Archive for the 'anime' Category

Krellion’s Geek Journal – 11/13/2009

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Welcome to this week’s post of my Geek Journal!

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Sorry about the lack of a post last week, I was quite busy helping the Tech Crew of Nekocon’s Main Events room. It was very tiring, but I’m happy to say that most things went off without a hitch.

I almost missed making this post as well; between almost getting swept away by the nor’easter that came out of the remnants of Ida (ok, not really, but I did see quite a bit of flooding), and keeping myself busy with some coding I had been meaning to do (when my power wasn’t out due to the former), I’ve been busy these past few days.

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Still running the release candidate of Windows 7; I’m hoping to be able to hold off changing over the release version until I get my new system built sometime early next year. Speaking of my new system, I decided that I’m going to try to go for one of the new six-core i7 processors instead of the current quad-core versions. Yeah, I currently don’t know what I’d do with all of them (with HyperThreading, it makes a total of 12 virtual cores), but I’m sure I’ll find something.

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I’m a fan of the TV series Numb3rs, and while the producers try to do their research, they don’t always get things right. Take, for instance, last week’s episode: The FBI is trying to find a couple of hackers and one of the characters suggests that they keep an eye out on Internet Relay Chat (IRC) for them. Now IRC is real, but some of the things mentioned about it in the episode aren’t completely true. The episode makes it seem like there’s only one IRC server on the internet (there are hundreds of different IRC networks, if not thousands), that it’s totally anonymous (not true on most networks), nothing is tracked (again, not true, some channels on IRC have bot programs whose purpose is to track stats of the channel), and that all users speak leet (yet again, not true; a lot of users just chat normally in their language of choice). Just remember that this is a TV show and sometimes (or most of the time) the facts are stretched to keep things interesting. Not to say that there aren’t IRC networks out there where this stuff isn’t true, but it is usually not the norm.

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That’s it for this week’s post!

Office of the Don #59: Neko-Leko-Hi, Neko-Heiney-Ho

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Greetings, Banana Splits!

There comes a time in every child’s life when they must put away childish things and become an adult…

…or they can say “To Hell with that” and continue to have fun by going to conventions like Nekocon.

Guess which one I did this past weekend?

To be fair, I was there in an official capacity, as my partner-in-crime Danny Valentini and I were invited to the convention again this year to be guests.  Supposedly, we do this web comic together called “The Draconia Chronicles” that grows in popularity every year.  Now, I would just chalk this up to rumor for now, because everyone knows that there are no such things as web comics.  That’s just a story parents tell their children at night to scare them so that they won’t grow up to get online degrees.

You should know the drill by now – I do a quick recap of my weekend at a convention, you skim over it feeling unfulfilled, then we both reluctantly agree that we need to see other people as we give back all the items we borrowed or gave to each other.

I’m still waiting to get back my copy of the “The White Album.”

As con Fridays go, this year’s Neko offered pretty much the standard fare – I show up at the convention center about two hours before the Opening Ceremonies.  Heading up to the “Con-Ops” room, I procure my Guest badge.  After some spirited conversation about topics I have no recollection of discussing, I make a dotted bee-line for our table in the Artists Alley.  I say dotted because one can never just go to where they are going at a convention.  Invariably, there will be many stops and restarts as you run into old friends for a quick chat, pose for pictures, stop to take pictures, notice something shiny, pause to ponder the secrets of the universe, stop because you’re chewing gum, or hesitate because the all-powerful con gods sent a messenger to you with a gift consisting of this confection called “Pocky”.  And no, I don’t mean the owner of Spwug.

As I survey the landscape of the cavernous region known as the Artists Alley, I catch up with more fellow AA (not Alcoholics Anonymous) commoners as I wait for my cohort to arrive.  I also wait for time to slowly transport me into the future, for that is where the Opening Ceremonies await me.

When the Hour of Trying to Fool People Into Thinking You Are Someone Important in Front of a Medium-Sized Crowd is finally at hand, my recently arrived partner-in-crime and I make our way into the even more cavernous region where the Ceremonies are to take place.  After a series of horrible attempts at humor that are the reason my parents gave me up for adoption, Danny and I – fully convinced that no one knew who the heck we were – remove ourselves and head back over to “Con-Ops”, where we trade our silly old Guest badges for shinier and cooler “Neko Bazaar” badges.  With renewed vigor, we return to the first cavernous area of which I had already mentioned previously.  From there, we set up our table, and begin the attempt to peddle our wares for the rest of the evening.  And that, little Christopher, is how babies are born.

