The Wee Archive: Aliens

5. Asogians

Franchise: E.T / Star Wars


Planet of origin: Brodo Asogi


Most well-known Member: E.T.


Reason I chose them: The film E.T. Made me cry, and I thought it was cool that they seemed to exist in both our universe and a galaxy far, far away.

4. Darleks

Franchise: Doctor Who
Planet of origin: Skaro
Most well-known Member: Davros
Reason I chose them: I mean they are the best villains on Doctor who. Do I really need a better reason than that?

3. Ultronians

Planet of origin: Ultron
Most well-known Member: George Sunday (later Monday)
Reason I chose them: Look at them, they come from a show that’s whole premise was basically : LOL, what I’d Dougal from Father Ted was a superhero. They are spectacular.

2. Chiss

Franchise: Star Wars
Planet of origin: Csilla
Most well-known Member: Thrawn
Reason I chose them: After I decided I would only choose one – solely – Star Wars species I debated for quite a while which one I should place here. After all this franchise have no end to interesting cretures and people to dig into. Ewoks, Wookies, Gungans, to only list a few. But I didn’t want to be too obvious with my choice – as I will be with the next species on this list. So then I started thinking about the individual meme era of these species, which one was the most likeable. And the most surprising in that likability, someone so likeable you end up liking him even though he’s a blue space nazi. And then it hit me, oh yeah, Thrawn!

1. Vulcans

Franchise: Star Trek
Planet of origin: Vulcan
Most well-known Member: Spock
Reason I chose them: Honestly, check out my last blog post – and that will give you more insight than I can offer right now.

If you’ve enjoyed this short little list of mine why not go back and check out the post that inspired it. Also while you’re at it give my TwitterInstagramPinterestFacebookGoodreadsTumblr and Kofi a look at too. Until next time we subscribers, stay sane, stay safe, and have a very Bonny day.

The Best Bread in Scotland

What Ho, Wee Readers and welcome back to my Wee Writing Blog. In the past I have covered many a topic raging from the shockingly nerdy to the deeply melodramatic. But today I’d like to speak to you about a loaf of bread.

Ah yes bread, whether we speak of the plain sliced loaf of the local supermarket or the freshly baked seedy roll, we as a society can’t get seem to get enough of dear bread. Why, even people that can’t handle gluten love bread – why else would there be so many packets of gluten-free bread loaves in my mum’s cupboards.

Well, my bread lovers what if I were to tell you that I have discovered the definitive best bread in Scotland. I’d even go so far as to say the world, but I think that would spark too many arguments in the comments.

And where exactly is this wonderful baked good to be found you might just be asking yourself right about now. A little place called Findhorn. A truly magical, and deeply spiritual place truly worth a visit even if it weren’t for the bread. If I was a more detailed oriented blogger I might then tell you a bit about the Findhorn foundation – founded in 1962 by Peter and Eileen Candy, and Dorothy Maclean – but as I am quite a lazy person I will instead just direct you to their site and post some pictures down below.

Besides which they don’t make the bread in the Findhorn Foundation anymore, but rather in the nearby Bakery in the village of Findhorn. Or is it a town, if anyone knows please let me know down in the comments.

Anyway, let’s move on to what we’re really all here to see…sometimes slightly blurry pictures of very delicious bread.

If you’ve enjoyed this little salivation over a simple loaf of bread why not follow the wee blog if you haven’t already. Also check me out on Twitter, Instagram, Mastodon, Threads, Pinterest, Tumblr, TikTok, Goodreads, Facebook and Kofi. Also sign up for the Wee Mailing List by the 31st of August to get a brief glimpse of my next blog series. Until next time wee readers, stay safe and have a very bonny day.

Time travel and the Artist: Peeling back the layers on Emily St. John Mandel’s Station Eleven

What Ho Wee Readers, well it’s been a while since I put up a post that wasn’t of the Wee Archive, hasn’t it? I could make excuses, excessive tiredness and a hectic work schedule , but I think that would just annoy us both. So instead, I’ll just ask you to turn your mind away from thoughts of the past posting schedules, and move on to the future. Dare I say it, a post apocalyptic future?

