Tuesday, May 17, 2011

New Free Digital Magazine: Galaxis – The Worlds of Science & Science Fiction

I'm proud to unveil the premiere issue of my new digital magazine, Galaxis. Subtitled "The worlds of science & science fiction," the premiere issue features an exclusive interview with famed physicist Dr. Michio Kaku, plus Q&As with writer Mary Doria Russell, physicist Leonard Susskind, critic Michael Medved, and heart specialist Deepak Srivastava.

Also in this issue is a colorful look at the days when science fiction magazines were the place to find out about your favorite genre films, background on Mobile Suit Gundam, David Gerrold's Starhunt books, a look back at the TV adaptation of The Lathe of Heaven, and more.

This new quarterly magazine is a free digital magazine that you can read online or download. Check it out today.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Philipp Rösler Elected Leader of Germany's Free Democrats

Just the latest sign of dramatic and welcome changes in Germany: Earlier today, the Free Democrats elected Philipp Rösler as its leader, succeeding Guido Westerwelle.

It's a first following a first, if you will. Westerwelle, who will remain as the country's foreign minister, is openly gay. Rösler is straight, but he was born in Vietnam before being adopted by German parents.

The Free Democrats are the junior party in the conservative government of Angela Merkel (who, for the record, is Germany's first female chancellor). Despite a strong economy, they are currently rather embattled in the polls, and it was as a result of their drop in popularity that Westerwelle stepped aside as party leader and the party elected new leadership. Rösler is also switching over from leading the health ministry to heading up the all-important economics, and he will assume from Westerwelle the role of Merkel's vice chancellor.

The fact that the Free Democrats selected the handsome 38-year-old doctor Rösler is just the latest sign of that party's classical liberal (in the European sense) leanings. Now we'll find out if he has the ability to reverse his party's slide in the polls and help buck up the CDU-led coalition government in Berlin.

[Photo from fdp.de]
.

Fangoria Announces Bloody Best of Gorezone Special Edition Magazine

In its weekly newsletter, horror magazine Fangoria announced a sort-of resurrection of Gorezone magazine, a dormant sister publication published by the Fango staff in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

The Blood Best of Gorezone magazine will feature reprinted articles from the dead (now undead?) magazine. But don't rush to your local Barnes & Noble; the magazine will only be available at Comic Con and through the Fangoria web site.

Gorezone was one of the horror magazines – along with the even shorter-lived Toxic Horror – that Fangoria's former publisher, Starlog Group, produced in an attempt to suck up newsstand space from competitors. Gorezone (not to be confused with the unrelated British Gorezone magazine that is published today) was sort of like Fango's messier little brother, covering more edgy and bloody films than even Fango covered (which is saying something, because Fangoria earned its fame by being the bloody, new wave horror film mag of the 1980s). Aside from the requisite film reports, it included some things Fangoria didn't, such as posters, short fiction, and a number of critical columns.

According to Fangoria, this Bloody Best of Gorezone is the brainchild of current Fango editor Chris Alexander, who had teased the project on his Facebook page a while back. It's just the latest welcome thing Alexander has done to shake up the Fangoria franchise.

Will it lead to a full-scale, ongoing return to print of new Gorezone issues? Fango didn't say, but its reception at Comic Con and online could be a good indicator to the current publisher of reader appetite for the magazine.

Hint, hint.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Dinosaurs, Dinosaurs, Dinosaurs: The Starlog Project, Starlog #193, August 1993

The cover of this issue of Starlog doesn’t lie. It promises “DINOSAURS! DINOSAURS! DINOSAURS!” and it really delivers. Smart dinosaurs, classic dinosaurs, mutant dinosaurs, violent dinosaurs, comic dinosaurs. Even a dinosaur in a Hawaiian shirt. All in there.

