mwolson.org Blog - /Personal

Fri, 05 Jun 2009

Video Games Live at the Greek Theatre

Epic: an overused word. Also: describes the Video Games Live concert experience that I had at the Greek Theatre tonight.

The highlights for me were:

There were a few things that could have made the show even more amazing than it already was.

Stacked parking was an interesting experience. Lots of people waiting in their dark cars, and then simultaneously leaving. It was more painless than it looked. One car nearby was rocking out some video game tunes with some sort of synchronous blinking lights on their car while everyone was waiting to get started.

Sun, 13 Jul 2008

Spice and Wolf

I came across a most excellent anime series recently: Spice and Wolf. The main character is a laid-back and calculating trader, and the his companion is a cunning, mischievous, yet fierce wolf goddess. The back-and-forth between them is enjoyable. The plot mostly concerns the trading ventures of the main character, and the distractions to the guy's normal routine due to his new traveling companion. The music fits very well, and reminds me a little of Haibane Renmei. It has been a while since I've liked opening and closing themes for an anime this much. I am very much looking forward to picking this one up when it becomes available for US distribution.

Sat, 05 Jul 2008

Anime Expo 2008

I just got back from Anime Expo 2008. Great experience.

I took the metro rail line from Universal City Station to Central Station on 7th Street, and then to Pico Blvd. From there it was a short walk to the conference. As I got off at Pico at 9am, I noticed quite a few cosplayers, and walked with them to the conference site. Taking the metro line brought to mind the Genshiken manga and anime series, and how the characters would always take the rail line to Comiket.

The cosplayers were amazing, as expected. Some highlights were a group of Sonic characters, a guy giving Mario a "tough-guy" image, many many cute Asian-American girls (most with male escorts), a guy with an exclamation point over his head, a girl dressed as Midna from The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess, a few characters from Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney yelling "Objection!", several girls with Tetris block costumes, Chouji from Naruto, Sakura from Naruto, a Transformer character, and some girls with parasols.

The line for picking up badges was very short, thanks to pre-registering online. I just had to print the email confirmation at home, bring it in, and scan the bar code. Definitely an improvement over the system at ACEN.

To start off, I went to the viewing rooms and took in some anime. I had been wanting to see The Third for a while, so I made sure to catch a few episodes. I liked the opening song. The anime had some humorous moments, which were appreciated by the crowd. The plot wasn't quite for me, though: a 14-year old tomboy beating up on mecha using PSP, with a bishounen love interest. After that, I watched a late-season episode of Wolf's Rain. I still don't quite understand the plot of that series. The episode had some sort of epic showdown involving a paradise.

I had some sort of a Thai salad for lunch on-site. The dining area was a bit crowded, and I ended up sitting across from a Korean-American manga-ka (manga author) named Jinsoo Terry. She was there to exhibit her new series Palbot: Come to America. She told me where her booth was, but alas, I was looking in the wrong place for it, and ended up missing it. Nonetheless, it was nice just to meet her.

I wore my "Eye"-R-C Chart T-shirt to the con, and that proved an excellent choice. I received at least 4 compliments on it, and two of those were not even while at the conference site. I had bought that shirt last year at ACEN 2007, so I made another T-shirt purchase this year. This one had a front which reads "Robert A. Heinlein for President: More Life Than Any Other Candidate ... and Better Ideas."

After lunch, I went to the exhibit hall and checked out every single vendor (including the artist alley), which took at least an hour. I ended up buying a Trigun poster, the aforementioned Heinlein shirt, and an artist drawing of several heroines from the Naruto anime series — I must admit a fondness for Hinata from that series :^) . I also noticed a towel with Kyoko Otonashi from Maison Ikkoku for sale, as well as some body pillows with the character Haruhi from The Melancholy of Suzimiya Haruhi. Tempting, but I have my limits.

I noticed that they claimed to have a "manga cafe" near the viewing rooms, so I thought I would see what that was like. Basically, it was just a room with several tables, a couple vending machines with drinks, and a lot of manga available for reading on shelves. We were required to leave our badges and belongings at the front desk, presumably to discourage theft. I spent a good hour and a half there, making it through volume one of the NausicaƤ manga, and about half of the first volume of To Terra.

