söndag 13 januari 2013

The Tudors - S II, E II

Currently rewatching Showtime's great mantlepiece, The Tudors, having just reached into the second season. The actors are great; Rhys-Meyers has likely made his life's foremost incarnation of England's most infortunate (in dubious terms) monarch, and Peter O'Toole is strikingly good as the scheming Pope. And I am yet to savor sweet Joss Stone and spellbinding Max von Sydow, great even for his lifetime of reputation and achievement. My favorite, however, would be Antony Brophy's wonderful omnipresent and omnibenevolent Ambassador Eustace Chapuys. So here is a question; do you enjoy history or a good, juicy scheme you'd rather not be part of yourself? Have you not seen it? Thinking still of not to? Fuh-Geehd Ab-Aout'it-te!

PS: I watched Season One once... stayed my eyes a few years, and then watched all four in a row. One... great... row. I may yet repeat it, many times... So long for "just" 38 episodes, and yet, under the steep, intoxicating guidance of Michael Hirst, 308 would have been more like it B-)


Incarnation of power... JRM, all sumptuous, charismatic and devilishly addictive.

fredag 11 januari 2013

If there was a music to my life...

... I would wish Hans Zimmer (or whomever does his work for him - no accusations intended) to compose it.

James Horner, James Newton Howard, Harry Gregson-Williams, Alexandre Desplat, Alan Silvestri, Alan Menken and Marc Streitenfeld are also particularly good in this area. Not to mention Two Steps From Hell - unfortunately, you or your agents sell your work as the cheapest kind of makeshift harlot.


The artwork is also brilliant - simple, but believable and very visible - in a subtle way   = )

Alternate title: The instrument of my liberation... (... would be written in ink by the hands of... etc)

onsdag 9 januari 2013

Power, Snuff and the Zimbardo Conclusion

The European Union was once hailed as a beacon of peace. "Once" was, last time, last year, precisely one month past, when the Union was bestowed the highest acclaimed award for Peacemakers, preciously kept by such heroes, shining or dubious, as Henri Dunant, Mandela and Henry Kissinger. In Sweden, the Norwegian decision to match this prestigeous award with the (to many) dubious recipient was met with particular ignominy, much due to last years' struggle by elements within the same Union to curtail the use of snuff.

Do you find snuff is disgusting and that that is an excuse for legal action? Well, a century past, a lot of people like you, within and without the Union harboured the same faithful creed on, well, gays for instance. And some kinds of sex. Lots of kinds of sex. Not to mention alcohol; that particular whim has sort of survived the Age of Reason, the end of Prohibition, and every other trial conceivable. Alcohol, I dare say, is dangerous, but only banned under the auspices of tyranny. Not here. Not in the "free world". Now, I ask, do you think snuff is more dangerous? Have you tried snuff? If not, you don't know what you're missing. It's not a particularly pleasant experience, I.M.O., but I do not see any reasonable cause why it should be generally suppressed - that is, in a personal context, used by consenting adults or adolescents. Snuff or snus, unlike cigarettes, has the tremendous capacity of a droner - only here it actually works - of only harming the people who deserve it. Obviously, some of you may miss my demise due to lip cancer (not a common cause of death here either, I kid you not) while others may cheer it, but that does not make my life subject to your whims or creeds or ill desires. Suicide is not an excuse for enslaving those who would commit it. As a French expert (without experience) put it, snuff is "not sexy" and thence, its use should be legally suppressed by all (reasonable - fines and steel bars make the job as well as camps and bonfires) means. Not sexy? Legal action? By all means, establish a Committee of Public Sexiness and let's see what kind of abuse you can work out. I'd prefer you to just work out, as that has the capacity of making your mind work as well.

Now keep the issue of snuff in mind and small committees making grand changes in the lives of others as I unevocatively move on to the next subject. Julmust - another commodity dangerously hampered by its lack of credibility in the English language. Apparently, it's unsafe at any drinking speed, and cannot be reformed. Swedes, a rather small people (:D) indeed, drinks about 50 million litres of Julmust each year. Its contents are not known to cause intoxication (until spiked) and the equivocal excuse, that it contains food coloring and is not to be labeled beer due to that non-alcoholic status, is just plain stupid.