Okay that was a bit corny, but I didn’t know how to more elegantly segue us into talking about Station Elven, one of my top current favourite books. Speaking of…

First published on the 9th September 2014, Mandel’s Station Eleven follows two time periods. One set in the present day, following the life of actor Arthur Leander, a man who dies of a heart attack during the first few pages of the book, and all those that interwove in and out of it during his relatively short time on Earth. Such as his first wife, the creator of a post-apocalyptic comic series named ‘Station Eleven’, his former best friend a corporate psychologist who’s drifted away from him, his second wife and young son who live in a different country, and Kirsten, the young child actress who was there on the stage when he drew his last breath.

The second, tells the story of the travelling symphony- an acting troop making their way through the post-apocalyptic world which the ‘Georgia flue’ has left behind. Kirsten , now an adult, is one of the leading actors in the Travelling Symphony. We follow this ragtag band of misfits as they travel to a previously friendly town, only to discover it has been taken over by a doomsday cult. Where Kirsten will meet the mysterious cult’s Prophet and discover he may have a connection to her past that even she cannot fully comprehend.

That is the basic gist of both interweaving plots, not altogether very well described but there you go. The book flicks back and forth between Arthur Leander’s modern timeline, and Kirsten‘s future to give a grander scope of both the lives of the characters, and how terribly they were disturbed and thrown of course by the tragedy of the Georgian Flue pandemic. An illness that wiped out a sizeable portion of the world’s population very quickly. Huh, why does that sound familiar, when was this written again? 2011? Are all the best writers going turn out to be witches?

Well, regardless it’s little more than a framing device to get us to the post-apocalyptic world, and by extension our main theme of the book. That is the connecting nature of art, of loving art, of doing art, of appreciating art. How when we create a piece of art, and it doesn’t matter what kind – whether it be a painting, a novel, a show, a freaking comic book – we in a sense, are reaching across time to all the generations that have the potential to see and (hopefully) love the work we are creating. And it goes the other way too, when we as modern readers sit down to read something like Shakespeare we connect with an artist, with their voice, their life, that lived hundreds of years before even our grandparents were born.

And I personally never fail to find that astounding.

The book uses its post apocalyptic setting to highlight the connecting nature of the art the characters experience ,with refreshingly frank clarity. Works from the plays of Shakespeare, to episodes of Star Trek, and the impact they have on the characters are openly discussed. The actors of the symphony have deep conversations on whether the works of Shakespeare they often perform still connect to their audiences’ post-civilisation lives, or if they just provide an escape from the day-to-day drudgery that is life now.

However the most illustrating example of this cross generational connection comes from the thing that the book takes its very title from. Namely the in-universe comic book series “Station Eleven”. Set in its own post-apocalyptic world, the comic book tells the story of Doctor Eleven and his giant, flooded, forever in twilight, planet-shaped space station known to all as “Station Eleven”. I could go on to give a detailed summary of the plot of the comic book, telling you all about Doctor Eleven and his fight against the people of the ‘Undersea’, but honestly that matters significantly less both to the book and my point, than then connection it bridges between three people. Who through the courses of their lives build a connection to one another through these pieces of art.

First we have the creator of the work Miranda, the first wife of Arthur Leander, who interestingly enough in a work of fiction, creates the graphic novels of Station Eleven with little to no intention of ever publishing them. Her satisfaction comes from the creation of the work itself and its not until years later, near to the time when civilisation is about to end, when she finally publishes the first three copies at her own expense. It’s an interesting, and highly unique stance for her character to take, but its one I can’t really relate to at this point in my life. So in that vain please take a look at my Short Stories page, where you should find my publish stories. Or at least most of them anyway. I’d also like to point you in the direction of my Fanfiction.net and Ao3 accounts, where you’ll find my fan-fiction work. Because it doesn’t matter if I can’t publish it professionally, and possibly make some money off it, I’m highly proud of what I’ve written and would like as many people to go and look at them as possible. Go ahead,go click on them, we can all wait for the post to continue…

Okay so maybe I don’t have the patience for that.

