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Hugh Likes Anime: One-Punch Man

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By Source (WP:NFCC#4), Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=38600684

One-Punch Man
Adapted by Madhouse
Streamed on Netflix

A parody of classic fight anime like Dragonball Z Japanese sentai shows like Kamen rider, One-Punch Man is a resounding success in both Japan and abroad. Based on a webcomic parody of beloved Japanese mascot Anpanman, the series follows Saitama, a would-be hero. But Saitama is so powerful, he defeats every opponent with just one punch.
By turns clever, goofy, and melancholic, One-Punch man tells a fun story while mercilessly satirizing fifty years of manga storytelling techniques. Carefree and bubble-headed Saitama is a great foil for the legion of supporting heroes, monsters, and other villains. He’s a bit like a Japanese version of The Hulk, without the anger issues.
While Saitama is the star of the show, the huge cast of supporting characters is where the show really shines. From his self-serious cyborg sidekick Genos, to homicidal and obsessive ninja assassin Sonic, to the legion of monsters, villains, and other heroes in the hero association. They all have good designs and fill the show with personality. My favorite of the bunch is probably Tornado, a young psychic heroine who is pretty much an immature, short-tempered parody of Jean Grey.
With just a thirteen episode season, One-Punch Man avoids the fight-anime trope of running on longer than it needs to. The show is packed with clever gags and subtle world-building, and is just long enough. A second season is in production, so hopefully it will stay fresh when it returns to the air. One-Punch Man is available on Netflix Streaming. If you grew up on stuff like DBZ and Power Rangers and you somehow haven’t checked it out, go have a look.

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Podcast-WotB: The Ungreat Escape

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The Way of the Buffalo is proud to present “The Ungreat Escape” by Siobhan Gallagher!

Click HERE to listen online!

Visit the author’s website HERE!

Today’s story was narrated by Renee Chambliss!

Hugh Likes Fiction: Lincoln in the Bardo

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Hugh Likes Fiction-Lincoln in the Bardo

Lincoln in the Bardo
Written by George Saunders
Full Cast Audiobook
Published by Penguin Random House

Lincoln in the Bardo is less a novel of The Civil War than it is a novel about life (and death) surrounding the war. It is set on the night following the burial of William Lincoln, the president’s son who died of Typhoid, and follows the many ghosts that dwell in Oak Hill Cemetery.
The ghosts, all trapped between life and death by their earthly desires and attachments, observe and interact with the spirit of the boy and the mourning Lincoln, who returns that night. A mixture of fantasy and historical record, Saunders intersperses the true event of the president’s mourning with the lives of his fictional ghosts and excerpts from memoirs and accounts of the period. The result is both cacophonous and elegantly executed. Much like the spirits who deny what is in front of them, the country is caught on the edge of monumental change, change that is nearly impossible, but necessary. Acceptance and reaction to those changes, both for the living and the dead, is the crux of the story.
The audiobook of Lincoln in the Bardo is a full cast recording that really takes advantage of the nature of the book. a huge cast of actors create a chorus of voices. The dizzying variety of their opinions and backgrounds reflect the diverse stories of the characters very well. The mood is well established, and it really sets the atmosphere for the story. The cast is anchored by Nick Offerman, David Sedaris, and Saunders himself as three spirits who are most active in the story. The rest of the cast is a crowd of voices both recognizable and unknown, and is excellently produced.
Lincoln in the Bardo is available in audio and print from Audible and your local independent book store. I recommend giving it a listen, or a read.

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Podcast: Nostalgia Pilots 6

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Episode 6: Those Kids Have to Die

This week, Hugh, Jason, and Jurd watch episode six of Gundam Wing: Party Night!

Join us as Heero goes to great length to avoid a school dance, Relena has a non-conventional grieving process, and Lady Une is barely holding it together with all this insubordination about her orders to murder civilian children.

Plus: Wu-Fei takes up puppetry, Trowa has an Allen Iverson moment, and Duo does literally nothing this episode.

And, Jason tells everyone how he really feels about Eureka Seven.

Hugh Likes Podcasts: The Adventure Zone, Revisited

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The Adventure Zone
Hosted by Griffin, Travis, Justin, and Clint McElroy
http://www.maximumfun.org/shows/adventure-zone

The Adventure Zone Flat_7

When I originally reviewed The Adventure Zone in January of 2015, it was still in the midst of its first arc. Having just finished the first campaign of the show 69 episodes later, I wanted to go back and give it a second look. The show went from a enjoyably funny Dungeons & Dragons podcast to something altogether different, and I think there’s a lot to talk about here.
Serial storytelling is a thing always in motion. TV shows change show-runners. Comics change creative teams. Target audiences drift. Even when the artists stay consistent, real-world events swirl around them. Tastes are fickle. Long-running concepts have to be adaptable. The Doctor regenerates. Batman shifts from swinging sixties Caped-Crusaider to Frank Miller’s gritty vigilante and back again. Podcasts are no less susceptible to these changes. But I never expected four goofballs sitting around a microphone and joking about role playing to make me cry.
The Adventure Zone’s first campaign was a train that constantly picked up speed. The McElroys are comedians at heart. The podcast started as a goof, and it was entirely in their oeuvre. It was a lot of fun, but one of the characters was named Taako, and his quest was to invent the taco. This was a big part of the early episodes. But something happened along the way. Often, when something becomes popular, it is considered the downfall of the enterprise. It gets too big, expands beyond the original concept, or the creators get overwhelmed or carried away. But that isn’t what happened to “The Adventure Zone.”
Fans loved the podcast. They made fanart, they wrote letters, they tweeted, and crated animatics from the audio. And in showing how much they loved these silly adventures, the McElroys worked harder. They gave their creation depth and emotional resonance that it didn’t have for them, because they knew that it was there for the fans of the show. It’s a bit of a trite statement to say that a media property is ‘for the fans,’ but it’s rare that something is so beautifully communicated between creators and an audience.
The Adventure Zone didn’t abandon the goofy aesthetic so much as it became more sincere in it. Seeing the reaction fans had to the show, the McElroys put in the work. Production got better. Griffin produced an intricate plot that slotted in seamlessly to the pre-made adventure they started out with. He also composed entire soundtracks, and sculpted lush sound environments. The players carefully weighed their decisions, because, they realized, the characters were no longer just theirs. The Adventure Zone became something better than its beginnings because the creators and the audience respected one another in a way that’s rare in our media sphere. The results are remarkable, and worth listening to even if you’ve never opened iTunes or rolled up a character sheet.
The Adventure Zone recently finished it’s first campaign, “Balance,” with episode 69. If you haven’t listened to it, I recommend going back and starting from the beginning. It’s a long road, but the transformation along the way is truly special. Art isn’t created in a vacuum, and sometimes, it sneaks up on you from the most unlikely of places. Just like three goofy heroes who wind up saving the world.

