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How Should We Look For Aliens?

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How Should We Look For Aliens?

The search for extraterrestrial life is the ultimate hybrid of creativity and science, the quest to discover something we can’t even describe yet. Jill Tarter embodies that creativity in her work with the SETI Institute, and is the subject of a special video released today.

WeTransfer’s Creative Class is an online series highlighting creative people doing cool things in the world. This season, the series features SETI Institute astronomer Jill Tarter, the real-life inspiration for Carl Sagan’s Dr. Ellie Arroway in Contact.

Tarter chatted with Gizmodo about the role of creativity in the search for intelligent aliens, exclaiming, “You have to try to think creativity about how do you discover what you really can’t imagine!”

How Should We Look For Aliens?

Jill Tarter, real-life alien-hunting astronomer. Image courtesy of Jill Tarter

“I like to say we’re looking for photons, but maybe it’s zeta rays that the advanced technologies of the universe are using to communicate,” Tarter offered as an analogy. “I don’t know what a zeta ray is because we haven’t invented it yet. We don’t understand that physics yet. Maybe that’s in our future.”

We haven’t found aliens yet, so we need to keep expanding the very way that we search. “How do you look at the universe in new ways that will allow you to find things you that you didn’t imagine?” Tarter said. “[Astronomer Martin Harwit] made this case for essentially venture investing in the astronomical sciences because every time you open up a new observation space, we found something we didn’t expect!”

How Should We Look For Aliens?

What will we find if we listen in just the right way? Image credit: Warner Bros.

Astronomy is full of such examples. Tarter recounts the iconic discovery of pulsars that started in 1965-66, when a team of graduate students built a new type of radio telescope:

Jocelyn Bell and her colleagues spent the summer nailing up kilometers of wire and fence posts to make a low-frequency detector. They made it for a very scientific goal, but yet when Jocelyn was looking at the data, she found these little bits scruff. She was curious enough and systematic enough to follow up on them.

Suddenly, wow! There are radio beacons out there more precise than any clock we’ve built. There are entire stars, neutron stars, that are spinning around several times a second. Unbelievable! They found it because they had a new tool. They had a different way of looking at the universe.

This happens again and again and again. Every time we invent a new tool, discoveries follow. “I think being creative, building new ways to look at the universe, can lead to amazing results.” Tarter said. “You don’t do that if you think, ‘Well, I’m going to do today what I did yesterday.’”

Our conversation with Tarter was so interesting and so long that we couldn’t transcribe it all in just one night. Instead, check out her Creative Class special here:

Check back tomorrow as we continue our conversation with Tarter about how the SETI Institute searches for alien life, how that search might change as technology improves, and her life as one of the first women in the industry.

Top image: SETI astronomer Jill Tarter is the real-life inspiration for Contact’s Ellie Arroway. Credit: Warner Bros. Corrections: We mistranscribed science fiction zeta rays as more mundane beta rays, and went camping with tent pegs while building a radio telescope. Such is the woe of phone interviews! Apologies, Jill.


Contact the author at mika.mckinnon@io9.com or follow her at @MikaMcKinnon.


Constantine's Arrow Appearance Was Probably His Last Ever

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Constantine's Arrow Appearance Was Probably His Last Ever

Star Wars Episode VIII might be getting rewrites to shine a spotlight on certain characters. Supergirl casts its young Superman. Robert Kirkman teases The Walking Dead’s next big badass. Plus, a huge new sizzle reel for Arrow, and Gillian Anderson on the practicality of pocket-sized flashlights. Spoilers!

Star Wars Episode VIII

In a recent episode of the Meet the Movie Press, Jeff Sneider claims that the start of the film’s production has been pushed back to February to re-write elements of the script... in order to focus more on Rey, Finn, and Poe, the protagonists of The Force Awakens, at the expense of the new characters in this movie:

They want to get to know better the characters they already have. So the new rewrite is shrinking the new roles in order to spend more time with Rey, Poe and so on.

While it might come as a surprise to hear that the protagonists of Episode VII weren’t planned to have as much screen time in the sequel, it’s not really—there have been rumors for a while that the film has been looking to cast a new female protagonist who will play a large role in Finn’s story, presumably to accommodate the fact that Rey will spend a portion of the film on her own training with Luke Skywalker.


The Shower

Anne Hathaway is in talks with Warner Bros. to bring her comedy about a baby shower interrupted by an alien invasion to the studio. Hathaway will both produce and star in the film. [THR]


Transformers 5

Michael Bay has confirmed the franchise will return to Chicago for location filming in a new interview with WGN Chicago. [TFW2005]


Deadpool

Early screenings of the film to fans—which have, unsurprisingly, garnered rave reviews from fans expecting to see preview footage and instead getting a full showing of the movie—have confirmed that yes, indeed there will be a post credits scene in the movie. [Comicbook.com]


Lobo

Actor Danny Trejo has sparked rumors that he’s been linked to the role of DC’s alien bounty hunter Lobo after tweeting a picture of the character.

Considering there’s been absolutely no rumors about DC’s Lobo film since progress stalled last year—The Rock was the actor most recently linked to the role—it’s more likely Trejo is just throwing his hat into the ring to garner attention.


Wonder Woman

Several social media pages set up yesterday for the movie have “revealed” Wonder Woman’s emblem in the film—putting “revealed” in quotes, because it actually first emerged a few months ago.

Constantine's Arrow Appearance Was Probably His Last Ever


The Little Prince

Here’s a new domestic poster for the film. [Coming Soon]

Constantine's Arrow Appearance Was Probably His Last Ever


Constantine

Arrow producer Marc Guggenheim has confirmed that Constantine’s recent appearance on Arrow was likely the last ever appearance for Matt Ryan’s take on the character:

When we were given the character, we were given the character with the understanding and the agreement that this is a one-off.

[CBR]


The X-Files

In a delightful Q&A with GQ, Gillian Anderson discusses what’s changed on the show since she last slipped into the shoes of Dana Scully:

What’s one thing that’s new about the miniseries?

We have cell phones that fit into our pockets, and we have flashlights that actually fit into our pockets, rather than pulling out something as if we pulled it out of our pockets but clearly it could not have fit in our pockets.

And shoulder pads?

There will not be shoulder pads in any way, shape, or form.

Bummer.

Such a shame.


The Walking Dead

Robert Kirkman discusses the fun of bringing Jesus to the series, and his zombie-fighting skills:

Jesus is just such a fun character to write in the comics. At this point in the life of the series, my thought is the apocalypse has been going on for so long, the people you encounter in your day-to-day life have to be extremely skilled. And they’ve been surviving for a reason, whether they were at a place like Alexandria that’s very safe, or they’re a great leader of their group and somewhat sadistic but in control of their group like Negan, or someone who’s an absolute, complete badass like Jesus.

He’s smart, quick, very athletic. He’s kinda been surviving on his feet. He’s going to be bringing a lot to the show. There’s some cool stuff coming with him.

[Entertainment Weekly]


The Flash

Candice Patton talks about the changes in playing the Earth-2 version of Iris:

She’s quite different. She’s similar in a lot of ways, but the way that I can say that she’s most different to Earth-1 Iris is that she’s really tough. I know Iris form Earth-1 is pretty tough, but this version is really hard and tough. She’s less emotionally penetrable than the Earth-1 version of herself, which was really cool to play. It was really fun to play a different version. As an actor, you end up on a series, and you think you’re going to play one character for however long. It’s nice that we have these doppelgängers and we get to play a little bit.

Does Earth-1 Iris get to meet Earth-2 Iris?

No, she doesn’t. I’ll say that much.

[Entertainment Weekly]


Legends of Tomorrow

Johnathon Schaech has been cast as the show’s take on the DC Western anti-hero, Jonah Hex. [THR]

Here’s a brief new trailer for the show, emphasising the “nobodies” nature of the team:


Supergirl

Daniel DiMaggio has been cast as the young Kal-El on the show. His first appearance will be in a dream sequence, but the role was originally listed with the potential to recur. [Comicbook.com]


Arrow

And finally, here’s a sizzle reel for the rest of the show’s season, ahead of its return.


Additional reporting by Gordon Jackson and Charlie Jane Anders. Image: Arrow.

Dark Souls Is Getting Its Own Comic Series

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Dark Souls Is Getting Its Own Comic Series

Praise the sun, Dark Souls fans! The wildly popular dark fantasy video game series about dying again and again (and again) is heading to the world of comics, where it’s likely also to tell tales of poor adventurers being killed by horrible monsters. At least reading a comic will be less punishing than playing the notoriously challenging games.

UK-based publisher Titan Comics announced the comic this morning, an ongoing series from the writer of their Doctor Who Eighth Doctor series, George Mann, and Orphan Black comic artist Alan Quah. In true Dark Souls style—for those unfamiliar, the series is beloved for its obtuse storytelling and world-building mechanics, relying on the player to divine information about the world around them through the people and creatures they encounter, rather than a linear story—we don’t know much about the plot of the series, but Mann promises a deep dive into the mythology the games are known for:

I’m ‘dead’ excited to be working on this new series (see what I did, there). Dark Souls has a rich, original universe that’s just begging to be explored in comics, and I’m honored to have the opportunity to delve in and tell some new stories within it. I’ve been a fan of the games for some time, so it’s a real thrill to be able to contribute to the mythology of the Hollows and their world.

Dark Souls Is Getting Its Own Comic Series

It’s kind of surprising that we’re seeing an official Dark Souls comic before some sort of manga, given its Japanese roots, but a welcome one. As I said, Dark Souls isn’t really a straightforward story—although fans have leaped on the lore of the franchise fervently, it’s a saga of trial and error and the stories players create through their struggles to defeat the punishing challenges the games throw at them, rather than a straight story. It’ll be interesting to see how that translates into the comics.

By which I mean to say there better be at least one issue that’s entirely about the main character trying to fight a giant monster, dying over and over again, before deciding to trap it in a corner and fill it with arrows till it dies.

Come on, I’m not the only Dark Souls player to do that sometimes. Dark Souls #1 will hit shelves on April 6th.