In the end, possibly because of this, only two other people will read these comics – Kirsten and the Prophet. I don’t want to give away anymore spoilers so I won’t tell you how the Prophet came into possession of these pieces of art, but suffice to say the comics have had a profound affect on these two children and the adults they would become. With Kristen not only were they a connection to a world she could hardly remember anymore, but they were a beautiful distraction to her terrible childhood on the road. For the Prophet they seemed to have become almost a religion, their words mixing with his own odd form of Christianity. Becoming so much a part of his philosophy that when he hears someone else quote them – line for line – for possibly the first time ever, he literally stops dead in his tracks.

These words, written by a corporate executive who died on a beach almost twenty or so years before, connect these two people who could not be anymore different, in such a profound way its as if they speak a language that only they understand. Really, because its such a small sample size, its as we’re seeing an intensified version of the connection made between Shakespeare and Gene Roddenberry by the other players of the traveling symphony.

As artists, when we write words down on a page, or set paint to canvas, or whatever form our art takes, what we do is seek to build a connection with our audience, with our readers, with our patrons and viewers. We might certainly expect this connection between ourselves and the audience in our own time, but what if that spark, that connection goes beyond that? Not only beyond our own time, the years of our life, but beyond the very world, the very civilisation that we live in. Why I think that would be something very close to magic.

This is the feeling, this is the theme, this is the connection that Emily St. John Mandel’s Station Eleven provoked in me. What about you?

If you’ve enjoyed my little philosophical rant why not follow the wee blog if you haven’t already. And make sure to check me out on Twitter, Instagram, Mastodon, Threads (which I’m now on people), Pinterest, Tumblr, TikTok, Goodreads, Facebook and Kofi. Also sign up for the Wee Mailing List before the 6th of August to find out what I’ve been messing around with on Canva for the past month and a bit. Until next time wee readers, keep safe and have a very bonny day.

The Wee Archive: The Men of Jane the Virgin

Well this has certainly been a fun month of Wee Archive’s, if you’re interested in seeing more of these posts before anyone else, why not sign up to The Wee Mailing List before the 9th of July. until then sit back and enjoy this slightly silly list.

Top 5 Sexiest Men from Jane the Virgin

5. Rafael Solano

Role in Story: Main Love interest
Personality: Jerk with a heart of Jerk (which is why he’s at the bottom of the list)
Sexy level: 100 %

4. Fabian Regalo del Celo

Role in Story: Temporary Love interest
Personality: A bit of a jerk when hurt
Sexy Level: 90%

3. Dennis Chambers

Role in Story: Michael’s Partner on the Force
Personality: Sweet and loyal
Sexy Level: 120%

2. Michael Cordero Jr.

Role in Love Story: Secondary Love interest
Personality: Giant Dork and best person in the world
Sexy level: 300%

1.Rogelio de la Vega

Role in Story: Long Lost Father of the Main Character
Personality: Fabulous
Sexy Level: Infinite

If you’ve enjoyed this very short list of mine why not check out the wee blog. Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Facebook, Tumblr and Goodreads for all that good stuff. Until next time, be safe, and have a very bonny day.

The Wee Archive: Early Christmas

Yes, this was a Wee Mailing List post intended for Christmas time, no I’ve not gone insane by posting it now. I think the Christmas mood shouldn’t be confined to just the month of December. We should carry it all the year. Remember to sign up to the Wee Mailing List if you haven’t already, for more content like this nonsense below.

Wee Lassie’s Top Five Netflix Christmas Flicks

5. The Princess Switch 3: Romancing The Star

This film is far better written, acted, and just all around done than it has any right to be. The third in the Princess Switch trilogy, ‘Romancing the Star’ tells the story of love, loss, and the mysterious disappearance of a precious jewel. Truthfully I’m making it sound a lot deeper than it really is – but it’s a lot of fun.

4. The Holiday Calendar

A beautiful film, that shows us the power of not only believing in the magic in our lives, but understanding it as well. Basically, you might belive that your magical advent calendar is real, but that doesn’t mean you’ll always understand what it’s trying to tell you.