Saturday finds us arriving early, long before noon’s rising sun can greet us.  We have a panel to host and candy tied to strings so that we can lure entice the con masses to our little panel room.  We are able to capture accrue a respectable number of individuals despite our outlandish buffoonery on display.  In fact, I do believe that a couple of them even stop screaming long enough to ask us questions about our web comic.  I call that a success.  Then again, I call not getting maced in the face when I ask a woman the time a success.

From there, we return to our temporary abode in the Artists Alley for more shilling, more debauchery, more talky-talky…blah blah blah…  You’re already asleep, so we’ll skip ahead…

Two in the afternoon!  We have another panel!  But our princess is in another castle!  Dejected from finding yet another one of those stupid Toadstool weirdoes (where do they all come from?  Do they multiply like rabbits?), we make our way back to the same room our last panel was in.  In a strange case of déjà vu, the room looks exactly the same as the last time we were in it.  In fact, maybe this really is the first time we are in it, and the first time really wasn’t the first time, but instead a strange message from the future telling us what lie in store for our fates.

Nope, same room, different panel.

This time we are joined by real artists and writers as we try our best to sound like we know as much as they do about making web comics.  I think we have them fooled right up to the point where I mention something about the right amount of tension needed on a loom when interweaving the threads of a web comic.  I’m not sure where the audience got the pitch forks and torches, but it makes for an exciting conclusion to what I think was a successful panel.

As my counterpart and I make our escape back to the Caverns of AA, we easily slip back into our respective roles – he’s the DJ and I’m the rapper.  Sales seem to be going well on our new “Men of the Quadratic Equation” calendar, as well as a few other items we have somehow managed to fool the commonfolk into believing have magical powers – mainly some Shamwow!s, as well as a few pounds of Mighty Putty.  Throughout the afternoon and evening we get several con-goers who stop by claiming to be fans of our web comic.  But, I know the truth.  After being visited by them as often as I am, you tend to recognize evil spirits when they show up to haunt you and ask you for favors.

It is at this point that I also have a vision that my wife is in an 80s glam-pop band.  I shiver from the delusion, then down a couple burgers that are really cookies.  My life is strange.

The greatest highlight of Saturday has to be in the evening when we go to dinner.  It isn’t often when an evil spirit actually tries to get you drunk so that they can take advantage of you.  Joke’s on him, though.  I would have said yes sober.

Sunday seems to be a blur.  No, I mean every Sunday seems to be a blur.  I think my brain just hates living in my cranial cavity so much that it just decides to shut down every seventh day as a middle finger to me and my ancestors.  I can’t fathom why.  I mean, it isn’t my fault that the Waltons aren’t real.

Now that I think about it, I do seem to recall some events took place on Neko’s Day of Sun.  We have a final panel wherein we are usurped by dark forces who yank the proverbial rug out from under us by yanking the actual rug out from under us.  I think we still manage to do a fairly adequate job of teaching the wailing masses how not to create or develop characters.  At least, I pray to Bill Cosby that we did.

A few more hours of trying to prove to the con folk that we are not wax statues and the con is officially over.  As my main squeeze who is not my wife but is really the artist who draws the web comic I scribble words for and I break down and cry our set-up at the table in the AA Caverns, we say our goodbyes to a few of the fellow artists who were crazy enough to talk to us.  We make our way to the bar in the hotel that is across the way from the convention center.  I remark as we head over that a way looks an awful lot like grass and asphalt.  Once inside the bar, a friend buys me an apple pie – except that this pie is really liquid and I have to drink it instead of eat it.  But hey, in today’s economy everyone has to make sacrifices – even our American icons.  I heard that baseball is currently just gardening in order to save money.

With the evening now upon us, we make our way to Olive Garden.  There, a free meal awaits all of us who were sneaky enough to convince the staff that we were Guests Neko Bazaar attendees.  But first we stand outside the restaurant to play a game called “Parking Lot-to”.  The object of the game is to stand out in the parking lot until the number of people in your party matches the number called.  Our group makes it to the bonus round, where we win some fabulous prizes – including our meals, as well as a copy of the home game.  I can’t speak for those who are still in the parking lot after we are seated, though I’m told that “manicotti formaggio” is Italian for “convention stragglers”.

