Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Link Round-Up: February 11, 2015

Darth Baymax by Brian Kesinger

"Darth Baymax" by Brian Kesinger


28 romantic gestures from Film, Television and Music that are actually creepy

Color Tiles is a simple, yet fiendishly addictive game.

Dread Central explains How Constantine Brings Its Supernatural Horrors to Life

Dungeons & Randomness is a podcast by Jason Massey that follows several Dungeons & Dragons parties as they quest for glory in a shared world. Episodes of the podcast specifically cover the misadventures of three distinct groups that all exist within the land of Theria. The podcast has a Patreon for those interested in supporting its continued production–which is scheduled to see the groups moving into a new chapter of the tale.


The history of paper engineering in books, or the making of "pop-up books" didn't start as a way to entertain children, but in the search for more tools to educate adults, including some proto-computers from as early as the 13th century. Let Ellen G. K. Rubin, known also as The Popup Lady, regale and inform you at length, in either the form of a 50 minute presentation for the Smithsonian Libraries, or read through her website, where she has a timeline of movable books and see the glossary for definitions of the different movements as starting points. Or you can browse the Smithsonian's digital exhibition (the physical exhibition ended a few years ago). And of course, there's plenty more online.

Moviepilot puts together a chronological sequence of (selected) scenes from Severus Snape's arc throughout the Harry Potter film series.

You probably know her as that green Orion slave girl from the Star Trek episode The Menagerie, but Susan Oliver was much more than that, as the documentary The Green Girl attempts to show.


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