Thursday, 24 September 2020

Enola Holmes (2020) Movie Review

 


Enola Holmes can be summed up in just one word: Fun. It isn't simply about the younger sister of famed 19th Century detective, Sherlock Holmes. It is about a young woman who is looking for her mother and ends up entwined in a mystery that could end up having dire consequences for all of England if it is not solved. All because of a boy.


Based on The Case of the Missing Marquess, the first book in the Enola Holmes series by Nancy Springer, Enola Holmes is not only a great movie, but it's a great set up for a series of Netflix Original Films. Millie Bobby Brown, who we all know from Stranger Things, plays Enola, the 16 year old sister to Sherlock Holmes, played by Superman himself, Henry Cavill, and their older brother, Mycroft Holmes, who is definitely the reason that Sherlock doesn't keep in touch with his family once he becomes a famous detective. Not that that's stated in the movie, but if I had a brother like that I wouldn't want to keep in touch with my family either. Just sayin'.


I'm not a huge fan of Sherlock Holmes. I read The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes when I borrowed it from the school library in grade six. I also had the Illustrated Classics edition of the book in my collection when I was a kid. But it was never something I gravitated to, preferring to read The Hardy Boys and The Three Investigators for my mystery reading pleasure.


I also read The Hound of the Baskervilles in grade nine. The grade nine class had Take Your Kids to Work Day in October every year. The problem is that when I was in grade nine, neither of my parents were employed as my dad had just gotten laid off, and my mom had "retired" at the beginning of that summer to take care of me following an operation on my leg, which required me to be off the leg for a few weeks, leaving me bedridden. Anyway, since my parents didn't work, and I didn't know anyone I could go to work with, I stayed home that day, helped my mom around the house, and worked on an independent book study to be handed into my English teacher. I chose The Hound of the Baskervilles because I had never read it before and I was interested enough in Sherlock Holmes, as a character, that I decided to read it.

All this was to say that I know enough about Sherlock Holmes to be immediately interested in watching this movie. Henry Cavill plays an excellent Sherlock Holmes in this movie. While I liked the first movie starring Robert Downey Jr. as Holmes, I actually prefer Cavill's interpretation. It's much less of a dark, tragic figure than Downey's was and more along the lines of what I remember Holmes to be from the two books I read. Cavill's is also more mischievious and playful than Downey's is.

Of course I would be remiss if I did not mention Enola Holmes herself, played by Millie Bobby Brown. Eleven is one of my favourite characters on Stranger Things, but I was surprised at how well Millie played the character of Enola, who I'm only encountering for the first time here, as I've never read the book this movie is based on. She was likeable, and while she had to prove herself to her brothers, though Mycroft is not impressed in the slightest, she doesn't whine and bitch about it. Instead she just goes off and does what she needs to do in order to find her mother, and to protect Lord Tewkesbury from being killed by an assassin and figuring out who hired the assassin in the first place.

The only other two cast members that I recognized were Helena Bonham Carter, who we all know as Bellatrix Lestrange in the Harry Potter film series, and Fiona Shaw, who played Aunt Petunia in the Harry Potter film series. The rest of the cast is completely unfamiliar to me, which is nice, because I can see them as their characters rather than as themselves or previous characters they've played. Even with the four cast members that I am familiar with, they all fall into their roles so that I can see Henry Cavill as Sherlock Holmes instead of Superman, Millie Bobby Brown as Enola instead of Eleven, Helena Bonham Carter as Eudoria Holmes instead of Bellatrix, and Fiona Shaw as Miss Harrison instead of Aunt Petunia. Which is nice.

One thing that I really appreciate about this movie is that they kept it in the traditional Sherlock Holmes period of the Victorian Era, circa late 1880s or early 1890s rather than attempt to modernize it and bring it into the early 21st Century. While streaming services are pretty good about making shows and movies set in eras other than the current one, Enola Holmes was originally supposed to be a theatrical release, only going to Netflix with the pandemic, and Hollywood is notorious for modernizing movie and TV show adaptations of comic books and novels. Though they do tend to leave the classics where they are. But still, the fact that they kept this movie adaptation in the Victorian era is pretty awesome.

This has nothing to do with the movie, but one of the reasons I'm pleased with the setting of the movie, is that I grew up reading books like The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain and Emily of New Moon by Lucy Maude Montgomery, as well as watching shows like Road to Avonlea, Murdoch Mysteries, and the TV show adaptation of Emily of New Moon as well as films like Tom & Huck. Upper Canada Village is one of my favourite places to visit. So while I did prefer reading The Hardy Boys over Sherlock Holmes I have an appreciation for the 19th Century in general, the Victorian era in particular, that other people might not have unless they also grew up watching those shows and movies and reading those books like I did. 

Without giving anything away, I was quite happy that I discovered who the villain truly was at the same time that Enola and Tewkesbury did rather than figuring it out several steps before they did. With modern day murder mysteries and whodunit cases, I tend to figure it out before the detectives, or whoever the main characters are, because they aren't complicated at all. At least in movies and on TV shows. All of the mystery shows Castle, NCIS, NCIS: Los Angeles, and even Murdoch Mysteries, which is set in Canada in the late 19th Century and early 20th Century, I tend to solve the mystery before the main characters do. So it was refreshing to watch a movie where I solved it at the same time as the protagonists did and was even as surprised as they were when the true villain of the story was revealed.

One thing that initially confused me in the movie is whether or not Holmes knew Dr. Watson at this point. From the quick research I did before writing this review, the books seem to indicate that Holmes and Watson are working together. However, I think the movie is set before Holmes is acquainted with Watson, as Sherlock is alone while tracking Enola and working on the Tewkesbury case, and Inspector Lestrade, Holmes's contact at Scotland Yard, indicates that Sherlock doesn't have an assistant. Which is the proof I need I guess, but still, it's weird.

Final Thoughts and Rating: Overall, Enola Holmes is a great movie. As I said at the beginning of this review, this is a fun movie to watch. It also reminds me of the kinds of movies that I grew up watching, like Tom & Huck. The danger was real enough that you could believe that Enola could get hurt or killed if she wasn't careful, but not so real that you couldn't believe that she'd be alright in the end, being the main character of the movie. The cast was excellent and the mystery was refreshingly complex enough that I was engaged the entire time, instead of simply waiting for the characters to catch up to where I was in the story. I'm giving Enola Holmes 10/10 stars.

IMDB:  https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7846844/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0

Thursday, 17 September 2020

Geek Talk from the Basement: Why Star Trek: The Next Generation is My Favourite Show of All Time

 


Hey guys! How's it going? I'm doing pretty good. Welcome back to Geek Talk from the Basement, where I pick a topic and talk about it. Today I'm going to talk about why Star Trek: The Next Generation is my favourite TV show of all time. Originally, today's topic was going to be why Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire is my favourite Harry Potter book (and film). But I changed my mind. So let's dive into some Trek Talk shall we?

