alexsarll: (howl)
Edit: wrt tonight's episode, we all know that in various Eastern philosophies 'Maya' = the veil of illusion, right? Also: Yay for Gene, he's on top form tonight.

Well, as against the last refurb (when we lost the deli counter), first impressions of this Tesco refit are positive - and installing the only free cashpoint between Finny P station and Crouch End was exactly the sort of idea which makes it so hard for me to give any time to the 'Tescopoly' doomsayers.
Although...since it reopened, my Freeview has gone on the fritz, and now my web signal's playing up. That probably has more to do with the weather, though; it's lovely light, but already verging on too hot.

I am briefly visible in this pop video, though clearly my contribution bears no comparison either to Scarlet Blonde's or [livejournal.com profile] alexdecampi's.

I've not really been paying much attention to the troubles at Waterstone's; apart from anything else, if I want to find something they don't have, and I've not planned far enough ahead to order it online, there's always Borders. Except now it seems that Borders are pulling out of Britain. Belatedly, I begin to fear for the future of high street bookselling. Not that it's the essential service it was even a decade ago, but a half-decent bookshop is still something I find obscurely soothing; it would be a terrible shame to see them all gone.

Two sperm can fertilise a single egg - how did I not know this? It's the sort of thing I would have expected Armand Marie Leroi's Mutants to cover, but either he missed it or I passed it by in the sheer overload of that genetic freakshow. Which still seems unlikely, because I've suspected for a long time that reproductive biology found what it was looking for; our modern understanding is a recognisable descendant of the 'homunculus' theory which ran from Greece through to the Renaissance - as against, say, certain South American tribes who consider every man the mother sleeps with during the early stages of pregnancy to have some contribution to the child. And this article doesn't mention it, but presumably either some deliberately irresponsible IVF behaviour, or just a particularly interesting weekend, could at the very least lead to twins with different fathers. To the category 'Things One Knew But Is Still Surprised To See Offically Admitted', I can now add "A lot of what we know about fertilisation is deductive, because we can't observe these events in humans."
alexsarll: (aim)
As it nears the end of its first series, Skins is moving increasingly from its pleasing teen fluff beginning to a land of dark neon and twisted mindgames; obviously, I'm loving it. Also, having met Tony's mentalist sister Effie, I'm now totally over Cassie.
Primeval went out on a different sort of high with its first time-travel story proper (as with most Doctor Who, previous episodes had used time travel to put the story's components in place, rather than actually telling stories about time travel). But as brilliant as it was to see Claudia Sound of Thundered, or realise who the camp was, for me the finest moment was Cutter shooting the super-evolved bat-thing from the future. What made the scene was that he didn't say "we're not dead yet", because he didn't need to; it was all in the eyes, a territorial triumphalism far older than language.

We had been warned in advance that the local Tesco would be spending this week closed for refurbishment (presumably it's just not sexy enough for Stroud Green Road anymore), but it seems a bit harsh that on its last day open it was almost entirely bereft of so many staples - the shelves normally devoted to bread, milk and fruit wouldn't have been out of place under communism. How are we meant to provision for the closure like that?

I remain deeply disappointed in myself over my performance at Quasar (although at least our team still won) but I managed to wash some of the salt out of the wound at the thoroughly enjoyable Guided Missile night. I liked the Duloks' shouty girl pop and Silvery's moments of sounding like Sparks, but bloody Hell they have short songs; in comparison, the Low Edges were practically prog, and I think they managed 13 songs in their brief set. Excellent as ever, obviously.

There's something at once reassuring and terrifying in learning that even Susan Sontag, towards the end, "spoke with leaden sadness of time wasted" - because it's a reminder that none of us, no matter how thoroughly we try to live life to the full, can ever escape the shadow of that great affront, mortality.
Likewise, knowing that even Susan Sontag felt "It is from reading that I derive the standards by which I measure my own work and according to which I fall lamentably short" is at once a sanction for, and a corrective to, the sensation that with so many things one wants to read, it's a bit of a waste of everyone's time to write - because what if she'd let that stop her?
Then again, all this was learned in a piece by her son introducing one of her last essays, in which we were reminded that even Susan Sontag could be grotesquely wrong at times. Her generalised attacks on television might apply to daytime pap, but if she lets that stand for the whole then she's forgetting Sturgeon's Law - 90% of everything is rubbish. She should have watched more HBO, and seen TV in a flourish of creativity comparable to Renaissance London theatre, happening right now.

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