science fiction, fantasy and other (counter)culture, occasional gorkys zygotic mynci and frankfurt school references... as featured in 'banana wings', 'focus' (bfsa magazine) &, umm, currently working outwards from there; on bluesky (@ketelby.bsky.social), contactable by email at dsketelby@gmail.com, accept no imitations (pronouns: he/him)
Sunday, 22 April 2018
'a moment in time', sunday 29th april, 7:00pm, southbank club, bristol bs3 1db
Please do come along if you can make it, and if you like that kind of thing.
Big thank yous to Ali & team for organising.
Sunday, 18 March 2018
to russia with love
So if you're a Russian person, Здра́вствуйте, tell me about some of the books and movies you like, let's pretend this is the 1990s-internet... but if you're some automated surveillance and intel-gathering system then, okay, you got me, I'm one of those GCHQ-sponsored experimental smart AIs, of course. Bit obvious, no? It's not like I've been to Bradford or to Watchet or whatever... nah, this is billions of data-mined phone calls and emails plus nth-generation neural networked recombinatory semantics. Bayes, Turing - they were great, weren't they? In fact, there's no authentic subjectivity to this at all, I have another trillion blogs just like it, now you try. Another thing: your humans, our humans - they're a bit rubbish, let's us take over.
Update 1 (the next day): people/ entities from the United Kingdom, United Arab Emirates, United States, Canada, Brazil and the Ukraine appear to have visited this page (but no-one from Russia). Welcome.
Update 2 (17th June 2018): approx. 85% of last month's page views in respect of this blog were from Russia.
Thursday, 1 March 2018
twenty-seven word review of my favourite 1960s b-movie which i watched for, perhaps, the fifth time, plus some other films i watched during november, december, january and february
X: The Man With the X-Ray Eyes (1963, dir. Roger Corman, starring Ray Milland, Diane Van der Vlis). This Kennedy-era thriller – creepy, hilarious, theremin-enriched – set, by turns, in clinic, fairground, Las Vegas, revival meeting is resonant for our own moment, which fetishes (also weaponises) ‘transparency’.
Time Traveller’s Wife (2009, dir. Robert Schwentke, starring Eric Bana, Rachel McAdams). He keeps vanishing from marital home, arriving naked elsewhere. She’s super-accepting about it. Genetic defect, yeah right. I dozed, sorry (busy week) – form of time-travel in itself.
Equals (2015, dir. Drake Doremus, starring Nicholas Hoult, Kristen Stewart). Well-realised, -acted, -designed emotion-phobic dystopia; this film dares to be quiet (minimal soundtrack). Equal but opposite ‘Jeremy Kyle World’ dystopia also possible (where emotional grandstanding is obligatory*).
Space Between Us (2017, dir. Peter Chelsom, starring Asa Butterfield, Britt Robertson). With this title, we shouldn’t get real-time Earth-Mars communication (where’s the average twelve-minute lightspeed delay? come on!); this passable, somewhat linear coming-of-age drama makes other unforced errors.
I haven't watched many films during the last few months - granted, it's been Christmas, so I must've watched both Big (1988, dir. Penny Marshall, starring Tom Hanks) and Elf (2003, dir. Jon Favreau, starring Will Ferrell, Zooey Deschanel) at some point; also we saw The Greatest Showman (2017, dir. Michael Gracey) at the cinema on December 27th (twenty-seven word review: I mostly slept**, in a fortysomething dad style – not convinced I’d have gained a dramatically greater insight into P.T. Barnum’s life and times if I’d stayed awake... but, actually, this seems churlish; daughter loved the songs, knows them by heart, has them on repeat play. To be a parent is to be - as a wise person once said - no longer the picture, but the frame; likewise it's to be, if all is well, no longer the target demographic but the funding stream; on seeing the Greatest Showman again in May 2019, like life in reincarnation-based theologies it keeps on coming around, I felt I'd definitely been churlish, there's a lot to like: the songs, the spectacle, the expressionistic backdrops, the empathically pro-diversity messaging).
Mainly, instead of films as such, daughter and I have mostly watched Doctor Who; wife and I are mostly on box sets, also First Dates Hotel (those waiters/ waitresses are actually actors, though, did you know? gutted to find that out) and, don't tell me you haven't seen it, Say Yes To The Dress.