I’m glad I ordered the chicken alfredo.

The Don would like to give his heartfelt thanks to everyone at Nekocon for their gracious generosity and hopes to be invited back next year!

9. The Don Says…

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

… I’m gonna have to punk out on this week’s “Office” and give you a “Don Says…” instead.  It’s just as good as an “Office”… really it is.

Okay, it’s almost as valuable as a “Meeting”, at least.  Listen, you can’t use any of these as legal tender (or even chicken tenders) anyway, so what’s the big deal?

Anyhoo, the reason I committed such a heinous act and punked out on a full “Office” article this week is because Nekocon is this weekend.  As we all know, Nekocon is that magical place where dreams come true and wine flows from the highest mountaintops in cascading waterfalls.  It’s where River Phoenix is still alive and continually successful in film and Tom Green didn’t survive putting his bum on a rhino.

Okay, it’s really an anime convention in my backyard of Hampton, Virginia.

But, the best news is that 2wcOnline, that awesome website that is the home of that awesome web comic called The Draconia Chronicles that I’m the writer for – you know, the one that has links to it on the right side of this here Spwug site?  Do you even know where you are right now?  Maybe you should lay down…

Lost my thought of trains…

Oh yeah – 2wcOnline will be there as web comic guests again this weekend!  My partner-in-crime Danny Valentini and I will be there all weekend pimping out our new Draconia Chronicles 2010 Calendar, as well as the rest of our stuff.  We will also be heading up several panels throughout the weekend.  Grab your peepers and check out the sched:2wcOnline

2wcOnline presents The Draconia Chronicles:   SAT 10a – 11a  in Panel 3

2wcOnline State of Webcomics:   SAT 2p – 3p in  Panel 3

2wcOnline Character Creation and Development:   SUN 1p – 2p in  Panel 3

So, if any of you happen to be going to Neko and want to come by and pay your resident Spwugnerian as well as both 2wcOnline Chuckleheads, feel free!  And next week, I will return to my regular programming with a rundown of the con.

I’m The Don and I approve this massage.

8. The Don Says…

Monday, October 12th, 2009

…congratulations to Richard and Katy, the supreme rulers of the Spwugniverse!!!!!

RichKaty

They are the essence of everything that is Spwug.  Without either of them, this site wouldn’t be here to bring you a daily dose of all things geek.

It was an honor and a privilege to witness the joining of these two forces of good.  They are my friends.  They are my family.  I am proud to be the head writer of something they envisioned, and I am proud to be a part of their lives.

My best wishes to both of you, Pocky Rich and Katy.  Here’s to bigger and greater things.  With your powers combined, anything is possible.

Meeting at the Docks #22: Show You Autumn Be Watching: 2009 Edition (Part II)

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Greetings, Spin Doctors!

As promised, here is the second installment of my highly popular and deeply revered Fall TV Watch List.  Unfortunately, as I look at the list of shows I’m currently watching, it appears that my list this year is smaller than I anticipated.  Part of that is because of the reason I mentioned in part one – not many new shows for the 2009/2010 season really grabbed me while a large portion of the shows that I did like were snuffed out like a wealthy, old man who lies on his death bed while his pillow-wielding son Billy (sorry – it’s William now) decides he wants his inheritance immediately.

The other reason is because there are about three or four shows that I can’t discuss yet because they haven’t started yet (Thanks, NBC!  Way to show your support for “Chuck”!  I bought and ate a Subway sandwich for that show!)

Still, I’m able to toss four more shows at you this week, with an extra helping of two new animated series that I’m having a ball with.

And remember kids – just because a show may not be listed here, doesn’t mean it isn’t a good show.  Let me be your LeVar Burton and use this series to stimulate your desire to go out and find shows that you like on your own!  These are just shows I am able to fit into my schedule that I really enjoy (except for one – I think I’m just a glutton for punishment with that one).  But, you don’t have to take my word for it…

“Community”

This is one of the two new shows of the fall season that I decided to add to my regular watch list.  In fact, I was originally going to give it a pass.  I’m glad I changed my mind.  This show is pretty funny so far, unlike when I tried that “Office” clone “Parks and Recreation”.  Joel McHale (of “The Soup” on E!) stars as a(n) lawyer opportunist who is forced to go back to community college because it’s discovered by the State Bar Association that his degree isn’t valid.  Add in an eccentric variety of characters that he shares classes with, mix thoroughly, and enjoy.  The biggest surprise here is Chevy Chase.  Yes, that Chevy Chase (no, not the bank).  This guy hasn’t been funny in years, but he seems to have gotten his second third fourth twentieth wind on this show.  I find myself laughing at the antics that made 80s Chevy so much fun.

