Friday, April 30, 2010

Save The Seeker campaign tips

Tip #1: If you are blogging on Wordpress.com, you can use tags to create or populate pages like Save The Seeker. See the Save The Seeker blog for more examples.

Tip #2: If you blog ANYWHERE, please mention ABC Studios and Disney's names. Many companies are now monitoring the Internet for mentions of their names. You can let them know you want them to hear your voice by using "ABC Studios", "Disney", and "Legend of the Seeker" in your blog articles.

Tip #3: Link to as many Save The Seeker sites as you can. Don't make the mistake of just linking to one site. Link to them all!

Tip #4: Link to the Tweets of famous celebrities who join the campaign. For example, Felicia Day wants to Save The Seeker. She has almost 2 million followers. LOTS star Bridget Regan also Retweeted the slogan.

Tip #5: Do NOT link to bad press articles. Entertainment Weekly attacked the Seeker fan community yesterday, obviously hoping to provoke angry reactions. There are plenty of good press reports about the campaign, such as TV Guide's Save The Seeker article, Spoiler TV's Save The Seeker article, and The Examiner's Save The Seeker report.

Tip #6: If you see a Facebook "LIKE" button on any pro-Seeker sites, click on it (if you have a Facebook account). Help get the word out and help show people that these sites are popular. This is a new feature from Facebook and not very many sites have added it yet, but it should appear on more and more.


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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Entertainment Weekly trolling with taunts to Seeker fan community

Entertainment Weekly's Hollywood Insider blog has taunted fans of Legend of the Seeker with insults, calling us a "small" and "rabid" community. This is clear and obvious attempt to draw angry fans in to comment on their blog, driving up their page views, getting more links, and increasing their advertising revenues.

I am advising Seeker fans to not respond to Entertainment Weekly. That is what they don't.

Don't post any more comments on their blog.

Don't link to the article.

Don't Tweet about it.

Don't express anger or outrage over it.

Just ignore them.

The blog article publishes no new information -- it cites no credible sources. EW's writer is practicing classic yellow journalism.

If ABC Studios decides to cancel the show, we can turn our efforts to asking for a movie or mini-series. We don't have to be silenced by one setback -- IF that setback happens.

Disney and ABC Studios, are you listening?

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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Update on the Save The Seeker campaign

So that was not Michael Hurst who Tweeted yesterday, just someone connected with Michael's Website (which is still cool).

In the meantime, The Torch Online and the Examiner have both carried stories about the campaign to save the Seeker.

The Save The Seeker blog has been posting updates frequently as new strategies are developed by the fans.

Fans are buying an ad in Variety, planning a Twitter Takeover on May 1, and are actively contacting U.S. sponsors of the show to ask for their support.

Some more visible Tweeters are also jumping on the bandwagon and retweeting the campaign slogans for fans.

Seeker fans are also voting for the show as Best On TV at the Faxo site. LOTS was leading by a wide margin the last time I checked the rankings.

ABC Studios and the Disney Company are, hopefully, aware of all this given all the emails fans are trying to send their way.

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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Michael Hurst retweets for Save The Seeker

Michael Hurst, who has directed in at least 5 or 6 Legend of the Seeker episodes and appeared in at least one has just retweeted stunt lady Dayne Porter Chiplin's encouragement to fans of the endangered show.
RT @Daynastunts what ever you guys are doing is obviously helping in some way, im not sure what else you can do, thank you
34 minutes ago via web

RT @Daynastunts Just dont give up hope till the official announcement!!!! Theres a reason why there hasnt been one yet
35 minutes ago via web

Follow Michael's Twitter account: MichaelHurstNow.

Thank you, Michael! We know you love the work you do and we hope you continue to work for a long time to come, but those of us who live outside New Zealand don't have many opportunities to appreciate what you do.

Fellow members of fandom, KEEP ASKING ABC NOT TO GIVE UP!

ABC Domestic Television, if you're reading this, have you checked out Tropins Blog? Look at the last paragraph:
If the show is so popular, then why was it cancelled? Tribune’s machinations may explain part of the problem but it could also be that Hulu and iTunes played a part in the Seeker’s failure to complete his quest. Is it time for ABC to launch a direct-to-Internet channel? Maybe that is a suggestion that the Seeker fans should put forward. It could help ABC save face and maybe spark a revolution in television programming that some feel is inevitable anyway.

