The Gentlemen Nerds

Horror / Pop Culture / Sci-fi / Television

Where Does a New Person Even START with Doctor Who?

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Like many classic genre shows, Doctor Who has fantastic eps and oh-so-painful-WTF-eps. To make matters worse, the show has been going for decades and often assumes you know what is going on so they can get on with the storytelling. So where does someone who has never seen the show…or saw bad eps and friends keep hounding them to try again…even start?

 

There’s an accidental secret to watching Doctor Who: Contrary to some opinions, it’s not a life-choice, or an addiction. It’s a salad bar. You don’t have to get hooked and watch everything to enjoy it. You can skip around, find what you like (there are two distinct eras, Classic Who and New Who, and different actors in those eras have different tone and styles; the show is constantly reinventing itself like James Bond on acid). If you check these out and like what you see, you can explore at your leisure.

This is a guide for people to look over, pick what appeals to them, and go from there. These are not necessarily the best episodes, merely good starting episodes to give you a taste and see if you like. As such, a major criteria is that the story can stand alone, with no or little introduction.

This is not a ranked list, but we’re going to start with New Who, for two reasons: A) The stories are traditionally shorter and B) Unless you love old B-movies, the shoestring budget and switching between film/video filming (due to guild restrictions) of Classic Who may be a turnoff. We will include some at the end for those who are either new and want that, or are New Who fans and need a good entry point into the classics.

The title listed for each story is a link to a scene or trailer of that episode.

Basic knowledge you need to know: The Doctor is a Time Lord from a distant very advanced civilization called the Time Lords; in New Who, he believes himself to be the last survivor of his people after a great war. He’s rather fond of Earth, having been stranded here for many years in the Classic Who era. His ship is the TARDIS, which can travel in time and space.  It’s chameleon circuit is broken, so it’s stuck looking like a 1960’s UK Police Box. That’s the basics.

Extra detail: Because the show has been going since the 60’s, there have been many actors who have played the Doctor.  To explain this, there’s a process when a Time Lord is mortally wounded: he regenerates in a new body. Same core character, different face and some different personality traits. And he hates traveling alone, so he almost always has companions with him, traditionally 1-2.

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Books / Movies / Podcast / Television

Ep 15. 7 Habits of Highly Successful Time Travelers

As Mickey packs for WhoFest, the Gents delve into the mysteries and media of Time Travel. Books, movies, and TV are poked and prodded, as well as philosophical quandaries. Part 1 of infinity includes Doctor Who, Back to the Future, Simon Hawke, Jack the Ripper in 70’s San Fransisco, bad 60’s Television, Quantum Leap, a hanging, Time Bandits, playing poker with yourself, Voyagers, and somehow….Ed Wood. Flux Capacitor not included.

 

The Gentlemen Nerds
The Gentlemen Nerds
Ep 15. 7 Habits of Highly Successful Time Travelers
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Comics / Movies / Podcast

Ep 14. B versus S versus G Post-Mortem

…in which the Gents manage to work Shakespeare, Darkseid, Picasso, Bond, Hercules, Bela Lugosi and Star Wars into their different opinions of Batman v Superman, and why it did or did not work. What makes a character, change of myths over time, the value of creative license, and fan reactions are all discussed. Marvel makes its way into the Coda Shawarma, of course. Heated arguments not included.

 

The Gentlemen Nerds
The Gentlemen Nerds
Ep 14. B versus S versus G Post-Mortem
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Blog / Comics

Isn’t Superman Supposed to Be a Positive Force?

There’s critique, and then there’s acrimony.

I’m witnessing a bunch of hate and vitriol being spouted forth about WB’s recent take on Superman.  An unhealthy amount, since much of it seems to be coming from the same individuals any chance they get, suggesting that this level of rage Snyder has wrought may not exactly be helping their stress levels. It’s quite likely harshing their zen.

Furthermore, the disgust and anger at people who even passingly liked the movie does not serve the fan community; it will certainly bring about change, but not in a good way.

Shining through all this, however, are the times where people show their love for what many call the core of the character, posting their favorite bits from comics, fan art, and other media…prompting a comment on a friend’s FB wall:

“I still haven’t seen Batman V Superman, but if nothing else, the movie has inspired people to post so many wonderful Superman moments that remind me why he’s such a special character. Have had more teary eyed moments re-reading these panels recently than in all the movies I’ve seen in the last year. As a hopeless romantic in the classical sense, characters like Superman and Captain America appeal to my desire for the world to be a little better, a little more honest, a little more noble of spirit.” – Alaric Weigle

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Instead of repeatedly hearing how the new version sucks and people refuse to see the film, ad naseum, I’d read the heck out of  more of these positive statements.

 

Please, fandom hivemind, I ask that you show folks how Supes is supposed to be… instead of grumbling like the broken down, seething Batman.

Be the Supes you want him to be.

 

 

 

 

Horror

BREAKING: Snyder off JLA, Attached to Star Wars film

Many have demonized Snyder for his take on the DC Universe

Many have demonized Snyder for his DC films

 

Reacting the the rage of critics and the Internet alike, WB has essentially fired Zack Snyder from future DC projects.  Snyder quickly landed on his feet, however, receiving several offers from top production companies, from Merchant Ivory to Saturn Films. “I was really tempted by the offer to direct The Bell Jar,” Snyder said in a report to CineMag Online. “But when Bad Robot offered me a future chance to direct The Fountainhead if I took the reins of the young Han Solo film, that settled it. Besides, they’re doing a different take on that one, making it an action comedy film, and I think I have the experience to  tackle comedy.” It is unknown at this time if that last comment was meant to be funny.

