(1) TOURNAMENT OF 1970 HUGO PHOTOS CONTINUES. Andrew Porter, who once had F&SF’s 1970 Hugo Award trophy, says about yesterday’s photo of Tim Kirk’s, “His does NOT look like the Hugo I had. The base of the one I had was in brown, not black, enamel paint, and the grain of the wood was clearly visible.” So Porter appealed to Gordon Van Gelder, current host of F&SF’s 1970 rocket, to snap a photo. And he did.

Porter asks, “When the toilet paper revolves, it provides gravity for the creatures inside, right?”
(2) GAME DEVELOPER’S CONFERENCE – SOON R.I.P.? “Even a rebrand may not be able to save America’s most storied gaming event” says the Guardian’s Keza MacDonald.
Every year for as long as I have been alive (read: since 1988), the annual Game Developers Conference has been held in California. It started out as essentially a house party: a gathering of 27 people in the living room of Atari designer Chris Crawford. By the mid-90s it had left Chris’s house and grown to more than 4,000 attenders, and in 2005 found a permanent home in San Francisco’s Moscone Center. These days, about 30,000 game development professionals of all kinds attend every year. The online GDC Vault is a precious trove of game development history and useful advice for any gaming discipline.
GDC has developed a bit of an image problem in recent years, however, as we have reported before. It’s prohibitively expensive for developers: a conference pass is more than $1,500, and travel and accommodation in one of the world’s most expensive cities quickly multiplies the total cost to anywhere from $5,000 to $10,000 (even for a hotel room with approximately the dimensions and safety of a phone booth).
On top of that, since Trump was re-elected president, a large percentage of the global video game development community is reluctant to visit the US. And the vibe of the event has been somewhat soured by the sudden withdrawal of funding from the entire games industry, alongside the threats to developers’ livelihoods from AI and ever-present layoffs. If nobody is funding games, what’s the point of travelling for days and spending thousands to attend some meetings?
As Jon Ingold, founder of UK studio Inkle, puts it: “GDC as an industry brokerage doesn’t make sense when there’s no money, no hiring, and the US is a hostile place to be … I fear whatever they do instead is too little too late; the executive club don’t leave much behind when they move out.”…
(3) GRAY POWER. Bookmarkedone brings us a list: “Glorious Grannies: Mature Female Protagonists in Science Fiction and Fantasy”.
Science fiction and fantasy isn’t always the intrepid young hero on his first voyage to Mars.
Or the naïve but strong and independent young woman falling for a magically attractive and dangerous fae lord.
Although those protagonists are impressively popular, there are plenty of stories where the heroes aren’t young, fresh-faced, able-bodied, perpetually confused, and conventionally attractive.
So please get to your feet and provide some thunderous applause for a look at protagonists with a brush of silver in their hair, joints that sometimes creak, and a fondness for quiet coziness in life:
The stylish and sassy senior ladies of science fiction and fantasy.
The list begins with —
“How to Train Your Demon” by Lisa Lacey Liscoumb
from The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Jul./Aug., 2021
It seems only right we should start off our list with one of the first and most charming pieces of SF/F granny fiction I’ve ever read.
It has everything you would expect—cookie baking, cozy vibes, helping hands…and demonic summoning circles?
The lovely lady in this story has some chores she can’t do anymore. She doesn’t have family or friends nearby, so what’s she to do except summon a demon?
Honestly though, this story is wholesome and delightful, if you’re reasonably prepared that it may awaken a craving for ginger snaps.
the bookmarkedone blog does not recommend trying demon summoning at home or in a laboratory setting. Please don’t.
(4) MURDER PARTIES. Olivia Rutigliano contends “The Best Movie Genre is One Where a Party at An Estate Goes Horribly Wrong” at CrimeReads.
As everybody knows, the best thing that can happen in a movie is for a character to go “someone in this house is a murderer!”
I’m rounding up a bunch of movies with that general vibe, for you to enjoy this month. Here are a bunch of movies where a party at an estate goes horribly wrong, probably because someone gets killed or something is stolen. What I would not give for a good film adaptation of Wilkie Collins’s The Moonstone, or to find out that the French movie 8 Femmes were streaming, but c’est la vie, I suppose. Moving on!
