“Every atom in your body came from a star that exploded. And, the atoms in your left hand probably came from a different star than your right hand. It really is the most poetic thing I know about physics: You are all stardust. You couldn’t be here if stars hadn’t exploded, because the elements - the carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, iron, all the things that matter for evolution and for life - weren’t created at the beginning of time. They were created in the nuclear furnaces of stars, and the only way for them to get into your body is if those stars were kind enough to explode.The stars died so that you could be here today.” 🌟🌟
Trailer for Kathryn Bigelow's film
In 1995, one of my favorite films was released. Set on NYE 1999, turning to 2000. A lone con men, dealing in black market sensory logs, stumbles across a police conspiracy that could rip the city apart.
Police militarization, open gun play in the streets, and mind reading technology. Well, two out of three are on the evening news every night.
Strange Days
Luke Cage was created in 1972. Four years earlier, in 1968, Martin Luther King, Jr. was shot and killed. Five years before that, in 1963, Medgar Evers was shot and killed. Eight years before that, in 1955, a young Black man named Emmett Till was tortured, then shot and killed. These events, and numerous others with frightening similarity, happened in a line, and in the early years of the first decade to reap the social benefits of the Civil Rights Movement, Marvel Comics gives the fans (and the world) a Black male superhero whose primary superhuman aspect… is that he’s bulletproof. Not flight, or super speed, or a power ring. The superhuman ability of being impervious to bullets. Superheroes. Action heroes. Fantasy heroes. Power fantasies. Is there any doubt the power fantasy of the Black man in the years following multiple assassinations of his leaders and children by way of the gun would be superhuman resistance to bullets? In American society, the Black man has come a long way from the terrors of the past handful of centuries, only to crash right into the terrors of the 21st century. Some of those terrors being the same exact ones their grandparents had to face and survive — or not. There are Black men who are wealthy, powerful, formidable and/or dangerous. They can affect change undreamt of by their parents, and their parents’ parents. Their children will be able to change the world in ways we can intuit and others we can barely begin to try and predict. But a bullet can rip through their flesh and their future with no effort whatsoever. And so we look at Luke Cage, a man who gets shot on a regular basis, whose body language is such that he is expecting to be shot at, prepared for the impact — because he knows he can take it. And maybe, in the subconscious of the uni-mind of Marvel Comics, is the understanding that Luke Cage may unfortunately always be a relevant fantasy idea for the Black man. 2012 – Trayvon Martin is shot and killed. 2013 – Jonathan Ferrell is shot and killed. 2014 – Michael Brown is shot and killed. 2015/2016 – Luke Cage premieres on Netflix. I look forward to seeing if the Luke Cage of that show will have a true understanding of his power and what he symbolizes.
Real Life Proves Why Luke Cage Endures (via comicberks)
Reading that was like getting kicked in the gut. And yet it feels like that’s not enough.
(via optimysticals)
btw the katy perry/bezos' girlfriend/other four irrelevant billionaires 10 minute space stunt was not the first all female expedition no matter how much they try to market it as such. the first all female mission was in 1963 with soviet cosmonauts Valentina Tereshkova, Irina Solovyova and Valentina Ponomaryova - all three of which were working class and had to pass incredibly hard exams to be chosen from 400 potential candidates. just in case we started falling for the propaganda machine again
Dial H for HERO was a great mid 80′s back up feature in a lot of Superboy comics, this series was fun for me. I don’t remember how long I kept up with it though. Most likely because 03 to 05 was an utter shit show in my life and kind of PTSD.
H-E-R-O #1, April 2003, cover by John Van Fleet
Good bye, to an iconic actress.
A legend has left us.
Evin Godzilla needs a break
Haruo Nakajima takes a break from being inside Godzilla.
http://welcometotwinpeaks.com/inspiration/twin-peaks-matchbooks/
Twin Peaks Matchbook Series by Steven Rhodes
Star Wars: The Force Awakens has completed principal photography.