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India female gang in pink gulabi

This is like a big, bad bag of revenge... women in India, long suppressed as a feeble gender, have banded together, put on pink saris and gone after the bloody throats of corrupt police officers and officials.


It's almost too much awesome vigilante action - they call themselves the gulabi gang, and they've hunted down men that abuse their wives, or police officers that treat lower castes unfairly.

Read the article!


""Nobody comes to our help in these parts. The officials and the police are corrupt and anti-poor. So sometimes we have to take the law in our hands. At other times, we prefer to shame the wrongdoers," says Sampat Pal Devi, between teaching a "gang" member on how to use a lathi (traditional Indian stick) in self defence. "

People are suffering in India, especially in regions where the drought has made farming difficult. The poor find it tough to find justice, feeling the wrath of a legal system that is happy to exploit them, monopolizing the resources for those with power and influence, leaving the hunger crowds with nothing.

The pink gang opposes these excesses:

""Mind you," she says, "we are not a gang in the usual sense of the term. We are a gang for justice.""

Sure, now you're all about justice... but what happens when the pull of power is just too seductive to ignore?


Soon, it'll seem like a good idea to farm a little heroin, just to make the balance sheet look a little nicer. Then you'll realize that automatic weapons can help the gang do three times the vengeance. Before too long, you'll be a full-fledged rebel faction, hiding in the jungle and trying to overthrow the police.

It reminds me of a Simpsons episode with the cat burglar, where Homer organizes a mob of vigilantes - I couldn't find that video, but here's one to replace it:



And that's why we shouldn't eat too many donuts.
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Little Annie Fanny

November 12th 2008 21:43
Little Annie Fanny was a full-colour comic strip by Harvey Kurtzman and Will Elder for Playbot Magazine; it ran from 1962 to 1988, and was one of the highest quality strips to appear in the magazine.

Annie Fanny was the strip's central character, a blonde, blue-eyed, buxom woman with an innocent, gullible mind and a propensity for finding herself naked.

I recently bought vol. 1 of the series, a nice, hefty paperback book with gorgeous colour reproduction of the comic strip. Kurtzman and Elder outdid themselves on this project, putting in long hours to finish the strip, and it shows. I can't think of another strip that put this much work into every issue - Calvin & Hobbes comes close, as does Bloom Country, but both of those strips, though beautiful to look at, pale in comparison to the Little Annie Fanny episodes.

Sadly, though, I didn't enjoy the book, as it felt hollow and unsatisfying. The style of the strip is gorgeous, but Annie, herself, is a Barbie-doll figure, with gigantic, fake-looking breasts, and a tiny waist. There's nothing really appealing about her figure, as she seems like one of the plastic mannequins that appear in Playboy Magazine - oh, wait, I see the appeal.

The writing is merely adequate, though... it never really gets funny, at least, not for me, and the episodes are independent of each other, with hardly any reoccuring themes or plotline. I suppose this is what happens when you expect too much from your comics - I guess I'm just disaapointed that, with this much work and production quality, that the writing doesn't live up to my standards.

Still, it's a ribald comic, which is always enjoyable, and it's satirical, too, poking fun at pop culture and music. There's enough enjoyment in Little Annie Fanny to pleasure comic book fans, but, ultimately, it falls from the top shelf.

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Gifts for your Star Wars-lovin' boyfriend

September 30th 2008 10:33
There's a rather short article on this page on gifts for your nerdy boyfriend that loves Star Wars.

It's predictable - minatures, fake lightsabers, etc.

The only reason I link to it here, is because of a suggestion that pleases us, at Orble, and pleases all Star Wars-lovin' boyfriends. That gift is this:

Slave Princess Leia costume golden bikini


That's right! Ladies, buy yourself a golden bikini and treat your man to a little Jabba's Palace. Throw your chain around his neck and arouse him with the sounds of a hungry Rancor! Offer him two droids and give him hibernation sickeness! Threaten to throw him to the almighty Sarlacc, but then destroy his barge! Wheee!