Now, you might be asking, WHAT about the movies where someone getting killed or something getting stolen during a party at an estate is the POINT of that party in the first place, and therefore, from the perspective of the event’s puppetmaster, it means that the party at the estate is actually going horribly RIGHT? Not so fast, inspector! Of COURSE they are included in this list!…
One of her picks is —
The Mirror Crack’d (1980)
Before she became Jessica Fletcher, Angela Lansbury played the world’s other most famous nosy lady sleuth, Miss Jane Marple, in this classic Christie adaptation about an Englishwoman who winds up poisoned when her village ends up becoming the shooting location for a Hollywood picture and a glitzy party becomes the setting for a murder attempt! Miss Marple is on the case! And Elizabeth Taylor, Kim Novak, Rock Hudson, Tony Curtis, and Geraldine Chaplin are also in the film! If you’re not obsessed with this movie right after seeing it, I’m sorry but you are clinically insane.
(5) HOLLYWOOD PUPPET MAKER TO SPEAK. The Los Angeles Breakfast Club presents “Kirk Thatcher – Making Monsters, Muppets, Messes and Merriment!” on October 1 at 7:00 a.m.

ABOUT THE PRESENTATION: Kirk discusses his work creating puppets for movies and television, from making creatures in Return of the Jedi and Gremlins through his work with Jim Henson and Henson productions, as a designer, writer, and director. From Dinosaurs and Muppet Treasure Island through Muppets Tonight, The Curious Creations of Christine McConnell and Muppet’s Haunted Mansion.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER: Kirk R. Thatcher is an Emmy award winning writer/producer, an award winning television, commercial and viral video director, as well as a creature maker and character designer for both films and television. Kirk began at nineteen working at Industrial Light and Magic, designing, creating and puppeteering creatures for blockbusters such as, Return of the Jedi, Star Trek II, Star Trek III, E.T., Poltergeist, and Gremlins. He was also an associate producer on Star Trek IV, in which he had a memorable cameo as the Punk on the Bus, rocking out to the Punk anthem he both wrote and sang, called, “I HateYou!”
Kirk has co-written several Muppet films including Muppet Treasure Island and directed four television movies: “The Muppets Wizard of Oz”, which premiered at Robert DeNiro’s Tribeca Film Festival, “It’s a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie,” “The Muppets Letters to Santa” as well as the Lifetime Network Thanksgiving movie, “Jim Henson’s Turkey Hollow” starring Mary Steenburgen. He was Supervising Producer on the Emmy Award winning ABC series, Muppets Tonight, and co-producer on the ABC series Dinosaurs, on which he designed most of the characters, working closely with one of his mentors, the Muppet’s creator Jim Henson. As well as his long form work, Kirk has directed over thirty Muppet commercials and web shorts including, Muppet’s Bohemian Rhapsody, which has been viewed over 72 Million times, and all of Neil Patrick Harris’ web comedy series, “Neil’s Puppet Dreams”.
(6) JIMMY KIMMEL RETURNS TO LATE NIGHT. [Item by Steve Vertlieb.] In a poignant, emotional, delightfully funny monologue, one of media’s most courageous, outspoken, humanitarian television hosts and witty comedians returned to his post. He was humble, self-deprecating, and solemn in his concerns for the future of free speech.
He didn’t bend the knee, nor did he apologize for a “crime” for which he was guiltless. He spoke to truth with gentle humor and utter fairness. His return is a welcome remembrance of freshness, substance, originality, humor and GUTS!
Watching Jimmy Kimmel last night reminded me that hope remains for our country and that speaking out against tyranny and censorship is the cornerstone of our cherished constitution.
Watch the first half hour of last night’s show here: “Jimmy Kimmel is Back”.
(7) FINAL WICKED: FOR GOOD TRAILER. “Wicked: For Good’ new trailer teases Elphaba and Glinda’s showdown, ‘Wizard of Oz’ characters” – Entertainment Weekly sets the frame.