Image Credit: Dark Souls #1 Art variant A by Joshua Cassara, Dark Souls #1 Art variant B by Marco Turini.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

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Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

You’ve undoubtedly already seen last night’s jaw-dropping Suicide Squad trailer (if not, get to it), but there was so much awesomeness packed into it, that it was hard to catch every important detail. So we’ve gone through the clip frame by frame to discover every single secret contained within.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

They start with Boomerang (Jai Courtney) asking to be let out of where he’s being kept. No bars or windows, so it looks like solitary. Thus begins a theme of how badly the members of the Squad who start out in prison are being treated, just in case you wondered why they’d be willing to volunteer for Amanda Waller’s team.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

My, doesn’t Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie) keep her hair looking nice while she’s in jail! Also, she’s reading a romance novel.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Our first look at Deadshot (Will Smith), who clearly longs to be outside.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Someone (Maybe Slipknot (Adam Beach) or, as meatwadf points out in the comments, more likely Killer Croc in a sewer cell) does some push-ups in an even dingier-than-usual cell.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

El Diablo’s (Jay Hernandez) fire plays a prominent role in the trailer.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Yeah, Boomerang’s going a bit crazy locked in that room. And he’s being watched. Is it for reasons other than just keeping an eye on a prisoner?

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Amanda Waller (Viola Davis): “I want to assemble a task force of the most dangerous people on the planet.”

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

In case you didn’t believe her, look how many guards are sent in to subdue Deadshot. And not only is he being restrained and beaten, it looks like Deadshot’s psyching himself up for something that happens to him frequently.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Since he has fire, El Diablo’s torture appears to be water-based.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

And Killer Croc (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje) is led into a room filled with surgeons in masks and gloves. Experimentation, possibly?

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

“What is this, cheerleading tryouts?”

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

In all seriousness, who ships a person—Boomerang?—in what looks like a mailbag?

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Slipknot punches an FBI agent. This kind of feels like it might be a flashback.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

“Deadshot. He... shoots people” says Rick Flag (Joel Kinnaman), as he goes through prisoner files. Note the name of the prison—Belle Reve Penitentiary, the same institution in which the Suicide Squad is imprisoned in the comics.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

The file says “Prisoner Movement Slip,” which could be people entering Waller’s care. And is that Cara Delevingne (who plays Julie Moon/Enchantress?) behind him?

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

“He’s a crocodile and he eats people,” he continues.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

“Burns people.”

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

“You’re possessed by a witch.” The “you’re” seems to indicate that, yes, that is Delevingne with him.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

“And she’s just crazy.”

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

A statement instantly proven correct by this scene of the assembled squad, where Harley says “What was that? I should kill everyone and escape? Sorry, the voices. Ha, I’m kidding! That’s not what they really said.”

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Flag lets them in on the deal. This is mostly included for Will Smith’s semi-patented “Are you kidding?” hidden smile.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Heavy artillery while Flag explains that the team is going somewhere “very bad” to do something “that will get you killed.” Hence the name of the squad!

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

And this looks very much like a crashed plane.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

This mysterious, swamp-like goo crops up a lot in this trailer—it seems to be whatever the squad has been tasked with dealing with. There were a lot of rumors recently that Julie Moon/Enchantress is actually not a member of the squad but the main villain of the film, using her magic to try and resurrect her brother and destroy the world. The goo certainly fits in with the Enchantress’ aesthetic.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Whatever they’re looking at has the team stumped—note that Enchantress is missing from this shot, which could support the abovetheory.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Flag and Deadshot (sans mask) go into a place that has been torn apart by something.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Something that leaves bloodspatter... and bodies. We see a lot of this particular subway station being torn apart.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Outside, something needs shooting. We get a glimpse of what that could be at the end of the trailer.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Harley waves goodbye.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Smith’s “Let’s go save the world” has a bit of an Independence Day delivery to it Also, something is burning in front of him.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

And the Deadshot mask finally appears! It has barely a second of screen time in this trailer. Given that the actor under the mask is so famous, we have to wonder how much of it we’ll actually see in the film.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Killer Croc and Boomerang go at it. They appear to be fighting humanoid versions of the goop. People possessed by it? Magical constructs?

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

With a “I can’t wait to show you my toys,” the Joker (Jared Leto) appears. Hair very green here. Almost all of the Joker’s bits in this trailer look like flashbacks and not like they’re connected with Suicide Squad mission.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

And this is cut so that it looks like the Joker is shooting at a giant eyeball and a big bald head. Given the strangeness on display, it’s also possible that these are the Joker’s henchman—they were in the first trailer as well, in a sequence that seemingly showed the Joker capturing and torturing Harleen Quinzel, a.k.a. Harley Quinn before her transformation.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

The shot of the Joker with the gun that follows it has a completely different background, so it really does look unconnected. This is a pretty classic Joker tuxedo look, though.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

The Joker and Harley are both in this car. This is the scene that the Batmobile was rumored to be a part of, with pictures of Batman riding along the roof of the car hitting the web last year. Is this where Harley gets caught?

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

The patch on this guy’s jacket says “Frost.” According to Imdb, this could be Johnny Frost/Pseudo Joker (Jim Parrack).

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

The Joker’s got a big light. Mostly, this shot gives you a great look at the Joker’s “HAHAHAHAHAHAHA” tattoo.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Enchantress says “Let’s do something fun” in a building with a seal on the screen, which looks governmental and matches the White House seal. Menacing the government could be another sign she’s the big bad of this movie.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

In the comics, Katana’s (Karen Fukuhara) Soultaker rips the soul out of anyone it kills and stores it in the blade, hence it’s name: Soultaker. Also, Katana can communicate with the spirits inside.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Deadshot shows off, with Waller in the background.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Boomerang ducks action with a drink.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Katana’s eyes go dark.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

We see a few shots in the trailer of Harley dancing with this chain. In this get-up (which clearly calls back to the classic Harlequin diamond pattern of her cartoon origin), she’s either undercover or this is a flashback.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Something’s clearly going wrong here.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

In the original trailer, these masked goons were part of Joker’s attack on whatever facility Harleen was working at. Is this meant to be Arkham Asylum, maybe?

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Fistbump. Because.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

The tile and pillars here match the devastation that Flag and Deadshot walk into earlier in the trailer. This also seems to be the closest full-on look we get to whatever they’re fighting.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

What are the guys behind the Joker wearing on their heads?

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Killer Croc menaces Katana. This seems like a bad idea.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

This shot goes fast, but it’s of what looks like Doctor Harleen Quinzel falling onto a car. The glasses (and un-dyed, un-pigtailed hair) feel like a Dr. Quinzel clue.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

Big battle scene.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

More from the subway station nightmare, with a giant cable-like tentacle that has a similar look to the figure in the sliced subway shot from earlier.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

El Diablo unleashes the fire in a big open stairwell, in an office building that looks like either a different scene to the subway battle.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

This looks like Julie Moon right before she becomes the Enchantress (r while she’s on her way).

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

The Joker jumps into a vat and pulls Harley out. Either the dye in her hair is bleeding out or this is how she ends up with the blue and red hair in the first place and this is a flashback—there were plenty of rumors about this being ACE Chemicals, where not only was the Joker turned into the madman he is in the seminal comic story The Killing Joke, but also where he “creates” Harley by dumping her in a vat of chemicals.

Everything We Pieced Together From the Frenetic Suicide Squad Trailer

And this is clearly something bad being released in the same general area where Deadshot had a gun in each hand and was firing at something.

Additional reporting by James Whitbrook


Contact the author at katharine@io9.com.

How Disney Fixed a Huge Mistake With Zootopia, Just One Year Before Release

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How Disney Fixed a Huge Mistake With Zootopia, Just One Year Before Release

In November 2014, the team behind Disney’s Zootopia had a very bad day. After years of development and production, they realized a huge aspect of their movie didn’t work. There were two main characters, one primary and one secondary— and they had to be flipped for the film to make sense.

In Zootopia, which hits theaters March 4, a young bunny named Judy Hopps leaves home for a job as a police officer in the big city of the title. There, she must team up with a con-man fox named Nick Wilde to solve a crime. Nick, voiced by Jason Bateman, is jaded, sarcastic, and believes everyone is exactly who they are. Judy, voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin, is exactly the opposite. She’s cheery, optimistic and believes anyone can be whatever they want.

For years, Nick was the focus on the film, with Hopps playing a crucial, but secondary role. But on that fateful November day, a little over a year before the film’s release, director Byron Howard realized they had to make the switch.

“We’re telling a story about bias, and when you have the Nick character starting the movie, through his eyes the city was already broken,” Howard said. “He didn’t like Zootopia.”

Hopps, on the other hand, did. She loved it. And suddenly, everything became obvious.

How Disney Fixed a Huge Mistake With Zootopia, Just One Year Before Release

“We asked ‘What are we saying with the movie?’ If we’re telling this movie about bias—something that is everywhere and in all of us, whether we want to admit it or not—the character that’s going to help us tell that message is Judy, an innocent, [who comes] from a very supportive environment where she thinks everyone is beautiful, everyone gets along,” Howard said. “Then let Nick, this character who knows the truth about the world, bop up against her and they start to educate each other. When we flipped that, it was a major flip, but it worked so much better.”

In retrospect, the flip may seem like the most simple thing ever. Have the positive character be the main one. But the reason something like that doesn’t happen immediately is that movies like Zootopia happen in an insanely organic, fluid way. When the film was first pitched, for example, there wasn’t much more than the idea of talking animals living together in a city. There was no story, no characters, just an idea, followed by an approval, and then the research begins. The hope is, through this research process, a story is arrived at organically, which is what happened.

It started with looking at animals behaviors, futuristic ideas for cities, and then a trip to Africa lit up a figurative lightbulb. “We looked at this situation around the watering hole,” Howard said. “Predators and prey are behaving because they both need something, water, and everyone’s cool. They’re kind of looking at each other cautiously, but people are behaving. That’s very much like our city. People are different in cities, and they have to get together to live, and what does that mean?”

How Disney Fixed a Huge Mistake With Zootopia, Just One Year Before Release

What it meant was, the story was going to be one about bias and stereotypes, told through a big adventure. And though the decision to make Judy the main character in that story came very late, some of people responsible for the film’s story admit that she was always stealing the limelight, from the beginning.

