sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2013-08-17 11:47 pm

Am I required to keep him alive?

I just watched my first episode of Fringe (2008–2013). It is amazing how disorienting it is to be told a city is Boston when it is very plainly either Toronto or New York. Also, I think the show's Harvard University might be Yale. Can you do that without starting a small war?

(John Noble is awesome. All mad scientist buttons checked. Including the one where he looks good in a lab coat.)

I saw these cat portraits on Tumblr a few days ago, but I had no idea they were actual guard cats of the Hermitage Museum. I approve.

The baked Alaska this afternoon was an amazing sucess. I am very proud of my skills with folding egg whites. [livejournal.com profile] rushthatspeaks and [livejournal.com profile] tilivenn can be proud of their ice cream wrangling and attention to baking times. The weevils in the confectioner's sugar were a surprise no one was looking for, and so was the time out where we had to get more eggs because the kitchen was too hot and humid for the first attempt at meringue to peak at all, but the results in Earl Grey and cardamom ice cream were wholly worth it. The sponge cake base was fluffy, the ice cream was sliceable and cold, the meringue on top was crisp-brown with the delicious marshmallow taffiness of burnt sugar at the tips. Egg whites are exactly as effective an insulator as I was always told. We really have no excuse for not reverse-engineering a butter-pie now.

I wish my head did not hurt this much.
skygiants: Sophie from Howl's Moving Castle with Calcifer hovering over her hands (a life less ordinary)

[personal profile] skygiants 2013-08-18 04:38 am (UTC)(link)
Someone needs to reverse-engineer a butter-pie IMMEDIATELY, and then give me the recipe. :D?
gwynnega: (tea poisoninjest)

[personal profile] gwynnega 2013-08-18 03:55 am (UTC)(link)
Earl Grey and cardamom ice cream sounds amazing.

[identity profile] tilivenn.livejournal.com 2013-08-19 05:51 am (UTC)(link)
If anyone wants to reproduce this wonder, the recipe can be found in The Cook's Canon by Raymond Sokolov. Fair warning, you need like eight eggs, and you have to separate ALL of them. Also you need an electric mixer and another eggbeater (ideally also electric, but in our case it wasn't). So worth it though.

[identity profile] nineweaving.livejournal.com 2013-08-18 04:09 am (UTC)(link)
Mmmmm.

I wish your head wouldn't hurt at all.

Nine

[identity profile] nineweaving.livejournal.com 2013-08-18 04:10 am (UTC)(link)
Also: I am so in on the butter-pie.

Nine

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2013-08-18 08:03 am (UTC)(link)
When in doubt, it's Toronto. (Think of it as My Neighbour, Toronto.) I've occasionally had the reverse experience, of seeing parts of Bristol and being told firmly that it is actually central London. House of Eliott, for example.
Edited 2013-08-18 08:06 (UTC)

one the other hand

[identity profile] lauradi7.livejournal.com 2013-08-18 11:40 am (UTC)(link)
When "Truly, Madly, Deeply" came out, I remarked to a friend from Bristol that it (B) was listed in the filming locations, but none of it looked familiar to me, an occasional visitor. Some of the scenes were obviously London, such as the ones along the South Bank. She said that probably the interiors were filmed in Bristol. She told the story of picking out leeks at her local greengrocer's shop when a bloody hand emerged from the nearby vegetable bin. She started to scream, and then noticed the microphone boom. I was impressed that the filming company would use an actual store and that the store would stay open for business while it was happening.

Re: one the other hand

[identity profile] moon-custafer.livejournal.com 2013-08-18 12:04 pm (UTC)(link)
My husband likes to tell the story of how years ago he was in a Toronto bookstore and wandered into a section that had been set up for a location shoot for the movie In the Mouth of Madness. They actually had a big display of "Sutter Kane"'s books -- all of which, if opened, turned out to be the same page endlessly repeated. In retrospect, that's the sort of creepy thing that would have happened in the movie itself.
ckd: small blue foam shark (Default)

[personal profile] ckd 2013-08-18 03:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Or Vancouver. When watching BSG, I was amused to see that Caprica City has a building I have walked through (Vancouver's main library).
ckd: small blue foam shark (Default)

[personal profile] ckd 2013-08-20 02:39 am (UTC)(link)
It was in the background of an exterior shot somewhere in S1 or early S2, I think. I'd have to go look to find the specific episode.

[identity profile] ladymondegreen.livejournal.com 2013-08-20 06:13 pm (UTC)(link)
I wish I knew enough about the city to say what an appropriate version of the Catbus would look like in this case.

Toronto buses are still reasonably square, but I can see where one might put the ears.

For my part, I make [livejournal.com profile] jlighton, [livejournal.com profile] akawil and [livejournal.com profile] pecunium crazy when we watch Due South by figuring out what all the locations are. Sometime I would like to pop over to the parallel universe where the show is set in Toronto but filmed in Chicago.

[identity profile] pecunium.livejournal.com 2013-08-20 06:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Does not make me crazy. I think it's sort of charming.

[identity profile] tamnonlinear.livejournal.com 2013-08-18 12:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I tried watching Fringe several times, but kept bouncing too hard off the first one or two episodes. I finally took the advice to skip half of the first season (normally I am a dedicated completist) and go from there. It worked well enough for me, and I'm up to season 4, a couple of weeks later, and love it.

Cardamon ice cream sounds fantastic. I had some amazing rum punch with cardamon bitters a while back, and have been putting cardamon in everything since.

[identity profile] tamnonlinear.livejournal.com 2013-08-20 03:07 pm (UTC)(link)
My problem with the first few episodes is that I was genuinely disgusted by the hostile interaction between Broyles and Olivia. I found it so repugnant that I had to skip forward until that was no longer an issue. If you're sufficiently familiar with the genre (and I assume you are), reading brief episode summaries and the 'previously on' flashbacks at the start of later episodes will be sufficient, and you'll be less likely to want to kick the screen.

