Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Fantasy on Television

So maybe this is just me, but it seems that fantasy is finally making a come back on television. The last time I remember more than one or two fantasy based television shows being on at the same time was during my young childhood in the mid-late '90s (early 2000s as well). Back when Hercules, Xena, and Beast-master were on (probably along with some others that I don't remember). There was something like a five-year break where I could not find any fantasy show. There were tons of sci-fi shows: Firefly, Doctor Who came back, Stargate: SG-1 and Atlantis, Eureka, Warehouse 13, Torchwood, among others. But there was a huge hole where some fantasy should be. Now, since 2-3 years ago, fantasy has started making a come back. And it seems to be adding up to a big one. It started with Legend of the Seeker (which didn't really do the books justice, but was fairly entertaining). Then BBC joined in with Merlin and Robin Hood. More recently there was the short series (which will hopefully continue) The Fades (also BBC) and in America we've got Lost Girl (which probably is aimed towards women, but I think it's still pretty damn good). I sincerely hope this continues and we get some more amazing fantasy shows just like sci-fi did during it's peak around 5-6 years ago. It would be interesting to look back over the history of sci-fi and fantasy television shows and see if there is a natural rotation between the two.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Trains...

I'm writing this while on an Amtrak train (yeah, some of them have wifi now), and I've realized something (not for the first time) a bit disturbing. The first steam-powered locomotive was demonstrated in 1804, over 200 years ago. But still after two centuries the best form of transportation for passengers around cities and for large cargoes over land is the train. Sure, there have been numerous advancements made to the propulsion system (gasoline-powered, electric-powered, maglev), but come on. Don't get me wrong, I'm not bashing the train. It was an amazing invention and still is today. My bigger issue is two-fold. First, it seems that most transportation-related inventions since have been passenger-centric. Cars and planes, for the most part, can't transport large quantities of materials. They're very good at moving people, fairly efficiently and very quickly. But with some cargo trains stretching for a mile or more, you'd need a significant amount of cargo planes to match. And for trucks the ratio is probably much, much worse. On top of that the energy consumption by a train for such cargo is almost definitely significantly lower (I'm guessing, but it seems to make sense, otherwise we would just build lots of giant cargo planes). Why hasn't the human race thought of a better system of cargo transportation yet? Granted, the only one I can think of would be a large system of tubes (like mail-chutes used in large office buildings), but I feel even something like that would be more efficient and faster to boot. Sure the infrastructure to set that up would be expensive, but I think it'd pay out in the long run (just like the rail system did).

My second issue is with the passenger trains used in cities. What happened to all those sci-fi books and shows that had tube transport for people throughout cities? Is it too dangerous? Too difficult? Possibly, but I don't think so. Are these advancements not being made because the majority of the human race has settled into a state of stagnation. No new ideas, just improve on the old ones as best we can. That's not good, and it's easy to see in other areas of our culture. Hopefully it doesn't stay that way.