I’ve claimed before that I’m Batman’s biggest fan. However, I think this guy might be. That’s a LOT of dedication to get a movie made the way you wanted.
And, of course, the reason I love Batman over all other superheroes is that he’s the living embodiment of the Neal Stephenson quote,
“Until a man is twenty-five, he still thinks, every so often, that under the right circumstances he could be the baddest motherfucker in the world. If I moved to a martial-arts monastery in China and studied real hard for ten years. If my family was wiped out by Colombian drug dealers and I swore myself to revenge. If I got a fatal disease, had one year to live, and devoted it to wiping out street crime. If I just dropped out and devoted my life to being bad.”
And he made us believe that anyone could do what he did. Perhaps not as well as he did, since we don’t all have trust funds and private jets to get the best training in everything around the world, but that it was within the realm of possibility.
But then Kick Ass came along and made real the dangers behind what most of us knew to be flights of fancy — we don’t all have former Army medic butlers, let alone super healing mutant abilities.
However, no matter the topic, I have an overarching desire to understand how and why things are the way they are. I suppose that’s why I ended up with a degree in psychology with a statistics emphasis. If, as I have said before, psychology is the application of science to philosophical understanding, then statistics is the foundation of the empirical method of doing same. It is the analysis of observations of glean meaning out of the seemingly random and/or overly complex nature of the world.
And to those who would claim that math and science is soulless, I would argue there is something amazing about an elegant proof to a complicated problem. Likewise, graphs, the visual form of statistics, can make incredibly complex data immediately understandable and relate-able.
Here are some of my recent favorites:
(from HIMYM, Marshall’s pie chart of his favorite bars and bar graph of his favorite pies.)
(from SFoodie, an actually baked Venn diagram of pies.)
(from The Expendables, a movie poster with the previous kill counts of all the stars of the movie.)
For more fun graphs like these, check out GraphJam. For a more serious discussion of stats, try 538.
But that last picture really got me. The original poster with just the action stars of my childhood is already pretty damn bad-ass, but adding their kill counts just gives it so much more depth. That’s why I can’t wait for augmented reality technology to become viable. In the meantime, I’ll just have to settle for Google Goggles.
OK, now to run before the violence geeks find me.
I often went to Disney World as a kid (my family went to Florida a lot more than we went to SoCal) and loved it, but if Star Wars Land really existed, I’d jump in the Great Pit of Carkoon for admission. I wonder if that would be a ride/attraction at this park. Perhaps a sarlacc-themed diner?
For more Star Wars goodness, check these links:
If you take Episodes 1–3 as the original/canon, this re-interpretation of Episode 4 makes sense. For those of us old enough to know otherwise, it’s a bit of a mind-fuck.
This blog has a lot of random, amusing, and/or interesting Star Wars non sequiturs. (And non-Star Wars, if you check go to the main page, I just linked the Star Wars-tagged archive.)
Can someone (a design/philosophy double-major, perhaps?) explain this to me?
Likewise, can an art history/film studies major explain this to me?
(I always hated symbolism. I remember having to dredge through books in high school to mine all the hidden gems my English teachers insisted were buried in every clause. No author/director is THAT meaningful.)