As long time readers of my blog know by now, I am a huge Trekkie. Star Trek is my favourite franchise of all time. Unlike Star Wars, I can't remember a time where Star Trek was not a part of my life. I was born a Trekkie, and through its ups and downs, its dormant periods, its times where it faced a lot of controversy, I have stayed with the franchise. Though during Star Trek: Enterprise I will admit to not being as enthusiastic in my fandom, preferring to watch That '70s Show on Wednesday nights instead, relegating Star Trek to the encore airings on Sunday nights instead. I was in high school, and I wanted the girls to like me. Star Trek is what kept me entertained during those long nights in the hospital.

At the focal point of this fandom was Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987-1994). This was the second live action Star Trek series (third overall) and the final one to be created by Gene Roddenberry. It was my introduction into the Star Trek Universe. Sure, I watched reruns of the original series on CBC on Saturday mornings, but to me TNG is the series that formed my love of Star Trek. It's the series I go to when I just want to relax and have fun, but not have a comedy or campy superhero show or movie on. 

When I was a kid, Riker was my favourite character. He still is. Played by Jonathan Frakes, Commander Riker is the fictional character that I looked up to. Picard was more like a parent in my eyes, but Riker was like a friend who was older. Much of the talks he had with Data and Wesley I also took to heart because in a way I felt like they were directed at me too. I also wished that my doctors were like Doctor Crusher sometimes, just so I wouldn't have to be in the hospital for quite so long as I ended up being in most cases if I wasn't having Day Surgery. While Riker was my favourite character as a kid, as a teenager I identified with three characters: Lieutenant Worf, Lieutenant Commander Data and (Acting) Ensign Wesley Crusher.

I identified with Worf as a teenager because, while I'm a Human Being, I still felt like an outcast. Someone who stood out and often had to make decisions that might not be what the majority of my friends and classmates would've decided to do. Also, my ways were not always their ways and so I felt connected to Worf for that reason. That, and he was also a funny character even though he was played as the straightman the majority of the time. Especially when he says lines like, "Sir I protest! I am not a merry man!" when Q has the crew dressed as Robin Hood and his Merry Men in a facsimile of Sherwood Forest in "Qpid" to when he tells Q "Die" when Q asks what he must do to convince the crew that he was mortal in "Deja Q". It sucks that Worf only became appreciated by the writers when he moved over to Star Trek: Deep Space Nine at the beginning of that show's fourth season. But I like him a lot.

I identified with Data as a teenager, and now as an adult, because like him I don't understand Human behaviour at all. At least not very often. I also don't know how to articulate certain feelings, which of course Data has a problem with when he first gets his emotion chip in Star Trek Generations, the first movie starring the TNG cast. I realize now that Data was an allegory for Autism, even if that wasn't Roddenberry's intention when he created the character in early 1987. I still think it's cool though, because Data is an awesome character and I love when he tries to emulate Humans. 

Of course I identified with Wesley, because he's the teenager on the ship. Yes, he had Bridge access and got to helm the Enterprise for almost three whole seasons, but he's still a teenager and is more identifiable with the younger audience of the show. Which is something the show lost when Wil Wheaton left the show in the middle of season 4. I say the middle, but it was more like a quarter of the way through the season, because his final episode as a series regular, "Final Mission" is the ninth episode of the fourth season. The ninth episode out of 26 episodes in the season. That's why I identified with him, because he was the younger character in a sea of adults, which is a situation I often found myself in growing up because I was around adults a lot more than I was around other kids, due to me being in the hospital so much, oftentimes having a room to myself, or needing to be in isolation due to illness and being contagious. 

One of my favourite episodes of the series is "Encounter at Farpoint". It's not a good episode by any means but I absolutely love it. I owned it twice on VHS when I was a kid, and I've owned it more than once on DVD since I had it on the Star Trek: The Q Fan Collective DVD box set, which was a collection of every episode that Q, played by the wonderful John de Lancie, appeared in from Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, and Star Trek: Voyager, as well as the DVD set for the first season of Star Trek: The Next Generation. So I've owned the episode several times. I watched it on VHS the most though. In fact I'm pretty sure that every time I wanted to watch TNG on VHS that's the episode I would ask my parents or my nurse to put on, or I'd put it on myself when I was old enough to be putting in and taking out tapes from the VCR.

My other favourite episodes are "The Arsenal of Freedom", "Skin of Evil", "The Outrageous Okona", "Q Who?", "Deja Q", "The Defector", "Yesterday's Enterprise", "The Best of Both Worlds Part I", "The Best of Both Worlds Part II", "First Contact", "Qpid", "A Matter of Time", "Cause and Effect", "Tapestry", "Parallels", and "All Good Things...". I know they aren't the usual episodes that are on people's best episodes of all time lists, but these are my personal favourites.

Oh and the Enterprise-D is my favourite ship in all of Star Trek. The Bridge is spacious, the corridors are brightly lit (the whole ship is), Sickbay is where I wish I could've stayed and had my operations in, instead of CHEO (only sometimes though), and I love Ten Forward, Engineering, the Transporter Room and the Holodecks. Not to mention the living quarters on the ship were great too. I don't know, there was just this homey feel to the Galaxy-class in general that other starships just didn't have. I mean, sure the refit Constitution-class ships from the first six TOS movies had that big recreation deck in the middle of the ship, but Ten Forward felt more comfortable. It helped that Guinan, played by Whoopi Goldberg, was the hostess of Ten Forward and she was a good listener, and not just because her race, the El Aurians, are a race of Listeners. So yeah, while the other ships are cool looking, especially Voyager, if there's any starship I would want to live on, from any franchise, hands down it would have to be the USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D, commanded by Captain Jean-Luc Picard.

TNG was my show. I like TOS, DS9, Enterprise, Discovery, and Picard, and I love Voyager and Lower Decks, but Star Trek: The Next Generation is home. It's family. It's taking risks and going on adventures with people you love. Characters who are so memorable that their faces are etched into your mind so that when someone asks you to talk about them, you remember every single detail, even if they only ever showed up on TNG. Even the recurring cast members are memorable and they aren't so numerous or rotating that you can't keep them straight. If you've never seen Star Trek: The Next Generation I implore you to find it on CBS All-Access, or Netflix, or on DVD or even on TV in reruns and watch an episode or two. I remember every weeknight at 6:30, TNG would be on and my mom would change it from CJOH News (after the weather report) to CHRO and we'd watch the rerun episodes, and then watch the new episodes on Saturday nights at 7 pm. And it was appointment viewing in my family, no matter where we were. My parents even made sure I could get CHRO in on the TV in my hospital room at CHEO so I wouldn't miss an episode. 