That's all I'm sayin' -- FIND A WAY!

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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

New Save The Seeker blog

Well, despite the fact that producer Mike Sussman and star Bridget Regan have both paid their respects to a great show, fans of Legend of the Seeker are pressing on with their campaign to save or resurrect the show.

To help people keep up with the details of the campaign, I've created a blog (at someone else's suggestion) called SaveTheSeeker.wordpress.com.

I'm a little behind in adding links to the blogroll. I've put out a call for volunteers to help edit the blog -- please contact me if you're over 18 and want to help maintain the blog.

And I would like to personally thank the owners of these sites for picking up the news about the campaign and running with it:

Legend of the Seeker Fans Raise an Army against ABC
ABC Television Braves Irate Fans over Fantasy Show
Look out, ABC! Here Come the ANGRY Scifi Fans!
Angry Fans Gear up to Demand ABC save the Seeker
Internet Fans Rise up against ABC to save Show
Legend of the Seeker Fans May Boycott ABC Sponsors
Legend of the Seeker Fans Work to Revive Show


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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Seeker fans rally to save their favorite television show

So you've been sleeping under a rock and you just woke up to the news that Legend of the Seeker has just been cancelled. Technically, as the show's hardcore fans are quick to point out, "NOTHING OFFICIAL HAS BEEN SAID YET".

Following that thunderous chorus, fans of the television show are plotting a strategy to convince ABC/Disney to save the show. Among many ideas put forward already, they have launched a petition to Save Our Seeker which (as of this writing) has already collected over 5000 signatures.

Not bad.

SF-Fandom will help as much as I can throw my weight into the battle (I cannot speak for the rest of the team at SF-Fandom -- they are free to follow their hearts in this matter). You can see that I am spreading the word about Save Our Seeker wherever I can (and you have NO IDEA what I can do).

I especially like this banner that one of the fans dreamed up:

Save Our Seeker fans want to see a renewal for Season 3

I don't know where this is going, but I'll follow the road until I reach the journey's end.

Good luck to us all. :)

I'll post updates to SF-Fandom's Legend of the Seeker online promotion discussion.

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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Monday, April 26, 2010

New James Cameron interview about "Avatar"

Well, while Legend of the Seeker fans scrape themselves off the floor over the rumor that the show has been cancelled, we can still rejoice in the enthusiastic support for James Cameron's "Avatar". Here is an interview that was just posted to YouTube.



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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Cool new Legend of the Seeker widget

I don't know how long this widget will work. Hopefully a good long time. SLAM 360/Sander Moses has asked us to pick up a widget that promotes Legend of the Seeker.

Always glad to help out a good television show. We've embedded the widget on our LOTS fan site and on the Xenite Legend of the Seeker Forum home page.

And if your browser supports Flash, you can check out the widget here, too.



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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Warner Brothers announces LoTR Blu-Ray sweepstakes

A Warner Brothers representative dropped by the SF-Fandom forums to announce a Lord of the Rings sweepstakes announcement tied to their upcoming Blu-Ray release for Peter Jackson's "The Lord of the Rings" movies.

I mentioned this news in Episode 21 of Middle-earth Talk Radio, which we recorded last night. You can almost here me describe it (sorry about the audio quality -- that will be fixed in an updated version).

The chess set is designed "by The Noble Collection with an ancient map of Middle-earth mounted beneath the playing surface and a base with actual images of the memorable characters and scenes from the thrilling motion picture trilogy."

By the way -- when I said (on the talk show) that no one cared about TORN's birthday, I was only swept up in the passion of the competitive moment. Of course it's great that they've been going strong for 11 years. I check their site often and they are a great bunch of people.

Normally our off-the-cuff remarks are reviewed and edited before the Middle-earth Talk Radio episodes are released for download. I just wanted Hawke to get a scoop up on the Web this time.

So, congratulations to TheOneRing.net on their 11th birthday!