It's surprisingly affordable - only $54.99 from the Star Wars Shop, which means it's probably guaranteed to last through a indecent battle over the desert.

Let me tell you - your boyfriend will be happier with this compared to if you buy him the R2-D2 projection clock.

There's an entire fetishizing site out there for fans of Leia and her bikini: Leia's Metal Bikini, with photo galleries and instructions on making your own. Apparently, there's no shortage of women willing to dress up like the sister of Luke Skywalker. You have a gift that I could never have!



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Beeblebrox Hitchhiker's guide to the Galaxy

Yes, it's true. The 6th installment of "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" is being written, but not by Douglas Adams.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Dave Perillo's Movie Poster Art

September 11th 2008 01:13
Mos Eisley Cantina Dave Perillo
One thing the Internet has been a blessing for is the easy access to all types of fan-driven art for geeky movies.

Dave Perillo makes original movie posters for some of his favourite movies, like "Star Wars", "Dawn of the Dead" and "Shaun of the Dead". The above poster, for the Mos Eisley Cantina in "A New Hope" is full of charm and levity


[ Click here to read more ]
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Louis Jordan playing saxophone

This 1944 song was penned by Louis Jordan, and the song would go on to some acclaim, being covered by a host of artists, from jazz to blues.

[ Click here to read more ]
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She-Hulk bikini pinup
It's a stupid title, I know, and it's outrageous to even think that people spend time wondering about things like this.

Who slept with Wolverine? And how hot were they? Even though they're just in a comic book?
[ Click here to read more ]
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Vox by Nicholson Baker

May 9th 2008 03:26
Vox Nicholson Baker phone sex novel
Vox by Nicholson Baker is an interesting novel, depicting a single phone-sex conversation between a man and a woman. It's this kind of bizarre scenario that give Vox its cult edge, putting it on bookshelves with Fight Club and Slaughterhouse 5.

Amitava Kumar wrote an insightful review of the book, expressing her appreciation for Baker's prose. From the review


[ Click here to read more ]
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Inspiration for Sci-Fi Movies

March 26th 2008 21:38
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Some would just say it's straight up better than the American comic book adaptation, which I had back in the 80s. Yeah, I liked my comic, but the colours were weird and the faces of the stars didn't really come out that well.

From starwars.com, a comparison of the Japanese manga version, to the original comic, including a critique of how the original made several flaws:
[ Click here to read more ]
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The Forever War

March 6th 2008 01:08
The Forever War Joe Halderman
Warning: this post contains spoilers of the plot of The Forever War!

The Forever War is #1 on the Orion SF Masterworks series, and it earns its place on the list by being a rich novel, deep in social commentary and originality


[ Click here to read more ]
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The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch

February 6th 2008 08:10
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch
What a bizarre novel! Yet it manages to captivate through sheer originality... this Phillip K. Dick novel is rarely mentioned, but it did win the Nebula Award for Best Novel in '65.

Dick was a master of creating tantalizing scenarios, universes that seemed so easy to translate to film, and this book is no different: in the future, Dick imagines an Earth that is overheating due to global warming, causing the booming human population to try and colonize other planets in the Solar System


[ Click here to read more ]
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I, Robot

January 10th 2008 08:27
I, Robot cover of Isaac Asimov book
You know it as the movie with the guy from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. Not, not DJ Jazzy Jeff.

But! I, Robot was originally a collection of nine short stories by notable sci-fi author Isaac Asimov, one of the writers that put serious thought into aliens, robots and faraway planets


[ Click here to read more ]
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The Road by Cormac McCarthy

December 27th 2007 02:31
The Road Cormac McCarthy
Bleak and depressing, The Road is a post-apocalyptic novel written by Cormac McCarthy about a man and his son walking through the ruins of human civilization.

It's a magnetically compelling read... the disaster that is responsible for the downfall of society is unnamed and left to the reader's imagination. We think, nuclear bomb? Asteroid? Zombies


[ Click here to read more ]
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