That's gonna be it for me for tonight. I could go on and on about Star Trek: The Next Generation, but I'll save that for another time. Stay tuned in the near future for reviews of all of the episodes I mentioned in this post, because I wanna get into the specifics. When I do get to them, there will be spoilers, because it's a 30 + year old show so if you haven't seen it by now, that's something you have work out with yourself. I have nothing to do with it. Lol. Have a great night guys and I will see you all next week for more great content here in the Review Basement. Later.   

Monday, 14 September 2020

Velocity Weapon (2019) Book Review

 


Velocity Weapon is a fantastic book! Yes, I know I say that a lot when it comes to books I like, but in this case it is 100% the truth. Modern Science Fiction is usually something I can't get into, be it in books, movies or on TV because it isn't really doing anything new. And at first glance it doesn't seem like Velocity Weapon is either. But, it is and you realize more than halfway through the book when the plot takes a sudden turn in a direction you don't expect, that it is doing something new and different while making use of the old and familiar. Which I really appreciate especially when the Space Opera has been done quite a lot.

First time author, Megan E. O'Keefe has managed to accomplish what so few authors have tried to do and assembled a story where you get to a certain parts and think, "Oh, that's like Star Trek" or "Hey, that's Star Wars" or "Did she put Andromeda in there?". Except, unlike those other authors, Megan did it without just making a novel that became a Star Trek novel or a Star Wars novel, or an Andromeda novel. But if you know those shows and movies, then you'll spot those elements in this story.

So what exactly is Velocity Weapon about? It's about a woman named Sanda Greeve and her brother, Biran and they find themselves separated when Sanda is supposedly killed during a battle against an enemy known as the Icarion. But she wakes up on a derelict Icarion ship called The Light of Berossus, known as Bero for short, 230 years after she was presumed dead (it takes place 1,521 years in the future from our present day in the year 2020). But nothing is what it seems and Sanda must find her way off the ship before it's too late.

There's a second plot of the story that involves a mercenary/smuggler/thief named Jules and her band of merry people who get in over their heads concerning a mind chip used by the Keepers (basically the Jedi/law enforcement group of this world Megan has crafted) and the information it carries. At first glance this plot seems like it has nothing to do with Biran or Sanda's stories, but by the end it's revealed that it is connected to them in a very real way that works perfectly for me. It wasn't intrusive and it was interesting enough that I didn't need it to go back to Sanda or Biran's stories too quickly. Jules was an interesting enough character for me to feel that her storyline was just as important as the other two main storylines. It was never jarring to switch back and forth between the three storylines, which it easily could've if the right person wasn't writing it.

Speaking of the Keepers, while I said they were like the Jedi, they actually remind me of the Lensmen from E.E. Smith's book Galactic Patrol (1937) or the Green Lantern Corps from DC Comics. With the Protectorate (the Keepers's ruling council) being like the Guardians of Oa from Green Lantern. But again, Megan doesn't rip off Galactic Patrol and Green Lantern. She takes inspiration from these sources and then transforms them into her own.

Bero reminds me of a combination of the Andromeda's sister ship, the Pax Magellanic and the warship, Battle of Judgment both from Gene Roddenberry's Andromeda. Each ship had an AI who went insane either from loneliness or through an action the ship was forced to take at some point. Bero is like that in this book. Though the extent of it and the reason behind it isn't revealed until almost the end of the book. There are hints of it in the book before the reveal though, which is good because then it doesn't come out of nowhere.

Something that I appreciate this book doing that most Science Fiction novels fail to do is make the female protagonist a well rounded character. Most times the female lead is either a damsel in distress and completely useless, or they're in the military and they're written as if they're guys and that's because there's a lot of men who write Science Fiction novels and they don't know how to write women even though they all have women in their lives they could take inspiration from. Of course, we see it in movies and on TV all the time. Especially on TV. So it's refreshing to have an interesting female protagonist that can not only fend for herself, but can also admit when she needs help, despite being in the military. Sanda reminds me of Princess Leia from Star Wars as well as Tasha Yar from season 1 of Star Trek: The Next Generation, which is cool.

One thing that confuses me a little bit is whether or not the Keepers are part of the military. There isn't really an answer in the book, but there are several moments where it's kind of implied that the Keepers and the Military are separate organizations. But then there are other instances where it seems like the Keepers and the Military are the same organization with the Keepers being the supreme authority. It's not actually a problem, I was just curious about this, since the book isn't really clear on the matter and being that the Lensmen and Jedi are separate entities from the Military in both universes, mostly, I wanted to know the answer to that. 

Final Thoughts and Rating: Overall, I thought Velocity Weapon is an excellent book. It's also a great start to a series or trilogy (not sure which it's supposed to be). It just came out last year so it's the most recent Science Fiction novel that I've read. If you've never read it before I would highly recommend you do so, because it's great and Megan is an author I'm looking forward to following as she continues this series of amazing Science Fiction novels. I'm giving Velocity Weapon 10/10 stars.  

Friday, 11 September 2020

Geek Talk from the Basement: Goosebumps, A Franchise I Almost Missed Out On

 Hey guys! Welcome back to Geek Talk from the Basement, the series, where I take a geeky topic and write about it. Today I'm going to be talking about something that spans between books, TV and movies. A franchise that I almost missed out on when I was a kid. That franchise is Goosebumps by R.L. Stine.


The first Goosebumps book was published by Scholastic Inc. in 1992. It was the summer of 1992 to be exact, and I was in my summer vacation between years of Senior Kindergarten at OCTC. I was still reading picture books and comic books as my primary form of literary entertainment, and so I was a bit young to be reading these books. By the time I'd transitioned over to Greely Elementary School, the series was popular enough to get it's own TV series, though it would be another twenty years before it would get a movie adaptation. The books were a big success and by the time I was old enough to read them, the book series was almost over, and the TV series was done.


The first Goosebumps book I ever got was Night of the Living Dummy III, the third appearance of Slappy, the talking ventriloquist dummy that has become the mascot for the series. I got this at one of the Scholastic Book Fairs that my school's library held twice a year. I know I owned some of the earlier books in the series, but I think this was the only book in the main series that I got at the Book Fair.


At the same Book Fair, I also got the fifth book in the Give Yourself Goosebumps series, Night in Werewolf Woods. This series was the Goosebumps equivalent of the Choose Your Own Adventures books that had been popular in the '70s and '80s as well as earlier in the '90s. I don't remember much about this book, but I had a difficult time with the Choose Your Own Adventures books anyway, so I probably looked at this book once and never picked it up again.