And that’s not all. Editor David McDonnell notes that Starlog Press has just published a one-shot magazine called (originally enough) Dinosaur. It was edited by McDonnell’s colleague, Tony Timpone, the editor of Fangoria. McDonnell praises it highly, as do I. Fun magazine. Not to be confused with the same-named Dinosaur magazine Starlog published around 2000, which was the official, licensed movie magazine for Disney’s Dinosaur film.

Starlog #193
84 pages (including covers)
Cover price: $4.95

A while ago, Starlog announced the opening of the first of its Starlog: The Science-Fiction Superstore retail locations. There is an advertisement for the Ridgewood, New Jersey, store in this issue on page 71, near the classified ads. Interestingly, tucked among the classified ads is this notice in the Miscellaneous category: “LOOKING TO BUY: Star Wars, Empire & Return of the Jedi toys in original boxes. Send description to Norman Jacobs, Starlog, 475 Park Ave. South, 8th Flr., NYC, NY 10016.” I’m figuring that those toys were being sought for resale in the Starlog stores. What do you think? Or was Jacobs just looking for a really cool gift for his nieces and nephews?

BTW, on a very minor note, around the time of this issue, Starlog started including “design and layout” credits on each of its articles, presumably to give its overworked art staff some more recognition. I assume this was an initiative of McDonnell, because I don’t recall seeing it in any of the Starlog Group publications that were not edited by him. I also don’t think I’ve ever seen it in any other magazine published by any other company. That’s neither good nor bad; just noteworthy – at least to magazine nerds like me.

The rundown: The cover is packed with photos of dinosaurs (I mean, DINOSAURS! DINOSAURS! DINOSAURS!). Meanwhile, dinos from the comic book Dinosaurs for Hire are on the contents page. In his Medialog column, David McDonnell reports that Skyvision is planning a 22-episode TV series based on the RoboCop movies. Michael McAvennie reviews GURPS Conan, Capcom USA’s The Magical Quest Starring Mickey Mouse, and other games in hs Gamelog column. And the Communications pages include Mike Fisher’s Creature Profile (featuring Rodan), readers picking apart the Space Rangers series, the required letter about Star Trek, and more, including people fretting about the cancellation of Quantum Leap (plus someone actually being helpful: a letter writer from Canada corrects a scene from that series in which someone experiencing a seizure is “helped” by Sam trying to stop him from swallowing his tongue. As the letter writer correctly notes, it’s physically impossible to swallow your tongue – seriously; try it – and attempts to stick something in the person’s mouth could actually result in harming the person undergoing the seizure. That’s your public service announcement of the day, courtesy of someone who knows whereof he speaks.)

In his Videolog column, David Hutchison describes how physicist Stephen Hawking ended up making an appearance on Star Trek: The Next Generation. Booklog reviews The Hammer of God, By the Sword: Magic of the Plains, More Whatdunits, Predator, Beggars in Spain, Glory, Warpath, Peter Nevsky and the True Story of the Russian Moon Landing, and Jadium. Scott Brigg’s directory of fan clubs and publications, along with the convention listings, fill up Fan Network. And in his From the Bridge column, Kerry O’Quinn lets his Texas roots show with a big wet kiss for AggieCon.

Interplanetary Correspondent Michael J. Wolff really gets the dino-party started with a five-page overview of dinosaurs and related giant scary lizards in genre history. (Illustrations by George Kochell.) The magazine finally tracks down actor Christopher Lloyd, and Bill Warren gets him to talk about his roles in Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, Addams Family, Star Trek III, the Back to the Future movies, and more. Kim Howard Johnson previews the Malibu comic book series Dinosaurs for Hire, which is where you'll find the Hawaiian shirt-clad dino. Marc Shapiro chats with Arnold Schwarzenegger about his latest film, Last Action Hero. And Bill Warren gets the scoop on Jurassic Park from stars Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Jeff Goldbum.