3. Single All the Way

A fun, LGBTQ Christmas Romance – that proves when it comes to falling  in love, gay people can be just as frustrating as straight people. Come on you two idiots, kiss already!!

2. A Castle For Christmas

A writer, A Castle, Scottish nobility – and two grumpy people reluctantly falling in love. What more could you want this holiday season?

1. Klaus

My Good Scottish God – there are no words to properly describe this film, other than you will cry. My, oh my, how you will cry.If you’ve enjoyed this short and sweet Christmas list of mine, why not check out the original post, here. And follow the Wee Blog if you haven’t already. Also check me out on TwitterInstagramFacebook,GoodreadsPinterestTumblr and Kofi. Until next time Wee Subscribers, keep warm and have a very bonny Holiday.

The Wee Archive: Night of a thousand Video essays

The Wee Lassie’s Top 12 Video Essays

Remember to sign up the Wee Mailing List to see more content like this post, first.

12. COBRA KAI Shows What’s Wrong with STAR WARS Disney Trilogy | SCENE FIGHTS!

Created by the YouTube channel ScreenCrush

Ever wonder what went wrong with the Star Wars Sequel Trilogy? What a similar story might look like if done right? Then take a look at this in-depth analyst of the danger of a nostalgic writer vs. the power of a nostalgic character.  

11. The Power of Abandoned Places

Created by the YouTube Channel Hello Future Me

A beautiful short piece, about the beauty of the silent, empty places of the world – both in fiction and out of it.

10. One X-Cellent Scene – Rage and Serenity

Created by the Youtube Channel Overly Sarcastic Productions

A very moving look into the mind of Magneto, before he became the villain we all know and sometimes love.

9. How To Alienate Your Audience

Created by the Youtube Channel The Closer Look

A deeper examination of political topics, particularly divisive topics, in media – and how mishandling of such things, and just general bad writing can transform subjects from deep and meaningful – as they no doubt were in the creator’s mind – to propaganda. What I liked particularly about this video was that it wasn’t trying to make a particular political  argument  itself, but just stating the outcome of genuine lazy writing on any kind of political topic.

8. Why the Music in Les Misérables (2012) is Worse than you Thought

Created by the Youtube Channel Sideways

I genuinely love the videos of this channel, and the fascinating insight into the production , and eventual outcome, of making beautiful musical they offer – so it was difficult to choose just one video of this channel to put on this list. Eventual I chose the Les Mis video, not only because it was the first one I ever watched, but because it offers some horrific insight into why this bad film was even worse than we originally thought.

7. The Three Faces of Darth Vader

Created by the Youtube Channel Full Fat Videos

A deep delve into the symbolism of the three secondary antagonists in the star wars prequel trilogy – and how each reflects a side of the man, of the villain, that our hero will eventual become.

6. The Case for Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre Dame

Created by Youtube Creator Lindsay Ellis

Do you enjoy the ending to Disney’s The Hunchback of Notre-dame? Are you tired of people whining that the best character in the film didn’t die? And acting like this is somehow a bad thing? Well, this is the video for you then.

5. The Complicity of Geek Masculinity on the Big Bang Theory

Created by Youtube Channel Pop Culture Detective

Feel uncomfortable with both the blatant and subtle sexism shown in both the Big Bang Theory as a show and Geek culture in general, well this…is the follow up to that video.

4. Eat the Rich! Stories About the Wealthy, Explained

Created by Youtube Channel The Take

Rather like Sideways, The Take has just so many interesting, and thought provoking video essays that it was very difficult to pick just the one for this list. Ultimately I settled on the essay entitled ‘Eat the Rich’ – not only because of its fascinating argument and insights but because, unlike every other video on this list – it actually ties back into my original post, which you can read here.

3. Isaac Asimov, Game of Thrones: How to Write Sociological Stories

Created by Youtube Channel Just Write

Every want to know the difference between Psychological and Sociological storytelling? Ever want to know how Asimov was a master at the latter? Well this is the video for you.

2. Art vs. The Artist – A Doctor Who Video Essay

Created by Youtube Channel Ladyknightthebrave

In this time of more and more creators, actors, and basically everyone who’s ever been involved in the entertainment industustrie turning out to be terrible, garbage in human form – it’s about time we talk about the death of the author theory. Don’t know what that is, you will after you watch this video.

