Apr. 5th, 2012

nebroadwe: From "The Magdalen Reading" by Rogier van der Weyden.  (Default)
So last week, one of the most unpleasant weeks in the history of ever, was also one during which I discovered two truly awesome things.

Thing the First:
Dark Oracle is an Emmy-winning Canadian live-action fantasy television program for young adults that ran for two 13-episode seasons back in the mid-oughts. (It's currently broadcasting on the "This TV" channel on Saturday mornings, which is where I encountered it.) Protagonists Lance and Cally Stone are fifteen-year-old twins: she's pretty, popular and a driving force behind most of her school's fundraisers; he's a quiet gaming-and-comic-books geek. One afternoon a frog (yes, you read that right, but don't worry -- this isn't an anthropomorphized animal tale) inflicts the first issue of a comic book, the eponymous Dark Oracle, on them. The pages are largely blank, but seem to detail the adventures of fifteen-year-old twins Blaze and Violet in a dark, crumbling town filled with unpleasant magic, dangerous gangs, and teen angst turned up to eleven. In the first season, the comic book seems to predict or mirror potentially problematic or disastrous events in Lance and Cally's lives, the panels gradually filling in as the plot in both worlds unfolds. By episode thirteen Blaze and Violet have twigged to the connection between their world and ours and the second season has them attempting to cross over, possibly with extreme prejudice to their counterparts. There's trippy weirdness, adventure, narrow escapes, and enough shipping to fill a port. :-)

Read more... )
Thing the Second:
So my friends and I road-tripped to Washington, D.C., for the Cherry Blossom Festival, but unfortunately missed peak bloom altogether. Thank you, global warming. On the other hand, we did catch the Kite Festival, which was a blast. There's nothing like being on the National Mall with hundreds of other people effectively reenacting the last scene from Mary Poppins. I hadn't put a kite in the air for twenty-five years, but in helping the small children in our group get theirs up, I realized both that I'm still pretty good at it and that I really, really enjoy it. It was hard not to hog the string, actually. As soon as I can manage, I'm buying a kite of my own and taking it over to the park of an evening to play. I had too much fun to let another twenty-five years go by without flying a kite.

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nebroadwe: From "The Magdalen Reading" by Rogier van der Weyden.  (Default)
The Magdalen Reading

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