Pat Jankiewicz provides a one-page chat with director Steve Miner about the filmmaker's attempt to make an American Godzilla movie. Tom Weaver chimes in with two articles: a Q&A with screenwriter Charles Bennett (The Secret of the Loch, Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, and others) and a profile of the late filmmaker Eugene Lourie (The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Gorgo, and more). Marc Shapiro interviews production designer and art director David Snyder, who discusses his groundbreaking work on Blade Runner and other films, such as Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey and Brainstorm. And in his Liner Notes column, editor David McDonnell returns to the topic of dinosaurs, admitting that he's "always found dinosaurs the most intriguing of all bygone beasties."
“Although the citizens of Tokyo, London and New York may have trouble believing this, Godzilla, Gorgo and the Deadly Mantis would have eventually died without proper medical supervision by trained veterinarians. The same problem applies to the other giant beasts which thrived after World War II, such as the mutant ants which roamed the New Mexico desert in Them! (1954), or the giant arachnid created by Professor Deemer in Tarantula (1955). Our world is ecologically different from that of the Mesozoic. Any creatures from that time which might still exist risk eventually being driven out of the safety of their fossil zones and forced into an environment they’re no longer able to tolerate. Small wonder many of them, especially the theropods, rampage.”
–Michael J. Wolff, Interplanetary Correspondent, “The Season of the Dragons”
For more, click on Starlog Internet Archive Project below or visit the Starlog Project's permanent site.

Michio Kaku: Master of Time and Space – My Latest Northside San Francisco Column

Michio Kaku describes the laws of physics
that will determine our future. Photo: Ed Ritger
My current Common Knowledge column in Northside magazine features physicist Dr. Michio Kaku and his thoughts on the future of the Bay Area, which is where he grew up.

Enjoy.
Common Knowledge 
Master of Time and Space 
By John Zipperer
Renowned physicist Dr. Michio Kaku has seen the Bay Area change from the open fields of his childhood to the insatiable metropolis of today. Now he’s offering a look at what it will be like in the future, and it might make a few people wish for the open fields once again. 
The very busy Kaku is professor of theoretical physics at CUNY and the co-founder of string field theory. He has authored many books, including the current bestseller Physics of the Future; he hosts two weekly radio programs and has hosted numerous science television series; and he frequently appears on national news programs to share his expertise on scientific matters, most recently on the Japanese nuclear crisis.

Monday, May 9, 2011

Catching Up

Sorry; I haven't blogged for a week. I've been busy with numerous other projects (almost all of them good).

So let me get caught up with my news and views:

1) Even after listening to (or reading) all of the concerns about feeling good that Osama bin Laden was killed, I still feel good that Osama bin Laden was killed.

2) Let Greece exit the eurozone. Dragging this process out forever is just making everyone (markets and national voters) uncertain, which increases the costs of doing business.

3) What? Justin Bieber is called a "brat" by a co-star? Imagine that. A Johnsonville brat?

4) Jezebel reports that an ultra-religious Jewish newspaper Photoshopped U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton out of the famous situation room photo, which showed President Obama and his national security team following progress in the commando raid on bin Laden (again, I still feel good about that raid). The reason? "The religious paper never publishes pictures of women, as they could be considered 'sexually suggestive.'" Uh, right.

5) Wisconsin's right-wing governor, Scott Walker, put out a video praising public employees. Yep, the governor, whose name you know only because of his questionable efforts to strip public employees of rights and benefits, says he likes them, really likes them. He'd just like them to be poorer.

6) I should have my newest digital magazine available online by next weekend. If you like science and science fiction, you might want to check it out. I'll have more info on the weekend.

7) Still feel good about the terrorist's death. I don't care if he was behind a human shield, if he had a weapon, if he was watching American Idol.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Unidentified Schwarzenegger Object: The Starlog Project, Starlog #192, July 1993

Over the nearly two decades of its existence, Starlog has occasionally reported on the UFO phenomenon. Except for its film-related reporting (Close Encounters of the Third Kind, for example), the magazine was blessedly free of the gullible reportage of much of the popular press. Unlike Omni magazine, for example, Starlog never drank the Kool-aid. Instead, it published articles such as James Oberg's intelligent examination of flying saucer claims. That was back in issue #12 in March 1978. The late 1970s were a cyclical high point of alien visitation claims, but things calmed down for a while after that time.