Dorothy has reached the end of the Yellow Brick Road in the final trailer for Wicked: For Good.
The beloved Wizard of Oz characters — including that tornado — appear in the new preview for the upcoming Wicked sequel, which concludes the epic musical battle of wills and circumstance first mounted by Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo) and Glinda (Ariana Grande) in director Jon M. Chu‘s 2024 adaptation of the Broadway musical.
Ahead of the film’s debut in November, Universal unveiled the final trailer Wednesday, featuring several callbacks to The Wizard of Oz — including a scene that sees Dorothy, the Tin Man, the Cowardly Lion, and Scarecrow face the the Wizard (Jeff Goldblum). “Bring me the broom of the Wicked Witch of the West,” the Wizard instructs them. “So I have proof that she’s dead.”…
(8) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.
[Written by Paul Weimer.]
September 24, 1934 — John Brunner. (Died 1995.)
By Paul Weimer: John Brunner, the man who saw our future. Or multiple futures. Yes, I know science fiction is really about the present much more than “predicting the future”, but take a look around at our year of 2024, with random violence, political instability, a kaleidoscope of fashions and trends, social divisions, global terrorism, extremism, billionaires running amok. And also, gay marriage, affirmative action, electric cars, the use of marijuana and more.

Aside from the fact that the random violence in the book is NOT gun-based, we seem to be living very much in the world of Brunner’s Stand on Zanzibar. But that’s not all. In The Sheep Look Up, we get environmental degradation, a Republican President who says the answer to all our problems is “Deregulation”, a widening gap between rich and poor, and a degradation of quality of life across the board. Or The Jagged Orbit, where a cabal of Republicans are going to use computers to swing an election. Or The Shockwave Rider, showing a United Stated dominated by computer networks a la the internet, even as infrastructure crumbles and crumbles.
Reading (or rereading Brunner) in 2024 can be a lot.
Beyond the gloom and doom of Brunner’s trilogy, though, there is much lighter fare if you want to try one of SF’s greatest visionaries. Out of his large oeuvre, my favorite is The Squares of the City.
Boyd Hakluyt is a traffic and systems engineer who is hired by a fictional South American country to resolve a traffic and transit problem. While there, he gets wrapped up in a plot between the government and the not so loyal opposition, in a literal chess match where Boyd finds himself a piece on the board. It’s a taut and fun political thriller that might be a bit light on the SF, but high on tension, drama, and if you like chess, you will love this book. And then there is The Infinitive of Go, which is the type of multiverse novel whose implications slowly creep on you.
(9) COMICS SECTION.
- Dinosaur Comics tells more fan fiction.
- Mother Goose and Grimm explains high wardrobe costs.
- Reality Check’s hero brings receipts.
- Rhymes with Orange can’t escape a critic.
- xkcd – but to get full enjoyment, says Mark Roth-Whitworth, first read the Wikipedia entry on Hermann Oberth.
(10) GUEST WHO? Ben Herman assesses the Marvel/DC “Deadpool / Batman” crossover issue at In My Not So Humble Opinion.
…As with pretty much any intercompany crossover involving Marvel and DC, the story is not especially deep or sophisticated. Pretty much the entire appeal is seeing characters from the American comic book industry’s two largest publishers appear together in the same story. To the credit of Wells, he does write a genuinely funny story that shows the rambunctious, loquacious Deadpool hamming it up in reaction to the grim, brooding, taciturn Batman. Wells also gets a fair amount of mileage out of contrasting Deadpool with fellow chaos agent the Joker, who is also possessed of a, well, distinctive sense of humor that frequently revolves around chaos & carnage…
(11) I WILL FEAR NO CHOCOLATE. “Hershey Wins Lawsuit Claiming Reese’s Candies Aren’t Spooky” – Insurance Journal tells why.
U.S. District Judge Melissa Damian ruled on Friday that the plaintiffs did not show they suffered economic harm because their pumpkin-shaped candies, which they thought would contain “artistic carvings” of triangular eyes and crooked mouths, were blank.
