Reading, Listening, Watching
Sep. 23rd, 2020 07:50 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Reading: The latest issue of DWM. An article on the New Adventures made me very nostalgic. Their flaws are well documented but it seems sad that so much of fandom hates them, or at least that that is the perception of many of the people who wrote them.
Listening: The Buzz is a University of Manchester, Faculty of Science and Engineering podcast. The last issue focused on Turing. It feels like a slightly odd beast in a way I can't quite put a finger on - maybe it is slightly too produced to be an amateur podcast but not really professional enough to be a professional podcast. Interesting, but not hugely enlightening.
Watching: We've picked up my Mysterious Cities of Gold DVD. It's a shame the voice acting in the English version is passable at best since I have fond memories of it as a child. I'm hoping the story will carry it. So far its interesting mostly for the educational detail both in the story itself and the slightly weird documentary segments at the end.
Listening: The Buzz is a University of Manchester, Faculty of Science and Engineering podcast. The last issue focused on Turing. It feels like a slightly odd beast in a way I can't quite put a finger on - maybe it is slightly too produced to be an amateur podcast but not really professional enough to be a professional podcast. Interesting, but not hugely enlightening.
Watching: We've picked up my Mysterious Cities of Gold DVD. It's a shame the voice acting in the English version is passable at best since I have fond memories of it as a child. I'm hoping the story will carry it. So far its interesting mostly for the educational detail both in the story itself and the slightly weird documentary segments at the end.
(no subject)
Date: 2020-09-25 12:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2020-09-25 12:26 pm (UTC)https://www.bigfinish.com/ranges/v/bernice-summerfield-books?sort_ordering=date_asc&search_product_type=book&search_availability=all
(no subject)
Date: 2020-09-26 04:07 pm (UTC)... Hmm, a glance through wikipedia suggests that I have all the novellas and paperback novels, and then the first three hardcover novels and roughly the first half of the short story collections and the confusing numbering is because ranges cut back and forth between paperback and hardback with similar covers but are numbered in sequence for the range.