In the July 1993 issue, though, former publisher Kerry O’Quinn takes the bull by the horns (he’s from Texas, see) and lambasts claims that aliens are landing in Alabama and mutilating cows. About midway through the column, O’Quinn writes, “Whenever I meet someone new, and they learn that I am involved in science fiction, their first question is usually, ‘Do you believe in UFOs?’ To me, this is insulting. Let me make myself absolutely clear – NO, I do not believe in flying saucers, alien abductions or little green people from beyond our solar system who have the incredible technology to travel light years to our planet, sustain themselves somehow with endless fuel and food while they play cat-and-mouse games in our cloud layers….”

Sometimes a bit of controversy can be a positive spark for a magazine. When it comes with a dose of rationality, it is like a welcome cup of water to a desert wanderer.

Starlog #192
84 pages (including covers)
Cover price: $4.95

This is Starlog’s 17th anniversary issue, which is celebrated with all of the pomp and circumstance of the royal wedding, except for the pomp and circumstance part. In fact, there are no extra pages or special features or any indication at all that it’s an anniversary issue aside from a badge on the front cover and the editor’s column at the end of the magazine. What, are they ashamed of being a 17-year-old magazine? Or is it because Starlog would suffer a premature death at the age of 33 in 2009, so the mag's editors and publishers somehow realized they had reached publishing middle-age?

The rundown: The cover features Arnold Schwarzenegger and his Last Action Hero co-star Austin O’Brien; a slightly different take on that same pose is on the contents page (the change is so slight, it might require many readers to look closely to see how the two images are different). A neat touch, that. Meanwhile, in his Medialog column, David McDonnell notes that early discussions have taken place about a feature film version of the old Lost in Space TV series. Michael McAvennie’s Gamelog reviews a number of Star Wars games, including Super Nintendo’s Super Star Wars, Game Boy’s The Empire Strikes Back, and others. And reader letters in the Communications pages include an official response from the Sci-Fi Channel regarding hopes and fears Starlog readers have expressed about the new channel, plus there’s an unbelievably long letter about Beauty & the Beast, and Mike Fisher’s Creature Profile features Gorgo.

In the early 1990s, VHS video cassettes were the relatively cheapest and easiest way to experience your favorite movies and old TV shows in the comfort of your own home. As David Hutchison notes in his Videolog column, various episodes of Star Trek: The Next Generation as well as the Trek movies are available for just $14.95 each, but that was in the days before commentary tracks and hours and oodles of hours of extras packed onto DVDs and Blu-rays. Booklog reviews Isaac Asimov’s Forward the Foundation (reviewer Jean-Marc Lofficier loved it), as well as Caliban, Dreams Underfoot, Path of the Hero, The Wall at the Edge of the World, A Sword for a Dragon, Redline the Stars, Retro Lives, The Element of Fire, A Wizard in Absentia, Warlords of Jupiter, Athyra, and Sandman, Sleep. The fan network includes Scott Briggs’ directory of clubs and publications, plus the convention calendar. And, as noted, Kerry O’Quinn shoots down UFOs, in his From the Bridge column.