“Even when Nick was the main character, Hopps kept pushing through,” said head of editorial, Fabienne Rawley. “She’s the character she is. She just kept being the main character. And we kept saying that we wanted Nick to be the main character. And sort of because of that, forcing a round peg in a square hole sort of thing, she just came through. And finally we’re like, ‘Fine! Go do it.’ So then you start again.”

For a normal person, changing and scrapping so much hard work would probably be seen as a huge defeat. But this is Disney and, according to the people there, everyone embraced it

“We knew it was going to be a lot of work, but immediately hearing the idea no one said like, ‘Oh no! I’ve got to keep this thing.’ It was very much the opposite,” said co-director Jared Bush. “It was ‘This is really exciting. This is going to help the movie immeasurably. We just need to execute it, and we’re running out of time to do it.’ But it’s an amazing opportunity to make this movie really special.”

How Disney Fixed a Huge Mistake With Zootopia, Just One Year Before Release

In changing the movie, Howard, Bush, Rawley and others found that they were better able to incorporate the film’s message of inclusion and harmony, along with a satisfying story.

“We never wanted this to be a message movie,” said Howard. “We always wanted it to be this great piece of entertainment, great emotion, great storytelling, but it’s never, ever supposed to be in-your-face with the message of the movie. Just letting Judy learn that and seeing her progress grow and grow, it became sort of a personal story between the two of them and helped us in a huge way.”

The other thing that helped in a huge way—especially when in executing such a major change—was adding Rich Moore as another director. When Zootopia was starting production, Moore was working on his own movie, Wreck-It Ralph, which was released in 2012. He then went to work on something we won’t see for several years, before his phone rang with the head of Disney Pictures, John Lasseter, asking him to come on board.

“When you’re in production for years, there are these kind of gear shifts that you can feel,” Moore said. “‘Okay, that’s ramping up. It’s going up another level.’ And [Zootopia] was just ready to go up another one. It was like jumping onto a fast-moving train.”

How Disney Fixed a Huge Mistake With Zootopia, Just One Year Before Release

Moore’s main task at the beginning was helping Howard manage all the changes that switching lead characters from Nick to Judy meant for the movie as a whole, and Howard was happy for the help.

“It’s great to have partners on these films,” Howard said. “It’s great to have someone to do a gut check with.”

Oddly, while everyone making Zootopia has no problem balancing and checking each other, even when it becomes incredibly difficult, the president of Disney Animation Andrew Millstein claimed there’s one place they never ever look to make sure they’re on the right track.

“Well, we really don’t follow the competition all that much,” Millstein said. “When Byron and Jared wanted to make this film, talking animals in an animal world, we didn’t say, ‘Oh, Blue Sky is making that, Illumination is making one.’ There are so many ways to tell a talking-animal story, and what better challenge is there to differentiate yourself from whatever anybody else is making? So our standard is really a self-referential standard, cause we want to make it great. And let the chips fall where they may.”

http://io9.gizmodo.com/inside-secrets...


Contact the author at germain@io9.com.

The Original Captain America Is Coming Back

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The Original Captain America Is Coming Back

Right now, there’s only one Captain America flying through the skies of Marvel’s mainline comic-book universe. But later this year, the original super-soldier will be back in the red-white-and-blue. And don’t worry about current shield-wielder Sam Wilson; he’ll sticking around. That’s right: two Caps at the same time.

Tonight’s news coincided with a TV special on ABC celebrating the 75th anniversary of Captain America. The upcoming series will be titled Captain America: Steve Rogers and an interview on Marvel’s official site with writer Nick Spencer and artist Jesus Saiz states that the two Captain Americas will be operating independently of each other and pursuing different agendas:

It means we’ll have two Captain Americas. When Steve handed the shield to Sam, it didn’t come with any caveats. It’s his. Steve respects and admires what his old partner is doing, and wants him to carry on. There are enough problems out there, and enough bad guys, to keep both of them busy. They’ll have very different missions; Sam will continue fighting the battles no one else will go near, while Steve is faced with a resurgent threat from his past: Hydra is back, and stronger than ever.

For me, it’s great, because I get to tell two very different kinds of Captain America stories. If you’re liking what we’re doing in CAPTAIN AMERICA: SAM WILSON, with a more topical, of-the-moment take, we’ve got a lot more of that coming your way; but if you’re looking for that classic, timeless version, the one that’s steeped in the Greatest Generation with Cap fighting the face of true evil, now we’ve got that for you as well. I think they’ll complement each other nicely.

Right now, I like this move for the reasons Spencer cites above. Sam isn’t getting kicked off a prestigious mantle; instead, Marvel editorial is apparently giving Spencer leeway to re-envision how two characters embody the role of Marvel’s foremost patriotic hero. There’ve been many storylines where two Captain Americas simultaneously existed but plots where one of them hasn’t been evil or time-shifted are rare.

Steve will be sporting both a new costume and a new shield, while Sam keeps the original circular weapon. More details about the changes are available at Marvel.com.


Contact the author at evan@kotaku.com.

Darth Vader Baby Onesie Recalled... For Choking Hazard

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Darth Vader Baby Onesie Recalled... For Choking Hazard

Coming as a surprise to no one who’s seen the original Star Wars trilogy, yesterday the Consumer Product Safety Commission issued a recall for a Darth Vader infant bodysuit that poses a potential choking hazard. Obviously.

But the risk posed to infants has nothing to do with the Force or Vader being in a bad mood. The bodysuits have a set of three snaps on the bottom that can randomly detach, creating a choking hazard for infants if they were to try and put the snaps in their mouths, like they do everything else.

The bodysuits were sold at Disneyland, Walt Disney World, and aboard the various Disney-themed cruise ships through most of 2015. Thankfully, to date there have been no actual reports of incident or injuries. And to ensure there never are, if you purchased one of these bodysuits the Consumer Product Safety Commission advises contacting Walt Disney Parks and Resorts for instructions on how to return it for a full refund.

[United States Consumer Product Safety Commission]


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Mysterious Planet X Could Be the Ninth Planet In Our Solar System

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Mysterious Planet X Could Be the Ninth Planet In Our Solar System

There could be a new ninth planet floating beyond the dark edges of our solar system, according to new research published in The Astronomical Journal from CalTech professors Mike Brown and Konstantin Batygin.

If those names ring a bell, it’s because Brown and Batygin worked to reclassify Pluto as a dwarf planet in 2006. The scientists behind that decision reasoned that Pluto was one of many small icy objects beyond the orbit of Neptune in an area known as the Kuiper belt. Most objects in that part of our solar system don’t meet the basic requirements for being a planet such as being spherical in shape, orbiting the sun, and clearing its own orbit of debris.

But now Brown and Batygin think they’ve found a celestial body that would meet all of the requirements for being classified as a planet. The researchers studied six small objects in the Kuiper belt and noticed their orbits funneled toward the sun in a very specific formation. The likelihood of this being a coincidence is slim to none. What researchers believe is that a new planet, unofficially dubbed “Planet X,” is pulling these objects into its orbit.

The theory is fairly radical. If true, it means that Planet X would be orbiting the Sun from a distance astronomers have never seen before. The celestial body is so far away, it takes 15,000 years for it to make one trip around the Sun. By comparison, Neptune, which has the longest known orbit around the sun, takes 164 years to complete.

Mysterious Planet X Could Be the Ninth Planet In Our Solar System

Photo: Courtesy of NASA

The existence of Planet X is entirely inferred by the movement of a half-dozen Kuiper belt objects. That doesn’t necessarily mean the prediction is wrong, though. This isn’t the first time astronomers have inferred the existence of another planet by calculating the movement of other objects in our solar system. When Neptune was discovered in 1846, it was because astronomers noticed that it was being pulled out of normal orbit, and they predicted that this was because of the gravity from another planet. This could very well be another case of history repeating itself.

Top image: Planet Nine—Artist’s Representation (Caltech/R. Hurt (IPAC)).


Contact the author at michael.nunez@gizmodo.com.


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

Save on protein products, a 1080p Samsung monitor, 1Password, and more in today’s best deals. Bookmark Kinja Deals and follow us on Twitter to never miss a deal. Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more.

More Deals

A Ton of Popular iOS and Mac Apps Are On Sale Today

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

January must be high time for supplement manufacturers, because Amazon just kicked off the third protein-packed Gold Box deal of 2016.

Whether you missed out on the Vega and Optimum Nutrition sales, or just didn’t like what you saw, you’ve got another chance today to save on protein bars, powders, and more from the subtly-named Muscletech. Prices start under $10 for multivitamins, or under $20 for certain powders, so head over to Amazon to check out the full selection. [Muscletech Supplement Sale]

Note: As with all Gold Box deals, these prices are only available today, or until sold out.


1Password is the best looking password manager on the market, and my one of the few apps I couldn’t live without. The only real downside is its upfront $50 cost for desktop apps. So if you’ve been waiting on a good deal to secure your digital life, the Mac version is marked down to $25 today. That might still seem a little pricey, but trust me, it’s worth every penny. [1Password for Mac, $25]

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1Password is far from the only app on sale today. Head over here to find the rest.

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

The classic BlenderBottle is great for mixing everything from pancake batter to protein shakes, and we’ve never seen it this cheap before. [BlenderBottle, $5]

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http://deals.kinja.com/stock-your-cab...


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

Update: Sold out, but this slightly smaller AOC IPS display is on sale for the same price. [AOC i2267fw 22-Inch IPS Frameless LED Monitor, $100]

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You just don’t see 24" computer monitors marked down to $100 very often, especially not from the likes of Samsung. This model typically sells for about $160, and today’s Gold Box deal matches its all-time low price. If you’ve ever wanted to try out a multi-monitor setup, I wouldn’t hesitate to pick up a few of these. [Samsung 23.6-Inch 1080p LED Monitor, $100]


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

You all have bought a lot of Lodge cast iron skillets, but if you’re having trouble cleaning them, a couple of popular solutions are on sale today.

Lodge Manufacturing SCRAPERGPK Grill Pan Scraper, 2-Pack ($3) | Amazon

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

While not as nice looking as, say, OXO’s Pop line, Rubbermaid’s modular food storage system will get the job done without breaking the bank. [Rubbermaid 8-Pc. Modular Canister Food System, $16]

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

Apple’s expansive (and expensive) iPad Pro has been mostly immune from discounts so far, but today, you can save $100 on the base model, or $80 on the LTE version. Plus, most buyers won’t have to pay any sales tax.

