(1) DEATH DOES NOT RIDE A CAMEL. Not in this book, anyway. Christopher Lockett’s “Discworld Reread #6: Pyramids” leads another excursion into the genius of Terry Pratchett.
…Pyramids is also, to my mind, one of the funniest of the Discworld novels. Given that there’s no such thing as a non-funny Discworld novel, this is a high bar: and while I would never put myself through the mental agony of ranking them, I will say that Pyramids is easily in the top five. The scene in which Teppic encounters the Sphinx and lawyers his way past the riddle (more on that below!) is pure comic genius. So too is our first introduction to the city-state of Ephebe, analogue to ancient Athens and very specific antithesis to the cultural and societal stasis of Djelibeybi. Oh, and the very name “Djelibeybi” (say it out loud!) is a piece of art unto itself (a helpful footnote informs us it literally means “child of the Djel,” the river that is the kingdom’s lifeblood).
But there is also of course the camel, named You Bastard, who is the greatest mathematician in all of Discworld. All camels, it is stipulated, are mathematical geniuses, a fact of which no human is aware because camels go to great lengths to disguise their brilliance:
“The fact is that camels are far more intelligent than dolphins. They are so much brighter that they soon realised that the most prudent thing any intelligent animal can do, if it would prefer its descendants not to spend a lot of time on a slab with electrodes clamped to their brains or sticking mines on the bottom of ships or being patronized rigid by zoologists, is to make bloody certain humans don’t find out about it. So they long ago plumped for a lifestyle that, in return for a certain amount of porterage and being prodded with sticks, allowed them adequate food and grooming and the chance to spit in a human’s eye and get away with it.” (207-208)
Our window into the mind of You Bastard, who alternates between Stephen Hawking-level mathematical calculations and wondering WTF the humans are doing, is one of the highlights of the novel. As is Sir Terry’s description of how camels gallop, “by throwing their feet as far away from them as possible and then running to catch up.”…
(2) THESE ARE THE TIMES WE LIVE IN. ComicsBeat marked the beginning of San Diego Comic-Con with an article advising fans “What to do if ICE crashes the con”.
Even as thousands descend upon the San Diego Convention Center for Comic-Con International: San Diego 2025, ongoing ICE raids throughout the U.S. are keeping many of us—immigrants and citizens alike—on our toes. In the wake of mass arrests and deportations, anti-ICE protests have gained traction not just in the U.S. but internationally as supporters in other countries stand in solidarity with those being taken from their homes and jobs.
On Wednesday, July 24, the official start of SDCC ’25, The Beat received unconfirmed reports of Border Patrol vehicles near the San Diego Convention Center, sparking tension among con-goers. Attendees, guests, and exhibitors are encouraged to stay vigilant and be aware of potential ICE and Border Patrol activity in the area.
In the event that federal officers crash SDCC, it’s important to know your rights and execute them to protect yourself and your community—no matter your immigration or citizenship status….
(3) COYOTE ESCAPES INTO WILD NEXT YEAR. After Warner Bros. tried to bury the film, it’s going global in 2026: “’Coyote vs. Acme’: Will Forte Reveals Release Date at Comic Con” – Deadline has the story.
Coyote vs. Acme actor today at San Diego Comic-Con said the global release date for the Warner Bros. abandoned-Ketchup Entertainment saved hybrid animation movie is Aug. 28, 2026. And that’s a global release.
“This movie wasn’t supposed to come out,” said the panel’s moderator Paul Scheer about the pic which follows Wile E. Coyote’s legal crusade against Acme corporation after suffering way too many damages.
“I heard Warner Bros wouldn’t release the film — I’ve never heard of Warner Bros!” the comedic actor and multihyphenate joked, “This is really an Acme decision and I’m saying that for legal purposes.”
“Ketchup is single-handedly saving the Looney Tunes,” said Scheer, “Mr. Ketchup, we salute you.”
Warner Bros initially took the $70M movie off the theatrical schedule in a cost-saving move, reporting that it was taking a tax writeoff. However, Ketchup Entertainment, as Deadline first told, wound up taking worldwide rights to the film in what was a $50M deal. Ketchup also released another Warner Bros’ abandoned Looney Tunes movie, The Day the Earth Blew Up which made $8.8M domestic, $15.1M worldwide. Forte emphasized to the room that it as the fans who saved the movie….

