have been going through over the past few weeks (and offering up yet another excuse for blog slacking). Last week, I applied for an apprenticeship at Rhythm & Hues Studios in Los Angeles. It would be an amazing opportunity to get some experience on the professional "industry" side of filmmaking (uncharted territory for me), and potentially continue on to more industry projects. Don't get me wrong, I've loved working on indie projects and my own work (which falls into the realm of "avant-garde"), but a girl's got to pay the rent. I'd also like more of my challenges to be creative and collaborative- "doing things" rather than "finding work outside of my day job," which seems to be my big challenge after leaving New York. In fact, I'd say that is the greatest challenge when it comes to independent filmmaking, no matter what your role: finding work, finding money, finding talent, finding locations, finding time, finding finding finding... it's miraculous that DIY films can even get finished, let alone end up "good." This apprenticeship is specifically geared toward texture painting, which an obsessive, observant person like myself actually loves doing (for example: though I love the stories and the animation of both Ratatouille and WALL*E, I just couldn't get over how cool the tiled kitchen floors and blocks of trash looked). It would also be perfect timing, as the apprenticeship starts the day after Comic-Con ends, giving me plenty of time to drive straight from San Diego to Los Angeles without flying back to Denver. I pumped up my demo reel to (hopefully) highlight my texture painting abilities. I offer the new, improved version below. Sorry about the bad censor box. I don't want the world to have my phone number, though. :)

It took me a couple of solid weeks of work to get my demo reel, application, resume and cover letter all in order. I dropped it in the mailbox last Monday and waited. And waited. And I'm still waiting. I leave for Comic-Con tomorrow morning at 5:00 AM and I still don't know if I should be packing for three days or three weeks! The frustrating part is that it's not as simple as "you haven't heard yet, just assume it's not happening, kid." The postmark deadline for the application was only a week ago, meaning applications might still even be trickling in! They've really only had a few days to look at all of the submissions. Cutting it close...

But still, until my flight leaves tomorrow or I hear back from the studio, I'm holding on to that slight possibility of getting my foot in that oft-closed door that is the film industry.

(edit: posted later. Not sure why it didn't post the day I wrote it)

tags: apprenticeship, avant-garde, demo reel, hollywood, indie, los angeles, n 3D, rhythm and hues
categories: Uncategorized
Wednesday 07.23.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

Geek Goddess

No, that is not a misspelling, for I am a goddess of geek! I'm a 3D artist, a web designer, an ARG player, a film nut, a sci-fi nerd, a martial artist, and an amateur astronomer, yet I love a good Sephora shopping trip, dressing up for a night of dancing, spa treatments, and would own quite a few more pairs of shoes if I could afford them (alas, zBrush is just too expensive and if given the choice, I could more happily live without the Louboutins). The ultimate proof of my geek status is that I can't wait to get to Comic-Con this year! Yes, I am going and yes, I do plan on bringing my mini-laptop so that I can blog away. The ultimate deciding factor for me this year was the strange commercial that played during the season finale of Lost (no spoilers here, I promise). The commercial was for "Octagon Global Recruiting." They claimed to be seeking people to fill a variety of "unpaid" positions that included "former military" and "ichthyologist."

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Ichthyologist? When have you ever seen a commercial on prime time television advertising an unpaid position for an ichthyologist (Professor Frink voice: ahem, that would be a fish scientist, m'hey)?

Of course I knew that it had to be the start of a new between-seasons ARG like "The Lost Experience" (glayven)! I missed out on that one, so I wanted to be sure that I caught the start of this one. I immediately went to www.octagonglobalrecruiting.com and entered my e-mail address. Several things about the site caught my attention: their "recruitment dates" and location coincided exactly with Comic-Con, the recruitment was for the Dharma Initiative (big players in the Lost drama), and the site was sponsored by ABC, with a bit of wording in the legal disclaimer concerning "contest submissions." (There are other "interesting things," but I will spare you the details.)

I'm a HUGE fan of the show and its creator, J.J. Abrams. I had a bit of luck with one of his other projects earlier this year, so I figured if there is a contest having anything to do with Lost to be won, I was going to go for it. It turned out that it wouldn't be too expensive for me to go to Comic-Con and there were dozens of other reasons why attending such an event might be fun. And so, off to San Diego I shall travel next moth, Dharma Initiative costume in hand...