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

If you want a capable media editing suite for standard consumer-grade needs, Prime members can get a copy of Photoshop Elements 14 and Premiere Elements 14 for $70 on Amazon today. That combo usually costs $100-$150, and unlike Adobe Creative Cloud, comes with no monthly fees. [Adobe Photoshop Elements & Premiere Elements 14, $70 for Prime members. Discount shown at checkout.]

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

If you have any old speaker systems lying around, this $8 dongle will bring them into the present with seamless Bluetooth streaming capabilities.

All you have to do is plug one end of the Mpow Streambot Slider into a USB charging port, and connect the other end to your speakers via the included 3.5mm audio cable. Then, just connect your phone, and enjoy the music. [Mpow Streambot Slider Bluetooth Music Audio Streaming USB Receiver Adapter, $8 with code OO6FDEZ9]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00YBJURB8


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

This adorable little 1080p action cam can stick anywhere via a magnet or a washable adhesive pad, and while its image quality might not match up to a GoPro, but you could do a lot worse for $70. [VicTsing Mini Lifestyle Action Camera with Wi-Fi, $70 with code ORDDHKFN]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0196O5JE2

Note: The promo code is only valid on the teal model.


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

Look, I’m not saying you should be giving yourself a haircut. I’m merely suggesting that with this $40 Wahl kit, you could. That price is one of the lowest ever listed, by the way. [Wahl Elite Pro High Performance Haircut Kit, $40]

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

We see a lot of external battery packs around here, but rare is the deal that breaks the $20 threshold for a battery over 20,000mAh. If you don’t own something like this already, or just want a bigger model for long trips, I wouldn’t hesitate. [EC Technology 2nd Gen 22400mAh External Battery, $19 with code NZGFMLUN]

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

While they might not conform to the classic look of our favorite chef’s knives, this Cuisinart Advantage knife set is anything but dull (get it?). You can own the whole collection today for just $15, an all-time low price

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Don’t let the colors fool you, these knives are stainless steel, and extremely sharp. The set has a 4.6 star Amazon review average on over 1,700 reviews, and while the colors might not seem like your thing, they do help you keep track and avoid cross-contaminating food while you use them. [Cuisinart Advantage 12-Piece Knife Set, $15]

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

The vast majority of external hard drives utilize 5400RPM platters, and while that might be fine for backing up your files, it’s not ideal for tasks like photo editing, running applications, and expanding your game console’s storage.

http://kotaku.com/the-best-exter...

http://kotaku.com/the-best-exter...

Luckily, the HGST Touro S ups the ante with a 7200RPM drive, which while not as speedy as an SSD, offers a noticeable improvement over its 5400RPM cousins. I use this exact drive to store games on my Xbox One, and reap the benefits in the form of shorter loading times. [HGST Touro S 1TB, $60]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

The oral thermometer probably didn’t need to be reinvented, but if you’re the kind of person who likes everything to be smartphone-connected, Kinsa’s smart thermometer works with both iOS and Android, and is down to $15 today.

Kinsa markets this as a kids thermometer, mostly because it only takes 10 seconds to get a reading, and its smartphone app includes a little bubble popping minigame that kids can play while they wait, but it’s a neat little gizmo for sick people of any age.

The app automatically tracks your temperature over time, and you can add your own metadata about symptoms and medication if you want a more complete record of your illness. Plus, if you own an iPhone, the temperature data is compatible with Apple’s HealthKit.

Obviously, nobody really needs this thing, but if you’re intrigued, $15 is one of the best prices we’ve ever seen, and is also not a terrible price for a good oral thermometer, smart or otherwise. [Kinsa Smart Fever Thermometer, $15]

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00UFOBDNY/...


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

It wasn’t that long ago that $62 would have been a fantastic price for a 120GB SSD. Now, that price gets you 240GB. [Kingston V300 240GB SSD, $62]

http://www.ebay.com/itm/2916578473...


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

If your car’s electrical system is a little finnicky, this $12 dongle plugs straight into your accessory outlet to help you diagnose battery and alternator problems, before they leave you stranded.

When the engine is turned off, the meter will show you the overall voltage and charge level of your battery, so you know when it might be time to buy a replacement. While you’re driving, it will also indicate when the battery is recharging or discharging, which can help you diagnose a malfunctioning alternator. You probably won’t keep it plugged in all the time, but for $12, it might be useful to add this to your tool chest. [INNOVA Battery and Charging System Monitor, $12]

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...


Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

If you missed out last week, Belkin’s WeMo Insight Switch is back in stock on Amazon for just $40.

Functionally, the Insight Switch is no different than a standard Belkin WeMo switch. Just plug one in between a wall outlet and the device of your choice, and you’ll be able to turn it on or off from your smartphone or Amazon Echo, and even create automatic schedules. The difference is that the Insight will monitor your device’s energy use, and even calculate its monthly cost on your power bill. I wouldn’t go as far as to say that the Insight will completely pay for itself, but it can certainly make you more mindful of what goes into your monthly bill. [Belkin WeMo Insight Switch, $40]

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

Anker makes some of the most popular and reliable USB charging gear on the market, and several of their Quick Charge 2.0 products are on sale right now.

As an aside, I own the PowerCore+ battery, and it has the best build quality of any battery pack I’ve ever seen.

Anker Quick Charge 2.0 18W USB Wall Charger ($6) | Amazon | Use code HITW3AYN

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Anker PowerCore+ 10050 QC 2.0 Battery Pack ($25) | Amazon

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Anker Dual-Port QC 2.0 Car Charger ($14) | Amazon | Promo code 55ANZPZ6

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

This unique measuring cup doubles as a kitchen scale, so you can work seamlessly with both volume and weight-based recipes. My mom had this when I went home for the holidays, and she said it worked great. [Etekcity Handy 11lb/5kg Digital Multifunction Kitchen Cup Scale, $14 with code PN5Q7LS5]

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Aukey’s newest Bluetooth speaker is tire-shaped, water resistant, and only $15 today. That’s a good price for any Bluetooth speaker, let alone one that you can take into the shower with you. [AUKEY Rugged Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker, $15 with code J95FUXF9]

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Most of the night lights we publish are battery-operated, but if you’d rather plug them in, this deal will net you four lights for just $16. [2x2-Pack OxyLED N30 LED Night Light With Dusk to Dawn Sensor, $16. Add two to cart and use code 86Y2TBED]

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Everyone likes a little candlelight every now and then, but if you don’t want to keep buying new candles (or houses after you burn yours down), this 6-pack of flameless alternatives is just $13 today. [Realistic Battery-Powered Flameless Pillar Candles - 6 Pack, $13 with code XDLIS6XZ]

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Today's Best Deals: Protein Powder, Samsung Monitor, 1Password, and More

We see a lot of deals on smartphone mounts for your car, but here’s a treat for all of you bike riders out there. [Liger Universal “SuperGrip” Bike Mount Handlebar Holder for Smartphones, $6]

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Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker

All the Other Movie News and Footage From Last Night's DC Special

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All the Other Movie News and Footage From Last Night's DC Special

While treating us to the first footage from the Wonder Woman movie and that outstanding Suicide Squad trailer, last night’s DC special was basically an infomercial for the upcoming movies. Here’s everything else important they showed—including concept art for The Flash, Cyborg, and Aquaman films.

First up is Aquaman, which features a small smattering of movie concept art along with a great deal of comic art. (Protip: The blond one is comic Aquaman.) There’s a neat shot of Momoa’s Aquaman in Atlantis, standing before a large sculpture of Ocean Master, his brother and rumored villain of the first movie.

Also, it’s kind of weird that Momoa talks about Aquaman being a half god, when Atlanteans are absolutely not gods—but he could be talking about superhero “gods” in that mythic sense that DC likes to use.

Here’s Cyborg. Honestly, it’s tougher to tell what’s regular comic art and what’s movie concept art, because they all look so similar; however, there’s a shot of what appears to be Cyborg’s armor expanding?—Exploding? Basically freaking out?—that I believe is new. At any rate, I imagine his armor in the movie will be quite adaptable and modular.

And the Flash! The really wacky thing about The Flash movie is that apparently the hero has ditched the iconic lightning bolt-in-a-circle logo on his costume for a simple lightning bolt... except that the movie logo still uses the circle.

I feel like the movie people wanted to visually differentiate Ezra Miller’s movie Flash for the TV version, hence this very superficial change. But maybe they forgot to notify the PR/graphic design department, which is of course going to use the logo the character has sported for over half a century.

Last and probably least: it’s a look at Batman v Superman, which includes the only the tiniest smidgen of new footage—and only tiny bits and pieces at that. Also, it almost entirely consists of Batman and Superman being angry at things—but hey, it’s here if you want to check it out.


Contact the author at rob@io9.com.

2015 Shattered All Temperature Records, and It Wasn't Just El Niño

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2015 Shattered All Temperature Records, and It Wasn't Just El Niño

In a joint statement this morning, NASA and NOAA confirmed that 2015 was the hottest year on record by a huge margin. We basically knew this—scientists have been calling it since at least July—but now that the official numbers are in, we can see just how wacky a year it was.

“2015 was by far the hottest year on the records we’ve put together,” Gavin Schmidt, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies said in a press conference this morning. “Even without El Niño, this would have been the warmest year on record. We’re looking at at long-term trend, and this is just a symptom.”

For the first time this year, the global average temperature was unequivocally 1 degrees Celsius warmer than the 19th century average, placing the planet halfway to the 2 degrees C global warming target climate scientists say we need to stay below to avoid catastrophic climate change. To stay below that 2 degrees C target, Schmidt says, the world would need to cut fossil fuel consumption “pretty much starting now, at historically unprecedented rates.”

As we’ve been reporting throughout the year, ten out of twelve months in 2015—every month except January and April—broke its respective monthly temperature record. According to Schmidt, many monthly records were surpassed by a much larger margin than they’d been broken in previous years.