“The Office”

There are those who are UK “Office” purists.  There are those who prefer the US version.  I say, “Are you gonna eat that donut?”  I mean, what else is there to say about this show?  The US “Office” started out looking like a weak clone of the original, and wasn’t faring much better.  Six seasons later, and the show is still as strong as ever.  I came into this show late, but it has become one of the shows I eagerly anticipate week after week.

“Smallville”

I mentioned that there is one show I’m a glutton for punishment for.  This is it.  I will admit, this show really shouldn’t even be on this list.  The storylines are contrived, the acting isn’t great, the plots go in odd directions that would make your GPS rethink what vocation the GPS Guidance Counselor in GPS high school advised her on (oh come on – we all use the female voice).  But for some reason, I can’t quit this show (yes, I made a Brokeback joke).  If for no other reason, I want to see Clark finally become Superman.  I think Tom Welling fills the role well enough.  And every season they manage to hook me with some gimmick.  Last season it was Doomsday.  This season… Zod.  Yes, he’s already delivered the “Kneel before…” line.  Moving on…

“Dollhouse”

The newest offering from everyone’s favorite scribe (except for you) Joss Whedon.  This is a show that should have been one of the casualties of the 2008/2009 season.  But, somehow Fox decided to graduate it to sophomore status, despite a very clunky year one.  Although the networks stepped on Joss’ toes consistently during production of the first half of the first season (forcing rewrites, episode shuffling, character changes), Joss was able to wrangle the reins back during the latter half, salvaging a sinking show and making the last few episodes pretty riveting to watch.  So far, the second season is starting out rather strongly, especially since all of the build up and introduction has been taken care of.  I’ve always been a loyal fan and supporter of all things Whedon, so I think I’ll be sticking around the “Dollhouse” for a little while longer.  At least until “Firefly” magically makes a comeback.

And now… a few brief words about two new animated shows that I’m finding myself eagerly diving into each week:

“Titan Maximum”

Holy crap, this show is awesome.  Hyperbole aside, this is another stop-motion animated show by the guys who brought you “Robot Chicken”, only this time they’re going the “Venture Bros.” route – creating a new universe of characters based on the sentai shows we grew up with in the 70s and 80s like “G-Force” and “Voltron”.  This show pays homage to those slices of fandom while at the same time parodying them.  And they’ve done their homework, from the character-types they use to the campy music they play during fighting scenes.  And this show is hilarious, importing the same type of humor enjoyed on “Robot Chicken”.  Plus: Billy Dee Williams as the voice of the Admiral that the TM crew has to answer to!

“The Super Hero Squad Show”

I know, your jaw’s in your lap – “Does he mean that little kiddie cartoon based on those little Hasbro figures for the kiddies?”  Indeed I do.  This show is a lot of fun!  When I first heard about it, I said my “feh”s and didn’t think another thought about it.  Then, I got to watch a mini-marathon of the first three episodes during Horrorfind Weekend in the hotel room.  This show hides some really intelligent writing under the “made for ages 4 – 8” Bruce banner.  It’s a silly, pun-filled romp where some of Marvel’s most famous (and even some obscure) heroes go up against the Marvel villains every week.  It’s all fighting and bantering, but it’s imaginative and fresh.  To put it best, it’s like if a Marvel Superheroes cartoon was done by the folks who brought you “Tiny Toons”.

And with that, I wrap up part deux of the 2009/2010 season watch list.  I plan to bring you at least one more, but it may have to wait… until spring, unfortunately.  That seems to be when the rest of the shows on my list come back.  In the meantime, this is October.  I’m running a little behind this year, but expect some Hallowe’en-themed articles for the rest of the month.  I leave you with a nugget of awesome news – our own Head Honchos, Richard Kim and Neomera, are getting hitched this weekend!  Now you know why they’ve been a little sparse around the site lately.  A couple of us Spwugnerians will be in attendance to bring the proper amount of geek representation, of course.  So, when you get a chance, please offer your best wishes to the happy couple!