Dangerously unsafe at any degree of sexiness - unless you add alcohol.



Wanted: participants for a committee experiment in the excesses of unwarranted power. Stupidity and prejudice against the unknown may grant preference. (Unbeknownst to you, the decisions of the committee will only be published as a warning to others.) Salary is rather self-chosen, with the risk of those who pay getting upset.


In this, I reach a very brief but old-as-the-trees excuse regarding the issues of legislation and power. It's called the Zimbardo-Stanford experiment nowadays; Google it, if you don't recall, or do not own that knowledge for your recalling. The point as I get it is, place some subjected to the unmutual power of others, and they will behave nasty and ignore their unpreciously bestowed civil liberties. This is, in short, the problem of tyranny, for those who don't find the idea of slavery or semi-slavery unappeasing in itself. Those ruled must in some sense be in charge over those who rule, or suffering and barbarity will follow. Heads will be shaved, and other heads will roll. Toilets will be scrubbed with bare hands. Men will turn to heat for other men to enjoy or suffer, into sweat on their brows. We of the free world are prone to think ourselves rid of barbarity and oppression, or at least reduced it to the whims of criminals, but as far as the institutions of power are concerned we have only come to change them, and the tides of indifference tends to wheel advance the other way - if yet at a slower pace when humans ferociously steep it backwards under the cry of swift progress. In this process, the importance of the vote - universal, exercised and direct - cannot be overestimated. I will have the power to f*ck with the decision-makers of the Union, or they will surely f*ck with me. Pardon the French (for I will not, especially not those who thinks I must be sexy or else be punished).

The EU, until proper democratic-federal institutions are instated, will inexorably suffer from this very dilemma. For some inspiration, look across the Western sea to the tree-old constitution of that insignificant democratic republic the despotic kings of Europe (including our own Gustav) once invested their strength, their money and, in at least two cases, their lives in creating. Fortunately, my committees of Public Sexiness and Against Food Color are too dried of initiative and willpower to find their "peace" under attack. Idleness, after all, is the disease of tyrants as well.

(I would never sink as low as to claim the EU a prison, but then take into account that the participants in Zimbardo's experiment had the power to leave their "prison" just as well as I. In the end, they didn't have to. Will you?)

By the way, Julmust is a soda, and thence will not be touched by the new regulations. Those were a scaring number of hours. Just think about it, and ask if the dragon may yet scorch you for as long as it is not restrained.

A Rant of Religion and Nitty-Grittiness


"It doesn't seem to matter what gods you pray to. We all die in the real world and in fantasy worlds. So, if there was one culture where you did not die, I suspect that God would become very popular."

Not only "popular", George (R.R. Martin). I suspect; this is my comment, that if that was true, we wouldn't have freedom of religion, or separation of church and state for that matter. Religion is too bloody important to be left to the individual, dammit! In that sense, let's pray (!) for universal immortality, and hope the minority sticks to none whatsoever. It doesn't make any sense with a conditional immortality that works after man-made morality. Wow. I just jammed my main argument against religion into one, single, pitiful sentence.

See the entire Google interview (a real horrorshow, brothers) right here. Even, I mean especially if you haven't gorged in his books, you might get a lot from it. There are two small spoilers from GoT (episode 1.9 and 1.10), but it's announced aforehand at the "favorite scene" part. Just skip ahead a minute or maybe two.

"Let's give them leprosy. 'Mmm...'" B-))))


(Hail Mislam and it's everlasting prophet, Uhammad! He'll kick the Twelveth Imam's butt when they resurface for a final showdown. Unfortunately, or perhaps not, that doesn't happen as often as Spider-Man, Ironman or Batman - hopefully this was the last time for a long time, as the Nolans will hardly be outflanked in a hundred years of intelligent, ambitious and deeply spiritual scriptwriters. Prophets and sons of gods seem to have more in common with the likes of Mr. Freeze - they appear once, they die, they are replaced with other people with the same ambitions and the same claims. Sometimes, there may be enough uncertainty for them to maybe return from their demise, and in that they mirror the real world way better than any of their perpetuated foes of eternal light. Period.)