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Okay, I'm not quite this guy. Yet. (or am I?)

(now in Comic Book Guy voice: for those of you unfamiliar with the show, that would be the outfit of Claire Bennet, the Indestructable Cheerleader from "Heroes." This was her season 1 cheerleading outfit with the Wildcats logo which was changed from the original Trojans logo from the pilot, thank you.)

tags: cheerleader, comic-con, geek, heroes, lost, octagon global recruiting, octagonglobalrecruiting, simpsons
categories: ufos
Friday 06.27.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
Comments: 5
 

ch-ch-ch-changes!

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I'm giving The Cutting Room Floor a much-needed makeover. While the "Darkwater" theme that comes as a plugin with WordPress was very nice, I didn't really think that it visually represented me as accurately as it could. I feel that this new imagery does a much better job. The background image is something I made in Maya. I took great care to be as accurate as I could. I measured out a typical piece of 35mm film, complete with Dolby, SDDS and optical soundtracks, accurately measured out the sprocket holes, aspect ratio, etc. For the texturing (which involves the colors, images, and actual "texture"), I made as detailed a reproduction as I could in Photoshop and then applied it to my filmstrips. I then mapped the color channel into the transparency channel and set a slight bump map to accurately portray the ridges of the film emulsion. I rendered the whole thing with mental ray. That was a whole lot of technical! If you understood it, cool. If not, just check out the images and marvel at their accuracy and coolness. :) I've been working on it for a while and just got the time to render it recently. Below- the Photoshop reference image :

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Compare that to this image from wikipedia. The most interesting part to make was the soundtrack. The "static" shapes between the sprocket holes contains the information for the Dolby Digital soundtrack (see the little "DD" symbol? that's really there!), the two blueish strips of "noise" on the edges contain the information for the SDDS track and the black and white sine wave patterns are the optical soundtrack, read by a lightbulb in the projector.

Pretty cool, eh? I stuck some countdown leader in the middle of the frames and then deformed the strips and added some cool glowey light and some metallic sphere thingies in a sort of "orbit" around the light (just going back to the astronomy interests). I'd love to hear feedback on it- especially if you find it detrimental to the blog reading experience. I tried to be kind to the eyes and I'm still working on the page layout...

tags: 3d, art, dolby digital, film, maya, modeling, movies, rendering, SDDS, sountrack, texturing
categories: web development
Thursday 06.19.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
Comments: 3
 

What We Still Don't Know...

Boy, if this post really tried to sum all of that up, it would be a really long post! I guess a better title for it would be "a specific question that we still cannot answer:"

Why does the moon look so big when it is close to the horizon and so small when it is higher in the sky?

(told you I'd write about this soon)

You may think you know the answer. We've all heard the most popular one- the "horizon perspective" explanation- which claims that it only "appears" bigger because you are seeing it next to houses and trees and whatnot, but as this NASA article shows, that does not fully explain it. In fact, no one really knows for sure! Is it because of the apparent "dome" shape of the sky? Is it happening at the level of the physical mechanics of our eyes? Is it all in our heads? Has the moon moved to be physically closer to the Earth? Um probably not that one- and as you can see in the photo below- it IS an illusion, captured only by our eyes/brains. It's one of my favorite mysteries, and one that has been around as long as we have been looking at the moon (which is a pretty long time).

Moon rise in Seattle- photography can’t capture the moon illusion!

Moon rise in Seattle- photography can’t capture the moon illusion!

(photo by Shay Stephens January 30, 2002)

The moon will be ginormous tomorrow night. The little squiggly red underline tells me that my spell checker thinks that ginormous is not a word, but according to the Oxford English Dictionary, it has been around since 1948. Back to the point- it will be huge. This is because it is the full moon closest to the summer solstice, which means it will be lower in the sky (because it is opposite the sun and the sun is highest in the sky... you know, the NASA article explains it better). If you have clear skies, be sure to check it out.

tags: illusion, moon, NASA, solstice
categories: ufos
Tuesday 06.17.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 
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