I’m out!

The Don is ready for his treatment.

Krellion’s Geek Journal – 8/21/2009

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Welcome to this week’s entry of my Geek Journal!

First, I’d like to apologize about the lack of a post for last week. I was out of town the entire week for training, had minimal access to the Internet, and didn’t get back until late Friday evening, where I was too tired to put something together. ^^;;

Now that I got the above out of the way, onward to this week’s post!

Over the past week, I managed to catch several movies:

G.I. Joe – I have to echo Donnie on this: It was a lot of fun to watch. To add upon what he mentioned, I want to point out that some of the technology seen in the film is very closely based on real-life technology: Scarlett’s cloaking outfit mimics developing tech where a camera (many really small ones in her case) records an image of whatever is behind the object to be cloaked, allowing said image to be displayed on the front of the object and thus rendering the object as see-through or invisible.  Nano-technology plays a large part of the plot of the film, though the kind seen in the film (nano robots) is still several years away. The enhanced power suits themselves may still be a ways away, but some of the technology they contain has already been seen: the military has been actively developing a heads-up display of sorts to allow real-time information to be fed to soldiers and pilots in the field, allowing them to know the status of their allies or see around corners or through cockpit floors and walls.

District 9 – I think the thing I liked best about this film is how realistic most things were portrayed, and I’m not talking about the CG (though that was really well done). The story is very close to how I think we would react after the initial excitement of “beings from another world” wears off. We’d grow used to/bored with them and start treating them the way we treat ourselves. Of course, things probably would have been different if the aliens weren’t as weak when they were found; they would’ve owned us. ;)

Ponyo – After seeing the above two movies this past Saturday, I decided to take in something a little lighter on Sunday and this was perfect. Hayao Miyazaki’s latest animated film is loosely based on Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Little Mermaid“, and after debating on seeing it dubbed, I found that Disney did a really good job with the dub (as they have done for the other Miyazaki films), especially with the number of well known actors/actresses they had do the voices; however, I am interested in how the dub compares to the original Japanese. The movie itself was very cute and fun; I found myself (and the rest of the audience) laughing at Ponyo’s antics, and it was amusing to hear gasps as Sōsuke (who is five years old) make use of matches to light a candle. I’m sure the parents were also wondering about his mother leaving him and Ponyo alone at home during a heavy storm. ^^

RiffTrax Live! – This was a special event that occurred last night (Thursday) that was put on by the ex-MST3K guys at RiffTrax. They debuted their new (live) RiffTraxed short film “Flying Stewardess”, had Jonathan Coulton perform a couple of his songs, and then presented their RiffTrax version of Plan 9 from Outer Space live. Overall, the experience was a lot of fun, once we got past the technical difficulties the theater I was at had (we didn’t start watching the “live” broadcast until an hour and twenty minutes into it; we did get to see it from the beginning thanks to the theater recording it with a DVR). I really should have volunteered to take a look at things. ^^ I should also look into picking up some of the RiffTrax tracks sometime.

I’ll close out this post with a plea to all the cable channels that have HD versions available: Please stop stretching your SD content on your HD channel! I like having what I watch in the proper aspect ratio! If people are that pissy about making full use of their widescreen TV, let them do the stretching themselves! A lot of the channels do their stretching differently as well:  Science Channel does a partial zoom of their content so that it isn’t warped, but the top and bottom is cut off slightly (not too bad, but still annoying), the History Channel does a straight stretch of the content so that it fills then entire width of the screen (easy to re-compress it back to the proper aspect), and TNT does a “special” stretch that causes the sides of the content to be stretched more than the middle (no real way of properly fixing this >_<). Again, please do away with the stretching! Or even better, start producing everything in proper widescreen! (I know we’re getting close to that!)

That’s it for this week!

Anime Expo is Coming!

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

‘Tis the season for some of the nation’s biggest and nerdiest conventions.  Tomorrow marks the beginning of E3 at the LA Convention Center, and just a month later, the LACC will host Anime Expo.  If you haven’t purchased your ticket already, now’s the time to take advantage of some last minute savings.  A single day pass currently runs $30 online and $35 at the door, a two-day pass runs $50 online and $55 at the door, and a four-day pass (there is no three-day pass) runs $65 online until July 5th, and will be $70 at the door July 2nd through 5th.