The May 2024 lawsuit challenged the lack of details on nine Reese’s products, including a bat-shaped candy missing eyes, a ghost-shaped candy missing eyes and a mouth, and a football-shaped candy that resembled an egg because it had no stitching.
Damian also said the subjective belief of the plaintiffs that they overpaid did not support their claims, or give them standing to sue.
“Put simply, plaintiffs do not allege that the products were unfit for consumption, did not taste as plaintiffs expected, or otherwise were so flawed as to render them worthless,” the Miami-based judge wrote.
The proposed class action by Florida residents Nathan Vidal and Eduardo Granados sought at least $5 million in damages. Damian said they may seek to file an amended complaint.
Anthony Russo, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, called the ruling procedural, and said his clients will review their next steps.
Hershey and its lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
(12) THE THRILLING DAYS OF YESTER(FUTURE)YEAR. formless blob with a blog at Tumblr keeps alive a meme:

(13) ALIEN: EARTH WINDS UP FIRST SEASON. With the finale of Alien Earth now streaming, audiences are flocking to the Alien universe’s bold new chapter. JustWatch, the largest international streaming guide, has exclusive commentary from the show’s creators and cast, plus fresh streaming insights.
About Alien: Earth
In the year 2120, an unidentified spacecraft crash lands on planet Earth. It is first discovered by a young woman and a group of soldiers who begin investigating. But as they look closer they soon realize that something deadly has been unleashed.
Alien: Earth is #3 on the JustWatch Daily Streaming Charts today. The TV show has moved up the charts by 1 place since yesterday. In the United States, it is currently more popular than Only Murders in the Building but less popular than Task.
(14) NASA’S FORTHCOMING VOYAGE DANS LA LUNE. “’We are ready for every scenario.’ NASA’s Artemis 2 astronauts say they’re all set for historic flight to the moon” reports Space.
The first astronauts to visit the moon in the 21st century can’t wait for their trip.
The four astronauts of NASA’s Artemis 2 mission to the moon, which could launch as early as Feb. 5 of next year, are deep in training for the first crewed lunar flight in over 50 years. They’ll launch atop NASA’s giant Space Launch System (SLS) rocket aboard an Orion spacecraft, whose name was revealed on Wednesday (Sept. 24) — “Integrity.”
“We’re going to launch when this vehicle is ready, when this team is ready, and we’re going to go execute this mission to the best of our abilities,” Artemis 2 commander Reid Wiseman told reporters here at NASA’s Johnson Space Center (JSC) during a press conference on Wednesday.
“We might go to the moon — that’s where we want to go — but it is a test mission, and we are ready for every scenario as we ride this amazing Space Launch System on the Orion spacecraft, 250,000 miles away,” he added. “It’s going to be amazing.”
Joining Wiseman on Artemis 2 — a 10-day trip around the moon and back to Earth — are pilot Victor Glover and mission specialist Christina Koch (both of NASA), as well as Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen, also a mission specialist. The mission, decades in the making since NASA first unveiled a planned crewed return to the moon in 2004, will set the stage for an even more ambitious flight: Artemis 3, the first astronaut landing on the moon of NASA’s Artemis program.
Artemis 2 will mark a number of firsts: The first crewed moon flight since NASA’s famed Apollo program. The first woman and person of color to visit lunar realms. The first astronaut flight of NASA’s Artemis program, which seeks not only to land humans on the moon but also to conduct sustained crewed exploration of the lunar south pole and beyond to prepare for an eventual trip to Mars….
(15) VIDEO OF THE DAY. “Eep Opp Ork Ah-Ah” lyrics. View it at the link.
Now you can sing along with the famous rock and roll song from The Jetsons! The words are there, so you have no excuse! …This is posted for the informative and educational value.
[Thanks to Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Mike Kennedy, Paul Weimer, JJ, Steve Vertlieb, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, and Mark Roth-Whitworth for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Bruce Diamond.]






























