(1) TERMINAL LANCE: “GENERATIONAL WAR”. [Item by James Bacon.] Terminal Lance “Generational War”, a poignant Marine parody of Dr Manhattan from Alan Moore’s and Dave Gibbons Watchmen speaks to the repetitive nature of history while sharing the sentiments and thoughts of Iraq Veteran Maximilian Uriarte.

The Veteran Marine, New York Times best seller, and creator of Terminal Lance a comic strip running for sixteen years now, shared his thoughts on his Terminal Lance blog, which deserves to be read in full. The comic and blog indicates sentiments and thoughtfulness that demonstrates a solidarity with humanity, at this time of war, reflecting a wider anxiety and is an important voice, to hear but also see speaking.
The Dr Manhattan parody is instantly recognisable, it adeptly gives a sense of lonely distance yet an Omniprescience, and for me, it evoked a sense of the pointlessness of war, while garnering an appreciation for those in service who make a commitment to what they saw as a greater good, now with no choice, who do their duty even if there is a desperate despair about the leadership, motivations and orders, facing an inevitable sacrifice.
The importance of a war veteran writing and creating work, that’s reflecting on our now, one where war is taking place, cannot be underestimated.
I was fortunate to meet Maximilian, at Wondercon when it was in San Francisco, he was supporting the Concord Veterans Center and an exceptionally nice person whose work has crossed over the military and comic communities, while the realities of the human aspect have brought it wide appeal.
I enjoy Terminal Lance, the online web comic, but should note that the graphic novel Terminal Lance: The White Donkey by Maximilian Uriarte is one of the best war comics of the 21st Century. An incredible reflection on the realities of war with its close up view of the impact, a beautifully drawn and told comic store that shares an honest and heartfelt insight into the Iraq conflict, written and drawn by a marine who served there.
(2) IT’S A ROBINSON AFFAIR. This Science Fiction / San Francisco event is happening March 29: “Mary Robinson in conversation with Kim Stanley Robinson”. Get tickets through Eventbrite.
The former President of Ireland, Mary Robinson will be in conversation with Kim Stanley Robinson on Sunday March 29th from 2:00pm.

Tickets just added due to overwhelming demand!
Join the Consulate General of Ireland, the University of San Francisco and SF in SF -Science Fiction in San Francisco, as we welcome Mrs. Mary Robinson, President of Ireland (1990-1997), United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (1997-2002) and globally recognized Human Rights advocate. Joining her in conversation will be award-winning writer Kim Stanley Robinson, author of “The Ministry for the Future”.
Just added ! Due to overwhelming demand, we are able to offer a limited run of tickets. Reserve before March 28th at noon. Space is limited! Register now.
This event will take place at McLaren Conference Center, directly next to the Sobrato center/basketball stadium on the University of San Francisco’s Fulton Street campus.
(3) DREAM FOUNDRY CONTESTS OPEN APRIL 13. The Dream Foundry’s contests for emerging writers and artists will be open to submissions are from April 13 through June 8, 2026. There are no fees to submit.
The full rules and details regarding the contests, including links to submit and full profiles on the judges, are available here:
Cash prizes will be given to the top three entries. First Place: $1500 (the art contest’s prize money as part of the Monu Bose Memorial Prize). Second Place: $750. Third Place: $400.
For 2026, Julia Rios returns as the writing contest coordinator and Ilinica Barbacuta returns as the art contest coordinator. They’ll announce the judges soon.
(4) OCTOTHORPE. In Episode 156 of the Octothorpe podcast, “Surprisingly Well-Adjusted Young Gentlemen”, John Coxon, Alison Scott, and Liz Batty “discuss Locus, we discuss the Nebulas, we discuss Eastercon, and then we talk about Liz’s totally SFnal and very genre pick.” There’s an uncorrected transcript here.

