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  • Colin Farrel

    Does 'sad-voice' sci-fi make you sad?

    by Capt. Xerox
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    This Disney film should be a sci-fi classic, but it's...

    by Capt. Xerox
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  • HIldebrandt painting of Gandalf and Bilbo in the Shire.

    Famed SF&F artist Greg Hildebrandt dead at 85

  • How many of this century’s most iconic books...

  • Camp Zero is a debut novel that brilliantly...

  • Bad movie poster

    This director doesn’t like having his movies mocked

  • Dune books

    The Dune typeface must flow

  • Space Cadets 2005

    Looking back at Space Cadets

  • deep space image

    Maybe interstellar travel is possible after all

  • screenshot from the short film Jettison

    Jettison is a short sci-fi film that imagines...

  • John Carter of Mars

    Listing the most expensive science fiction movie flops...

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    How many books did you write during the...

  • Time Traveler's Wife TV show

    There was a Time Traveler’s Wife TV show?

  • Star Wars action figures

    Hasbro promising personalized action figures

  • Max Headroom

    Do we really need a Max Headroom reboot?

  • Rendezvous with Rama

    Maybe we don’t know what alien life is

  • Dune TV miniseries

    In praise of Dune 2000

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  3. Get your Star Trek NFTs
3 years ago 3 years ago

Odds and Sods

Get your Star Trek NFTs


Capt. Xerox
by Capt. Xerox 3 years ago3 years ago
80

Oh, boy. Paramount is going all-in with the NFT grift by offering new Star Trek NFTs. Can I pay with gold-pressed latinum?

www.theverge.com
Paramount’s new Star Trek NFTs utterly miss the point of Star Trek
Warp me to a galaxy where this doesn’t exist.

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    Colin Farrel
    Does 'sad-voice' sci-fi make you sad?
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    Meet the Robinsons
    This Disney film should be a sci-fi classic, but it's...
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More Sci-Fi Goodness on Instagram

If you're up for some Halloween reading, the only If you're up for some Halloween reading, the only place you'll find Norman A. Daniels' 'The Lady is a Witch' story is in this March 1950 issue of Startling Stories. It was never reprinted anywhere else. As for the cover painting, no artist is attributed to it so it's anyone's guess.
Justin Case? That is obviously a pen name and it h Justin Case? That is obviously a pen name and it happens to be one used by the ever prolific Hugh B. Cave. The cover painting of this February 1942 cover of Spicy Mystery Stories is by Harry Parkhurst and you get to compare what the original looked like.
The May 1951 cover for Future is another in the lo The May 1951 cover for Future is another in the long line of women in space without a spacesuit with a man alongside her in a suit. I guess they are immune to the vacuum of space. This image is painted by the always prolific Leo Morey.
A portrait of ‘Buck Rogers in the 25th Century’ is a bold design choice in my bathroom at the Graduate Hotel in Fayetteville, Arkansas. I wonder how many guests that are not me have any idea who this is or have ever even seen the show.
There's no truth to the rumour that Mel Hunter's c There's no truth to the rumour that Mel Hunter's cover painting for the October 1956 edition of 'If' inspired James Cameron when he dreamed up Avatar's blue-skinned Na'vi.
Not sure what artist Wendy Pini is going for on th Not sure what artist Wendy Pini is going for on this cover of the July 1974 issue of Galaxy, but having two women floating above a gas giant without space suits definitely qualifies as science fiction, with an emphasis on fiction and less so on science. As an added bonus, you can also swipe through to see what the original painting looks like!
Who else could have painted this cover of the Apri Who else could have painted this cover of the April 1934 issue of Weird Tales than the unmistakable Margaret Brundage?
Simple yet effective, this colourful cover for the Simple yet effective, this colourful cover for the April 1949 issue of Famous Fantastic Mysteries was painted by the always prolific Lawrence. I had to look up Edison Marhsall and Elmer Brown Mason. The former penned only a handful of stories, mostly in the 30s, and the latter was equally obscure, only publishing a few stories during the First World War.
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