(4) TRAILER PARK. “’Peacemaker’ Season 2 Trailer Drops at Comic-Con; Shows John Cena Parallel Universe” – and Deadline was there.
DC Studios stepped in at San Diego Comic-Con where Marvel Studios use to dwell: the late Saturday spot in Hall H with the James Gunn co-run Warner Bros comic book label bringing the second season of Peacemaker.
But there was also more reason for glee, for as the panel’s moderator Joshua Horowitz observed: “James this is the first time you’ve been in front of crowd since Superman.” And with that, Hall H erupted in cheer.
The panel kicked off with the new trailer for season 2 which shows John Cena’s Christopher Smith enjoying a new parallel dimension he’s found. It’s just like our, and it’s even better. It’s a place where he can hook up with Jennifer Holland’s Harcourt. Meanwhile, back in the real world, Frank Grillo’s Rick Flag Sr (from Superman) is out to close the portal in his face-off with Peacemaker. Says Leota in the new trailer to Chris, “No matter how great the grass is over there, you belong here with us.”…
…Gunn’s Superman leads straight into Peacemaker season 2 with that movie’s supporting characters Green Lantern/Guy Gardner (Nathan Fillion), Hawkgirl/Kendra Saunders (Isabel Merced) and Maxwell Lord (Sean Gunn). That trio, as seen in the first teaser, grill Peacemaker for an interview with the Justice League….
(5) WHAT THIS SUBGENRE NEEDS. Paul Weimer gives a take on “science fantasy” in “Book Review: A Song of Legends Lost by M. H. Ayinde” at Nerds of a Feather.
…For me, science fantasy works best and makes me happiest when it is essential that the two genres work and mix together. Science fantasy stories that are more than, oh look there is a raygun in this fantasy world. Or, oh look, in this science fictional world, there is the barest hint of something supernatural. But when the story surely can’t work without both elements, where the story feeds on being in this borderland, that’s when science fantasy works the best for me.¹
And so we come to A Song of Legends Lost by M.H. Ayinde, first in a prospective trilogy.
A Song of Legends Lost is set in a secondary fantasy world that is under constant threat from creatures called greybloods, scavengers and dangerous leftovers from a previous fallen civilization. The society and world of Ayinde’s book respond to this threat by having certain individuals call upon the spirits of their ancestors, being able to manifest them from the beyond, to help fight these threats. One of our main characters, Jinao at the beginning of the book, has tried for years in vain to be chosen to do this, to be allowed and able to invoke one of the warlord ancestors that protect the Nine Lands, his ancestor, Mizito.
So far, so good. Straight up fantasy. Spirit magic. Invokers. Threats from beyond. But we dig a little deeper. Another major POV character, the first we meet, Temi, brings in the science part of this equation. Her family are bakers, and also have a side business using old “techwork” to make water votives (purifiers) and other small bits of what are at best questionable and otherwise illegal uses of ancient and forbidden technology. So Temi is hip deep in old technology from a lost age that many (and rightly as it turns out in the course of the book) consider hideously dangerous, even as she is trying to help her family scratch out a living at the bottom of society (far different than the noble born Jinao).
What’s more, it quickly becomes clear, although Temi is driven to distraction, that some sort of ancestor spirit has attached themselves to Temi. Just what this spirit is, and why it has done so, and what its own plans and goals are the major throughline and mystery of the book. But the result is that Temi embodies the science fantasy nature of Ayinde’s novel better than any other character. Jinao is all about the ancestor spirit of Mizito and where that leads him (mainly down a road of confrontations with a ferocious greyblooded adversary called the Bearnator). Other POV characters we get are all about the techwork and ancient forbidden technology and only latterly wind up having to deal with spirits themselves….
(6) SHUNSAKU TAMIYA (1934-2025). Plastic model industrialist Shunsaku Tamiya died July 18. (I wonder how many of his company’s creations the late Taral Wayne built?) The New York Times pays tribute: “Shunsaku Tamiya, Who Brought Perfection to Plastic Models, Dies at 90”. (Behind a paywall.)