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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Episodes 20 and 21 of Middle-earth Talk Radio

For reasons I cannot explain, after Hawke uploaded Episode 20 it didn't quite fit into the new site for Middle-earth Radio. The old site is "dying" and Hawke is moving everything over to a NEW Middle-earth radio site (which, for the time being, can be reached by http://new.middleearthradio.com/.

When the link starts working, you should be able to download Episode 20 from this page (I get only partial content right now).

I was able, however, to download Episode 21 of Middle-earth Talk Radio.

Episode 21 actually carries some late-breaking news. You can almost hear me say it. I asked Hawke to upload the raw, unedited file because I thought it would be cool to get the news out. He normally adjusts the volume on my channel so when he gets around to editing the file he'll fix this.

About 22 minutes into the discussion Hawke asked me to check my microphone setting and he said things improved after that.

Normally you don't get to hear all the banter but I hope that doesn't detract from the show.

So, I hope you can download both shows and enjoy them.

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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

John Christopher's Tripods FAQ added to Xenite.Org

As we continue to upgrade the Xenite.Org network, we come across all sorts of little issues that have been hiding for a long time. Many years ago I wrote a WorldFAQ for the alt.fan-created-worlds news group about John Christopher's young adult books about the Tripods.

You might remember seeing a BBC television series based on the books. Here are the opening credits from that show:



Well, anyway, either I never uploaded the WorldFAQ to Xenite.Org or else it was lost during one of several server crises. So while updating the network this week I discovered an old copy of the WorldFAQ and I have published it to Xenite.Org.

John Christopher's Tripods is a nice read. It's classic science fiction without all the schlocky cliches that have become common and it lacks the pseudo-grittiness that plagues most current science fiction stories.

Check out the FAQ and if you can find the books, get them.

And while I'm talking about the most massive update to Xenite in years, I should mention that we've also updated our Xena: Warrior Princess Directory (Xena Online Resources). The link submissions queue had not been checked in a long time but it's now been caught up. The site still lists many GeoCities pages. Removing or updating those links will have to wait for another time.

We also shut down the old Hercules and Xena Banner Network. It had stopped working two years ago and I concluded that anyone still trying to connect to the banner server was probably not updating their site. So instead of fixing the problem I decided to just retire the service. If you've been hoping it will come back, I'm sorry.

Finally, we also just updated our Edgar Rice Burroughs fan site. Other sections of Xenite have been updated as well. Too many to mention here.

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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Friday, April 16, 2010

Arthur H. Landis' Camelot

I've been cleaning up old content on the Xenite network and this article, written many years ago, won't fit into the current structure of the domain without a lot of reworking. I may come back to the topic and write a WorldFAQ or feature article some day, but for now I'll just repost the article here because the old URL is going away.

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I don't know if Arthur Landis ever had a heyday. If he did I missed it. I came across the first of his Camelot books in a used bookstore in Atlanta. The book is a paperback with a pretty nice picture by Thomas Barber, Jr. of a man in armor holding a great sword overlooking a castle and a band of warriors. A somewhat attractive and slightly fur-covered woman is holding onto his left arm. I'm not sure you can tell she is covered with fur unless you know to look for it.

I like fantasy but do not like the King Arthur books that seem to have been flooding the market ever since Mary Stewart proved that T.H. White wasn't the only person who could do the job better than Mallory. So, the title threw me off a bit. "A world called camelot," thought I. "Not for me." But then I noticed the floating teddy bear. "This cannot be about King Arthur."

And it's not about King Arthur. It's a fantasy novel disguised as science fiction. Kyrie Fern, Adjuster for the Foundation, comes down to Camelot (whose inhabitants call it Fregis) to check things out. The Foundation is a mysterious benevolent agency that watches over primitive worlds, ensuring that Mankind doesn't destroy his brothers across the stars or some such thing like that. The story is less about how the Foundation intervenes when a world is in trouble than it is about how Kyrie finds the world of his dreams and the love of his life. It's a Fantasy.