By 3:30pm, I was a bit tired, and no interesting anime series were being shown in the viewing rooms, so I decided to call it a day. This was the first time I had done a solo trip to an anime convention, and it proved to be an enjoyable time.

Mon, 30 Jun 2008

Book recommendation: The Devil in Dover

Lauri Lebo's book The Devil in Dover is a moving account of the 2005 "Intelligent Design" trial in Dover, Pennsylvania. The author does an excellent job of fusing the real stories of many participants in this debacle into a comprehensible timeline. She writes in a way that makes for an enjoyable, diverse, and moving read, preserving the human element of the tale. I recommend it.

Fri, 30 May 2008

Modest Mouse in concert

I went to a concert featuring The National, Modest Mouse, and R.E.M. I caught only the last song from The National, which was pretty good. It was good enough to cast doubt in my mind as to whether they were Modest Mouse — it would have been depressing to miss MM.

Luckily, I didn't miss them, and enjoyed about an hour and 10 minutes worth of material. There was a good mix of old and new. Isaac Brock was fucking fantastic to see in person. Some kids next to me lit up a cigarette when Modest Mouse played the song Fire It Up, which prompted a security guard to take them aside for a talking to. Paper Thin Walls was a personal favorite, due to the walls on my apartment conducting a bit too much sound. The instrumental work in Doin' the Cockroach was particularly snappy. I was able to see one of the band members break out a trumpet with a mute on some of the songs. They did a really good job of bringing the concert songs at least up to par with how they sounded on the albums, which was quite a feat.

R.E.M. was about how I expected them to be. In a word: mediocre. I left about halfway through their set because I didn't hear any of their older stuff.

I enjoyed the setting for the concert. In the backdrop were some hills with a tiny bit of vegetation on them, and a bit of the famous Hollywood sign. Not so enjoyable was the gaudy eyesore of an electrically-lit cross off to the right in the background. With the hills, it was a contrast of majesty and masochism.

There were only a couple of songs from the Modest Mouse set that I didn't recognize, probably because they were from the latest album. I'll have to pick it up now.

Tue, 18 Mar 2008

Driving on Coldwater Canyon

In celebration of my old Volvo passing a smog inspections test (well ... actually I was just trying to go around the block after finding a grocery store), I took it for a drive south on Coldwater Canyon and Mulholland. The view was really something, as these roads wind their way up a hill with a significant drop-off. The hairpin turns reminded me of playing Need for Speed and MotoRacer 9 years ago, except at lower speeds and with a vehicle that handles better at that speed. I wonder if these roads are part of any video game I've played; they gave me a certain sense of deja vu.

Sun, 16 Mar 2008

Bootstrapping the apartment

It has now been three weeks since I relocated to LA. The process of moving in lends itself to the analogy of bootstrapping a system. The goal of not sleeping on the floor (an important one for me) has the following dependency chain:

  1. Block until movers arrive with computer and other items
  2. Install Internet service (for getting directions and evaluating furniture options ahead of time)
  3. Block until arrival of car from a different mover
  4. Obtain driver's license and temporary permit for car from the DMV, which involved a very long metro trip
  5. Clean driver's side window and front window to make it safe to drive more than a block
  6. Take car to car wash place to make it safer to drive for longer distances
  7. Make trip to furniture place
  8. Receive couch and bed from delivery people
  9. Install couch
  10. Reboot the system (sleep)
  11. Install bed

I decided to use the metro instead of renting a car, based on some decent experiences in West Lafayette with their transportation system. That has been a somewhat dismal choice, mostly due to needing to learn several lessons about life in a big city. Such as: don't sit on a bench for more than a half hour if an angry panhandler is known to be in the area. And also: the LA Dash tends to zigzag across different roads, rather than staying on its current road, leaving me an uphill walk of perhaps a mile and a half to get back on track. I got my car a few days ago, and I have never been more happy to have one.

It's interesting to go to a place like Starbucks at different times of the day and note how the atmosphere changes. I had never seen anything like that until I came here.

I went to IKEA yesterday to get a couch and a bed, as I did not bring any furniture here with me. The couch looked easy to set up, so I did that yesterday. Even though the couch was a tad narrow, it beat sleeping on the floor. My goal for the end of the weekend is to set up the bed and buy a microwave.