Laundry, getting the recyclables to the curbside, continuing the job search via e-mail alert subscriptions and website checks and so on, a grocery walk and so on: these are the chores of this particular Wednesday for me.
Not much else to report for the moment, at least nothing that avoids asking permission of other people to share their stories here, anyway.
Copies of Cinefex # 164 and 165 arrived at my door today, mind you. Cinefex is a trade magazine focusing on visual and mechanical effects work in major motion pictures and television projects, if you're wondering.
Topics as follows:
# 164 - Captain Marvel
Hellboy
Dumbo
Digital Animals
# 165 - Avengers: Endgame
Godzilla: King of the Monsters
X-Men: Dark Phoenix
Pokémon: Detective Pikachu
Good Omens
They publish six times a year, which seems to have moved up from where I remembered them at 4x/year as of...2014, apparently. 2015 was a "bridge" year as they expanded their coverage and publication schedule. Guessing that there are more people interested in the "how'd they DO that" stuff than used to be the case. That's not a bad thing to my mind.
I decided to drop the Ars Technica feed from my Reading Page here, mainly because I visit their actual web site more often than not. So...
More as it occurs to me.
Not much else to report for the moment, at least nothing that avoids asking permission of other people to share their stories here, anyway.
Copies of Cinefex # 164 and 165 arrived at my door today, mind you. Cinefex is a trade magazine focusing on visual and mechanical effects work in major motion pictures and television projects, if you're wondering.
Topics as follows:
# 164 - Captain Marvel
Hellboy
Dumbo
Digital Animals
# 165 - Avengers: Endgame
Godzilla: King of the Monsters
X-Men: Dark Phoenix
Pokémon: Detective Pikachu
Good Omens
They publish six times a year, which seems to have moved up from where I remembered them at 4x/year as of...2014, apparently. 2015 was a "bridge" year as they expanded their coverage and publication schedule. Guessing that there are more people interested in the "how'd they DO that" stuff than used to be the case. That's not a bad thing to my mind.
I decided to drop the Ars Technica feed from my Reading Page here, mainly because I visit their actual web site more often than not. So...
More as it occurs to me.