1. The Best Moment In ‘Spirited Away’ Is A Scene Where Nothing Happens | 10 Minutes Of Perfection

Created by Youtube creator Insider

And finally my favorite video essay, is from a creator I know next to nothing about, and whose’ other videos I haven’t seen. But it’s just such a good video, I highly recommend that if you watch just one video on this list – you watch this one. I’m not even going to tell you what it’s about, just take my word for it – this is fantastic.

If you’ve enjoyed this wee list of mine don’t forget to check out the original post, back on the Wee writing Lassie blog. Also look for me on TwitterInstagramPinterest,  TumblrFacebookGoodReads, and Kofi. Until next time Wee Subscribers, stay safe, stay alert, and have a very bonny day.

The Wee Archive: A look back on 2020 Tv binging

Remember to sign up the Wee Mailing List to first more posts like this.

The Top 7 Shows the Wee Writing Lassie binge-watched during the apocalypse

7. Jupiter’s Legacy

This isn’t a bad show by any stretch of the word; it has an interesting premise, good acting, dynamic if not actually likable characters and a mystery that seem genuinely strange and difficult to figure out. I watched most of it in a couple of days just because I wanted to know how it was gonna end – that’s an intriguing mystery. Really the only reason it’s last on the list is just a personal gripe for me – namely the character they reveal is the one behind it all, the main jerk of the season, is the only character I really liked and connected to. So yeah, it’s as simple as that – but still it upset me enough that I probably will not continue watching even if this thing gets a season 2. Though I would recommend, if nothing for that build up – and the pay-off itself is really not bad at all, there were plenty of clues to it hidden throughout the rest of the show, it just wasn’t something I personally enjoyed all that much.

6. Angel

I first watched Angel, my god it has to be over ten years ago because I was very much a kid back then – and I never really watched it all the way through since. Not only because the only way we had to watch Angel for a long time was our collection of slightly confusingly organized DVDs (that may or may not have been pirated till this day I’m still somewhat confused by that); but because, and I say this with all affection, it’s a very dark show. Honestly if you’re planning on binging this show, I recommending watching something funny in conjunction with it, for your own mental health if nothing else.

Thus, it was a very different experiencing watching this compared to say something like Buffy, which I know so well I literally find myself quoting it accidently. So just off the bat, I may be a very biased source but Angel is not as good as Buffy. But saying that it’s by no means a bad show, in fact for the first two seasons, I was blown away but just how good a show it was. It was really fascinating to see just how much fun and inventive ideas you could play around with in the Buffyverse without having to always tie it to an allegory. You want to have Angel meet a thief with electric powers, sure why not; cut up a giant off screen monster – cool, sounds fun. Not that it doesn’t have Allegory in a lot of its monsters, it does, but it’s not a show built around them – unlike Buffy which had so many allegories that it became somewhat confusing exactly what they were allegories for. I mean is magic an allegory for Willow’s exploration of her newfound sexuality, or one for drug addiction? Both are fine, but you do have to pick one and stick to it. Otherwise…yikes.

But getting back on topic, yes Angel is a good show; but one that I would say has some persistent flaws that hold it back from being quite the equal of its parent show. In particular it seems to have a lot of characters or ideas that were really interesting, but either never goes anywhere with them, or criminally underuses them. For instance, take Gunn’s gang – a group of street kids that had starting fighting vampires to protect their neighborhood. Wow what an interesting idea, that completely uses the setting of L.A. and explores the realities of a world like the Buffyverse even better than the original show. There’s no superhero slayer that would protect these kids, so they took up the stake themselves. What we gonna do with them? Well, outside of their first appearance they show up as minor supporting characters in a couple of episodes, they need help from some Zombie cops in another, and finally they’re used as a cautionary tale for the prejudice that humans can develop towards demons. So background characters, save for one or two episodes where they need the mainly white (except for Gunn, but then even he’s portrayed as wrong in most of his interactions with the other main cast so make of that what you will) main cast. Yep, that feels like an idea that was fully utilized – nothing left to say here.
Okay so this part is running a little longer than I planned so I’ll just end on a brief run down of the seasons of Angel to give you a kind of idea of what you’ll get with each season.

