achyon TV is a quarterly webzine devoted, as the name implies, to SF television. Run by fans in the United Kingdom, it covers all the programs a casual visitor might expect: from Doctor Who and Farscape to U.S. programs like Babylon 5 and Star Trek: Enterprise.. What makes this site different from the dozens of other fanzines and SF news services on the web? Simply this: The Tachyon TV crew doesn't wait for news about a favorite show to come to them. Instead, they'll happily invent itand the more outrageous, the better.
The result is a long and hilarious cache of news items covering topics like the end of Angel, potential episodes for a no-budget show airing on the BBC (If ... Logan Hadn't Run), and false spoilers for new Doctor Who episodes. Along with the actual articles are sidebars with snappy headlinesquick and amusing sound bites too small in scope to rate an entire fabricated story.
Other features of Tachyon TV include a captioning contest, a Mystery Science Theater 3000 fan page, a newly inaugurated area devoted to lampooning bad TV commercials, a Doctor Who of the Month photo and a blog filled with irreverent TV news and reviews. The star attraction of the page, though, may well be its "Karaoke with Kosh Naranek" section. Here, the mysterious alien from Babylon 5 provides readers with the lyrics for a host of TV-themed filk songs. Visitors can download the tune of any given song (for "Like a Vorlon," for example, the tune is Madonna's "Like a Virgin") they would like sing along with. Most of the songs are B5-themed, but there is a trio of Doctor Who titles, pieces like "Gallifrey," which is set to the tune of the Bee Gees hit "Tragedy." This section could use some good flash graphics to up its visual humor quotientit cries out for an animated boogie-down Koshbut even so, browsing through the lyrics will give visitors a hearty chuckle.
Cheeky and cheerful, Tachyon TV is packed with an infectious but irreverent fondness for all televised SF.
A.M. Dellamonica
Site of the WeekMay 24, 2004
ccording to site owners Jim and Allen Richardson, "gonzo" science is a fusion, combining the rigorous thinking of the skeptics with more progressive and iconoclastic viewpoints. What does that mean in layman's terms? To judge by the Richardson brothers' Gonzo Science site, it means adding just a squeeze of Scully-style scientific restraint to the mix before having as much credulous fun as possible with the wildest fringe theories alternate science can dig up.
Gonzo Science is an archive of articles on topics ranging from Altered States to UFOs. Within these categories, visitors can read up on alternatives to the Big Bang theory or plasma physics (these would be under the heading of "Cosmology/Astrology"), or perhaps click on "Heretical Biology" to learn more about the idea that life on Earth began in space.
A similar indexing system holds sway in the extensive "Gonzo Links" section, a jumping-off point for researchers interested in odd and unexplained phenomena, whether it be the Kennedy assassination or Marian apparitions.
This Web page is an eclectic mix, ricocheting through a range of subjects without ever probing into any of them very deeply. While pointing out gaps in what conventional science can explain, and offering some interesting alternate theories, the site's authors never go to any great effort to substantiate their claims. As a result, Gonzo Science makes perfect break-time browsing, giving visitors a fast-track escape from the mundane world, into another whose possibilitiesif sometimes ludicrousare infinite.
A.M. Dellamonica
Site of the WeekMay 17, 2004
ounded in 1973 to continue the work of skeptic Charles Fort, Fortean Times magazine covers the world of strange phenomena, from Bigfoot to UFOs and everything in between. Debunking hoaxes and investigating paranormal occurrences, the magazine and its official web page present a thrilling mix of science and speculation.
The archive of past Fortean articles available on this site is a reader's buffet, with features on (to name just a few of the many intriguing subjects) sexuality in Victorian séances, the existence of alien cats in the United Kingdom, the life and work of Paracelsus and avoiding Mediterranean curses. Book reviews cover fictionwith a special "SF Roundup" section written by David V. Barrettand loads of non-fiction, with books handily sorted by categories including "Conspiracy," "Cryptozoology," "Gaming" and "Paranormal."
Fortean Times runs a lively message board for interested visitors, covers strange news events all over the Web (African frogs threaten San Francisco!), and runs regular contests for prizes like video games, books and DVDs. For more visually minded novelty seekers, the site also has a gallery of supernatural images, such as Loch Ness monster and Bigfoot photos, complete with information on when the photos were unmasked as hoaxes, if they were.
Naturally, Fortean Times also provides subscription information on its print magazine, a valuable aid to any visitors who find they are finished with the site's extensive library of articles ... but still hunger for more.
A.M. Dellamonica
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