Landis uses all sorts of cute little words and names that probably are meant as inside jokes. I'm not sure who the "in" crowd are, mind you. A World Called Camelot was published in 1976, but it was based on an earlier story Landis had published as Let There Be Magick under the pseudonym James R. Keaveny. JRK, AHL, JFK. I'm sure there is a connection in there somewhere.

Oddly, the original book was published by...The Camelot Publishing Company. Weird, huh? It's going to get weirder.

Fern tells us in fairly simple, plain English that he was travelling through a Vermont-style countryside. I've never been to Vermont, and when I think of Vermont I usually confuse it with New Hampshire and remember Ethan Allen's Green Mountain Boys (where were they from, anyway?). Well, at least I don't think of Maine and those awful accents from Murder, She Wrote (except Jessica didn't have an accent, did you notice?).

So, Kyrie is trundling down a road in Vermont-style countryside that I'm picturing as New Hampshire-style landscape (even though I've never been there, either) and I'm waiting for Ethan Allen and the boys to jump out of the trees and demand that Kyrie give up the cart for the sake of the colonies. You see, Kyrie decides that the world is not really like "Vermont-land" but rather is more like "England-isle". How could the ghost of Allen let that one go by?

You know this story is going to be interesting, however, once you get past the Vermont-land and England-isle stuff. Fern decides that the people who have converted Vermont-land to a faux-Medieval paradise with all their castles would envy the real thing he sees twenty miles ahead of him (through his purple contact lenses which give him telescopic and microscopic vision). By the way, did I mention that Fern has more gadgets than James Bond and Maxwell Smart combined? It's still a fantasy, story, believe me.

"Anyone looking...would see...green ski pants tucked into soft leather boots with golden spurs" Kyrie tells us as he describes himself. He obviously knows he has a reading audience, so we must be reading his memoirs. He finishes this stylistic knightly outfit with "a heavy green shirt opened to the waist in the purported style of the country, and a green jacket and green cap with a contrasting bright red feather." So, one quickly gets the impression that Kyrie is dressed from head to toe in green. I'm not sure, after all the times I've read the story, what the significance is.

Kyrie gives us a little bit of Galactic history. About all I can say is that it doesn't much impact on Camelot-Fregis, except that Fern soon finds out he is on his own (except for a comm-link to an orbiting spaceship). The important thing is that we learn Kyrie was sent to "adjust" the situation because two of the Foundation's spies (called "Watchers") were shown a horrific future in a crystal ball. Magic (or, Magick) works on Camelot, and the Foundation has through two Galactic Centuries not managed to figure out how or why.

Prophesies are never fully explained in the Camelot books, but the Magick is (sort of) finally explained. It works on a molecular level (shades of Arthur C. Clarke). By this time I've been impressed by the remote resemblance of Landis' space-faring Foundation to that of Isaac Asimov's Time-spanning Eternity. I don't see any connection to Asimov's Foundation, except Fern has all these micro-gizmos that would make an Asimovian Foundation Trader's heart flutter.

Landis invents some interesting politics as these stories unfold. There are two continents, one in the north and one in the south, which seem to be divided into Good Guys (the north) and Bad Guys (the south). The Bad Guys are led by a creature called the Kaleen and the Good Guys are aided by little furry creatures called Pug-Boos. But once Kyrie sails to the southern continent, things no longer seem so cut and dried.

I like these stories and have read them time and again. I don't know how well or poorly they sold but if you can find them in a used bookstore somewhere, scoop them up. They are well worth the purchase price. Landis' story is bit bizarre in places, but Fern is an unusual hero who seems to just be having fun in the old-fashioned sense. There's nothing wrong with that.

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SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Andrew Niccol returning to genetics-based SciFi film

Andrew Niccol ("The Truman Show", "Gattaca", "S1mOne", "Lord of War") is reportedly developing a new movie called "I'm Mortal" which is set in a near future timescape. Humanity has conquered the aging process and people use time from their lives to pay for goods and services.

MTV has more information.

I'm not sure I would want to live in a world like that. Maybe the movie will show some people become self-sufficient, maybe not. I would certainly prefer self-sufficiency to selling off part of my lifespan.

SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Australians begin the Borg process ...