2015 Shattered All Temperature Records, and It Wasn't Just El Niño

NASA, NOAA, and UK Met Office global temperature anomalies, dating back to 1880. Via NASA

And thanks to El Niño, 2015 went out guns blazing: December 2015 was the most anomalously hot month of any in history, at 1.11°C (2.00°F) warmer than its monthly average. (Remember our July-flavored Christmas? It wasn’t just the northeastern US.) As NASA and NOAA stressed today, whether or not 2015 had been an El Niño year, it would have been a roaster.

2015 swiped the warmest-year-in-history title from 2014, but it might not keep the record for long. We’re starting 2016 out with the most extreme El Niño conditions in history, and we can expect more monthly records to be obliterated as the winter continues. “The factors causing this trend are continuing to accelerate,” Schmidt said, adding that there’s “no evidence that the long-term trend has paused, slowed, or hiatused anytime in the last few decades.”

“We anticipate that 2016 is to be an exceptionally warm year, and perhaps even another record,” he said.

Hold onto your butts: the future’s just starting to heat up.

Top image via Scientific Visualization Studio/Goddard Space Flight Center

Freddy Krueger Will Host Valentine's Day Horror Marathon on the El Rey Network

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Freddy Krueger Will Host Valentine's Day Horror Marathon on the El Rey Network

We may have lost Wes Craven last year, but we’ll always have the terrifying films he created—and as long as actor Robert Englund is willing, we still have Freddy Krueger. He’ll be hosting El Rey Network’s “Rip Your Heart Out” Valentine’s Day horror marathon, featuring five Nightmare on Elm Street films.

The schedule includes, in order, the iconic first film, campy Freddy’s Revenge, cult fave Dream Warriors, The Dream Master (the one where Freddy eats a pizza dotted with tiny human heads), and The Dream Child (the one where Freddy fights a comic book character).

The most intriguing part of the marathon, however, is that El Rey—founded and co-owned by filmmaker and genre fanatic Robert Rodriguez—will also dust off several episodes from horror anthology TV series Freddy’s Nightmares, which originally aired in the late 1980s at the height of Freddy fever. The macabre stories were set in the town of Springwood, site of the most notorious Elm Street ever, but didn’t usually feature Freddy—though England (in full costume) hosted each show like a ghoulish Rod Serling.

Here’s the full schedule, courtesy of El Rey:

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13TH

6:00 AM ET/PT “FREDDY’S NIGHTMARES: BLACK TICKETS”

7:00 AM ET/PT “FREDDY’S NIGHTMARES: LOVE STINKS”

8:00 AM ET/PT “FREDDY’S NIGHTMARES: THE ART OF DEATH”

9:00 AM ET/PT “FREDDY’S NIGHTMARES: NO MORE MR. NICE GUY”

10:00 AM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET”

12:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 2: FREDDY’S REVENGE”

2:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS”

4:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 4: THE DREAM MASTER”

6:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 5: THE DREAM CHILD”

8:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET”

10:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 2: FREDDY’S REVENGE”

12:00 AM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS”

2:00 AM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 4: THE DREAM MASTER”

4:00 AM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 5: THE DREAM CHILD”

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14

6:00 AM ET/PT “FREDDY’S NIGHTMARES: DEADLINE”

7:00 AM ET/PT “FREDDY’S NIGHTMARES: JUDY MILLER, COME ON DOWN”

8:00 AM ET/PT “FREDDY’S NIGHTMARES: SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIAL”

9:00 AM ET/PT “FREDDY’S NIGHTMARES: SISTER’S KEEPER”

10:00 AM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 5: THE DREAM CHILD”

12:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 4: THE DREAM MASTER”

2:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS”

4:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 2: FREDDY’S REVENGE”

6:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET”

8:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 2: FREDDY’S REVENGE”

10:00 PM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 3: DREAM WARRIORS”

12:00 AM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 4: THE DREAM MASTER”

2:00 AM ET/PT “A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 5: THE DREAM CHILD

The Legendary Filmmaker Werner Herzog Has Made A Documentary about Robotics and A.I.

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The Legendary Filmmaker Werner Herzog Has Made A Documentary about Robotics and A.I.

For anyone who has seen a Werner Herzog film, his voice isn’t something you’ll soon forget. Now the director is bringing that authoritative voice, and storytelling prowess, to brand new subject: technology.

Herzog’s latest film is called Lo and Behold: Reveries Of The Connected World and it’ll premiere this week at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival. Deadline has posted the first trailer, which you can see right here.

Connectivity, artificial intelligence, robotics—these are all incredibly ripe topics for Herzog to explore in this day and age. Along the way he’s got interviews with Elon Musk, Bob Kahn and many others to try and figure out exactly where this all is going.

One important note about the film though, is that it’s produced by Netscout, a major tech company, which—having not seen it—makes the film sound like it may have, you know, some fish to fry. But, we’ll hear more once it premieres at Sundance.

[Deadline via /Film]


Contact the author at germain@io9.com.

Physicists Successfully Tie the Very First Quantum Knots

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Physicists Successfully Tie the Very First Quantum Knots

Theoretical physicists have been predicting that it should be possible for knots to form in quantum fields for decades, but nobody could figure out how to accomplish this feat experimentally. Now an international team has managed to do just that, tying knots in a superfluid for the very first time by manipulating magnetic fields.

Led by David Hall, a physicist at Amherst College, and Mikko Möttönen of Aalto University in Finland, the group describes their groundbreaking achievement in a new paper in Nature Physics. It’s tough to visualize these exotic objects, but they are essentially particle-like rings or loops in a quantum field connected to each other exactly once. A mathematician might not consider these structures to be true knots; typically a knot is defined as a knotted circle, like a pretzel, while a rubber band would be considered an “un-knot.” Hall and Möttönen prefer to think of their structures as knotty solitons.

And what’s a soliton, you may ask? There is a certain type of traveling wave that keeps rolling forward at a constant speed without losing its shape. That is a soliton, and such objects also show up in quantum field theory. As I wrote in a 2014 article for Quanta, “Poke a quantum field and you will create an oscillation [wave] that usually dissipates outward, but configure things in just the right way and that oscillation will maintain its shape” — just like a traveling wave.

Möttönen read about theoretical predictions of quantum knots, and became intrigued by the possibility. After making a few pencil-and-paper calculations, he ran computer simulations to demonstrate what to look for in the experimental data, and teamed up with Hall’s research group at Amherst to test his findings.

Physicists Successfully Tie the Very First Quantum Knots

David Hall (l) and Michael Ray (r) with their experimental setup in the Amherst laboratory. Credit: Marcus DeMaio/Amherst College.

First, they needed a medium — in this case a quantum state of matter known as a Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC). At normal temperatures atoms behave a lot like billiard balls, bouncing off one another and any containing walls. But they do so more slowly as you lower the temperature. Get the temperature down to billionths of a degree above absolute zero, and the atoms are so densely packed, they start to lose their individual identities. You end up with an ultra cold sample of quantum matter.

Physicists created the first BECs in 1995, 70 years after they were first predicted, but once they figured out the trick — and had the right technology — making BECs became routine. “Now it’s like you sneeze and a BEC comes out,” said Hall. More specifically, the quantum matter in the Amherst/Aalto experiments is a superfluid, since it flows with no viscosity.

The next step was to actually tie the knots via clever manipulation of magnetic fields. The superfluid sample has a quantum field, best envisioned as a series of points in space, each with a specific orientation. Think of a bunch of arrows all pointing up, for example — that is the starting state of the superfluid. When a knot forms, it has a core, essentially a circle of points where the arrows all point down. Hall compares it to a god’s eye yarn pattern. “If you followed the magnetic field line, it would go toward the center, but at the last minute it would peel away into a perpendicular direction,” he said. “It’s a particular way of rotating these arrows that gives you this linked configuration.”

The experimental setup was so delicate, that once the process started, even bathroom breaks were verboten, as Möttönen discovered to his detriment during one of his visits to the lab. The slightest movement of any metal object — like an office chair — could disrupt the magnetic field and keep the knots from forming. “We were limited by our ability to keep our attention focused,” Hall admitted. “After an hour of this, your back is killing you.”

But all the effort and aching backs paid off in the end. “We started with absolutely nothing working and we worked for more than year before we got results,” said Möttönen. By the time they were done, “It was just matching one to one with the simulations.” The group has gotten much more adept at twisting knots into quantum fields since then, even managing to take movies of the knots they make.

Physicists Successfully Tie the Very First Quantum Knots

Quantum knots in a superfluid. Credit: David Hall.

The knots created by Hall and Möttönen resemble smoke rings, which seems especially appropriate, given the history of knot theory in physics and mathematics. Back in the 19th century, Scottish physicist Peter Tait performed a number of experiments involving smoke rings. William Thomson (Lord Kelvin) was struck by how these rings could form and be stable enough to travel pretty far across the room before dissipating. Tait described them as being like “rings of solid India rubber.”

It inspired Thomson to develop a theory that atoms were knots tied in the swirling vortices of a medium then known as the luminiferous aether. At the time, it was believed this aether must exist to explain the strange behavior of light. An ideal fluid with no friction (zero viscosity) would make such rings stable, and the aether was conceived as an ideal fluid, much like the superfluid used in the Amherst/Aalto experiments. Different kinds of knots would correlate to different kinds of atoms — hydrogen or oxygen, for example. Tait even compiled a classification of types of knots, attempting to build his own version of a periodic table of elements.

It wasn’t correct, of course: by the dawn of the 20th century, experiments had confirmed that there is no such thing as the luminferous aether, and without it, the theory doesn’t work. But some physicists consider vortex knot theory to be the original string theory.

One of the open questions is what happens to these quantum knots over time. The knots are topologically stable: unlike the knots we tie in ropes or shoelaces, a topologically stable knot cannot be untied without cutting the rope, although you can relocate the knots within the rope. Similarly, the quantum knots in the Amherst/Aalto experiments cannot be separated without breaking the rings. “It can’t un-knot itself; it’s stuck in whatever weird way it’s been twisted together [in the superfluid],” said Hall.

The only way the knot can escape its topological prison is to shrink, which it should do over time, because it will seek to minimize its energy, much like a ball wants to roll down a hill to minimize its potential energy. So these knots may not be dynamically stable.

Hall would especially like to find out whether the knot can last longer than its superfluid medium. “If it does, then it’s effectively stable,” he said. “But if the superfluid hangs around and the knot winks out of existence, then it’s clearly dynamically unstable and that would be sad, because then it’s hard to study.”