  • Season 1 – An excellent season of television
  • Season 2 – Also excellent, but we’re beginning to see the start of the series storyline that preserves for the next two seasons to come. So, if that’s not your thing, just a head’s up this is where it starts.
  • Season 3 – Still very good, but we’re beginning to see those flaws I talked about manifest in more series ways, that objectively affect the quality of the writing.
  • Season 4 – I won’t say this is the worst season, since season 3 had some objectively stupider writing fumbles, but it is by far the meanest of the seasons of Angel.
  • Season 5 – By far my favorite, and the most fun of the seasons. It gets a lot of flak, but honestly, I think it’s just a fun ride all throughout.

5. BoJack Horseman

BoJack Horseman is a liar. It lures you in with its bright colors, talking animals, and the fact that it’s listed as a comedy in Netflix and then it hits you full in the face with the fact that it’s not really a comedy at all, it is a tragedy with funny bits. In all honesty if you are in anyway feeling depressed or just vaguely down at all do not watch this show. Or at the very least do not watch this show by itself, I’ll give you the same advice I gave for Angel, pair it with an objectively funny show for the purposes of binging.

Having said that this also just a really good, very engaging show. Like when I was watching it, I was aware that there were other things I needed to do in the day, but like I really just needed to know what happens next. Just a really good show, with such deep and complex characters, that didn’t feel the need to give satisfying answers to all its question or at least that’s how I felt. Everything everybody else has said about it, is completely true – it is just a fantastically made piece of television. Also, fun fact, for those of you not in the know, one of the characters is played by Aaron Paul, who improves everything he’s in, even if it starts out good already it will just be made even better by the inclusion of Aaron Paul – so that’s fun.

4. Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

Crazy Ex-Girlfriend is a show about successful lawyer, Rebecca Bunch (pictured above sitting on a piano in a pink dress) – who after meeting her ex-boyfriend in the street once, decides to completely up-end her life and move to his hometown of West Covina, California to win him back. It is a show about bad decisions, poor mental health and coping strategies; and what can happen when those two forces come together and conspire. Oh, and it’s also a musical. It is a fantastic show whose story and characters only grew better and more complex the longer they were on screen.

If I did have one criticism, it would be the slightly unbelievable devotion all of Rebecca’s former love interests still hold for her. Especially considering, well everything she’s done to each of them by the time of the final. I wouldn’t mind too much if it were a traditional Rom-com esc, show – as those don’t always take the time to examine the morality of their protagonists’ actions. However, ‘Crazy Ex-girlfriend’ wasn’t that, and characters bad behavior would usually be examined through (most of the time through song and dance number). So, it comes off feeling slightly false to still have all these men falling over themselves to be with Rebecca Bunch, despite all the turmoil being in a relationship with her in the past has put her through. Really it makes me like her less.

Still, other than that I’d highly recommend it.

3. How I met your mother

Yep, if you’ve read the original post in the Wee blog, you knew it was only a matter of time until this show, well…showed up on this list. I go into the specifics of this show, as well as my own outlandish theories on the original post so I’ll keep this as brief as I can get. All I say is this is that whatever else you might say or complain about it, that this is a very funny show. Seriously I have only laughed harder at one other show in this list – but more about that later. And while it does have its genuine heart-breaking moments, that I promise you will make you cry – unlike a show like BoJack Horseman this is a show that knows exactly what it is, and tells you that upfront – a comedy. Binge it by itself, or pair it with a much more miserable show, either way your bound to have a blast.

