Tag Archives | Lapsus Linguae

Secret Origin of the Hulk

That Stan Lee and Jack Kirby have offered conflicting testimony as to which of them came up with the idea for the Hulk is not exactly news. But what I didn’t know before was the specific incident that Kirby claimed gave him the inspiration for the Hulk – namely, seeing a mother demonstrate extraordinary strength by lifting a car to free her trapped child.

CHANGE

What’s striking about that example is that in the (surprisingly good) 1970s-80s tv series – though not in the comics – the experiment that originally turns Banner into the Hulk is part of his research into cases of ordinary people demonstrating extraordinary strength in emergency situations – with the case of a mother lifting a car to free her trapped child being the main case study focused on.

Assuming this isn’t a coincidence, then either Kenneth Johnson (who wrote and directed the first Hulk episode, as well as being responsible for a few other shows you may recognise) got the idea through conversation with Kirby, or else Kirby’s memory is mistaken and inadvertently drawing on the tv show.

Between Lee and Kirby I’m ordinarily more inclined to trust Kirby. But this mother-saving-her-child-by-lifting-a-car idea is so central to the tv show and (as far as I recall) so non-evident in the original comic that I’m left scratching my head.


Wrap Artist

Sin City: A Dame To Kill For

Robert Rodriguez is finally beginning work on a sequel to Sin City. According to the announcement, the title will be Sin City: A Dame To Kill For, and “details of the film’s story have been kept tightly under wraps.”

Um, no. I don’t think a movie based on a graphic novel that’s been out for nearly twenty years can really claim that its story is “tightly under wraps.”

This reminds of the reporter who claimed that Steven Moffat was being “tight-lipped” about the storylines for Sherlock’s second series because the only clue he would give was the three words “Adler, Hound, Reichenbach”!


The Old Rugged Cross

Genius.  Billionaire.  Playboy.  Philanthropist.

Genius. Billionaire. Playboy. Philanthropist.

For some reason I’m on the mailing list of an outfit called “Conservative Action Alerts.” (They seem more libertarian than the conservative mainstream, so that’s probably the connection.) Their latest missive complains that the word “individualism” has been “poisoned by deceptive propaganda that disparaged it as ‘rugged.’”

Well, not exactly. “Rugged individualism” was introduced as a positive term, either coined or popularised by Herbert Hoover (who liked to pose, at least sometimes, as a free-market type even though his actual policies were straight-up big-government dirigism). Admittedly it’s often used pejoratively now, but that’s mainly due to the (ludicrous) perception that Hoover’s ineffective response to the Great Depression was somehow driven by individualism.


Santorum Converts to Anarchism!

Rick Santorum

Rick Santorum has been selling himself as the candidate who’s reliable and consistent, in contrast with Romney’s flop-flipping. But here’s what Santorum has said in the past:

Republicans, I think to our credit, have sort of morphed away from the Goldwater idea that government needs to be smaller, it needs to do less, it needs to be doing nothing except what its core functions are. … I am not a libertarian, and I fight very strongly against libertarian influence within the Republican Party and the conservative movement. … We are not a group of people who believe in no government. … They have this idea that people should be left alone, be able to do whatever they want to do, government should keep our taxes down and keep our regulations low, that we shouldn’t get involved in the bedroom, we shouldn’t get involved in cultural issues – you know, people should do whatever they want. Well, that is not how traditional conservatives view the world …. There is no such society that I am aware of, where we’ve had radical individualism and that it succeeds as a culture.

And here’s what he just said today:

We don’t need a manager. … We need someone who’s going to pull up government by the roots and throw it out … and liberate the private sector.

Um … uh … welcome to the revolution, comrade?


Drome Without a Home

What should these things be called? They’re not palindromes, but they’re like palindromes’ second cousins or something. “Homodrome” and “isodrome” are already taken (and the latter is prohibited in the u.s. navy).

Got each? Go teach!

Daredevil dared evil.

He rode her ode.

We tore wet ore.

We stole or ate west oleo rate.

Heh! Ate slime? She hates limes.

I slam Islam.

Pan Iceland? Panic, eland!

I cede land, iced eland.

I’m Ethan, I met Han.

A mint, I bet! I am in Tibet, I.

I’m a keg or Ewan, I make gore wan.

I smile, saw a yam. It is Sue, is miles away. Am I tissue?

Hi, sexy! Our attack: you tart! His ex? You rat! Tacky! Out, art!

Who wants some, and war? Four odes saw how ants so mean, dwarf – our Odessa!

He won’t woo Xena. Llamas, sheep, I sod. I call, yearn: shit! She won two oxen, all a mass. He episodically earns hits.

Ow! All a blur! Bok choy, our Eden. N.Y.C., Apis, Ceres! O lute, O wall, a blurb: OK, Cho? You’re Denny, capisce? Resolute!


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