(5) CRITICAL WRAITH. [Item by Steven French.] Ben Child gets a tad snarky over recent LoTR news in the latest “Week In Geek” newsletter: “Will Stephen Colbert’s Lord of the Rings film be Tom Bombadil’s time to shine?” in the Guardian.
As I write this, there are at least five days to April Fools’ Day. Yet the news that Stephen Colbert, the American late night host, is about to write a new Lord of the Rings movie based at least in part on some (more) bits of the JRR Tolkien tome that didn’t make it into Peter Jackson’s Oscar-winning trilogy certainly feels like a prank….
(6) THE MOST IN-DEMAND FAMILY MOVIES OF 2026. JustWatch the world’s largest streaming guide, today released its top performing family friendly titles just ahead of the long Easter weekend. Drawing on millions of JustWatch film fans, the list highlights what US families are watching ahead of the long weekend—spanning decades, genres, and platforms.
Here are some of the key findings:
- Fresh releases lead the Easter watchlist
Three of the top 10 most popular titles are recent releases not yet available on streaming, showing that audiences are looking to watch something new over Easter. - Familiar favorites still steal the spotlight
Sequels, re-releases, and beloved titles like Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, Zootopia 2, and Wicked: For Good continue to draw strong interest, highlighting the enduring appeal of films audiences already know and love. - Classic comebacks
Renewed interest in the 1985 classic The Goonies is emerging this year amid rumors of a potential sequel in the works, making it a nostalgic pick for Easter viewing.

(7) STILL PLAYING VHS. [Item by Steven French.] Keith Stuart waxes nostalgic in this week’s “Pushing Buttons” newsletter: “My quest to preserve VHS-era gaming culture, one eBay bid at a time” in the Guardian.
As I am nostalgic and of a certain age, I recently bought a VHS video recorder, just for the retrospective thrill of it; then I won a 32-inch CRT television at an auction in Shepton Mallet. Partly, this was to play a few old videos I had found in my loft, including one of me appearing in a 1990s youth TV show talking about sexism and Tomb Raider. (I was against the sexism, to be clear). But it was also because I wanted a new way of spending my money on fragile video-game nostalgia.
The rise of the games industry in the 1980s and 90s coincided with the explosion of the home-video business, and the two crossed paths in lots of interesting ways. There are the obvious treasures I want to get hold of: VHS copies of Street Fighter: The Movie and the 1993 Super Mario Bros. movie, naturally, as well as early games-inspired hits such as The Last Starfighter, The Wizard and WarGames. I rented most of these from my local video shop in the 80s – which, like many others, also sold computer games by the budget publisher Mastertronic, another interesting (at least to me) crossover between these two entertainment formats….
(8) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.
[Written by Paul Weimer.]
March 26, 1931 — Leonard Nimoy. (Died 2015.)
By Paul Weimer: It is fitting that Leonard Nimoy’s birthday should only be a couple of days after William Shatner’s. Sure, like Shatner himself, Nimoy is much more than his Star Trek character. But then again, he is the one who felt it necessary to write a book called I am Not Spock. Shatner never had to do the same for Kirk.
Why that is is because Nimoy brings a human alienness to Spock that no iteration of him since has quite managed. There are several Spocks running around now in movie and series history, but Nimoy’s is the one that sticks, the one that is the definitive article. The brainiac logic-fueled half human…who nevertheless shows real passion and anger in “Amok Time”, and especially at the utter joy that Kirk has in fact survived after all. Or learning the limits of logical action in “The Gaileo Seven”. Nimoy’s Spock was always learning, always growing, always becoming better (a lesson Spiner would apply to Data). The whole journey of Spock’s death, resurrection, and return to normal through the Star Trek movies shows a whole gamut of emotions and character growth. Nimoy sells all of that.
But Nimoy was more than that. He was the narrator of In Search Of, and I remember watching that for the first time and wondering why the voice was familiar on the episode, and only learning a couple of months later it was, in fact, “Spock”. I also enjoyed his secondary role in the 1978 Invasion of the Body Snatchers. He also directed a number of movies as well, and became a producer, later, in the bargain. When I finally got to watching the original Mission Impossible (which I had only seen scattershot growing up), I was delighted to find he was there, too, as a master of disguise and immersion, Paris.
Later in life, he had a role in a number of episodes of Fringe.
On top of all that, you probably know about his music, if for nothing else than “The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins.”. But did you know he was also a rather good photographer? In a world next door, he pursued that to the fullest rather than acting. As it is, the work he has done has been exhibited in major museums.
Such a diverse and strong and polymathic artistic talent. I wish I could have met him, but he died in 2015. Requiescat in pace.