Shunsaku Tamiya transformed his father’s former sawmill into a leading manufacturer of plastic model kits, with a passion for detail that once led him to buy and disassemble a Porsche to make a perfect miniature version. He died on July 18 of undisclosed causes, at age 90.
For more than four decades, Mr. Tamiya led the company that bore his family’s name, turning it into one of the world’s largest makers of build-it-yourself plastic model kits of racecars and military vehicles. Since producing its first such kit in 1960, of the Japanese World War II battleship Yamato, Tamiya Co. has become a globally known brand that also produces remote-controlled cars.
Under the leadership of Mr. Tamiya, who replaced his father as the company’s president, Tamiya won popularity worldwide for making kits that excelled in quality and historical detail. In 1967, one of its miniature models so faithfully reproduced a Formula 1 racing car, down to the location of a starter battery beneath the driver’s seat, that the maker of the original vehicle, Honda Motor, wondered if he had access to trade secrets but decided to let it pass.
His pursuit of accuracy also once took him to the embassy of the Soviet Union in Tokyo, where he sought details about Warsaw Pact tanks. This drew the attention of Japan’s public security bureau, which placed him under surveillance for a time.
Mr. Tamiya was serving as the company’s chairman at the time of his death. According to the company, he still enjoyed standing at the entrance to an annual trade show near Tamiya’s headquarters in Shizuoka, a city south of Tokyo, to watch the children come in….
(7) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.
[Written by Paul Weimer.]
July 26, 1945 — M. John Harrison, 80.
By Paul Weimer: M. John Harrison taught me about the joy of inconsistent and contradictory worldbuilding.
For most writers of fantasy, for most works of fantasy, I am always looking for the consistency and the power of the worldbuilding. Inconsistent and worse, lazy and weak worldbuilding can catapult me right out of a story or a novel, permanently. This has happened for me as a reader just this month with a brand-new novel.

M John Harrison is the exception to that for me. My reading of his work is almost exclusively Viriconium. But it is precisely in Viriconium, Harrison’s carved out territory in the Dying Earth subgenre, that I learned that worldbuilding is not the be all and end all of fantasy writing.
The contradictions, the inconsistencies, the lack of cohesion is part of the point of the dying world of Viriconium. Not being able to rely on previous stories and novels in the sequence to understand what is happening in a particular work is something that Harrison relies on, and it is something that I learned to accept, and even expect in the Viriconium stories.
Really, Viriconium’s world building is beside the point, and that is why Harrison writes it in a way that you can’t rely on it. Instead, to use modern parlance, Viriconium is much more all about the “vibes”, and what vibes! Vance and Wolfe may have perfected Dying Earth as a subgenre, but Harrison gives it a feel that few authors have managed to hit ever since. There are few authors I’ve read that have managed to embody the vibe of the subgenre they are writing in as well as M John Harrison has. And with such language and writing. On a sentence by sentence level, Harrison is one of the most talented writers I’ve ever read, of any genre.
A singular talent.
(8) COMICS SECTION.
- Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal knows who will save the world.
- Cul de Sac has a take on comics reminiscent of the Three Bears and their porridge.
- Jerry King goes off script.
- Off the Mark has the unwanted edition.
- Rubes times out.
- Strange Brew finds fans
- Thatababy tells how it should have ended.
- The Argyle Sweater has an erudite pun.
- xkcd explains geological epochs.
(9) TREK NEWS FROM SDCC. “Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Teases All-Puppet Episode at Comic-Con”. The Hollywood Reporter says Jim Henson’s Creature Shop is supplying the puppets.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds boldly went exactly where fans wanted them to go with its San Diego Comic-Con panel, delivering a fun presentation that also gave the 6,500-strong crowd in the cavernous Hall H one thing that geeks most: seeing something before anyone else….
(10) WELCOME. MAYBE. “Neurotic robots are a staple of science fiction. One study recently found that neurotic traits in a robot can make them seem more relatable.” “Scientists study how people would react to a neurotic robot personality in real life” at NPR.