2. Buffy the Vampire Slayer

Buffy the Vampire is fantastic. Yeah, it may be twenty-five years later, but the show about the tiny blond who kicked vampire booty still for the most part holds up. Whether it’s the inventive dialog, the dramatic storylines, the acting, the writing, the feminist messages, the humour, or heck even just some of the goofiness of the effects this is a program well worth the binge. Although for honesty’s sake I will say that there are a couple of problems with it. The first being just how monolithically white the cast is – I mean there is no reason that a town in California should be this white. And it’s not just a weird nineties thing, where yeah the main cast is all white but maybe there are people of colour off screen or in the background. No, it’s stated in story that Sunnydale is a predominantly white town – using the old writer’s trick of ‘if we acknowledge the problem, we don’t actually have to fix it’. Really the only way this is made slightly less cringe is if this is all because of the Hellmouth. Like either white people are so dumb they don’t notice the evil among them, or they just are the evil. Honestly at this point either is as likely as the other – and I say that as a white person myself. But joking aside, the sensible part of me knows this is just pandering to Joss Whedon’s by now very publicized racism.

And the second issue is honestly less of problem, but it still can make some of the story elements a little confusing. Namely what I mentioned in the Angel section, the shows over reliance on allegories. Now its original premise was ‘High school is Hell; so, allegory was always going to be a big part of what Btvs was – that’s not the problem. The problem is when the allegory is given more importance than the actual facts of the story. For instance, in season six where after (spoilers) coming back from the dead, Buffy finds that her finances are in disarray. [Mainly because she has terrible friends, who despite two of them living in her house and one of them having a well-paid job, spent all her money.] But before her and Giles can start sorting everything out, she gets a call from Angel and runs off to go and see him.

Of course, she’s back the very next episode where she’s confronted by a concerned Scooby Gang. And for a moment it looks like they’re going to talk to her about running off like that the previous episode; but our brave slayer cuts them off, with the revelation that she’s developed a plan on how to manage those bills. It’s not necessarily a long-term plan, but it’s clearly been well thought out, and with the help of her friends she can iron out the rough patches. So, everything should be better, right? Nope, because apparently, they weren’t here to help her with the bills, they were here to shame her because she doesn’t have a plan for her life. At 21, after just coming back from the dead. The Allegory in season 6 is depression, and you can see that the Scoobies are meant to represent the well-meaning friends and family who put pressure on the depressed person to get their life together, without understanding how much harder doing even simple things is for them. But the difference here is, the Scoobies know she just came back from the dead. And even if that weren’t the case, Buffy has a life plan – she’s the Slayer.
I’m running long again so I’ll just run down the seven seasons and give you my brief thoughts.

  • Season 1 – The weakest of all the seasons, they were still finding themselves.
  • Season 2 – A good dramatic season of television, with extra props for introducing Spike and Drusilla. Although the Angelus plotline hasn’t aged all that well.
  • Season 3 – Some of the best stand-alone episodes of the series, with an ambitious if slightly confusing main storyline.
  • Season 4 – Terribly underrated. Although I do take points off for introducing the world to Riley Finn. Shame! Shame! Shame!
  • Season 5 – The best plotted of the seasons; and a really fun bad guy.
  • Season 6 – Talk about under-rated – it delved into very deep subject matter (not all of which it was prepared to handle). But overall, what makes season six one of my favorite seasons is the musical episode.
  • Season 7 – Just the perfect end, with the balls to say that the exceptional woman trope that the line ‘in every generation a slayer is born, one girl in all the world to fight the demons’ is kind of sexist and maybe we shouldn’t do that anymore. Talk about going out on a high note.

1. Jeeves & Wooster

Jeeves & Wooster is the only show I’ve laughed harder at that How I Met your Mother. Set in the twenties, Jeeves &Wooster tells the story of rich bachelor Bertie Wooster (played by Hugh Laurie, pictured above standing) and his genius valet Jeeves (Played by Stephan Fry, pictured above sitting); and the hilarious and strangely peculiar hijinks they get themselves into. Or Bertie gets himself into and Jeeves gets him out. It’s a surprisingly uplifting show, especially for this time of deep existential thoughts while we slowly settle back into a world that expects us to actually talk to people. Sometimes we just want to laugh at the stupid antics of rich young gentlemen, who haven’t yet experienced the great depression. Now for honesty’s sake I should say that once again this is a show that was set in the twenties and it was released in the nineties – so not everything in it has aged terribly well. I might recommend skipping the episode ‘Kidnapped’ entirely as the Drones club (the idiots Bertie has to save from their own stupidity half the time) dress up in blackface. It’s a practice derided by the episode, and every character who wears it ends up in prison by the end for one reason or another, but they do it on screen so it can be pretty uncomfortable to watch. But all the other episodes have aged incredibly well, and since they’re based on the Jeeves short stories of P.G. Wodehouse, most of the episodes are their own self-contained stories. So, missing one won’t spoil your enjoyment of the rest.