Physicists Successfully Tie the Very First Quantum Knots

This is very fundamental research, so real-world applications are far in the future. Hall likes to think of scientific advancement as a pyramid, with fundamental research at the base.

“Each higher group [applied physicists or engineers, for example] is picking out things from the layers below and putting them together in new ways,” he said. “You get your consumer products at the apex of the pyramid, but you just don’t know, at the base, what’s eventually going to be useful.”

That said, Möttönen believes the work might provide a good proof of principle for physicists interested in developing topological quantum computers. Such a design would braid qubits into a kind of knot; different kinds of braids would encode different computational tasks, and those structures would be topologically stable. “The result does not depend on the positions of these things,” said Möttönen. “If you move them around a little, it doesn’t matter, so [such a computer] should be really robust against any error.”

The design is still very much in the early stages, but it’s promising enough that Microsoft is collaborating with physicist Charles Marcus (now at the University of Copenhagen), among others, to bring the project to fruition.

What would be really interesting is if the Amherst/Aalto group can manage to create more complicated quantum knots. Perhaps there is an entire class of these objects, much like the chart of real-world knots compiled by Tait in the 19th century. For Hall and Möttönen, this is just the beginning of the story.

[Nature Physics]

Top image: Visualization of a quantum knot. Credit: David Hall. Bottom image: Mikko Mottenen. Credit: Heikki Jantunen/Unigrafia.

The Classic Cyberpunk Novel Altered Carbon Is Becoming A Netflix Series

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The Classic Cyberpunk Novel Altered Carbon Is Becoming A Netflix Series

Add another entry to the long list of amazing things Netflix is doing with their original programming. They’ve just picked up the rights to Altered Carbon, a 10-episode-series based on the brilliant award-winning 2002 novel of the same name by Richard Morgan.

http://io9.gizmodo.com/5542862/cyberp...

Altered Carbon is set in the 25th century, where humans live all across the universe and consciousness can be transferred from body to body, making death a thing of the past. It follows a centuries old soldier who is “resleeved” (their word for transferring consciousness) into the body of a police officer and must then explore a huge conspiracy.

http://www.amazon.com/Altered-Carbon...

Writer and producer Laeta Kalogridis, who co-wrote Avatar and Terminator Genisys, bought the rights to the book and its sequels several years back, after co-writing a movie script that didn’t get picked up. She’ll now serve as writer and executive producer.

“Altered Carbon is one of the most seminal pieces of post-cyberpunk hard science fiction out there,” Kalogridis said at that time. “A dark, complex noir story that challenges our ideas of what it means to be human when all information becomes encodable, including the human mind.”

A ten-episode series seems like a great way to adapt such a dense, noir drama. In film form, it almost certainly would’ve been rushed and chopped up. Here, the story will get a chance to breathe... and be binged.

[Deadline]

Image: Abe Books


Contact the author at germain@io9.com.


If You Loved The X-Files, You'll Probably Still Like The New X-Files

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If You Loved The X-Files, You'll Probably Still Like The New X-Files

This Sunday, The X-Files returns for a six-episode miniseries. It’s been eight years since the last movie, and fourteen since the last TV episode. We’ve already watched the first three episodes of the new series, and are here to tell you, with no spoilers, that it’s worth your time. But it may not be worth the wait.

The X-Files always mixed long-running “mythology” arcs with standalone cases. And the new miniseries does the exact same thing. The first episode, “My Struggle,” is a hardcore mythology episode. Whether or not you enjoy it is going to depend on whether or not the show’s complicated mythology interests you. Even though it seems to throw out everything the show spent nine years building, explaining, retconning, and re-explaining, “My Struggle” is exactly like any of the mediocre mythology episodes that the X-Files aired over the years. There’s an abduction victim and an informant. There’s a government lab. There’s men in black, disappearing evidence. Mulder runs headlong into danger, while ignoring Scully. People monologue about truth. Go back and watch one of the other Chris Carter-penned episodes, and it will all look very familiar.

The only thing separating this episode from the old series is raised expectations. This is the first episode of the revival and everyone’s back, so we’re all hoping for something that blows us away. What you get is just The X-Files—exactly as it has always been.

Which isn’t a bad thing. It’s just not revolutionary.

Chris Carter announced a while back that the first and last episodes of the miniseries would be mythology episodes. The middle four are standalone cases, which is where the show always excelled. There’s incredible variety in The X-Files, and in the standalones in particular. And that’s exactly what the miniseries provides.

The second episode, “Founder’s Mutation” is heavy on paranoia and body horror. It’s not for the squeamish and does bring to mind some of the creepiest old school X-Files episodes. It’s a solid episode, with some interesting character work revolving around Mulder, Scully, and their past. Plus, we get the requisite “Mulder and Scully report to Skinner” scene.

If You Loved The X-Files, You'll Probably Still Like The New X-Files

But the third episode, “Mulder and Scully Meet the Were-Monster,” is where the revival finally starts approaching the high highs of the original show. Darin Morgan’s script is weird, twisty, and—as usual—hysterically funny. Everyone’s back on their game here. Mulder’s got a crazy theory, that is both wrong and right. Scully’s doing autopsies and calling Mulder out on being “batcrap” crazy. Just like previous Morgan triumphs, “Clyde Bruckman’s Final Repose” and “Jose Chung’s From Outer Space,” this episode has a superb guest cast. Rhys Darby’s performance deserves to go down in X-Files history. He’s got to be sympathetic and annoying at the same time. It’s a hard line to walk, and he is brilliant at it.

The only sour note in the episode is a run of transphobic jokes that aren’t just offensive, they’re unoriginal, and out of date.

Which is kind of how everything that doesn’t work about the revival feels. It’s recaptured the feel of the old show, but hasn’t updated anything. Mulder, Scully, and the FBI feel a bit like they were put in cold storage until now. They haven’t advanced or changed at all since we last saw them. Their understanding of the internet and politics, and everything else, feels as though it froze in the early 2000s.

The show goes to great pains to put everyone right back where they “belong.” Mulder and Scully aren’t together any more. The X-Files is reopened, and they’re back in the FBI. Skinner is their boss. You could slot these episodes in almost any season and, except for the age factor, they’d fit right in.

For fans, the X-Files revival has everything they loved about the show. And everything that drove them crazy about it. It’s six episodes of pure, concentrated X-Files. Which is exactly what we want—just not what we may have hoped for.

Top image: Frank Ockenfels/FOX. Middle Image: Ed Araquel/FOX

Contact the author at katharine@io9.com.

Newly Discovered Prime Number Is 22 Million Digits and Would Take About 127 Days to Pronounce

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Newly Discovered Prime Number Is 22 Million Digits and Would Take About 127 Days to Pronounce

Assuming you can say two digits a second and have evolved beyond the need for food, sleep, or a social life, the largest prime number ever discovered would take you more than four months to even say. So you’ll forgive the Great Internet Merseene Prime Search project, the impressive minds behind the discovery, if they keep it short.

Let’s call it M74207281.

GIMPS discovered the prime number by multiplying 2 by itself 74,207,281 times and then subtracting 1. This obscenely large number, which you can peruse here (though it is a 44MB text document full of numbers) does little for the math community other than continuing the never-ending exploration of every possible prime number out there. Curiously, the number was discovered using nothing more than an Intel Core i7 processor. It’s the 49th prime number discovered since the search began in about 500 BCE.

The GIMPS project, located at the University of Central Missouri, beat out the previous record holder, discovered in 2013, by a cool 5 million digits. A video posted by YouTube user standupmaths breaks down the discovery and includes lengthy interview with the team’s lead prof, Curtis Cooper.

Interestingly, the new prime number was actually discovered by the GIMPS machine on September 17th, 2015, but it took almost four months for a flesh-and-blood researcher to notice they actually had something. Luckily, not even enough time passed between the mechanical discovery and the real one to say the 22 million prime number in its entirety.

[Gimps]

Image: Shutterstock

Contact the author at darren.orf@gizmodo.com.

This Poster for Fantasy Parody Dudes & Dragons Is Suitably Goofy 

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This Poster for Fantasy Parody Dudes & Dragons Is Suitably Goofy 

Wigs, pointy ears, swords, and a lotta fake fire—all make a robust showing on this brand-new poster for fantasy parody Dudes & Dragons, which slathers layers of cheese on the Lord of the Rings genre. Many, many layers of cheese, from the looks of it.

The comedy—which stars a cast of unknowns, though Luke Perry and James Marsters have cameos—hits VOD on March 1.

This Poster for Fantasy Parody Dudes & Dragons Is Suitably Goofy 

Wild West Novels Have Suddenly Gotten A Whole New Exciting Lease on Life

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Wild West Novels Have Suddenly Gotten A Whole New Exciting Lease on Life

Lately, the Western novel has been getting really fun again. Most of us probably think of Louis L’Amour’s, or maybe Joe Lansdale’s classic Weird West stories. But there’s a slew of new Westerns, featuring diverse characters and bracing new storylines. We talked to four authors about the new wave of Westerns.

In Gemma Files’ Hexslinger series, a Pinkerton agent named Ed Morrow infiltrates a gang of outlaws that’s led by a rogue “hexslinger” named Asher Rook and his lover, Chess Pargeter. The Hexslinger books have won lots of praise for their protrayal of LGBT characters and themes.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

In Lila Bowen’s Wake of Vultures, a mixed-race girl named Nettie Lonesome kills a vampire and suddenly she can see supernatural creatures everywhere. She steals the vampire’s clothes, passes as a man, and becomes first a cattle rustler and then a Texas Ranger. But her sexuality turns out to be more complicated than killing monsters.

Elizabeth Bear’s Karen Memory combines steampunk, fantasy and Westerns, for a story about a sex worker who gets tangled up with a Jack-the-Ripper-esque serial killer and a man who has a machine that can control anyone’s actions.

And Laura Ann Gilman’s Silver on the Road follows a saloon girl named Isabel who volunteers to be the Devil’s Left Hand, helping the man who’s believed to be Satan to control his vast territory West of the Mississippi. But a rash of supernatural attacks tests Isobel’s control over her new power.

These are just four of the more interesting novels that have come along recently and play with Western themes. We talked to all four authors about why now is the perfect time for a wild new West.