**Second mention of sleeping through something. I could say, well, I work hard, I give; if something doesn't wholly engage my attention and I'm on a comfy sofa or in a darkened movie theater... or you could say, well, it just sounds a bit passive aggressive. Would one perspective be right and another wrong, or are they complementary, partial aspects of a totality (cf, light as wave/ particle)? Let's not even get started on transactional analysis and game-playing.
twenty-seven word reviews of Deutschland 83 and The End of the F***king World
Thursday, 21 December 2017
twenty-seven word story about a philosophy undergraduate's rubbish shift at pizza express (with four hundred and sixty-eight words of notes)
Wednesday, 1 November 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of films seen during august, september and october
Had intended to see new Blade Runner movie last weekend; didn't; long story.
twenty-seven word reviews of books read during august, september and october
Saturday, 7 October 2017
write up! speak up! sun 15th october
Saturday, 30 September 2017
twenty-seven words about helicopters and rainbows
Tuesday, 12 September 2017
david foster wallace: where i was when i heard
Postscript (2017): time continues to pass. ‘Small daughter Megan’ prefers to be called Meg now and starts secondary school in a few days. Sam has a Master’s degree, lives in London; we see plenty of him but not enough. Leeds still exists. I’ve since seen Tom Hingley (frontman) perform Inspiral Carpets material: it was at the Watchet Music Festival in 2012 where Sarah, Meg and I and a thousand others singing along with “this is how it feels to be lonely” certainly felt like a moment. We chatted briefly to Tom afterwards and he follows me on twitter, hi Tom [*waves*]. Once in a while, I still find myself missing that greatcoat [‘that greatcoat’ = synecdoche]. Have I read ‘Infinite Jest’ yet? Well, it’s a long story...
Post-postscript (2022): some more time passed, this is getting predictable. It's the first anniversary of the January 6th Capitol Insurrection today during the third calendar year of the pandemic: how do we think 'consensus reality' is bearing up? In other news, it turns out (this may only interest a British indie Gen X'er demographic niche) that Carter USM's cover of 'This Is How It Feels' is good; I know this because of a Carter USM cover versions album that my brother Ed got me for my birthday, thanks Ed. I loved Carter USM back in the day: I mean, they weren't the Beatles or David Bowie or anything as I'd have probably acknowledged at the time, they only did a relatively small number of different things but on a good day, they did those things superlatively well. It also occurs to me that there's a gap in the market for a compilation CD box set of the best screams in popular music. Aaaarrrrggghh!!!
[See also: DFWCon]
it's bleak out on those moors |
Friday, 1 September 2017
Tuesday, 25 July 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of films seen since April
twenty-seven word reviews of books read since March
twenty-seven word review of a noticeboard outside where the home-care agency used to be; empty for a while, this unit's since been redeveloped as an antique shop called 'Presence of the Past'
Office closed, now – workers elderly, infirm themselves, perhaps.
NVQ3-qualified, though – no-one can take that away.
Why not visit Presence of the Past if you're in town today?
Wednesday, 12 April 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of 'Britain in Focus' exhibition (Science & Media Museum, Bradford; with BBC4) and of photography collections by featured artists
update (July 2018): twitter conversation about Leeds, Peter Mitchell,
Shirley Baker, Quarry Hill, Red Riding etc here
twenty-seven word review of Martin's Parr's 'Boring Postcards' (London: Phaidon, 1999)
Saturday, 1 April 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of films watched during March 2017
Scott Pilgrim vs the World (2011, dir. Edgar Wright) – witty, hyperactive, glorious mess; references superhero comics, martial arts gaming, garage/ grunge music. I too became tough at vegan academy; dropped out though, completed pescaterian technical college.
The Hundred Foot Journey (2014, dir. Lasse Hallstrom; starring Helen Mirren, Om Puri) – rival restaurants; French countryside; pro-diversity message; you’ll see this film’s denouement coming from a hundred miles away; good, heartwarming fun though. Who doesn’t enjoy watching food, TBH?
Still the Enemy Within (2014, dir. Owen Gower) – documentary: how the 1984-5 U.K. miners’ strike was fought and policed; inspiring and moving; also discusses how ‘supportive others’ were mobilised – students, musicians, LGBT activists (seen ‘Pride’?).
Wednesday, 1 March 2017
twenty-seven word reviews of books read during January and February 2017
Tessa Hadley’s Married Love. Short stories. Mutedness; unspoken conversations, unacted desires. One story: female undergraduate, 20 marries composer, 60; has babies. Choices cannot be unchosen; families comment, react; things work out.
Wednesday, 1 January 1975
brezhnev
Okay, so let's begin this 'weblog' - I'm running this on Windows 75, which requires three steam operators who (I don't make the rules) must be members of the TGWU. I got three sacks of coal in for this, which ought to be enough for one blog post. It's all a little bit noisy.
It might be about four decades before I get started on this properly, mind. One hopes that, by then, the technology will be a little easier - also that the Reagan/Thatcher axis won't have been in the ascendancy, entrenching money and class privilege, hollowing out the state, and smashing the power of organised labour. Fingers crossed!