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[personal profile] nevanna
Before Black History Month comes to a close – and with Women’s History Month ahead – I want to talk about some of my top five Black female characters in live-action TV (not necessarily characters I, as a white viewer, feel qualified to judge as Good or Bad Representation – just characters whom I enjoyed watching).

1. Zoe Washburne (Firefly)

As with most of Joss Whedon’s work – and for some extra reasons having to do with the show’s unapologetic Orientalism – I think the cultural re-evaluation of Firefly has, overall, been a good thing. I still think that Zoe was and is a standout character: capable, tough, loyal, loving, sexy and funny, in ways that balanced each other and (although at least as much credit has to go to Gina Torres as to Whedon and the writing team) made her feel like a whole and authentic person.

2. Martha Jones (Doctor Who)

In her long-running TARDIS Eruditorum project, Elisabeth Sandifer describes Martha as “the forgotten companion – the one that didn’t quite work. That’s not to say that she doesn’t have her fans and admirers, nor that those fans are wrong. But they are swimming against the tide…” Sandifer does her best to back up that thesis in her discussion of Martha’s narrative role on Doctor Who, and I don’t think she’s entirely wrong, either, but Martha is still one of my favorite characters. She’s brave and clever and adventurous, like many of the Doctor’s companions, but is also willing to push back when he’s taking her for granted, despite her doomed crush on him, and cares as much about her family on Earth as she does about her travels in other worlds. Watching her pine for the Doctor while he’s still fixated on Rose is sometimes frustrating,, but that makes her choice to walk away from the TARDIS on her own terms – after traveling over a post-apocalyptic earth and laughing in the face of the near-omnipotent being who tried to take it over – is deeply satisfying.

3. Lynn Stewart (Black Lightning)

I love all the members of the Pierce-Stewart family, but – even based upon the season and change of Black Lightning that I’ve seen – I really appreciated the direction that the show took Lynn’s character. Not only was she the civilian partner of a superhero, and the non-powered parent of super-powered children, who knew about her family’s abilities (instead of being kept in the dark like many wives and girlfriends in this genre), but she had an entire storyline that wasn’t primarily about her husband but about her, her medical expertise, and her relationships with other supers and a morally ambiguous scientific colleague. I would definitely love to finish the show at some point soon, and even if something infuriating happens to Lynn in the episodes that I haven’t seen yet, she’ll always have had that.

4. Monica Rambeau (WandaVision)

Monica was first introduced as an adorable child in the Captain Marvel movie. WandaVision revisits her as an adult re-acclimating to her life after Thanos’s Snap (which happened in another movie that I did not watch, but I understand the basic gist) was reversed. I like how she’s integrated into the story, first as a victim of Wanda’s illusion and then as one of the people investigating it, grieving but still determined. I agree with the observation in this video essay that her motivations and moral compass – both of which were very sympathetic – started to fall apart toward the end as it became more evident where the show’s sympathies were weighted,, but she’s a wonderful character up until that point.

5. Spanish Jackie (Our Flag Means Death)

Whether her character was collecting husbands or noses, Leslie Jones stole every scene that she was in. No notes.

Characters whom I considered listing include Amanita Caplan (Sense8), Aisha Robinson (Cobra Kai), Bonnie Bennett (The Vampire Diaries), and Viv (Sex Education).

Pluralstories Hits 300!

Feb. 24th, 2026 11:07 am
lb_lee: Sneak smiling (sneak)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Sneak: we have 301 entries on [community profile] pluralstories now! I’m really happy and proud of that! I feel like it’s becoming a nice mix of us finding older books, readers submitting the new stuff we don’t hear about and some really neat surprises! It’s especially the “weird” submissions I feel most excited about!

When I started the project three and a half years ago, I didn’t know how it would go. I’m very pleased with it!

... I also want to make a user poll to see how people use the catalog, but that’ll have to wait until we’re less sick.

Oh Come ON!

Feb. 23rd, 2026 01:21 pm
lb_lee: A hand wearing a leather fingerless glove, giving the finger to the camera. (ffffff)
[personal profile] lb_lee
We’re sick again. :( Third time since Day of the Dead. This is getting really old, guys.

The Fine Art of Bibliography

Feb. 22nd, 2026 08:02 pm
lb_lee: A colored pencil drawing of Raige's freckled hand holding a hot pink paperback entitled the Princess and Her Monster (book)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Rogan: I have apparently become the kind of person who not only reads bibliographies of my own free will, but has done so enough to develop taste and critical feelings about them.

Please imagine me swirling fancy wine in a goblet as you read this. )

Comic: Barred from Pokemon Forever

Feb. 21st, 2026 09:21 pm
lb_lee: Biff kissing M.D. on the cheek. (mori&dudema)
[personal profile] lb_lee
This is the winner of the comics/art poll this month! Please enjoy this goofiness... and for added bonus, I'll add the sketch as well!