I'll probably get into this a bit deeper as another topic, but part of the reason I didn't read any Goosebumps until I was older, was because my parents were very discerning when it came to the books, comics, TV shows and movies I read and watched. Not only because I have younger siblings, but also because certain shows, books, movies and comics are designed for a specific age group for a reason, and my parents abided by that kind of organization. And so, naturally, it wasn't until I had the ability to buy my own books that I was able to read Goosebumps. Hence why I was so late into the franchise. This also meant that I wound up not being into horror very much when I was a kid, and am still not today, as an adult. Again, that'll be a topic for another time.


As a result, I also never got into the TV version of Goosebumps. I think I saw the opening credits of the show a few times, and of course I knew about it because of the commercials I saw for it on TV, but I've never watched an episode of the show in the four years that it ran for. I mean it was on around the time that Animorphs and Big Bad Beetleborgs/Beetleborgs Metallix were on, but I think because I didn't read any of the books until 1999 or 2000, I didn't have much interest in watching the TV show, even though I'm sure there were a bunch of kids in my class who did watch it.


I also missed the movie when it came out in 2015. I saw commercials for it on TV, but I was basically only going to the movies with Brad at that point, and he wasn't interested in seeing it, so I ended up not going to see it. However, back in 2018, on Halloween, I watched it on Netflix. I enjoyed it for what it was, and it was an okay movie, but I think I enjoyed it more than I would've if Goosebumps had been a series that I'd gotten into when I was a kid rather than something that I was aware of, and had read a few of the books of, but generally wasn't into it the way I was into the Star Wars Expanded Universe novels, Animorphs, Bruno & Boots/Macdonald Hall, and The Adventures of the Bailey School Kids books. 

I think it's impressive that while the original series is long over, R.L. Stine has continued writing Goosebumps over the years. There's five other series of Goosebumps that were published after the original series ended in 1997. I haven't done any research on these later series only that the second series, Goosebumps Series 2000 started in 1998, a month after the original series ended. Maybe I'll do a follow up on this post and go into the later series more as well as go over some of my favourite books from the original series.

That's it for today. I just wanted to come on here and talk about Goosebumps a little bit since it was everywhere when I was a kid, like how Animorphs was after that. It's not a series I was super into, but it was part of my childhood, like it was for many other kids who are my age and a little bit younger. I'll be back next week with more reviews and other posts. In the meantime have a great weekend and I will talk to you later.

Wednesday, 9 September 2020

Big Hero 6 (2008) #2 Comic Book Review

 


I'd never have known about Big Hero 6 if it weren't for the animated movie that Walt Disney Animation Studios put out in 2014. When I found out that it was a comic put out by Marvel in the late '90s and throughout the 2000s, I actively went looking for the issues. I was out of luck as none of the comic book stores I went to had them in their back issue bins, and the trade paperback that collected the five issue mini-series from 2008 was long out of print so nobody had them on their shelves either. So I gave up my search. Then almost two years ago, Brad and I were at a toy and comic sale I happened to come across issue #2 of the 2008 mini-series. There weren't any other issues of the series, so I passed on it because I didn't want to just get the second issue without anything else surrounding it. But, being that it was my birthday, or the weekend before my birthday in actuality, Brad bought it for me as part of my birthday present, while my back was turned. This is the only issue of Big Hero 6 that I have so I probably won't get to review any of the other issues since they're so rare and like I said, the trade has been out of print for almost a decade. 

It wasn't super difficult to follow the story in this issue, as Chris Claremont does a good job at getting people up to speed on the first page of the issue. Yes, Chris Claremont wrote this mini-series, putting the same slant on this book that he did so well on the various X-Men comics he's written over the years. At least, as far as the team's dynamics are concerned. As in, they're at each other's throats for most of the issue. For absolutely no reason. It's like a CW teen drama TV show in comic book form. The only difference is that all of the main characters are Japanese and they're on a mission in the United States, because that's never happened before *he says sarcastically*. 

Unlike the versions in the movie, I don't like any of the characters in this issue. Well, that's not entirely true. I like Hiro and Marys, who is the female, American, equivalent of Hiro. Honey Lemon, Go-Go, Wasabi, and Fred are all completely unlikeable in this issue. I don't know if that's because Marvel can't seem to come up with genuinely likeable characters or if Claremont is the problem, but whatever the case may be, there's a problem when half the members of the superhero team, whether they're teenagers or adults, whose name is on the cover of the book, are people you don't like. 

Baymax is kind of weird as he seems to be modeled after a Yakuza bodyguard, complete with a bowler hat, rather than the sidekick health/medical robot from the movie. His personality is also not as cuddly as it is in the movie either. Maybe if the movie had been live action and made by Marvel Studios, they would've gotten closer to the comics in the movie than Disney did through their main animation studio. I guess we'll never know, but it would've been interesting to see what Marvel Studios would've done with this property.

I like the story, though this issue is focused more on the team's experiences at an American high school rather than the Japanese high school they usually go to. Which is kinda cool. It just would've been cool to read the first issue so I'd know who exactly they're up against. Though from the way this issue plays out, it doesn't seem like the kids know who they're up against. Which is actually pretty refreshing, considering so many comics are about heroes who know exactly who they're fighting every single time they face a bad guy. Being this is the original comic book version of Big Hero 6, chances are pretty good it isn't going to be any of the usual Marvel bad guys since from what I've read online, they kept this book completely isolated from the rest of the Marvel Universe after the original mini-series, Sunfire & Big Hero Six ended it's three issue run back in 1998. I really appreciate that because one of the biggest problems I've had getting into Marvel Comics is how interconnected everything is and it seems like you can't read and enjoy one book or one character without reading five or six other books or characters. Even if it's not a team book like The Avengers or The Fantastic Four. So it's nice to have a Marvel book that, while set in the Marvel Universe, is separate from what's going on in the rest of the Marvel Universe. 

The artwork in this issue is spectacular. It's a very Anime/Manga style of artwork which makes sense since for all intents and purposes, this is an American Manga book. It's something Marvel dabbled in quite a bit in the 2000s, right around the time this book was being put out and earlier. One of the more notable ones that I discovered five years ago, but have yet to read any of, is Agent X, a book that served as sort of a spin-off of Deadpool as well as a relaunch of the character in 2002. This was a period where Deadpool wasn't selling very well and they hadn't yet come up with the idea of pairing up Deadpool with Cable yet. So this was a style of art that Marvel played with numerous times. I think they even had their own Manga line at one point, but I don't remember exactly when that was, or if I'm even remembering that correctly, but I'm pretty sure Marvel had it's own Manga line sometime in the 2000s or even early 2010s. Either way the art style works very well for this book.