Why is now a great time for people to experiment with Western novels?

Wild West Novels Have Suddenly Gotten A Whole New Exciting Lease on Life

Lila Bowen: We’re in a weird place now in America, in a time in which rage has become a commodity and most people feel helpless to change anything. The idea of the Old West has come to represent something we yearn for: a new beginning with an unrestricted frontier of endless hope and possible riches that allows for personal vigilanteism. Right now, so many people are fed up with the corruption of government and the way we feel disconnected from our leaders and our laws and our land that we yearn for a world where a person is as good as their word—or they have to deal with the consequences. Westerns have a comfortable familiarity and shorthand that we all connect with but offer endless variations for science fiction and fantasy stories.

Laura Anne Gilman: I’m not sure there’s ever been a bad time to experiment in that genre - it’s both iconic and constantly being reinvented, especially in film, as each decade looks back differently. From the heroic loner of the 1960's to the more cynical look of the 1970's, and the “big epic revisionist” of the 1980's, all the way up to the SFnal takes and gritty hyper-realism of the 2000s. Every time we revise our history, we also revise the mythology of our history.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

I think what’s different now is that it’s more women doing the experimenting. There’s been a leap over “girls can’t play in the old west unless it’s a historical romance” to “this is our sandbox, too,” a step away from the hyper-macho aspect. Possibly still hyper-macho, but gender inclusive, now.

But really, if you’re asking “why is weird west making another run at popularity?” the only honest answer is “I haven’t a clue.” Waves occur and it’s easier to see them in retrospect than when the impulse is still building under the surface.

Elizabeth Bear: I’m not sure what in the Zeitgeist it is that’s giving these books a push. Because there has been a slow trickle of fantasy or SFnal westerns by women for a while now—Karen Joy Fowler’s Sarah Canary, Emma Bull’s Territory, Cherie Priest’s Boneshaker et. al., and more—but it does seem as if, bang, this is the time to railroad, as it were. I started KAREN MEMORY in 2009, roughly, and it didn’t see print until 2015, and it seems to have slotted in magically as if it were something that people were really looking forward to.

http://www.amazon.com/Boneshaker-Clo...

Gemma Files: I think, at this point, we’ve very much moved on from an age of strict gatekeeping—an age in which there was a very deep perceived divide between those who were only “allowed” to consume popular cultural narratives versus those who were “allowed” to comment on, analyze or unpack them. Possibly this is due to a rise in the number of fans with deconstructionist academic training, or maybe it’s just an off-shoot of the immense number of fans for whom the production and consumption of fanfiction is a natural part of the whole fannish process; probably both.

Wild West Novels Have Suddenly Gotten A Whole New Exciting Lease on Life

One way or the other, we now know that nothing’s sacred and that every narrative has a thousand potential alternatives—we get that don’t just “have” to accept anything anymore, just because it’s the only thing of its kind that currently exists. So if we’re dissatisfied with the way an existing narrative handles (or, more likely, doesn’t handle) something, we can either create our own version that solves those inherent problems or at the very least go looking for someone else’s version, one which plugs those pesky world-building holes and addresses our political discontents: flip the default, add context, refuse and rewrite the received wisdom of a given genre.

Plus, since the classic Western story is definitely perceived as a narrative originally designed to provide a new mythology for a then-new country—one that would allow Americans rationalize and romanticize even their grossest decisions in the name of expansionism, Manifest Destiny and the New Frontier—and very much inherently marketed towards the absolute default (ie, power fantasies about conquering savage nature for cis white heterosexual dudes), I think as a genre it’s thus become something everyone who doesn’t fall into that particular rubric feels instinctually compelled to fuck with.

What is it about the West that makes stories about people who don’t fit in and are trying to figure out who they are so compelling?

Files: A lot of Westerns are about running away and starting over, to one degree or another: you pack your bags, move somewhere so far away from “civilization” that the rules don’t matter any more and remake yourself, usually by setting yourself in opposition with uncontrollable and mysterious forces that want to crush you: landscape, weather, ecology, fierce beasts and even fiercer indigenous human beings, criminal predators of every description. They are fantasies of escape as much as anything else, and I don’t know anything that non-default people crave quite as much as escape, aside from the concept of the found family—the possibility of going so far away from whatever structure you’re trapped inside that you find out where you were always actually meant to be, form a gang, create your true “tribe.”

Basically, the Western is all about potential, though there’s also this constant undercurrent of a tragedy foretold; eventually and inevitably the map gets filled in, civilization encroaches yet again, and what you have will always be lost. It’s like history’s shadow peeping in on us through a brightly-painted scrim, tingeing the sheer entertainment value with retrospection and nostalgia.

Bowen: In our current world, we’re all crowded together and constantly in touch. Everyone’s on Facebook, along with their entire home town, high school, college, first job, and neighborhood. It’s hard to drop who you used to be and entirely recreate yourself, and the people who knew you in the past will continue to judge and troll you, even if they think they mean well. But in the Old West, you had an entirely new backdrop of wide spaces in which to reinvent yourself. Change your name, change your physical presentation, create your own new history. There was no real way to determine who you used to be, and even if someone did manage to get paperwork from Back East, it took months to arrive and the jury might be swayed otherwise.

http://www.amazon.com/Wake-Vultures-...

It reminds me of Colorform sets—right now, everyone’s Colorform set is totally packed with people and things, stuck down like stickers. But you lift up that character and drop them into a new set, and you’ve effectively erased everything up until that moment, giving them the freedom to completely remake themselves. Which I love. Plus, as I learned writing Wake of Vultures, if you don’t like what a feller has to say about who you are, you can punch him in the teeth with zero repercussions. It’s immensely satisfying.

Wild West Novels Have Suddenly Gotten A Whole New Exciting Lease on Life

Bear: There are so many fewer expectations and much looser social codes in a frontier society, I think is a lot of it. Women like Mother Damnable and Calamity Jane, who refuse traditional gender roles, can become legends, rather than being forced into tiny socially acceptable boxes or shut up in madhouses. It’s actually curious to me—Robert Heinlein, in several of his novels, has Libertarian-leaning protagonists such as Lazarus Long wax poetical about the opportunities of a frontier society for a man to make his own way and be who he truly is without interference from meddling neighbors. It’s a very Charles Ingalls kind of rhetoric.

But really, marginal societies function because of interdependence. Even Pa Ingalls needed nails and calico, and those nails and that calico came from an industrial society. And that level of interdependence—the work needs to be done, and any hand that can do that work is turned to it—leads to greater freedom for everyone until the niches fill up and the competition gets fierce enough that social pressure starts displacing people lower on the social ladder from desirable jobs.

Gilman: The American West is about frontiers—that moving grey space between what’s (too well) known and what’s completely unknown. It’s where whatever you were can fall off, and something new take shape. Like the space between high school and college, nobody knows you so you can become anyone. Or, your past can follow you, and you have to take a stand against it, gunslinger style, face to face.

That’s the idealized version, anyway. It’s also a canvas of some colossal mistakes. Failure’s not only an option, it sometimes seemed to be the default.

Did you set out to shake up the tropes of the Western genre? What have you learned from playing around with it?

Bowen: Oh, hell yes! Wake of Vultures was born of a late night tweet in which I decided I wanted to write Lonesome Dove but with monsters and heroes who weren’t white guys. The idea stuck with me, hard, and I decided that if I was going to flip a table, I should flip ALL THE TABLES. In Nettie, I wanted to craft a hero who would face every single kind of discrimination and hardship in the Old West and still triumph. She begins as a half-black, half-Comanche girl kept as a slave by a pair of abusive drunks, and she goes on to realize that what she wants most in life is to be a cowpoke and live as a man. I learned that I had been playing it safe in other books, not putting my protagonists in too much pain. But torturing Nettie and watching her kick ass is a pure joy and has helped me level up as a writer. Now, instead of thinking, “What happens next?”, I think, “How can I take away everything she loves, and how can she still come out victorious?”

Gilman: I didn’t so much want to shake them up as step around them. By setting by story in 1800-1802, I’m working before the “Old West” that we recognize today was established. An area that hadn’t been surveyed by the east yet, much less colonized or claimed... so a lot of the tropes we automatically assume are there—weren’t, yet.

Wild West Novels Have Suddenly Gotten A Whole New Exciting Lease on Life

That wasn’t intentional. I’d been using the Louisiana Purchase as my story-point, since it was an interesting pivot for the continent (history major, here. So much of who we are as a nation can be traced back to this moment, both politically and emotionally, for good and for ill). But my research quickly reminded me that, for example, the Colt “Six Shooter” so beloved of the Western wasn’t mass produced until 1832, and even the flintlock revolver was 1814. So my characters would be restricted to single-shot rifles and blunderbuss pistols—with a 14" muzzle, not exactly useful for the quick draw! Take away the Western iconic gunfighter, lawman, and cavalry (not to mention the affiliated townspeople)...what do you have?

The explorer. The dreamer. The builder. And, yes, the order-bringer, in the lawful neutral sense of the word. Fortunately, those were the people who interested me.

Files: My route to the Western led directly through Slash Canyon, so yeah, I guess I was looking to mess things up from the start—but then again, when you deliberately gay up a narrative that’s already homocentric and homosocial by nature, how far are you actually moving away from the original? I went into my first book, A Book of Tongues, with the deliberate intent of making my main character a full-bore Billy the Kid kind of guy, unrepentantly murderous, peacock-flamboyant and viper-deadly, anti-authoritarian to the point of perversity but also completely and absolutely “frilly”...a dude who, if rap had been invented yet, would be apt to declaim in public that he like[d] big dudes and [he] cannot lie, or [he] could but [he] ain’t gonna try, mainly for the pleasure of shooting any fool dumb enough to object. That was Chess Pargeter, the human engine whose doomed relationship with fallen preacher turned hexslinger Reverend Rook drives the entire trilogy.