This was a silly 2016 cooldown sketch from back when I did livestreams. (I have been saying for years that I'd like to start doing them again, but sorry y'all, our art program just doesn't work on Linux. We haven't been able to do digital art on this comp reliably since we got it in Thanksgiving.)

The Devil’s Instrument

Feb. 21st, 2026 11:54 am
lb_lee: The Blue Beetle, Ted Kord, doubled over laughing. (bwa-hah-ha)
[personal profile] lb_lee
(Alternate title: the Devil Went Down to Georgia... and Regretted It)

While talking with our roommates about the fiddle as the Devil’s Instrument, we got to thinking about the comparative Satanism of other instruments, ranked by how well you could make a Devil dueling song out of it.

The fiddle, yes. The banjo, of course. The harmonica would also be a good contender.

But then we got silly. The tuba would just end like that Spike Jones record where they try to play Flight of the Bumblebee on the trombone. The Devil’s Tympani? The Devil’s Theremin??? (Well, the theremin would likely work out fine.) Warring bassoons? (As a former school bassoonist, we are of course obligated to declare that bassoons can totally war, it’ll just look undignified as the thumbs fly.)

But then we knew. The Devil’s Horn. The instrument that regardless of playing ability instantly sends all listeners to hell:

THE VUVUZELA.

All other contenders go home.

Amish Wizard

Feb. 20th, 2026 04:22 pm
lb_lee: The Blue Beetle, Ted Kord, doubled over laughing. (bwa-hah-ha)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Some smartphone door-to-door salesmen were going around my neighborhood a few days ago, but they made the terrible mistake of getting me at the door, and I easily banished them with the words, "I don't have a smartphone."

Later that day, as I was hauling my laundry for washing, I encountered the salesman again, along with their colleague, both of whom looked to be young, in their early twenties. The one who hadn't encountered me complimented my "necklace," which I said, "Oh, it's a compass!"

"What, really? Can I see?"

"Yup!"

I opened the compass, dazzling both young sellers. They very well may have never seen a compass before in real life.

"Can you really use that?"

"Yup! I use it with maps so I don't get lost!"

"Like, on paper? YOU CAN READ A PAPER MAP???"

At which point the one who'd encountered me said, "They don't have a smartphone either!"

"REALLY?!"

With a flourish, I whipped out my dumbphone and flipped it open. The two salespeople watched as though I had done a magic trick, utterly enchanted, staring at me like I was some kind of Amish wizard. I should've bowed.

So now we and the salespeople are on good terms. ...they probably won't try to sell to us again.
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
I wrote about the time my girlfriend's online RPG became my primary fandom.

I am not immune to the sentimental allure of a fandom anniversary, and I'd hoped to post this entry last fall, roughly 20 years after the events that it describes. But in October, my offline life became very chaotic, very quickly, and I didn't have nearly enough energy to decide what I wanted to say, or - just as importantly - what I wanted to leave out.

If we know each other offline, and you have some idea of "Briar's" real identity, please don't bring it up here. I gave her a pseudonym, and ultimately cut out a lot of what I'd written about the progression of our relationship, for a reason.

Peter Ibbetson, 1891 vs. 1935

Feb. 19th, 2026 03:29 pm
lb_lee: A colored pencil drawing of Raige's freckled hand holding a hot pink paperback entitled the Princess and Her Monster (book)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Rogan: I’ve gotten obsessed with a 130-year-old novel and its 90-year-old movie, and much like Dracula 2020, I’m gonna make it all y’all’s problem now!

I hope y’all like Gary Cooper and great-grandma-aged SPOILERS! )

Tuesday Top Five: A Peek at Critique

Feb. 17th, 2026 10:41 pm
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
Here are five pieces of popular culture and media commentary that I enjoyed in 2025.

1. Wizards vs. Lesbians (Podcast)

The best way that I can describe this show is that the podcasters, Isaac and Alexis, have identified a recurring cluster of tropes in science fiction/fantasy, relating to queer desire, patriarchy, and empire, and are exploring how those tropes manifest across different works – mostly literature, though they have discussed a movie or TV series here and there. Their approach to their subject matter seems largely to be “we know it when we see it,” but their discussions are usually thoughtful and enjoyably snarky, even if I don’t fully agree with their opinions.

2. Broken Watch (Blog Post)

Jude Doyle’s essay is primarily about Alan Moore’s Watchmen and its influence on superhero comics, but it’s also about the power – and the failures – of Dark And Gritty Takes on established genres. (Consequently, it talks a fair amount about sexual assault other types of violence.) In this essay and others, Doyle is really good at analyzing why he, and many of us, love and hate certain works of fiction, or find them compelling and infuriating and culturally foundational, at the same time.