If you've never read Big Hero 6 before, but loved the movie, I would definitely recommend you read this mini-series. Don't expect it to be like the movie though, because they are very different entities, and none of the characters are the same between the two versions. It's definitely worth a read though since this is one of Marvel's least known properties, something that hasn't changed in the last six years. It's a pretty cool comic though, even if most of the main characters are unlikeable in the comic book version. I'm giving Big Hero 6 #2 8/10 stars. The story is solid, the artwork is great, but the majority of the main characters are unlikeable, drama instigating people for no reason at all.

Monday, 7 September 2020

Living With Disabilities: Going to School as a Person with Disabilities

Hey guys! How were your weekends? Mine was pretty quiet. I did some laundry, chatted with friends online. You know, the usual. But, welcome back to Living With Disabilities, the series where I talk about what it's like being someone with disabilities, both physical and mental. Last time I talked a little bit about what going to school was like while at a school for kids with disabilities when I talked about my time at OCTC. But in September, 1994 I was thrust out into the real world of public school, where I was the only kid who used a wheelchair at the school I went to. There were other kids who had disabilities, but none of them used a wheelchair. Which meant that I stood out from the rest of the school. 

The first time I entered Greely Elementary School, was actually in May or June, 1994 because I got to go on a tour of the school, meet the teacher I was most likely going to have, and see what kind of accomodations the school would have to make in order for me to be comfortable being in my wheelchair at school. I think I also ended up meeting one of my future classmates too, but I don't remember that much. I just remember meeting Mrs. Morgan and seeing the classroom I would most likely be in. 

Fast forward to the beginning of the school year, where I started grade 2 and things were different. Suddenly I was among kids who didn't use wheelchairs, or had problems walking or going to the bathroom or whatever other difficulties my former classmates at OCTC had. Mrs. Morgan was nice though I wasn't as nervous as I had been before I had my visit of the school back in the spring. I also spent the morning in a Special Education class, with Mr. Burke. Mr. Burke kinda reminded me of Joey Gladstone from Full House in that, while he could be serious, he made sure that we always had fun. Most of the kids in that Special Education class were actually kids that were in Mrs. Morgan's class with me, with two being from the grade 3 class next door. We read books, did math, spelling tests and I think there was a third thing we had in Mr. Burke's class, but I don't really remember what it was.

Mrs. Morgan's and Mr. Burke's classes were where I made my first friends in the public school system. The Lion King had come out in theatres the summer before I started at Greely E.S. and had been a huge hit with merchandise tie-ins like you wouldn't believe. And get this, the movie was actually popular with kids my age. Mostly the girls, but of course my mom had taken my siblings and I to go see it over the summer and I had loved it, so I bonded with some of the kids over the movie.

There were six kids in particular that I bonded with during that first year. Chad loved The Dukes of Hazzard as did I, so we played that at recess, with my wheelchair being the General Lee. Chad was blond, so he was always Bo, while I played Luke, even though Bo was usually the driver on the show. It was my wheelchair after all. Dillon was another story. I don't remember what we bonded over, but he and Chad actually came over to my house a few times and we played Days of Thunder and After Burner on the NES, though not until about 1998. Then there was Erica. She was in my class, but she moved in the middle of the school year and I haven't talked to her in over 25 years. I don't even remember her last name. I wonder what she's up to these days. Chelsea was another girl I played with at recess, and was in my Spec Ed class as well. She and I actually were in class together from grade 2 until grade 6, except for grade 4.

In grade 3, I had Mrs. Morgan and Mr. Burke again, and in terms of relations between myself and my classmates were basically the same as they were in grade 2. Except this year I was in a grade 2/3 split, so there were other kids I met. This was the year I met two people who would be a big part of my life right through my transition from Greely Elementary School to Metcalfe Public School in grade 7. Twin girls named Meagan and Trina. Trina had a hearing problem so she wore a hearing aid and a device that linked to a microphone worn by the teachers so Trina could hear them speak without any problems. The girls and I played together at recess, and Meagan was in my class until her, Trina and their parents moved away in the middle of grade 7. At some point she got into Star Wars and by the time we were in grade 6 we would sit outside at recess and talk about Star Wars and speculate about the then upcoming prequel trilogy, since Episode I was coming out the summer between grades 6 and 7 for us.

Something that stuck out to me about grade 3 in particular was on my birthday, two girls that I was friends with, Alex and Morgan, who were in the grade 2 part of my class, surprised me during a circle time with Mr. Burke. They got up in front of the class and sang me a song, with choreography and everything. I don't know how long they had practiced this, but Mr. Burke knew about it, and it definitely not a spur of the moment thing either. Like I said, they'd rehearsed it over the course of a month at the most. 

Music class was fun as Mrs. Sheriff, the mother of one of the kids in my class, was our teacher, and we sang a lot of songs, including "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" and others (she also taught us music in grade 6 as well). Mrs. Sheriff was also the choir director and I don't remember what it was for, but I remember us practicing a few Disney songs, still classics like "A Spoonful of Sugar" and others from before 1981. 

Grades 4 and 5 were fun years too, though I only made one new friend, in grade 5, named Andrew. Everyone else were people I had already known for two to three years. Though, once again, we sang Disney songs in music class for a performance at some assembly. Mr. Meredith was my teacher for grades 4 and 5, and Mrs. Brown was my Special Education teacher. Mr. Meredith introduced me to a lot of books, including one book in particular that we read for a novel study. That book was The War with Mr. Wizzle by Gordon Korman, starring Bruno & Boots. 

Grade 6 was where I had my first group of friends and where I met my best friend that I had from 1998 until 2010 when he stopped coming home to Ottawa for summers and Christmas holidays. That friend was Garrett. He introduced me to the world of Star Wars novels and even lent me the X-Wing series as well. In that group as well were Meagan, Jessica, Kayla, Jordan, Spencer, Rachel and Jasmine. As I've mentioned in another post, Jessica was the girl who introduced me to Animorphs by K.A. Applegate.

Greely Elementary School was really the time of my life. Especially in grade 6. I had to stay inside during first and third recesses during the winter since they were the shorter ones and it wasn't worth it to get off my feeding pump and get bundled up only to have to come in five minutes later since it was too cold for me to go outside with my feeding pump on. Luckily I had friends who were willing to stay inside with me during those recesses so I wouldn't be alone. They would rotate too. One recess Garrett would stay in with me, then another Meagan would stay, then Jessica, Jordan, Spencer, Rachel, Kayla and Jasmine would all stay in with me at different recesses through the winter. Lunch recess however, I was outside with my friends as I would in the fall and spring.