…GREENFIELDBOYCE: So for this study, people were recruited at a museum in Chicago. Each person went into a room and met the robot. It was introduced to them as a restaurant greeter. Together, the human and the bot had to do a simple task – just sit and answer some questions.
ZHANG: The first one is, what are three things that you’re grateful for?
GREENFIELDBOYCE: Depending on the personality it had been given, the robot would respond in different ways. For example, the extrovert was enthusiastic.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
AUTOMATED VOICE: One thing I’m super grateful for is the amazing people I get to meet every day.
GREENFIELDBOYCE: The neurotic version of the robot spoke with less certainty.
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
AUTOMATED VOICE: I’m grateful for having a job where I can, you know, keep everything organized and on track. It helps me stay focused and avoid, like, unexpected issues.
GREENFIELDBOYCE: In addition to these two robot personalities, this experiment also included a robot that was, well, robotic. It answered the questions in a flat, emotionless way. It turns out people did not like that one. The extroverted personality was rated to be the most enjoyable to interact with. But here’s the thing. Zhang says the neurotic robot did provoke some interesting responses.
ZHANG: I would say, like, a majority of participants actually mentioned how human-like they found the neurotic robot. And, you know, they found it to be a lot more relatable.
GREENFIELDBOYCE: This could potentially be useful for some applications, but there’s been almost no research on neuroticism in robots. Lionel Robert studies robot personalities at the University of Michigan. He says researchers’ overwhelming focus on extroversion isn’t surprising when you consider that robots and AI agents are being sold as products that can do skill-based tasks, like sales and customer service….
(11) A MORE POPULAR PRESIDENT. “’Rick and Morty’ Announces Spinoff ‘President Curtis’ With Keith David” reports Variety.
“Rick and Morty” continues to expand its universe: Adult Swim has picked up a new adult animated comedy set in that universe, “President Curtis.” The news was announced Friday during the show’s San Diego Comic-Con panel, which included a surprise appearance by [Keith] David….
… “President Curtis has always been a blast to play,” David said in a statement. “Getting to explore his world more deeply in this new series is a dream. I can’t wait for fans to see what kind of chaos he stirs up when Rick isn’t around to steal the spotlight.”
Per the show’s logline, “’President Curtis’ follows the Commander-in-Chief and his eccentric staff as they tackle the kind of crises that Rick Sanchez could never be bothered with – from interdimensional diplomacy to paranormal investigations and unexplained phenomena.”…
(12) BACK TO SCHOOL. An array of photos of the cast in character accompanies Entertainment Weekly’s coverage: “’Star Trek: Starfleet Academy’ first look welcomes Holly Hunter, Paul Giamatti’s alien”. Holly Hunter plays the lead of the series, the captain and chancellor of the academy.
With Star Trek: Starfleet Academy, which is expected to launch its freshman season in 2026, executive producers Alex Kurtzman and Gaia Violo developed an idea about the next generation… not the Patrick Stewart-led classic series, but of Starfleet.
“If you’re going to do a show about a young generation facing the future and you want it, as all Star Trek does, to be a mirror that holds itself up to the world as it is now, to situate the show in the halcyon days of the Federation would, in some ways, be dishonest,” Kurtzman, a showrunner on Starfleet Academy with Noga Landau, tells Entertainment Weekly. (The halycon days was a time period when the Federation of Planets enjoyed peace and prosperity.) “Our children are facing a lot of challenges right now and they are our hope for the future.”…
(13) COSPLAY AT COMIC-CON. The Guardian has a gallery of cosplay photos from SDCC: “Stormtroopers meet Spider-Man at Comic-Con 2025 – in pictures”
(14) VIDEO OF THE DAY. Ryan George analyzes “Which mascot would kill you the best?”
I’ve never liked the way any mascot has ever looked at me, and since I’m convinced they’re all murderous lunatics, I decided it would be good to explore how each of them would do us in.
[Thanks to Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Paul Weimer, Andrew (not Werdna), Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, and SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Cat Eldridge.]

