Quick! Call Steve Austin! His bionic eye has been found in Australia, but it appears to have been assimilated into Borg technology.

According to Science Daily researchers from the University of South Wales have announced details of a bionic eye device that should help improve vision in people who have suffered "degenerative vision loss caused by retinitis pigmentosa and age-related macular degeneration."

The device, which is a miniature camera mounted on glasses, apparently wires directly into the retina, sending visual signals that the brain then sorts out.

Our ability to connect to the brain is, I admit, far surpassing the limits I thought would hold steady in my lifetime.

People who are fitted with these types of devices may have to endure a few "Six Million Dollar Man" and Borg jokes, but I'm sure the restoration of useful eyesight will be more than worth it.

SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Tad Williams speaks with Xenite.Org

While promoting his new book, Shadowrise, Tad Williams invited Xenite.Org to interview him for the Web. We love interviewing writers and actors so we readily agreed. The team conferred, came up with a list of questions, and I was able to get the ball rolling pretty quickly.

Okay, so Shadowrise was published in March -- which was when all the other Tad Williams interviews appeared. We had a few delays in the process but the interview is now finally live.

Be sure to drop by Xenite.Org and read An Interview with Tad Williams. It's packed full of interesting questions, anecdotes, background information, pictures -- well, if you're familiar with Xenite.Org then you know it's NOT just another interview about a book.

Be sure to let me know what you think. And if you're a Tad Williams fan, we'll appreciate your letting your friends know about the interview. I'm sure they'll be interested, too.

SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Indiana University scientist challenges Stephen Hawking's black hole theory

So, Stephen Hawking proposed in 1971 (or thereabouts) that black holes will eventually radiate themselves into nothingness (not the supposed nothingness that black holes are because they actually contain a lot of mass). As far as I can tell, Hawking's postulate has been generally accepted by the scientific community. One day the universe will consist of nothing but black holes and then one day after that the universe will consist of nothing but the heat that the black holes radiated away into.

Or something like that.

But now Nikodem Polawski of Indiana University has put some science into a speculative thought that millions of people have shared: What if black holes open out into other universes?.

Poplawski has suggested (in math I'm not qualified to discuss) that the universe could actually be "inside" a black hole that is sucking matter from another universe, and that perhaps all the black holes in our universe are sucking matter into their own universes.

The Big Bang, according to a theory called the Einstein-Rosen bridge, might be a white hole that is channeling energy (and matter) into the universe from some "future" black hole. That is, Poplawski's work combined with everyone else's work suggests that perhaps the universe is recycling matter/energy either from the future or from another universe (which exists in a lattice of universes through which a lot of matter/energy is flowing).

At least, that's my layman's grasp of the concept. White holes supposedly don't exist for very long. Think of all the water flowing out of the bottom of a self-sealing tank very rapidly. That is sort of how a white hole might behave: it drains the contents of something else and then closes up (vanishes).

The universe is supposedly expanding outward (into a nothingness or somethingness that is larger than the universe itself). Most scientists assume that universal expansion will eventually lead to a time when future inhabitants of galactic clusters will only be able to see their own galactic clusters, and even more chronodistant inhabitants of galaxies will only be able to see their own galaxies.

Eventually, everything will supposedly have moved so far away that whatever is left will just die down and stop interacting and all the bajillions of fragments of what was once the universe we see today will vanish.

That seems rather depressing, I suppose, and attempts to quantify the amount of time that elapses before this final fate (maybe 100,000,000,000 years) don't help. The universe just seems to be so finite when viewed in this clinical fashion.

Of course, one wonders how scientists justify their estimates for the size of the universe and how it is behaving. Their observations of the so-called Cosmic Background Radiation seem to confirm that there was a Big Bang-like event at some time in the past.

The problem with measuring the universe by the Cosmic Background Radiation is that it suggests the universe was larger than an infinitismally small point back when it supposedly burst into existence. To resolve that minor difficulty, scientists argue there must have been a period of Inflation soon after the birth of the universe in which space expanded quickly (faster than the speed of light) into what may now constitute about 13,000,000,000 light-years of space -- and then from there continued to expand outward (at less than the speed of light but with an accelerating velocity) toward the boundaries that we believe exist today.