My friends and I also had a radio show during the lunch hour once a week too. We'd play a song from a CD that I owned, do a fake weather forecast, tell stories, and have fun. The principal, Mrs. Macdonald, was in charge and since I didn't have to eat, being that I was tube fed, I handled most of it, though like I said, my friends would help out as well. It was just this silly thing we did, but it was then that I decided what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. Be on the radio.

As my classmates and I became teenagers and moved onto middle school, making friends was a lot harder for me. Kids who'd been with me since I started at Greely Elementary School became not so nice, while kids I was meeting for the first time at this new school weren't nice either. Friends drifted apart. My one friend in my class, Meagan (Andrew was there too, but we'd drifted apart over the summer), moved away. Girls started to ignore me, and for the first time I didn't hang out with girls at recess. Just a group of guys, whose friendships wouldn't last beyond that school year. One of them, whose name was also Andrew, is the reason I have two of my best friends now, but I'll get to that shortly.

Unbeknownst to me (but knownst to someone else), I had a stronger ally in my class than I thought I did. There was a girl named Alex (not the same Alex who sang a song to me for my birthday) in my class, and she secretly had a crush on me. She'd been new to school in grade 6 (or was it grade 5?) and had come over with me to Metcalfe Public, and ended up in my class. Anyway, any time we had indoor recess, or a free period (Christmas party, Metcalfe Fair etc) Alex always found some reason to come over to my specially made desk that was made when I got a bigger wheelchair at Greely Elementary School and had transitioned over to Metcalfe with me, and talk to me. Now, I am absolutely oblivious when it comes to girls liking me in a romantic way so it wasn't until we were adults and were chatting on Facebook one day that Alex told me that she'd had a crush on me when we were in grade 7 but of course being an awkward teenager, she wasn't gonna do anything about it. And like I said, I was clueless. I should've known that Alex had a crush on me though, because out of all of my classmates, she took the time to bike over to my house one random Saturday afternoon with her friend, Julianne, who I'd also been friends with since grade 2, as her mom and my dad had worked together before that.

So this one day, I think it was in late May or early June, 2000, I'm up in my bedroom, reading a comic book, my dad was at work, my siblings were doing something else, my mom was in the kitchen, and my grandfather was over, working on something in our garage. Anyway, he comes in the house and yells up to me, asking me to come down as two girls were asking to see me. I had no idea who it might've been as only three girls had ever been over to my house before, and that was for a Halloween party or to drop off a get well card after I'd been sick and off of school (and in the hospital most likely). This was none of those times. Alex and Julianne had looked my address up in the phone book (yes kids, you had to look addresses up in a physical book in the '90s and early 2000s) and then biked over. I think Alex had planned on asking me out or something but THAT subject never came up. We just sat on the back patio and talked for half an hour before the girls had to bike back to either Julianne's place or Alex's place (not sure which). They didn't visit again, but that was pretty cool they even did that, since Garrett hadn't even started biking over yet.

Grade 8 was the worst year I'd ever had at Metcalfe Public. Grade 7 wasn't bad though I did have classmates and other kids at school who picked on me. It got worse in grade 8. I loved my teacher, Mr. Pare. We were his first teaching job and oh man my classmates were the absolute worst class of kids I'd ever been in. We missed so many gym classes because the people in the class wouldn't stop talking long enough to let Mr. Pare actually talk. He even kept us after school at least once (luckily my bus driver had the leeway to circle back and pick me up after after the other buses were gone). There were a few people who carried my books for me to my Special Education math class with Mr. Fitch, who was the craziest teachers in the entire school, the way he was always rushing about. I was amused by this of course, but still. Anyway, some of the nicer kids in my class carried my books back and forth between Mr. Pare and Mr. Fitch's classrooms every day after french class that year. But the only friend I had in that class was a girl named Leslie, who I'd been off and on friends with since grade 2, when she pushed my wheelchair too fast and tipped me over. I wasn't hurt, but she laughed at me which made me angry.

High school was the best of times and it was the worst of times. It was the best of times because I made a lot of friends. Some of whom I still see all the time as an adult. It was the worst of times because as I got older, the jerks who'd harassed me mercilessly in grade 8, multiplied and decided it would be fun to not only harass me, but to start picking on my friends as well. Of course the majority of the teachers and the school's administration were worthless at Osgoode Township High School, because they did nothing about the bullies. It got to the point where one of my friends transferred to a different school because she was being bullied so badly. Luckily I had three teachers who were in my corner my whole five years at OTHS. Mr. Saint-Yves was my Spec Ed teacher, Mr. Pritchard was my mom's old English teacher and while I never had him as a teacher, he was well aware of me and had promised my mom he'd look out for me as long as he was a teacher at OTHS, and he was also my vice principal for a couple of years towards the end of my high school days, so any time I had a problem I went to him with it and he helped me with it. 

What saved me in high school, after having been isolated in grades 7 and 8, were the people I hung out with. Not all of these friendships survived, but at the time these people were my life. There are a few people I want to mention, but a few of them will wait until I do my post on what dating was like for me as a teenager and what it's like as an adult. The big ones in the early days were Keira, Kelly, Brad, Garrett, Claire and KrisP (his last name starts with the letter 'P' hence the nickname). 

Of course Garrett has to be mentioned because he was the only person I still hung out with from my Greely days. He was also my best friend at the time too and the only one of my friends who didn't need a parent to drive him over to my house because he was in biking distance. He wasn't over every weekend. But he'd show up after school and on some Saturdays too. I knew his sister, Hayley, as well but Garrett was the man. He was my safe harbour for when things got a little too intense with the Lunch Group. Him and Keira. Keira more so when I was in grade 9, just because Garrett was still over at Metcalfe Public, in grade 8. But when I was in grade 10 and he was in grade 9, Garrett and I would spend entire lunch hours together. 

Keira was the girl I was in love with almost all through high school. She was one of my closest friends as well. She was special. It all started in the summer between grades 9 and 10. My friends and I had planned on going to see Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones after exams were over as our first major group outing. Kelly and I started planning it in like February or March of 2002, two or three months before the movie had even come out in theatres. Well, as it turned out, neither Keira nor I could go, so we made plans to go see it together, just the two of us. However, by the time we were both able to get together, the movie was out of theatres, so we ended up going to see the third Austin Powers movie, Austin Powers in Goldmember instead because it was the only movie that either of us were even remotely interested in seeing. After the movie, my mom had to stop at Ikea to pick up bucket chairs for the basement to replace some child size chairs that my siblings and I couldn't fit on anymore. We had a station wagon at the time and on the way home from Ikea, Keira had to sit in the front seat with my mom while I sat in the back so one of the seats could be folded down to fit the bucket seats into the trunk. Keira and my mom made fun of me the whole time. Which should've been the first inkling that Keira had a thing for me. 