As I got further into even that first book, however, I started thinking about trying to redress other imbalances. I made up a literal magical Native person character, the Diné shaman Grandma, just so that I could have her do the opposite of what she’d be expected to do in a “normal” Western; instead of mentoring the Rev, she observed him from afar long enough to figure out how dangerous he was, then lied to him to get him close enough to kill. My Big Bad turned out to be an amalgamated creature constructed from worship-hungry indigenous archetypes that had eaten each other after “death,” named after the Mayan moon goddess Ixchel but also containing all the most bloodthirsty aspects of a bunch of Mexica goddesses, whose transition from human sacrifice to total inhumanity predicts what could happen to any magician if they become more interested in predation and power than making sure the world around them survives the imbalance they create by simply existing. Trying to do due diligence and be respectful to all three cultures was a challenge I was proud to meet, though I’m sure I screwed up here and there, for which I apologize.

Wild West Novels Have Suddenly Gotten A Whole New Exciting Lease on Life

By the next book I was playing around with situational bisexuality, lesbianism, and genderfluidity, introducing a character (Yancey Colder Kloves, an innkeeper’s daughter who quick grew to become the third-most important person in the whole shebang) who hopefully made the whole thing slightly less of a massive bag of dicks, and trying my best to make even the people I’d originally brought in as little more than pulpy local colour into honest-to-god human beings, with character development and everything. Near the end, I was even trying to make a distinction between zealous Christian characters whose faith was genuine but who made bad decisions and the sort of straight-on status quo hypocrites you expect in these tales. I also fell down a burning ring of shaky world-building here and there, but was hopefully able to extricate myself without looking completely ridiculous.

One of the biggest things I learned from the whole experience was that although the Western looks like a “simple” genre, it’s really anything but. Adding historical detail and trying to keep it fresh but valid will take you down one rabbit hole, while adding realistic psychological detail but trying to keep it true to the period will take you down another; trying to make sure no character falls into the easy trap of “heroes” vs. “villains” is yet another challenge, as is trying to create action and maintain pace, to sketch spectacle without allowing things to flatten out. I don’t even begin to know how other people do it, especially if the structural changes they’re trying to incorporate involve more than crossbreeding your basic horse opera with black magic and gay romance.

Bear: I certainly set out to give a more realistic picture of the American west than we usually get in the motion pictures, which are extraordinarily white-washed and Bowdlerized. The American west was a very diverse (and very stratified) society, and so many of the people who made it up are erased from the narrative, the Myth of the West. (Which I think in general is a pretty toxic myth on a lot of levels.) I did want to show some classic Western tropes from the point of view of the people who are usually treated as set dressing, to give them a subject position.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...

And once I found out about the history of prostitution in Seattle and San Francisco, well, the setting for Karen Memory was pretty much set and done.

And finally, the Western story obviously comes with a certain amount of baggage, and the genre has a problematic legacy. How did you grapple with this in writing your own Western?

Bowen: I started Nettie out in isolation, which means she was, philosophically, a nearly blank slate. She was taught very little and kept outside of the mores of society and religion, which means she doesn’t have the built-in prejudices most people of her time would. The book is in tight third person, which means the narration is in Nettie’s voice, mostly, and allows me to show how she reasons through her various problems and her growing understanding of herself and her place in the world. She’s never encountered any spectrum outside of miserable heteronormativity, so she’s able to reason that there’s nothing wrong with the fact that she’s attracted to both sexes and prefers to live as a man. She’s been taught she’s ugly and that being non-white is a bad thing, but she reasons that since the white folks who raised her aren’t worth a damn, their teachings about race aren’t worth a damn either. Nettie ultimately decides that a person’s worth is based not on what they look like or who they love, but in how they treat people and animals and what they contribute to the world. She does face insult and discrimination, but she has a strong core of self-worth and rises to the occasion as she grows.

In book two, Conspiracy of Ravens, which I’m writing now, it was important to me that Nettie make the mental leap from thinking of herself as a woman to accepting himself as a man, and I was really excited to write that bridge and change his pronouns to he/him. It is odd to have him think of women as basically useless, therefore disparaging my own gender, but it’s important to me to stay true to the character and his feelings... while slyly using women in the story to up his estimation of female worth.

Wild West Novels Have Suddenly Gotten A Whole New Exciting Lease on Life

Files: As I’ve tried to address somewhat in the paragraphs above, the difficulty of providing representation is always going to be that readers will automatically assume you intend your characters to be representative of their own particular identity, their group, their sub-set—and this is only going to get worse when you’re working in a genre rightly infamous for its classic use of racist shorthand. What always helps, however, is if you do your level best to make sure your gay character isn’t the only one within sight, or your female character can’t be somehow assumed to symbolize all female characters, and so on. Don’t tell stories that make people feel bad about who they think they are, if you can help it; that’s the basic principle. It’s hard, I guess, but it’s not that hard.

Because I write horror, for example, I struggle with the perception that since a lot of my characters are “bad people,” I must therefore have created them in order to prove that every person who shares their traits must be equally “bad.” In the Hexslinger Series, one of the ways I tried to get around this was by making sure Chess Pargeter eventually (spoiler alert!) gets to the point in his life where he doesn’t shoot first and ask questions never, or act like he thinks being annoying warrants the death penalty. Over the course of all three books, he makes and keeps friendships, learns to value other people’s happiness, changes enough so that he’s willing to make sacrifices on their behalf which cost him dearly, grieves love’s loss yet takes the risk of loving again.

None of which necessarily makes him a “good” person per se, or substantially different from his original self, but definitely does make him better, or at least recognizably human—and that’s all I was going for, really, in terms of not only Chess, but every other character he shares these books with.


Charlie Jane Anders is the author of All The Birds in the Sky, coming Jan 26 from Tor Books. Follow her on Twitter, and email her.

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

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The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

The Silver Surfer is one of those superheroes who’s always looked cooler than he actually was. The character’s visuals point to an ideal of unfettered freedom and navigating the cosmos with a slick, frictionless ease. But, in the main, the actual stories featuring the former herald of Galactus have had him weighed down by guilt and responsibility. He was never a “hang ten, dude” kind of character. But the latest series featuring Norrin Radd make him a lot more fun.

Gloomy, shakespearean soliloquies have been the Silver Surfer’s stock in trade. He started his fictional life as Norrin Radd, a scientist on the idyllic planet of Zenn-La. When world-devourer Galactus came to Zenn-La to make it his next meal, Norrin offered his own life as a sacrifice, pledging to help keep the always-hungry entity fed with a steady supply of planets. He did that for ages, until he rebelled against his master to save Earth from getting broken down into a smoothie of life force energies.

Galactus erected a barrier that stopped the Surfer from leaving Earth, and the former herald killed time pining after old girlfriend Shalla Bal and begrudgingly protecting the inhabitants of the less-advanced planet he was trapped on. After he was freed from that cosmic cage, Norrin Radd soared through the galaxies as a cosmic defender of life and justice. He was a lot more well-adjusted but still seemed to lean towards the depressive side of the psychological spectrum. Drama is necessary to give action-adventure genre stories momentum but the Surfer’s always seemed like a character who bore more than his fair share. Norrin Radd could do just about anything with near-limitless energies of the Power Cosmic but happiness and fulfilling interactions with other sentient beings always seemed to elude him.

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

This week’s new Silver Surfer #1 is a continuation of a re-invention that began in 2014. In the run that started that year, creators Dan Slott, Mike and Laura Allred engineered a sci-fi meet-cute that tethered the Surfer to average everyday Earth-girl Dawn Greenwood. After rescuing Dawn from an evil resort planet powered by the heart of a celestial being, the Surfer took her on as a traveling companion.

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

Dan Slott is a writer who’s been steering Spider-Man for more than a decade, and his work on Silver Surfer is among his very best. The very quality that initially made me lukewarm to Slott’s tenure on Spider-Man—a fan-turned-pro reconstituting all-too-familiar beats—seems to be the very thing that’s powering my enjoyment of Silver Surfer. There’s a ton of Marvel Comics literacy simmering under the shiny surface of the series’ peppy plots and dialogue, but it gets used in a different way.

Most comics readers already know Peter Parker’s personality, and we know that Slott knows it, too. So, even while he’s making the newest take on Spider-Man feel more adult in cleverly appealing ways, there’s a sense of inevitability to it all. Peter becoming more responsible as he rises to greater heights of socioeconomic power? Of course. It’s reinforcing the commonly-held attributes of the character. The arcs spooled out so far in Silver Surfer have felt fresher.

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

Because the Surfer doesn’t have as weighted a publishing history as Spider-Man, the creatives on his newest series seem more free to take him into trippier, more bizarre outings. The stories and tone in Silver Surfer bear the heavy imprint of Mike Allred’s authorial touch. Allred—who shares storytelling credit with Slott—first came to renown on the strength of Madman, his wholly-owned superhero creation that tapped into a deep love for kitsch, Silver Age comics creativity and retro pop-art.

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

Visually, Allred’s work channels the same frantic yet earnest goofiness that he brought to bear on Madman, X-Statix and other well-regarded work by him. The book is a frenzy of askew angles, bold colorwork by Laura Allred and optical puns. The first chunk of the last volume of Silver Surfer had Norrin and Dawn gallivanting across the universe, exploring, outwitting and outfighting various threats across the universe. While this was happening, the human woman remained unaware that her partner shepherded giant, purple walking death to the doorsteps of millions of inhabited worlds. Learning of the Surfer’s past shocked Dawn and drove a wedge between her and Norrin. (There’s that lore knowledge getting used to specific effect.) But she was prepared to make the same sacrifice herself to save a planet of Galactus-dinner survivors:

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

The pair shared an even more existentially themed adventure during Secret Wars, one where they held the possibility to create the entire universe from their memories.

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

The story climaxed with Norrin and Dawn having to choose between a perfect shallow reality made from their own hopes or a deeply flawed one filled with evil and past regrets.

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week

The new Silver Surfer #1 shows Dawn and Norrin returning to Earth and reconnecting with her family. On the way, they scuttle a would-be invasion handily, but the Hordax aggressors retaliate by leeching away all of mankind’s collective creative works.

The Best Silver Surfer Series Comes Back This Week


This first issue maintains the zippy and surprisingly poignant feel of the Slott/Allred run of Silver Surfer comics and doesn’t come off as a massively reinvented take on already extant characters. Superhero characters often say that every life matters as motivation but the sentiment rarely feels genuine in today’s bleak-outlook cape comics. In this creative team’s hands, Norrin Radd really feels like someone who thinks life is precious.

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