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Podcast: CCRC27-Dungeons & Dragons S1E2

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Watch along with the Chrononauts as we watch to the Dungeons & Dragons cartoon!

Click HERE to listen!

and HERE to watch the cartoon via YouTube!

Podcast: Nostalgia Pilots 05: The Mutterer

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Episode 5: The Mutterer

This week we’re taking a trip to space! Hooray! I’m sure nothing bad will happen… oh wait there’s Lady Une.

This episode: Lady Une is totally Heero’s secret clone mom, Qatre’s got it bad, and Relena was super high at the time, but her dad told her she’s totally a princess or something. Plus: Duo and Heero have a bonding moment, and the Nostalgia Pilots get lost in the weeds of meta continuity!

Thoughts? Don’t forget to follow us on Twitter!

Hugh Likes Fiction: River of Teeth

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River of Teeth
Written by Sarah Gailey
Published by Tor

In a lot of ways, River of Teeth is your typical western, you have your wronged hero out for revenge, the manipulative riverboat gambling entrepreneur out to fix the system, and of course, a lake full of hungry feral hippos. A clever and unique alternate history, Sarah Gailey’s River of Teeth consistently surprised me.
The basis for the story is an attempt by the U.S. government to import hippos as a food source in the early 20th century. While that plan fell through, Gailey took the idea and ran with it, pushing the setting back in time and populating her world with colorful Western archetypes. But Gailey made these tropes her own in a way that made me stand up and take notice.
This is a very queer book. Protagonist Winslow Houndstooth is unabashedly and unashamedly gay. Another character, Hero, is given neutral pronouns throughout, and these are accepted as given, as entirely mundane by the characters. Gailey writes these characters, their motivations and their reactions with a deft hand and clear understanding. There is no justification, there is no unnecessary explanation. She presents us her rich palate deep characters, and gets to the good stuff: Hippo cowboy antics.
The caper, or operation as is repeatedly corrected by the main character, is worthy of a big-budget heist. The weirdness of the concept, and the fact that it is based on equally weird historical fact, adds to the richness of the story, rather than detract from it. A stampede is exciting and dangerous. A 3,000 lb. bull hippopotamus is something else altogether.
River of Teeth is another outstanding novella from Tor’s line. You can find it on their site, or from Amazon and other online bookstores. I recommend picking it up before the sequel, Taste of Marrow comes out next month.

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Hugh Likes Video Games: Downwell

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Downwell
Created by Ojiro Fumoto
Published by Devolver Digital
Played on PS Vita
Downwellgame.com

On the surface, “Downwell” is a very simple game. The Japanese indie shooter/platformer has very simple controls, a limited color palette, and low-resolution sprites. But there is something very charming about the mashup of ideas that comes together elegantly to make an experience that his easy to pick up, and extremely challenging.
The player controls a figure who jump into a well full of monsters with only his ‘gun-boots’ for protection. He can shoot monsters below him, and landing on ledges reloads. The randomly generated levels stretch down, with a few side caverns full of upgrades or shops to try and reach. Like in old-school shooters, the gun-boots can be upgraded to a number of different weapons, from spread-guns to shotguns, to lasers. Players also can snag upgrades like jetpacks and health refills between levels.
Even with these bonuses, the difficulty is very high, although not really cheap. Monsters such as bats and ghosts fill the well, and they all have their own patterns the player can learn. Sections are split into three levels each, but there isn’t really any save system, so players are booted back to the top with each death, which is a bit disappointing.
The player unlocks new palettes and slightly different game modes based on cumulative score, but most of these are just slight variations or aesthetic changes.
“Downwell” is a clever mashup that will certainly fill your time on the train, without sucking you in to a 100 hour adventure. But you may be surprised how long you think “Just one more run,” while playing. You can play it on Steam and a variety of platforms. It’s also available in Playstation Plus this month.

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Podcast: Nostalgia Pilots 04: Get The Space Laser!

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Nostalgia Pilots Episode Four

We’re back! And this episode we’re finally introduced to the series’s breakout stars, Lt. Noin and Lady Une!
Meanwhile, Zech’s does the half-cape walk of shame, Wu Fei hangs out in the worst subreddits, and both Relena and her dad have insufficiently dramatic outfits.
Plus, Trowa and Qatre share the flute and violin duet that dares not speak its name.
This podcast originally appeared at NostalgiaPilots.com on August 3rd, 2017.
Thanks for listening! If you enjoyed this podcast, please share it! You can also support me on Patreon for more goodies!

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