That same summer, Keira came over and we hung out in my family's above ground, inflatable pool. Then about a month later, I had to go to the Guidance Counselor's office on the first day of school to get my schedule switched, because somehow they managed to have me in a class that was outside in one of the portables. Which wasn't a problem at Greely Elementary School or Metcalfe Public because there was one portable at each place that had a ramp. The problem at OTHS was that NONE of the portables at that school had ramps. Every school year, at the beginning of EVERY semester I inevitably wound up in the Guidance Counselor's office getting my schedule changed because of this goof up. So the first day of school in grade 10, I went to the Guidance Counselor's office and Keira, who was in my homeroom as she had been the year before, came with me and then, she just sat with me while I waited until she had to go to her first class, which I would be late for because of that goof up. She actually sat in the outer office area with me.

As the semester went on, Keira and I found ourselves becoming closer. To the point where people around us, thought we were actually dating. We weren't, but that's how close we were at the time. Finally, for my 16th birthday I had some friends over and Keira was late because she was in the drama club and the drama teacher, who I liked, Mr. Karp, had kept them a bit later than normal, and it being almost winter, it was snowing that night as well. Anyway, me, Keira, Jess (a girl from one of my classes), her boyfriend Andy, Andrew (guy I knew from Metcalfe Public), Kelly, Claire and Barbara sat in my basement, watching Spider-Man (2002) on VHS. We were on a mattress and two of the bucket chairs, and Keira and I somehow ended up on the mattress together, sitting next to each other, under a blanket just watching the movie. Our hips touched each other, because I was actually sandwiched in between Keira and Kelly, and I had shifted more towards Keira. Then, Keira was the last person to leave when my party was over, because her dad was late picking her up, and we ended up singing along to "Hero" by Enrique Iglesias (laugh all you want, but it's a good song). Jess and Andy had gotten me Enrique's second English album, Escape for me for my birthday and "Hero" is on that album, and I wanted to listen to it. As the music started playing though, Keira said that she liked the song and before I knew it we were singing the song to each other.

Sadly, Keira and I drifted apart after high school. Though we did come back together for a brief period in 2009. She came over in April of that year and we hung out in the basement, listening to music and chatting for hours. Then in June of that year, Keira ended up driving me to a friend's Wake. My friend, Amber had been killed in a house fire in June of 2009 and it happened that Keira was going to the Wake as were pretty much everyone else we knew who had also known Amber. The next day Keira and I ended up standing together at the cemetary during the burial. At one point my legs were tired and I bent over to try and give my knees a rest. Keira grabbed me by the arm and just held me as we watched the caskets for Amber and her daughter (who'd also been killed in that house fire) be lowered into the ground. That was the last time Keira and I saw each other. We also haven't spoken since.

Back in high school, when Keira and I were in grade 10, the time we were becoming much closer than just friends, I was excited because Garrett was going into grade 9 and I'd planned on dragging him into the insanity that I'd had to endure by myself the previous school year. Which meant introducing him to everyone in the group. Including Keira. That did not go as planned, though it makes for a hilarious story that has stayed in my mind for 18 years. So, it was lunch time, and I asked Garrett to meet me at Keira's locker in the main hallway of the school so I could introduce them. Anyway, Garrett arrives and I introduce him to Keira. Garrett said the most hilarious, and the most horrifying thing he possibly could've said to Keira at this point in hers and my friendship. He said, "Oh so you're Josh's girlfriend". Of course, Keira had been hearing this from other, not so nice people, in the school by this point. So what did she do? She punched Garrett in the shoulder like Rachel would do to Marco any time he made a snide remark in the Animorphs books or Donna would do to Kelso on That '70s Show. What was my response to this? I laughed. Hard. I finally had two best friends and one of them, inadvertently, antagonized the other.  

Also in high school, I met two of my favourite people in the whole world. Kelly and Brad. I won't go into the story of how I met Brad right now, because that's gonna be a story for this series at another time, but Kelly had been Andrew's girlfriend before I ever knew her, and had been away from the group for the first few weeks of school when I was in grade 9, because Andrew was dating Claire by then, and she was uncomfortable with that. I was too, but only because they never tried to hide their Public Displays of Affection or were discreet in any way. Anyway, Kelly came back to the group for the Metcalfe Fair that year and eventually she started writing me notes, which she expected me to write back to or she'd write me a longer one that I would then have two to reply to. Yeah, this was before E-mail was the primary form of written communication between people. Lol. Kelly was there for a lot of my firsts as a teenager. She was there for my first girlfriend (Claire), my first high school dance, the first time I ever ate solid food at school, and most importantly, Kelly was the first girl I ever slow danced with. Period. For the OTHS Oscars ceremony (big event combined with a school dance) in 2004, we went as a group as usual, though some of my friends had dates (I was flying solo), but somehow Kelly and I both ended up dressing in black and there's a picture of us in a very red carpet fashion, with her arm draped across my shoulders and me trying to look sexy, but failing miserably. Lol. Those were the fun days.

Believe it or not, Brad and I were not friends right away. That came later in our high school years, after Garrett had moved away, but we talked a lot at school and in our later teen years he'd lend books to me, often dropping them off at my house randomly. We were into Star Trek and Star Wars so we had those to talk about all the time. As well as comic books. Our friendship would solidify when we became adults, Brad got his driver's license and a car and we started being able to do things like go to the movies, go to the mall or the comic book store without needing a ride from one of our mothers. High school was the very beginning of it though.

In the later years of high school, aside from Brad, all of the people I had been close with, Kelly, Garrett, Claire, Simon, KrisP and even Andrew, had all moved on from high school or moved away and I found it more difficult to be friends with people because I was one of the oldest people at the school since I turned 19 in 2005, a few months before I graduated from high school. The younger kids were more reckless, and less mature, and so I found myself in a difficult time. Especially since the bullying was getting worse and the principal and vice principals (except for Mr. Pritchard) were becoming more and more incompetent as time went on. And being the only person who had disabilities and used a wheelchair, I stood out even more than I would've if I'd just been a geek/nerd. 