Cardamon is one of the spices that I would want to wear as a perfume. Heady and floral. It's one of the spices that I also tend to assume likes to hang out with its friends- anywhere cinnamon goes, for instance, it often liked to bring along ginger, nutmeg, mace, cardamon, and others.

[identity profile] handful-ofdust.livejournal.com 2013-08-18 11:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Ha, yeah. Luckily, I have very little sense of Boston beyond the bits you can see in The Departed and/or on the way to Burlington, so it's not that much of a wrech. Also, to be frank, I'm used to being told somewhere is somewhere else and knowing in my heart it's Toronto, because it's happened to me all my life.;)

That said: Episode two of Fringe is seriously some of the worst TV I've ever seen. Don't be disheartened! Keep going anyhow. ("Hey, I know that bridge," Astrid says, at one point, to which Steve and I both replied, out loud: "That's the Magical Bridge of Many Colours!", because the line was almost identical to one in Cal's then-favourite Little Einsteins episode. Which tells you how long ago this was.)

BTW: New Ian Tregillis book! A third instalment of Milkweed, called Necessary Evil! It starts with a Gretel-POV chapter!
Edited 2013-08-20 02:16 (UTC)

[identity profile] handful-ofdust.livejournal.com 2013-08-21 04:09 am (UTC)(link)
Like people said above, Toronto is where half the stuff on TV/in movies seems to be shot. Also Vancouver, with occasional side-trips to Quebec City to film stuff set in "Europe," and Nova Scotia, for stuff set in "Ireland" or "rural America/Maine." My Neighbour Toronto, indeed.

Good choice to start on episode three. I didn't personally hate the pilot, but I know a lot of people did. Then again, a lot of people went through the entire show hating Peter Bishop fairly relentlessly, so. (Shrugs.)

So far, the book's really good. You read The Coldest War, right?
Edited 2013-08-21 04:10 (UTC)

[identity profile] handful-ofdust.livejournal.com 2013-08-21 04:46 am (UTC)(link)
One time I walked out the side of my building and discovered that Market Street, which runs (oddly enough) down the side of the St. Lawrence Market, had been entirely converted via the magic of set dec into a New Orleans boulevard right after Mardi Gras. This was apparently in aid of a TV movie they were shooting called Sinklhole, in which New Orleans falls into a gigantic sinkhole. And this was long before the SyFy Channel, too.;)

Yeah, I think you'll enjoy reading these two back to back far more than you would have having to wait a year or so between instalments. Still, I was pretty sure even at the time Tregillis wasn't going to leave it there.;))

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2013-08-19 05:07 am (UTC)(link)
It is disorienting when one is told a city is a city that it's not. There was a popular sitcom (Family Ties, I think.) when I was a kid which was allegedly set in Columbus, OH, my place of abode at the time. It almost never showed any real views of Columbus, but as best I recall they accomplished this by having hardly any exterior scenes at all. Being shown some other city would have been unbearably strange.

Thanks for sharing the cat portraits! I googled and turned up a few more examples than were shown in the NYT piece. Do you happen to recollect which Tumblr you saw them on?

I'm delighted to hear of the amazing success of baked Alaska. Cardamom ice cream sounds delicious, and I wish I could talk the local ice cream operation into making some, even if I'd probably never have the patience to make baked Alaska with it.

I'm sorry for your continued headache.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2013-08-20 05:44 am (UTC)(link)
That looks like the same half-dozen linked from the New York Times.

So it does. I missed the link on the NYT piece, but only saw the one or two that they used for illustrations on the page itself. I may've been too caught up, after reading the piece, in trying to find it on the Nook edition so I could commend it to my mother's attention on said device. (As it turns out, this was another article left out of the Nook edition.)

I do not unfortunately remember where I saw them originally; the Tumblrs I usually read are handful of dust's and strange selkie's, but Tumblr by its nature reblogs so much, I could have gone one or two links over and found myself somewhere completely strange.

Indeed. I've had similar experiences on Tumblr.

Actually, it didn't take that long. Discounting the failed first meringue, the most time-consuming part was waiting for the angelfood cake to cool.

Interesting. I reckon I am still not likely to ever make a baked Alaska, but it's good to know that it's perhaps not quite on the turducken level of difficulty that I've always envisioned it being.

PS: Those six may be all the Hermitage cat-portraits he's done, or at least that he's released to the public. Here is his deviantART gallery.
Edited 2013-08-20 06:22 (UTC)

[identity profile] ron-drummond.livejournal.com 2013-08-19 04:04 pm (UTC)(link)
I hope you feel better soonest.

Fringe is an incredibly wonderful series but it takes most of the first season to get going, and then from there it's pretty awesome all the way through to the end and yet full of flaws and mistakes and continuity errors and some profoundly silly writing and bad acting but interwoven amongst all that nonsense is some of the most amazing television ever created, brilliant ideas and brilliant acting and great effects both special and aesthetic. Just jaw-dropping -- right alongside what the hell were they thinking. Worth it for all that's great, which is a ton. Can you imagine if they had allowed everything that wasn't working to stop them, thus depriving us of this show? I shudder to think of it! And take that as a lesson for me and for all of us, to be a little bit less perfectionist and a little bit more willing to wing it and risk failing big time.

[identity profile] schreibergasse.livejournal.com 2013-08-26 07:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Weavils in the confectioners' sugar...?

I mean, ok, I can certes see that, but still.

I hope your head is better. I hope that when I read more recent posts, I wil hear that it is.