Sound confusing? Yeah, it's all kind of weird science. But I don't have to defend or destroy it. My task is just to let it spin my head around and make me dizzy.

In the meantime, the scientists are still trying to figure it all out for themselves (and the rest of us). Good luck to all. See you in about 100 billion years.

SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

May the Force amuse you

Variety and other sources including MTV are reporting that LucasFilm Ltd. is planning to disturb the Force with a sitcom based in the Star Wars universe.

Here is an excerpt from the MTV take on the news:
Yesterday, Lucasfilm issued a press release revealing plans for an unusual new "Star Wars" TV series. Building on the success of high-profile parodies from the "Family Guy" and "Robot Chicken" crews, the Lucas camp is planning a sitcom series based on the famous galaxy far, far away. "Chicken" creators Seth Green and Matthew Senreich will be "creatively involved"; the show will also feature the writing talents of Brendan Hay ("Frank TV") and direction from Todd Grimes ("Back at the Barnyard").


With the recent news that SyFy will develop a sitcom, I suppose this is the next step in the evolution of science fiction TV. In a few more years we'll probably have science fiction cooking shows, fantasy home design shows, and Girls-and-Geeks game shows (oh, wait, we've already slogged through Beauty and the Geek).

Oh well. Science fiction TV was fun while it lasted. Now I guess we'll all have something to chortle about other than how clueless the Mundanes can be.

SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Another round of stories on the Neolithic Rhine princess

And the stories just keep on coming! More sites are picking up the news about the excavation of the burial site of a "Rhine princess" (aka the Princess of the Golden Woods) and the nearby City in the Trees.

I'm sure archaeologists will be discussing this news for years to come. So, anyway, here are some excerpts:

Dr. Ernst Voorst, Director of the Reinhard Van Gelder Institute of Anthropology and Archaeology, led an exuberant team in announcing the historic find earlier this week in Basel, Switzerland. Voorst hinted that this discovery vindicates the work that he and his colleague and mentor — the late Dr. Reinhard Van Gelder — had published a few years ago concerning two ancient fortresses on opposing sides of the Rhine Canyon.

Source: Day Loans

Now Professor Bonnet and her mentor, Dr. Voorst, have announced an astonishing discovery that is sure to set the European anthropological and archaeological community abuzz for years to come. A team of experts led by Dr. Voorst has excavated a grave site in a well-hidden part of the Black Forest region they dubbed the “golden wood”. The burial contained only one body, a female, and has been dated to approximately 10,000 BCE. Professor Bonnet, who holds the Chair of Rhine Valley Studies at the Van Gelder Institute, hinted that the body may not be either Neanderthal or modern Human.

Source: The Lobscouse Net

Nestled in what has now become known as the Golden Wood, the white fortress was the bastion of the apparent victors in a war that Voorst and his associates say occurred around 10,000-12,000 years ago. The archaeological community failed to rush to embrace the Voorst-Van Gelder expedition’s findings because they did not uncover any graves or find human remains.

Source: Day Change

It's a pretty big day for science, if you ask me. I'll probably spend many hours analyzing these reports, piecing together the entire complex picture that is slowly emerging. I hope you share that enjoyment, too.

SF-Fandom is a moderated, fan-run community devoted to science fiction, fantasy, history, and mythology. SF-Fandom was founded in 2001 and is part of the Xenite.Org network. Free registration is required to post. Please be sure you read our Posting Guidelines.

More news on the Rhine princess from the golden woods

This is turning out to be a pretty exciting day. The news about the excavations in the golden woods along the Rhine river has been spreading like wild fire. I guess a lot of people are as amazed as me that an entire ancient civilization could exist 10,000 years ago in the Black Forest region and we're only now just finding evidence about it.

Here are a few more excerpts from news stories:

Now this week Dr. Voorst has announced a follow up investigation reveals that the western culture apparently lived in trees but — probably at the end of the war — it simply packed up its homes, buried them, and then left. No one seems to know where they went, but one grave has finally been located. The nearly complete remains of a woman dubbed the Princess of the Golden Wood have been exposed for scientific scrutiny.