Luckily I made friends with two awesome girls, who would help me out no matter what happened. Amber, who I already talked about, and a girl named Sarah. Sarah suffered from Depression and Anxiety and other mental illnesses. She was a great friend though. She even helped me get through my first real romantic relationship (Claire doesn't count since she and I were together for a day) where I was with a girl who was...very difficult, shall we say. Amber did too. But Sarah was the one that stayed by my side during the whole thing. Both girls died in the late 2000s. As I mentioned before, Amber died trying to rescue her sleeping daughter from a burning house in 2009. Sarah's death was a lot more tragic. Her Depression and Anxiety overcame her in July, 2007 and she committed suicide. She'd gotten really bad the previous September, and she'd cut me out of her life as a result. Amber was the one who called me to tell me that Sarah had died. It hurt. I remember being at the church in Osgoode, with Amber, Kissy and Kayla (I'll talk about Kissy's and my friendship at a later time) and during "My Immortal" by Evanescence, which was Sarah's favourite song, I remember closing my eyes, tears welling up, and I just remember listening to the song, on the verge of crying, when this hand grabbed mine and a head fell onto my shoulder. I opened my tear filled eyes and looked to my right and Amber was leaning on me, our hands entwined. We cried. Losing Amber and Sarah two years apart like that hurt me more than any operation, medical diagnosis, or a bully's words ever had.

Aside from the bullying, school wasn't always peaches and cream. While Occupational Therapy and Physical Therapy were part of our routine at OCTC and were incorporated into our daily activities, at Greely Elementary School, I actually had to take time out of class for those things. I had a nurse at school with me to take care of my feeding pump, help me with going to the bathroom, and help me do my Physio. OT happened once a week, but not with my nurse, with an Occupational Therapist who was assigned to the school. I had three nurses at Greely. Two of them I liked, the other one not so much. Eva was my first nurse and she was pretty spectacular. I remember her babysitting my brother, sister and I on weekends when my parents wanted to go out. Eva has two kids, Amy and Jonathan, who also came over and I loved spending time with them. I remember Johnathan bringing over his Game Boy and NES games over and that's how I played Home Alone 2: Lost in New York on the NES and Super Mario Land on the Game Boy. Johnathan also helped me on the Game Boy games that I owned at the time as well. He was kind of like a big brother to me, since I'm the oldest of my siblings and I. Amy was also like a big sister, though she probably did more with my sister.

I remember one day, Eva took my siblings and I (or maybe it was just me, or just my sister and I) to her house for the day and we watched the 1995 film, Babe and we also watched an episode of the original DIC English Dub of Sailor Moon. I remember because Amy was home that day and she watched Sailor Moon with us. It was cool having older siblings like that, even if it was only for a short time as I got a new nurse after grade 3. That nurse's name was Kathy, but I didn't like her very much, even though I had her for grades 4 and 5.

The nurse I had in grade 6 was Lorraine, and man I had fun with Lorraine and her son, Spencer. Lorraine would watch us on Friday nights after school, and, like Kathy and Eva before her, she would help me bathe, do Physio, and watch us while my dad was at work and my mom went out for time for herself. We watched movies, and did a lot of cool stuff. In fact, Lorraine even took Spencer and I to see Star Wars: Episode I The Phantom Menace after school one Friday. I'd seen the movie the weekend before with Ahmed (as mentioned in the previous edition of Living With Disabilities), but I gladly watched it again because not only did I genuinely like the movie (I was 12 and a half when it came out), but I had gotten to get out of school early to see it too. 

School was difficult for me. Academically and socially. Grades 2 through 6 were great, but things declined as my classmates and I grew up into teenagers, and they just stopped caring about the goofy, geeky kid in a wheelchair, with some of them actively disliking me simply because I was different. By high school, the OT had stopped altogether, and the Physio Therapist started just coming to the house instead of to the school to see me. But I was still out of class a lot because I had my feeding tube and pump to take care of, as well as the bag on my neck that needed to be changed. Which is why in grade 10 enough was enough and I would make the appointment with Dr. Bass that would change my life forever. Go read my CHEO and OCTC posts for details on that appointment and how it affected me in the most positive way ever. 

I didn't talk about college, because it was basically an extension of high school and I didn't have a lot of close friends in any of my programs. At least, none that continued after college was over. Plus I could do an entire post on my college life if I REALLY felt like talking about it. Lol. High school was my major period where I made a few friendships that continue to this day. Friendships that I am forever thankful and grateful for.

That's it for today folks. I've got a comic book review coming your way on Wednesday, and then on Friday will be this week's Geek Talk from the Basement post. So stay tuned for those later in the week, and at the end of the month I'll have another Living With Disabilities post coming out, where my friends take over and talk about things from their perspective as well as me talking about them. Later.

Tuesday, 1 September 2020

Blog Update: Geek Talk from the Basement, Living with Disabilities and more! (Tuesday, September 1st, 2020)

 Hey guys! How's it going? I'm doing pretty well for a Tuesday. I've got a few things to talk about today in this blog update, including the new thing that I'm doing on the blog and the not so new thing that I'm also doing, but doing slightly differently. Now that I've confused you, let's move on to the new thing that I'm doing.

Yesterday I posted a piece on Stranger Things under a new title, Geek Talk from the Basement. I kind of alluded to this in an earlier blog update post where I had explained that I had decided to go back to the blog's original geeky roots, when it first started in 2015 as the Geek Outpost and be a bit looser with these reviews than I had become in the five years since I first started blogging. Now I've actually given it a name and a slight focus shift. I'm not just going to talk geeky stuff. Instead, I'm going to come on here once a week and write about a topic. It can be about anything. It can be about a movie, an entire movie franchise, a TV show, an entire TV show franchise, a book or a book series, a comic book or a comic book series, or a video game/video game series. The only thing is that it has to be one of those things that I'm familiar with. Like I'm not going to talk about movies I know nothing about, or shows or books or comics or video games. I'm going to talk about the movies, books, shows, comics and games that I've played, watched and read before so that I don't have to rewatch a movie or a few episodes of a show, reread a book or comic or play a video game if I don't feel like doing so. This will be a weekly thing.

I'm also still going to do reviews of shows, books, movies and comics that I've never read or watched before, particularly new movies that are coming out that are of particular interest to me, but that's it. Anything I've seen, read or played before will fall under the Geek Talk from the Basement banner. 

I'm still going to be doing Living with Disabilities series as well, but that's going to be a twice monthly thing. One post will be a random story from my past and the other post will be a post like my CHEO and OCTC posts that I did last week. This month is going to be a little bit different though because the first post, which I'll be putting out next week is going to be about going to school as a person with disabilities and the friends I made at the schools I went to after I left OCTC. Then, at the end of the month, a few of my friends are going to be writing about their experiences with me and how they adjusted to having a friend who is as vulnerable as I am. So two big Living with Disabilities posts this month. Next month will go into smaller, random stories and then another big post. Not sure what the topic for that post will be about, but the random story will be a Halloween story since next month is October.

That's all I wanted to talk about today. I'll be back next week with the next two posts. Until then have a great week, stay safe and I will see you all soon. Later.