tag » dinosaur comics

The polymathematic Joey Comeau has started a series of interviews with people important to him: i am other people. The series begins with the illustrious Ryan North of Dinosaur Comics. Best part? Joey and Ryan are friends, and the interview reads like a conversation half the time, both of them ending up being questioned.


The magic was inside you all along



Posted on May 11, 2008
in Undressing the Internet, , , ,

Television Tropes & Idioms is a “a catalogue of the tricks of the trade for writing fiction” (in wiki format, of course).

Tropes are devices and conventions that a writer can reasonably rely on as being present in the audience members’ minds and expectations. On the whole, tropes are not clichés. The word clichéd means “stereotyped and trite.” In other words, dull and uninteresting. We are not looking for dull and uninteresting entries. We are here to play with tropes, not to make fun of them.

Examples include E equals MC Hammer (see above), better than it sounds (with the related I am not making this up), slap slap kiss, and the untwist.

TV Tropes is definitely worth bookmarking and looking around, but be careful. It will steal all your time and ruin your life.

(via the subversively troperific Ryan North)


T-Rex goes cuckoo for cargo cults



Posted on October 29, 2007
in Undressing the Internet, , ,

Today’s episode of “Dinosaur Comics” finds our hero T-Rex a bit flustered over the idea of cargo cults. For those not in the know (which is probably everyone), let’s listen as our protagonist recounts a gripping tale of war:

During the war, the islanders would see this cargo going to the troops and would grow to believe that the gods meant it for them — that the white people were just getting it sooner because of their influential rituals. And of course, after the war ended and the troops left, the cargo stopped being dropped too.

The islanders started mimicking what they’d seen the troops doing!

The result was ersatz marches, imitation airstrips walkie talkies made out of wood and bamboo, and even torch signal flares, used to signal divine planes that never come!

Some internet snooping revealed, without much trouble, the Wikipedia article and (thank Jason for this trend) the generic first-New York Times-reference-ever: The Lure of Remote Places.

Surprisingly, the term shows up about once or twice per year, but (especially more recently) not with the original definition. Instead, the phrase has expanded in meaning, encompassing any situation (as per Wikipedia) whereby ill-considered effort and ceremony takes place but goes unrewarded due to a flawed model of causation. For example, from the New York Times’ obituary for Dr. Richard Feynman:

Dr. Feynman was no mystic, and he despised all kinds of fake learning, particularly pseudo-science. In that category he placed a good part of modern psychology, calling it ”cargo cult science.”

Dr. Feynman describes the cargo cult phenomenon following World War II, then continues:

It is the same, he said, with cargo cult scientists. ”They follow all the apparent precepts and forms of scientific investigation, but they’re missing something essential because the planes don’t land.”

It’s CRAZY!


undressing the internet
Quantum poetry
Dinosaur roams through LA Museum
Baby’s First Internet
Ruined scenes
iPhone apps waiting to happen

music
Nana Grizol - Love It Love It
Gablé - 7 Guitars with a Cloud of Milk
Why? - Alopecia
Xiu Xiu - Women as Lovers
Rings - Black Habit

graphic novels
Astonishing X-Men #23
The Umbrella Academy #1
Rex Mundi #7
Doktor Sleepless #1 & #2
The Last Fantastic Four Story

concerts
Man Man, The Extraordinaires (3/22/08)
The Walkmen, White Rabbits, The Triggers (1/16/08)
Electric Six, We Are The Fury, The Resistors (11/07/07)
Jens Lekman (10/29/07)

interviews
Syme
Jamie Tanner
Texas is the Reason
Jason Anderson
Body Without Organs

movies
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
The Ruins
There Will be Blood
No Country for Old Men
30 Days of Night

features
USA NUMBA 1
Best Musical Albums of 2007, Belated
Spotlight on Hong Kong Six