3. The Problem With "The Year of Dramione" (Video Essay)

Princess Weekes posts reliably insightful YouTube video essays about pop culture and fandom, with a particular eye toward racial politics and speculative fiction. In this video, she discusses three popular Harry Potter fanfics that were re-worked into original fiction and released by major publishing houses in the same year. This “pull-to-publish” practice has fascinated me for a very long time, and Weekes does an admirable job of examining how those particular authors and their publishers handle (or fair to handle) the problematic origins of their work.

4. Queer As Folk Ran So Heated Rivalry Could Skate (Newsletter)

In this installment of the Fandom Exile newsletter, Monia Ali compares and contrasts Queer As Folk, which was adapted for American viewers in the early 2000s, with recent fandom darling Heated Rivalry. I never watched the former and am newly fannish about the latter, but I found myself nodding along at Ali’s discussion of how both shows fit into the modern queer media landscape and ongoing discourse about what counts as Good Representation, and how audience responses have and haven’t changed.

5. Untitled Tumblr post about Shadow Daddies, Kylo Rens and Dracos in Leather Pants

This post, by a blogger called goblins-riddles-or-frocks, is a sort of analytical neighbor to Princess Weekes’ video linked above. I don’t currently have much interest in the “romantasy” genre, in which all three of the relevant romantic archetypes are thriving, but I am interested in Fictional Boyfriends.

Heated Mockery

Feb. 16th, 2026 08:27 am
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
Even if JK Rowling hadn't turned out to be a tar pit, I would still think SNL's "Heated Wizardry" sketch was a misfire.

Salty overthinking. )

Rawlin sketch: digitigrade

Feb. 11th, 2026 08:13 pm
lb_lee: Rogan drawing/writing in a spiral. (art)
[personal profile] lb_lee
Mori: Rawlin pencil doodle behind the cut!

Read more... )

LB tables at Boskone this weekend!

Feb. 11th, 2026 06:57 pm
lb_lee: Rogan drawing/writing in a spiral. (art)
[personal profile] lb_lee
This weekend, February 13-15, we will be tabling at Boskone 63, at the Westin Boston Seaport District, Boston, Massachusetts. Tabling hours will be 4-8 Friday, 10-6 Saturday, and 10-3 Sunday. To make up for the sick day at Arisia, we will be debuting four new titles, creek don't rise! All of them are short stories, and two of them contain all-new material available nowhere else (yet): Sacrificial Stories of the Neverwas, a collection of imaginary folk takes on the nature of sacrifice, and Kayfabe in the Coliseum, a pseudo Greco-Roman tale of prizefighting and metanarrative.

The other two are a zine version of Crazy Boys Get Money (with an illustration I'm proud of!) and Time is a Mobius Strip, which is a compilation of two short stories, "Ana, Chronistic", and "Chrone," originally published in Flights of Reality under the name "Better Luck Next Time."

All of the stories have been edited for print. Hope to see you there!

EDIT from Rogan: Just realized this I guess makes Crazy Boys Get Money a Valentine's Day debut. Well, maybe it's happier than Red Roses, Old Horses?

Tuesday Top Five: Love Multiplied

Feb. 10th, 2026 09:34 pm
nevanna: (Default)
[personal profile] nevanna
With Valentine’s Day coming up at the end of the week, I decided to list my top five polyamorous ships across my various fandoms.

1. The Crew of Light aka the Polycula (Dracula)

When I was following Dracula Daily in 2022, I summed up the relationships between Stoker’s heroes as follows, more or less: “Lucy, her three boyfriends, her girlfriend Mina, Mina’s husband Jonathan, and… whatever Doctors Seward and Van Helsing have going on.”

2. Rose Tyler/Ninth Doctor/Jack Harkness (Doctor Who)

Each of the three characters and component pairings was fascinating and charming in their own way, and the trio clearly and believably cared for each other, and enjoyed their adventures together, within their relatively little shared screen time.

3. Kara Danvers/James Olsen/Winn Schott (Supergirl)

The connection between these three, as it developed over the first season of the CW’s Supergirl, was what inspired [personal profile] nightforest and me to coin the phrase “Team Triad.”

4. Poe Dameron/Rey/Finn (Star Wars)

I wasn’t the biggest fan of The Rise of Skywalker, but I did enjoy seeing Finn, Poe, and Rey go on an adventure together, and the group hug between them at the end.

5. Varice Kingsford/Numair Salmalín/Ozorne Muhassin Tasikhe (Tortall series)

The backstory in Tempests & Slaughter, in which Arram (later Numair) and Ozorne are best friends at mage school, makes the events of Emperor Mage at least ten times more tragic than it already was.