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Showing posts from October, 2023

Omni addition this week: Thor by Jason Aaron vol 2

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      As I've mentioned various times (and will many times again), part of a selective rebuild of my comics collection in large-format hardcovers, with a particular eye on the horizon of that life-transition clumsily called "retirement", has primarily been Omnibus editions.        Perhaps foolishly I've mostly been just accumulating them rather than digging straight in, as I'm looking forward to days when my time will rarely be beholden to anyone I don't in some way love, and I can try to discover if I'm capable of recapturing some version of those long-ago years when I had the time to get lost in this sort of thing when and as long as I wished.       There's a whole other quality of life, and the building of a life I want to live discussion I need to have with myself that relates to the timing of all this, but today's blog entry ain't for that.       This week's sole new addition to the physical library is Thor by Jason Aaron vol.2, which

TV/streaming - Oct 27-Nov 2

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   So much that needs doing, and with more than enough items already waiting for me to make the time to watch them, I haven't been digging for yet more new/new-to-me items.       I've already watched and enjoyed this week's penultimate second season ep for Star Trek: Lower Decks and the Frasier series (both on Paramount+), each as part of quiet island block when I wake up somewhere between midnight and two AM on a workday, and am up for two to four hours before dropping off for a pre-workday nap. Both of those I watched pre-dawn yesterday. This week's Lower Decks starts to bring this season's mystery arc out of the shadows, while Frasier continues to build the new show, in part, with thematic echoes of the old.       Today even just Amazon Prime/freevee has five new episodes of shows I'm following: Two each for the recently-returned Bosch: Legacy and Upload , and the seventh/penultimate episode of the first season of Gen V. (Gen V's been renewed for a

Oct 20-26 - Shows (and Bodies) Piling Up

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      I continue to be tired and off-step, these Friday posts coming together on the fly and mostly at the last minute. Still, there's more than enough on my returning and new list to leave me with more than I'll have time to actually watch this weekend.       Restlessness, impatience, and avoiding tasks I'm supposed to be doing all contributed to my already watching this week's episodes of Star Trek: Lower Decks (I've enjoyed every episode) and the third episode of the new Frasier series (still finding its footing, but more there to attract me than put me off) - both Paramount+, and the latest Doom Patrol (a musical episode, including an a capella rendition of the opening theme; this being the back half of the final season, I'm going to miss this crew) on Max. Waiting for me still are this week's Loki (Disney+) and Gen V (Amazon).       I've yet to break the seal on the new and ongoing seasons of Our Flag Means Death on Max, or Syfy's Chucky

Omni-Adds week of October 8th

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     A fairly brief nod toward t his past week's pair of additions to my library.       The fourth volume (of five) of Brubaker's Captain America run, and the all-in-one collection of Peter David's run of Captain Marvel stories, following the tale of Genis-Vell, son of (Marvel's) first Captain Marvel.       Each of these were series I only read once, as each was coming out, each with likely even less attention than I realized at the time. (Which I've been realizing again and again is true for entirely too much of my unfortunately distracted adult life.)       The Captain America volume is 928 pages, and while I recall some of the specifics it's receded to a blur in memory. The fifth volume, wrapping up Brubaker's run with the character, will be coming out within the next month or so if memory serves.       The Captain Marvel tome is 1400 pages, covering some sixty one issues, between his 36-issue series begun in 1999 and the 25-issue one begun in 2002. What

Oct.13-19 - More Returns and Changes

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      Even though I've already watched the pair of debut episodes of Frasier (see next paragraph), and this week's Star Trek: Lower Decks (which continues to do a stellar job of mining  previous Trek series for character, episode and extraterrestrial culture lore and deftly applying them at breakneck speeds), I still have multiple things I'm looking forward to catching up on, including new eps of Gen V (Amazon Prime), Loki (Disney+), and both Archer and Welcome to Wrexham (both on Hulu), along with the first two episodes of a final six for Doom Patrol over on Max... and that's just off the top of my head, so getting this week's streaming post out of the way brings those one step closer for me.       I've watched the two episodes of the new Frasier series that arrived on Paramount+ this week, and while it was a mixed bag it was good to see the character back, with him attempting to move into his third act by returning to Boston, where we first met the ch

Recent Omnibus Adds

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      Five that arrived in a little over the past two weeks. Sunday finally finds me starting to notice them, and begin sorting them into the collection in between loads of laundry and getting some cooking done.       Really only one, the Avengers vol 5, adding the rest of the Englehart run to the Avengers Silver/early Bronze run, is a primary add. This is to say, something strictly in line with what I'd set for myself when I first started selectively building this comics library. This is meant to be a selective, physical rebuild of key-to-me comics runs (having sold off my original comics years ago), with an eye towards a next stage of life, following nominal "retirement," when I'll have the overall time and self-determination of schedule to let me as a late-stage adult potentially have the time for comics that I had back in the '60s and early '70s. The intent will be to evaluate them both with respect to nostalgia and (one would hope) evolved tastes.      

What's To Watch? - Oct 6-12 - Many Returns

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      For the past four years I was part of a group blogging page, The Consortium of Seven , where each of us had one day of the week to post, generally on a given field or some grouping. I started broadly with movies and television, and over time started to mostly narrow it to streaming entertainment, though it would still shift off to something still in theaters or some other reminiscence from time to time. I did that every Friday from September 19, 2019 until this past Friday, September 29, 2023. It wasn't always (often?) prime reading, but it was a schedule, and even through some bad, tense times, I managed to get something up each week. It was good for keeping my hand in.     In reviving my own blog, I'm going to aim to continue something of that sort each Friday. Now, though, I won't just be limited to Friday for such things, should I want to post something about some movie or show at a more timely moment... and I can also post about anything else on Friday, too.  

The Tease of Things I Don't Need

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     The lure of things we don't need, could easily find greater needs to apply the cash to, and which we may not even have the space for, is a very First(ish) World Problem, to be sure.        HasLabs is a special projects division of Hasbro, that occasionally pitches large and/or elaborate items - oversized figures and/or vehicles - essentially crowdfunding each project. They set the price, and a funding line - the number of people who need to pledge to buy one (or more -- up to five) at the announced price, then collect the names and information of interested parties for a period of 45 days. Once the number of pledged buys hits the target, the project is greenlit.      A couple years ago there was a HasLabs special build project aiming to fund a production run for an oversized (32" tall), elaborately-articulated action figure of Marvel comics' Devourer of Worlds: Galactus. Back on July 18, 2021 I posted a piece on the project, which at the time was just two days