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Site of the Week -- Jan. 22, 2001

Proton Charging
http://www.protoncharging.com/

S pooks, slimers and full-torso vaporous apparitions continue to haunt Ghostbusters fans at Proton Charging.

The fan site is slavishly devoted to all things Ghostbusters, from the two movies through to the Extreme Ghostbusters cartoon. Fans who vaguely remember a mid-1980s cartoon with the same name--but very different characters--can read the writeup about Filmation's 1970s Ghostbusters live-action show, and their failed attempts to update it after the far more popular movie hit the big screen.

The site's news section covers anything and everything remotely related to Ghostbusters or its stars, and tries to keep fans abreast of what's happening (or not happening) with the much-rumored-but-never-developed Ghostbusters 3. The site's feature news stories are more than just rehashes of news items, though. There's an overview of J. Michael Straczynski's (Babylon 5) writing duties on The Real Ghostbusters, cartoons and interviews with folks like Ron Hayes, the guy who designed the action figures based on the cartoon.

Unfortunately, there are a few dead links, and a dearth of multimedia material (forget finding soundclips or images here), but fans looking to catch up on Ghostbusters lore would do well to stop by the site.

-- Kenneth Newquist


Site of the Week -- January 16, 2001

Sluggy Freelance
www.sluggy.com

A part from Bill Amend's Foxtrot, few syndicated comics acknowledge, let alone cater to, the science fiction community. Fortunately, wherever traditional channels leave a gap in niche entertainment these days, the Internet steps in. Hence Sluggy Freelance, an unabashedly geeky adventure that's long been one of the best of the growing crop of online comic strips.

New Jersey writer/artist Pete Abrams, who started the strip as a hobby but has watched it grow into a full-time job, follows a newspaper format: a new black-and-white comic every day, a longer color strip on Sundays, a horizontal panel format, a punchline in each strip. But Sluggy Freelance is way too much fun for the increasingly stodgy mainstream newspaper comics pages. The strip centers around two longtime friends--budding mad scientist Riff and his dorky friend Torg--and their assorted hangers-on, including a homicidal lop-eared bunny, a Giger-style alien who works as a secretary, a blowhard vampire and a normal college student who gets involved in their time-traveling, dimension-hopping, TV-parodying adventures more often than she'd like. Over the course of the past four years, Abrams has woven some surprisingly intricate and serious plotlines, while parodying everything from Santa Claus to Dr. Laura's radio talk show to movies (The Blair Witch Project, The Matrix) to television (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Pokemon, The X-Files, and many, many more).

Longtime readers can access the main page for a new strip every day, but new readers will be lost unless they head for the Sluggy Viewer Guide. There, four years' worth of daily strips are archived by plotline, with two of the all-time silliest story arcs highlighted: "The Sci-Fi Adventure," in which the dimension-traveling characters make cameo appearances on Star Trek, Star Wars and Alien, and "Torg Goes To Hell," which introduces the fan-favorite nebbish netherworld, the Dimension of Pain. The Guide lets readers access strips by the day or by the week, so it's easy to catch up on all the complex backstory, which is necessary to really appreciate the later strips' humor and to feed the addiction that often hits newcomers after their first taste of Abrams' twisted, fan-friendly wit.

--Tasha Robinson


Site of the Week -- January 8, 2001

The Galactic Gateway
http://www.thegalacticgateway.com/

There are plenty of Web sites out in the ether of the Internet that pay homage to J. Michael Straczynski’s five-year novel on television. And while many of these do a supreme job of keeping fans up to date on when and where Babylon 5 is currently airing, as well as providing detailed episode descriptions, they generally fall flat when it comes to timely information regarding the B5 cast and crew.

Where are they now? Where can a fan read about the current projects that Capt. Sheridan, er, Bruce Boxleitner will be doing? What about Jerry Doyle, Claudia Christian, Richard Biggs, Mira Furlan, Peter Jurasik and all the others?

The Galactic Gateway is your one-stop site, a cyber-community of sorts, for all your B5-related needs. Like the five-mile station itself, it could be considered a port of call, in that it contains links to most of the starring actors’ official web pages. But it is much more than just a Web portal. Here you will find details on Pat Tallman’s (telepath Lyta Alexander) efforts with the Penny Lane charity, the results of Jerry Doyle’s (Garibaldi) unsuccessful run for Congress, B5’s latest Nielsen ratings on the SCI FI Channel, Jeffery Willerth’s (Ambassador Kosh) latest production endeavors for The History Channel and Peter Jurasik's (Londo) recent step onto the set of Dawson’s Creek for a guest appearance.

There is also a section which is devoted to episode spoilers. The Galactic Gateway offers more than just a synopsis. The site ties together the story arc of the show bit by bit, and offers the text of never-before-seen footage that was deleted from the final cuts of some episodes. A message board and chat list allow fans to keep in touch with others in B5 fandom, and the online store offers autographed memorabilia that can be personalized. A conventions listing round out the periphery features of The Galactic Gateway.

-- Brian Murphy

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