Source: Scourings

Earlier this week Dr. Voorst and his new team announced they had excavated the grave of a wooden princess in a small forest they call the “golden wood”, a region of the Black Forest that takes on a soft golden hue in the afternoon sunlight. Releasing pictures of the princes and her grave, Voorst and his colleague — French scientist Felecia Bonnet — have rebutted many critics’ doubts about Voorst’s earlier work.

Source: This Press

Now Dr. Voorst is gambling everything — his reputation and the credibility of his and Van Gelder’s institute — on what is sure to be a controversial new report about a “woodland princess” whose grave site led researchers to uncover nearby carefully preserved wooden artifacts — remnants of a prehistoric “city in the trees”.

Source: Cutting Edge

However, members of the expedition team say they have not yet decided whether to make part of the remains available for DNA analysis, which would answer many questions. The notion that a prehistoric war has been confirmed elicits extreme skepticism in the scientific community. “Where are the graves of the warriors?” one archaeologist who has spent 30 years digging around Europe asks in an anonymous news group posting. “Why has no one else documented these finds?”

Source: Eigen Decomposition

Critics of Dr. Voorst’s work suggest he may have overlooked significant information but Voorst’s team are adamantly insisting they have conducting a thorough and trustworthy investigation. The lone grave’s single occupant has been dubbed the “Princess of the Golden Wood” because her remains were so well-preserved. The scientists have not yet decided whether to submit a sample of the nearly perfectly preserved remains for DNA analysis.

Source: The Outlet Detector

As you can see, some controversy has already been stirred up. This makes for good, healthy science. Skeptics have not only a right to be heard, they have an obligation to make themselves heard. But I think it looks like the preponderance of the evidence is on the side of Dr. Voorst and his colleagues.

This could turn out to be another big find like the discovery of Homo Florienensis, the "hobbit" from Indonesia. What do you think?

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International archaeology team announces major Rhine valley discovery

Neolithic science just got rewritten. Scientists excavating a lone grave in a copse of woods that make up part of the Black Forest have announced a fascinating new discovery. Here are a few excerpts from articles I've found across the Web:

The grave site for the supposed princess reportedly led Professor Felecia Bonnet, a French anthropologist who teaches at the Van Gelder Institute, to discover buried ancient wooden platforms, walls, and other artifacts associated with a City in the Trees. The tree-dwelling humans appear to have lived in the region for many thousands of years and were closely associated with the white fortress on the western side of the Rhine. Excited members of the team uncovered and restored a road leading to the city and built a replica of its largest surviving house.

Source: Flanitos

The University of the Rhine accepted a bequest from Van Gelder’s will to establish the Reinhard Van Gelder Institute of Anthropology and Archaeology, which is now headed by Van Gelder’s longtime student and friend, Dr. Ernst Voorst. Voorst made headlines this week when he announced that further work in the Golden Wood had led to the discovery and excavation of a grave site for a female human from about 10,000 years ago. Dubbed the Princess of the Golden Wood, her burial led researchers to uncover wooden artifacts that are believed to have been used to construct homes in the treetops.

Source: Singona

The excavation of the female’s grave led to a stunning discovery of carefully preserved wooden structures that, the team concluded, had once adorned majestic trees in the ancient world. The team reconstructed one such home and dubbed it the Palace of the Princess from the City of the Trees in the Golden Wood. Initial reaction to the announcement has been guarded but hopeful. Some experts insist that Dr. Voorst’s work will have to be confirmed by other experts in the field who have not been tainted by the controversy.

Source: Info-Monster

The Voorst expedition returned to the Golden Wood and uncovered a remarkable deposit of carefully preserved wooden artifacts from the era. It is almost as if the inhabitants of the Golden Wood disassembled their homes and left the area about 10,000 years ago. They may have planned to return because they left enough material to rebuild at least a few of the houses that were once supported by ancient trees of monumental height.

Source: GeoStatics

One of the more amazing pictures associated with this story depicts a restored roadway through the Golden Woods.

An ancient road leads through the Golden Woods toward the City in the Trees

I'm sure there will be more stories. It seems like this party is just getting started!

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