(9) COMICS SECTION.
- Rubes stuck the landing.
- Savage Chickens kept mutating.
- Strange Brew has a question from the electorate.
- xkcd feels more people deserve credit for the breakthrough.
(10) ENTERTAINING COINCIDENCE. Mental Floss found “7 Historical Figures Who Lived at the Same Time (But Feel Like They Didn’t)”. For example — Orville Wright (1871–1948) and Neil Armstrong (1930–2012).
…When Neil Armstrong stepped onto the Moon in 1969, it highlighted how far aviation had come from its earliest days. Orville Wright, who pioneered powered flight in 1903, witnessed advances from horse-drawn travel to the breaking of the sound barrier in 1947—capturing one of history’s most dramatic leaps, even though he didn’t live to see humans reach the Moon…
(11) NEW APPLE TV SFF PROJECT. “Vanessa Kirby & Yahya Abdul-Mateen II To Star In ‘Liminal’” reports Deadline.
Apple has greenlighted Liminal, a sci-fi action-thriller from director Louis Leterrier (Fast X) that will star Academy Award nominee Vanessa Kirby (Pieces of a Woman) and Emmy winner Yahya Abdul-Mateen II (Wonder Man).
Liminal is based on the AWA graphic novel Telepaths by Eisner Award winner J. Michael Straczynski, Steve Epting and Brian Reber. While the plot of the feature take is being kept under wraps, the source material takes place in a world where a tenth of the population suddenly gains telepathic powers as a result of electromagnetic disturbance. Subsequently, newly telepathic Boston police find themselves contending with a faction, led by a wrongly convicted prisoner, who are trying to escape a world in which their powers will make them targets.
Hailing from Apple Studios, Liminal is written by Justin Rhodes (Terminator: Dark Fate)….
(12) KENTUCKY ENERGY DISCOVERY. “Scientists Turn Bourbon Waste Into Supercapacitors With A 25x Energy Boost” reports HotHardware.
Scientists at the University of Kentucky have found a way to turn the soggy, grain-filled leftovers of bourbon production, a.k.a. stillage, into high-performance electrodes for supercapacitors, potentially turning Kentucky’s 95% share of the world’s bourbon market into a major player in the green energy grid.
No doubt then that one of Kentucky’s bread-and-butter industries is the whiskey business. However, for every bottle of Pappy Van Winkle or Jim Beam you might enjoy, there are about 10 bottles’ worth of a chunky, beige, oatmeal-like sludge left behind in the vats. Distilleries usually offload this stillage to local farmers as cow feed, but cows have their limits, and the sheer volume of waste is a logistical headache that requires expensive drying processes.
Enter the chemists Josiel Barrios Cossio and Marcelo Guzman who recently discovered that this waste is a goldmine of carbon. By stuffing the stillage into a 10-liter reactor and hitting it with intense heat and pressure (a technique known as hydrothermal carbonization), they transformed the sog into a fine black powder.This powder was then treated in two different ways. Some of it was baked at 392° Fahrenheit to create hard carbon, a material where the carbon sheets are slightly messy and disorganized, making it the perfect storage medium for absorbing lithium ions. The rest was treated with potassium hydroxide and blasted at 1,472° to create activated carbon, which is packed with tiny pores that provide a massive surface area for holding an electrical charge.
When the team sandwiched these materials into coin-sized supercapacitors, the results were very positive. The activated carbon versions performed as well as high-end commercial models. However, the biggest surprise came when the team built hybrid devices using both the hard and activated carbons—they found that these bourbon batteries stored up to 25 times more energy per kilogram than traditional versions.
As they are, supercapacitors are prized for their ability to charge and discharge almost instantly, perfect for the regenerative braking in electric cars or stabilizing the power grid when the wind stops blowing….
(13) VIDEO OF THE DAY. “DreamWorks Animation Drops ‘Forgotten Island’ First Look” from Animation World Network.
Grammy and Academy Award winner H.E.R. and Soberano (Lisa Frankenstein, Alone/Together) star as high school graduates Jo and Raissa, best friends since grade school but now about to embark on separate life paths. While celebrating their last night together, the pair stumble upon a mysterious portal that transports them to the fantastical island of Nakali, packed with magical and mythological creatures they grew up hearing stories about from their Filipino families.
Some of these figures will become friends, some foes. Joined by well-meaning-but- hapless weredog Raww (Dave Franco) and a small-but-mighty pack of pals, Jo and Raissa must face The Dreaded Manananggal (Tony winning icon Lea Salonga), the most feared creature on the island. When they discover that the memories of their entire friendship are the price for returning home, Jo and Raissa will race to find a way to leave the island before they forget each other forever.
[Thanks to Steven French, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, James Bacon, John Coxon, Daniel Dern, Peter D. Tillman, John King Tarpinian, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Mark Roth-Whitworth, and Kathy Sullivan for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Dan’l.]

















