Speaking of questionable claims, on page 21 of this issue, there is an advertisement for L. Ron Hubbard’s Battlefield Earth. Among the blurbs promoting the book is this from novelist Frederik Pohl: “I read [Battlefield Earth] straight through in one sitting although it’s immense … I was fascinated by it.” Really? According to Amazon.com, the book’s 1,004 pages long. I’m not calling Mr. Pohl a liar, but surely he was mistaken when he said he read it entirely in one sitting. Was he on some strange drugs that kept him awake long enough to reach the last page? Even if he could read a quite-fast 60 pages an hour, it would still take more than 16 hours. Any slower than that, and it soon takes a full day and night to complete this sucker. I’ve never read Battlefield Earth – nor any other book attributed to Hubbard – though I did sacrifice $9 that never did anything wrong to me so I could see the film made from it. The movie felt like it was 16 hours. But I have a good friend who is in no way a devotee of Hubbard’s religion who nonetheless says this book was a hell of an enjoyable novel, so I will grant the possibility that Pohl, too, found the book fascinating in some non-ironic way. But to spend anywhere from 16 to 24 hours “in one sitting” reading it? I guess I am calling him a liar.

Anyway, back to the issue. Star Trek: The Next Generation’s Data, actor Brent Spiner, is interviewed by Joe Nazzaro. Author (and climate change skeptic) Michael Crichton is interviewed by Bill Warren, discussing the Steven Spielberg adaptation of his book Jurassic Park as well as other adaptations of his work, such as Runaway and Rising Sun. Marc Shapiro visits the set of Last Action Hero. He talks to the director, John McTiernan, and others involved in the movie, including star Schwarzenegger, who admits that it is “not necessarily the most challenging role I’ve ever had,” and that “I’m the first one to laugh at the silliness of the films I’ve done.” Kim Howard Johnson profiles producer Robert Solo and his Body Snatchers film. And Dan Yakir previews Super Mario Brothers, the $42 million film starring Bob Hoskins and John Leguizamo.

Stan Nicholls and Michael McCarty separately interviewed legendary writer (and reader!) Frederick Pohl, and Starlog combines their two interviews into one quite interesting six-page article. Pat Jankiewicz talks with screenwriter Jon Povill, who discusses his many projects (with a resume that is quite Trek-heavy), but the article starts off with a fascinating story about how he and Gene Roddenberry got involved with a group of people who claimed to be in telepathic contact with aliens. And editor David McDonnell wraps it all up with an anniversary Liner Notes column, citing numerous people responsible for the magazine reaching the magic age of 17.
“I was in Paris in August 1945, and I was getting a haircut in a barber shop. ... I was looking over the shoulder of the man next to me, and he had a newspaper with a big headline, ‘Le Bomb et Amique.’ And the first thing I thought was that these crazy French will print anything in their papers. And then when I looked a little closer and realized it actually had happened, I felt – well, I knew it all along and I had. Everybody who read science fiction knew that this was a good possibility. There are several kinds of science fiction that you can’t write anymore. You can’t write about the first intelligent robot, the first trip to the Moon or the first nuclear war, because they’ve happened, but the consequences of all these things are just getting clearer every day.”
–Frederick Pohl, novelist, interviewed by Stan Nicholls and Michael McCarty: “The View from a Distant Star”
For more, click on Starlog Internet Archive Project below or visit the Starlog Project's permanent site.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

President Obama's Excellent Speech on Osama bin Laden

 

Remembering Osama's Hatred of Mankind

On this day, when Osama bin Laden has been reportedly killed at long last, I think it's time to remember just one of his crimes, just one of his many, many crimes and murders, the awful days of 9/11 in Manhattan, where I was living at the time.

Osama Bin Laden Dead

The reports coming out of Washington are that evil al Qaeda mastermind/fanatic Osama Bin Laden is dead and his body is in U.S. custody. As I write this, I am awaiting President Barack Obama's public speech on the topic.

So, until the president speaks, let me just note how welcome this news is. One does not have to glorify in death to be happy when a mass murderer is dead. I hate killing and war, but Osama Bin Laden is about as far from an innocent or from a correctable criminal as one can get. So, if the reports are true and the awful Osama is dead, then that's great news. It doesn't mean al Qaeda is no longer a threat, but it puts the biggest spanner in their operations that we've yet seen, and they do remain a lethal threat, even to relatively minor military nations.

Osama, may you never rest in peace.