Haven’t booked a hotel room yet?  No problem.  Several AX designated hotels, including the Omni Hotel, Biltmore Hotel, Wilshire Grand Hotel, and soon, the Marriot and Sheraton, have issued new discounted room prices.  For more information, visit Anime Expo’s website (http://www.anime-expo.org/2009/05/29/anime-expo-2009-provides-additional-discounts-for-hotels/).

In true AX fashion, the official programming guide has yet to be posted (and probably won’t until later in the month), but if you’re looking to plan out your gathering visits, Cosplay.com has it’s official AX cosplay gathering list posted and regularly updated.  You can find it here: http://www.cosplay.com/showthread.php?t=167513

Admittedly, these gatherings are only really interesting if you enjoy seeing how different people interpret crazy anime and video game designs and bring them to life (or miss the target completely), but one gathering in particular this year promises to be very exciting.  This year AX cosplayers will attempt to beat the Guinness World Record for most video game cosplayers in one place.  The current record is 337, but for a large convention like AX, breaking the record should be a piece of cake.  A lot of thought and planning has already gone into this attempt.  You can follow the efforts of these AX cosplayers here: http://www.cosplay.com/showthread.php?t=164635 or cheer them on Saturday, July 4th, from 11AM to 1PM.

See you there!

The Adventures of Nerdy Barbie: Prop ‘Til Ya Drop

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

The air is changing… The breezes whisper its arrival…

Time grows short.

Yes, that’s right, Anime Expo (AX), one of the largest anime (/manga/video game/etc.) conventions in the nation is almost upon us!  If you plan to cosplay at AX and haven’t started your costume yet – better get crackin’!

The vast majority of costumes require more than just cotton or polyester; they require titanium alloys, precious stones, tiny supercomputers, and other impossible pieces to make up a character’s armor and accessories.  But unless you’re insanely wealthy (and probably a little insane), you’ll take the budget route and use tried and true materials, like resin, foam, wood, or clay.

Clay is great for armor details and oddly-shaped accessories – which is the reason I chose it to form the jewelry that Princess Zelda adorns in her Twilight Princess form.  As you can see, it’s definitely not something you can pick up at a store, and if you try to buy a ready-made set online, you’re looking at spending a couple hundred bucks – and that’s just for the headdress!  If you’re artistic or can bribe a friend who is, you’re better off trying to attempt making it yourself…

I'm supposed to make THAT!?

…no matter how daunting the task may appear. *gulp*

To make accessories like these, you can choose from a variety of clay on the market.  I’m going to focus on two for now – Crayola Model Magic and Sculpey UltraLight.  Crayola’s Model Magic seems like a cosplayer’s dream – it’s cheap (one 4 oz. bag costs around $3.00), it air dries in a day, and it’s lightweight.  But Model Magic requires a surprising amount of extra work to ensure long life of a prop.  Most cosplayers that use Model Magic recommend coating the dried piece with a few coats of gesso, glazing, and/or covering with material to strengthen the piece.  The old (and possibly current) formula of Model Magic also performs a magic trick when paired with metal – it chemically reacts with the metal, producing a brown, rusty goo over time (I learned this the hard way with some ornaments I created years ago and unearthed later).  If you’re making a one-time-use prop and don’t care about durability as much as cost, this is a good way to go.

On the other hand, if you want all that blood, sweat, and tears spent trying to form these intricate pieces not to have been spent in vain, Sculpey UltraLight is a great option.  I stumbled upon this stuff while trying to hunt down some Hearty Clay, and decided to give it a shot.  I love this stuff.  It’s soft and forms easily (a little too easily at times – I don’t think Zelda would approve of my fingerprints all over her jewelry), it bakes well, can be sanded and drilled, and best of all, it’s pretty durable.  I made an extra test piece and when dropped, it bounced and didn’t shatter.  Now mind you, this was a piece shaped like one of the leaves in Zelda’s crown, and not something super delicate, but I was surprised at how well it stood up to the repeated abuse my fiancé and I put it through.

Although this clay requires an oven to harden pieces, it only takes fifteen minutes per quarter inch of thickness to bake – much nicer than waiting the twenty-four hours required for Model Magic.  Once the piece has cooled, you can sand it and paint it with standard acrylic paint.  If you don’t sand the entire piece beforehand (I didn’t…), it’ll just require a few extra coats of paint – something you’d want to do anyway, sanded or not.