Harrison Ford’s reaction was as expected. “Look, it was a paycheck.  Was it a fun role? Yes. Of course. But I don’t get all mushy about it. Another take on Solo is fine.  I don’t own the character.”

Carrie Fisher was a tad more distraught about it, and was unusually at a loss for words.

Harrison Ford comforts Carrie Fisher on hearing the news

Harrison Ford comforts Carrie Fisher on hearing the news

Gary could not be reached for comment.

Comics / Movies / Podcast / Television

Ep 13. Marvel v DC v TV – Fight!

…in which the Gents discuss DC and Marvel on the small screen over the last several decades, from Spiderman’s old goggles to Daredevil’s new duds. Topics wind up devolving into Stan Lee impersonations, the possibility of too many watertowers, and the animosity between WB Film and Television studios. Bonus Feature: Mark Hulks out.

 

The Gentlemen Nerds
The Gentlemen Nerds
Ep 13. Marvel v DC v TV - Fight!
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Games / Podcast / Star Wars / Television

Ep 12. Making the Sausage Pt1

…which finds the Gents behind the curtain, answering the questions of what they’re like outside of the show. Topics include Furiosa, Fallout 4, a lack of a parrot, A Star Wars without a Death Star, Hogan’s Heroes gone horribly wrong, and an abuse of a sound fx library. Decorum not included.

 

The Gentlemen Nerds
The Gentlemen Nerds
Ep 12. Making the Sausage Pt1
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Comics / Movies / Podcast

Ep 11. World’s Finest – Batman v Superman v Gents

….in which the Gents take on the psych and morals of Supes and the Bat, the history in media of Wonder Woman and the guys, Aquaman’s day job and discuss what the heck you call the cinematic universe of DC…the CDC? Tasty, tasty shawarma included after the credits.

 

The Gentlemen Nerds
The Gentlemen Nerds
Ep 11. World's Finest - Batman v Superman v Gents
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Blog / Comics / Pop Culture

My Top Five Superman Mentions in Rock and Roll

Bats and Supes, Fleischer-Style. Art by Steve Rude.

In honor of the upcoming Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice movie, here’s a bonus from the episode, and maybe the other three Gents can drop some of their own. Superman is one of the most universally-recognizable characters in popular culture, right up there with Mickey Mouse and Godzilla. His ubiquity is a given, so much so that there are dozens of references to Superman in popular music. He’s a symbol for America, right up there with baseball, apple pie, and dare I say it? Rock and Roll. Hence, this list.

As with every single Top 5 List on the planet, these are very subjective. Don’t feel bad because I didn’t put your favorite Superman song on my Top 5 List.

And before you ask…yes, I have heard that one. I’ve heard them all, I promise you.

Sunshine Superman5. “Sunshine Superman” by Donovan – Probably the one you’ve heard above all. Granted, it’s not much of a shoutout, but Donovan scores double geek points with a twofer: “Superman and Green Lantern ain’t got nothing on me.” If you can ever chase down the cover of this song from the band “Seduction of the Innocent” (Billy Mumy’s band), the cover is sung by Miguel Ferrar and it’s particularly choice.

4. “You Don’t Mess Around with Jim” by Jim Croce – Folk singer Jim Croce made a career singing about calling people on the telephone and telling folks about how big and bad other people were. I kid, I kid. Mostly. Here Superman joins the list of things everyone knows not to do, specifically, “You don’t tug on Superman’s cape.” Well, not in anger, anyway.

3. “Superman’s Song” by Crash Test Dummies – Part of the 90’s Power Prozac movement, the Crash Test Dummies made a splash with their ginchy couplet, “Superman never made any money saving the world from Solomon Grundy,” and while that’s technically correct, he never really asked to be thanked in that fashion.

Pocket Full of Kryptonite2. “Jimmy Olsen’s Blues” by The Spin Doctors – This two-hit wonder, also from the 90’s, went the other direction and wrote a catchy little ditty about Jimmy Olson crushing on Lois Lane. Their album was named A Pocket Full of Kryptonite, just in case you missed the reference in the song. I love the album cover. That’s a phone booth, ladies and gentlemen. It’s what people used to step into when they needed to make a phone call in public. Also, it was where Superman used to strip down into his skivvies. Where are they now, I wonder? The Spin Doctors, I mean. Not phone booths. They both need to make a comeback, though.

1. “Superman” by The Clique – Maybe you heard this song when it was covered, very appropriately, by R.E.M. on the album Life’s Rich Pagent.  I’m surprised more angry young men and punk bands haven’t run with this. But their version is complete in its late-to-the-party Texas-based hippy trippy-ness. In my 20’s, this was one of my many go-to songs for unrequited love.

Movies / Pirates / Podcast / Pop Culture

Ep 10. Kidnapped by Pirates is Good

…in which the good ship Lobot Lounge has been boarded! Joseph kidnapped! Quartermaster Griff presides over the remaining Gents to discuss pirates in history and pop culture, how to talk like a pirate, accents of the country folk of Europe, and the introduction of the supernatural into the genre. Aztec gold not included. PS: Here there be shawarma.

 

The Gentlemen Nerds
The Gentlemen Nerds
Ep 10. Kidnapped by Pirates is Good
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