So, sit back and enjoy the smart writing, clever dialogue, and the slow creeping feeling of shock as you come to the realisation: ‘Oh my God, is Stephen Fry hot?’. Yes, dear subscribers, yes, he is.

If you’ve enjoyed this wee list of mine don’t forget to check out the original post here, and follow the Wee Blog if you haven’t already. Also check me out  on TwitterInstagramPinterestGoodreads and Tumblr for all that good stuff. And if you would like to support the wee blog, why not buy me a wee coffee on Ko-fi. Until next time Wee Subscribers, stay safe, stay awake and have a very bonny day.

The Seven Knights of Arthurian Media: Knight the Sixth

What Ho Wee Readers, and let us all welcome the second to the last post in this blog series. Remember if you want to see the very last knight of the Arthurian round table of Media – remember to sign up to the Wee Mailing List before the 31st of May.

Quest for Camelot

Thinking honestly this was really my true introduction to the idea of King Arthur. Because it was the first film I ever saw in the cinema, or at least according to my parents. However, staring as it does a young farm girl, a blind hermit, and a two headed dragon as they try to recover a stolen Excalibur from the clutches of a deranged Gary Oldman – it’s not your traditional King Arthur story. Still I’d recommend it if for nothing else but for the sheer joy of seeing a two headed fire breather argue themselves into stagnation.

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The Seven Knights of Arthurian Media: The Fifth Knight

Let,s pull those swords out of those stones for the fifth knight of Arthurian Media

Sword in the Stone (Disney)

What I love about his film, although it’s quite a famous piece of Arthurian Media is it actually has very little do with a lot of the extra stuff we consider important in the great king’s mythology. There are no knights of the round table, no Lancelot, no Morgan Le Fey and her shenanigans. There is a Sword in the Stone, but despite it being the title of the film it really doesn’t play a part in the majority of the plot – which is primary focused on Merlin changing the young Arthur into various different animals to teach him lessons.

Which I think just goes to show that sometimes to have a good Arthurian story all you need is just…Arthur himself.

If you’ve enjoyed the fifth installment of “The Seven Knights of Arthurian Media” why not follow the Wee Blog if you haven’t already. Also check me out on Twitter, Instagram, Mastodon, Pinterest, Tumblr, TikTok, Facebook, Goodreads and Kofi. And sign up to the Wee Mailing List to find out what the Seventh Knight of Arthurian Media is. Until next time Wee Reader, keep safe and have a very bonny day.

The Seven Knights of Arthurian Media: The Fourth Knight

What Ho Wee Readers, let’s raise our goblets and welcome our fourth knight to the round table.

King Arthur (2004)

Hey do you love the fantastical world of King Arthur and his knights of the round table? Well what if that was a lie, and the truth was both much more boring, and much more depressing. What if Arthur wasn’t a king at all but a Roman General, and his faithful knights were basically indentured against their will to serve him? And as for Merlin…okay he’s still pretty cool, but I think my point still stands. You wouldn’t think this was anything you’d pay good money to watch but to the film’s credit it still manages to produce a fun and entertaining story, with a cast filled with faces you might find ever so slightly familiar.

I would recommend it if nothing else than for the fun of seeing Hannibal, Uncle Owen, and Mister Fantastic as knights of the round table.

If you’ve enjoyed the fourth instalment of “The Seven Knights of Arthurian Media” why not follow the Wee Blog if you haven’t already. Also check me out on TwitterInstagramMastodonPinterestTumblrTikTokFacebookGoodreads and Kofi. And sign up to the Wee Mailing List to find out what the Seventh Knight of Arthurian Media is. Until next time Wee Reader, keep safe and have a very bonny day.