I haven’t completed my Zelda armor/jewelry yet, but so far, I’m very happy with the results I’ve experienced with the Sculpey UltraLight.  It’s a bit more pricey than Model Magic – it comes in a 10oz package only, which runs around $10.00 – $12.00, but the saved frustration from having to remake your props will make it all worthwhile.

You can find Model Magic and Sculpey UltraLight at most craft stores and online.

Have a safe Cinco de Mayo, Spwug readers, and may you finish your costume BEFORE 3 AM the night before AX!

The Adventures of Nerdy Barbie: Duck Lake

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

It’s pretty easy to write a “magical girl” anime.  Take one young girl, add an animal sidekick, some latent magical abilities, a world in crisis, and voila! – you’ve got the basic ingredients for stories like Cardcaptor Sakura, Sailormoon, or Alice 19th.  Enjoyable as these stories are, they become extremely predictable.  Gee, Sailormoon is really the “Princess of the Moon”!?  Didn’t see that one coming!  But as forgivable as these predictable storylines are, sometimes it’s nice to find a “magical girl” anime that actually keeps you guessing until the end.  I’ve found such an anime in the surprisingly intriguing Princess Tutu.

Now, I know what you’re thinking (because I thought the same thing when I first heard the anime’s name) – “Princess Tutu,” probably the story of a ballerina and her happy, sugary friends who dance ballet in a land of sparkles and rainbows while repelling cute semi-evil creatures with attacks that include words like “dazzling” and “pink.”  But despite the name, Princess Tutu is anything but sugary-happy.  Its story has a good mix of comedy and tragedy, all stemming from its ballet roots.

Tutu’s story borrows heavily from a variety of ballet stories.  Each episode contains themes from a specific ballet, usually reflected in the episode’s title.  The character of Princess Tutu (a.k.a. “Duck”), herself, is a mixture of characters from Swan Lake and The Little Mermaid.  Besides the literary references, the characters also use ballet mime – motions that are like a type of ballet sign language – to help express ideas.  Of course, this is all reason enough to watch if you actually enjoy ballet (like me), but even this can’t compare to the real draw of the series – the characters.

It’s so easy for a series to practically hit you over the head and say, “Hey!  See that creepy guy?  You’re supposed to distrust him.  And that cute girl?  Root for her, okay?”  What’s not easy is for characters to morph over the course of a series so that you experience a whole range of emotions with them – fear, loathing, sympathy, admiration, and more.  In Princess Tutu, the character you trust one moment might be the character you hate in the next.  But no matter how many transformations a character may undergo, they’re all surprisingly believable.  These changes also shape the fairytale previews that open each episode.  What begin as allusions to classic ballet stories slowly turn into the real story being revealed with each passing episode; kind of the way the true story is revealed in the movie, Hero.

Just as the characters and story transition smoothly, so do the story’s settings.  In one scene, Princess Tutu is surrounded by the usual comedic school chums and the hijinks that go with them, and in the next, she is in a more reserved and serious world, mindful of the task she has sworn to see fulfilled.  Nothing ever feels rushed or drastically altered.  The pacing of the series as a whole is done well.  Even the ending is carefully set up, helping viewers to understand and make peace with the story’s conclusion.

For me, Princess Tutu is one of those rare series that has characters that come to feel like old friends towards the end.  They make you care enough to want to know what happens to them next while also not wanting to, to prevent the story from ending so soon.  When even the voice actors themselves are moved to tears at the end of the series, you know you’re watching something that had a lot of thought and heart put into it.

You can find the entire series of Princess Tutu for around $35 to $40.  I highly recommend it.  This way, when you start to experience the inevitable “Tutu withdrawal” that comes with the final episode of the series, you can ease the pain by starting back on disc one… Which… I think I might just do.

The Adventures of Nerdy Barbie: Is It Tuesday Already!?

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Sorry, Spwugsters… Life’s been a little hectic for me lately, so I haven’t had much time to write.  But, never fear, I won’t leave you without something interesting.

If you’ve been to any anime convention’s “masquerade,” you know that the skits performed there have the huge potential of being boring, drawn-out, and (the worst offense of all) unfunny.  But the thing that keeps us attending the masquerades and voluntarily suffering through the mediocre and sometimes downright horrible skits are the ones that are done very well.  I have just such a skit to share with you tonight.  From Sakuracon 2009, here’s “Sora the Explorer.”  Enjoy!

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