Monday, February 29, 2016

Photos of the Day #2: Meeting Heroines from the Marvel and DC Comic Universes...

At The Reef in downtown Los Angeles to attend the L.A. Comic Book and Science Fiction Convention...on February 28, 2016.

Yesterday, I went to a comic book and sci-fi convention at The Reef in downtown Los Angeles to meet actresses Ming-Na Wen and Katrina Law. Ming-Na, in case you're wondering, appeared in the 1993 film The Joy Luck Club and voiced Mulan in the 1998 Disney flick, Mulan. She now kicks major ass as Agent Melinda May on ABC's Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. Katrina, on the opposing side, plays Nyssa al Ghul in DC Comic's Arrow on the CW Network (she was also in other shows like Spartacus and CSI: Miami). It's very interesting that two actresses from TV shows produced by rival comic book studios made an appearance at the same time yesterday (from 11am to 1pm). Either that, or I'm just easily amused.

Posing with AGENTS OF S.H.I.E.L.D.'s Ming-Na Wen at the L.A. Comic Book and Science Fiction Convention...on February 28, 2016.

Having now met Ming-Na with Chloe Bennet before her, the only other actresses from Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. whose photo ops I need to go to is Elizabeth Henstridge and Adrianne Palicki. With Palicki, however, I hope that she's sitting down when I meet her 'cause she's freakin' tall up-close! I saw her in person recently... Can't say where though; I just did. In terms of DC Comics, I met Danielle Panabaker from The Flash and Summer Glau from Arrow (this is the second time I met her) at Stan Lee's Comikaze expo last year. The one actress I wanna meet next from another DC Comics TV show is Supergirl's Melissa Benoist! That is all.

Posing with ARROW's Katrina Law at the L.A. Comic Book and Science Fiction Convention...on February 28, 2016.

Posing with ARROW's Katrina Law at the L.A. Comic Book and Science Fiction Convention...on February 28, 2016.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Photo of the Day: A Sunny Afternoon in Los Angeles...

A photo that I took of downtown Los Angeles on February 20, 2016.

Just thought I'd share the photo above that I took of downtown Los Angeles while heading home from work last Saturday. If you look closely, you can see the new Wilshire Grand Center (left of center frame above and below...with the construction cranes above it) as the skyscraper slowly reaches its full 1,099-foot height amidst the L.A. skyline. In a little over a year, the Wilshire Grand Center will open to the public and officially become the tallest structure in the City of Angels as well as west of the Mississippi River. Pretty cool. Below is a cropped version of the pic.

A cropped version of the photo that I took of downtown Los Angeles on February 20, 2016.

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Aaand It's Over...

Five days after she told me that she was having a baby and I gave her a not-so-enthusiastic response about it, I found out last night that Nancy unfriended me on Facebook. While I was stunned at this discovery, I wasn't completely surprised by it. In fact, I saw it coming from a mile away. Nancy most likely realized (as I did) that we could never go hiking together again...unless she wanted to enjoy six degrees of awkwardness between us. No, Nancy actually did me a favor by putting an end to our friendship. There's nothing to gain by continuing to hang out with a woman who got married last year, and will have an infant by the time Rogue One: A Star Wars Story hits theaters this December. I really shouldn't be associating my excitement for that movie with this shitty-ass turn of events...

Now the question is: How soon will I delete my Facebook album containing photos that I took at Nancy's wedding? These photos are also on my MySpace page (yes, I still visit that Ford Pinto-equivalent of a social media site) and personal website. How soon will I also delete my Facebook album containing photos that I took at all of our hiking trips? There are 380 pics in all... It's gonna be easy to erase these images on Facebook but it'll be a bitch deleting 'em on Flickr as well (I have to go through each pic one-by-one). That's what happens when you grow close to someone who you should've left alone at the very beginning—when you know that the chances of entering an intimate relationship with her is zilch. Did I also mention that it's gonna be super-awkward if I ever run into her at work again (which, I'm sad to say, is inevitable)? Carry on.

Friday, February 19, 2016

OSIRIS-REx Update: Send Your Drawings and Other Cool Stuff to Bennu!

An artist's concept of NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft preparing to take a sample from asteroid Bennu.
NASA / Goddard / Chris Meaney

NASA Invites Public to Send Artwork to an Asteroid (Press Release)

NASA is calling all space enthusiasts to send their artistic endeavors on a journey aboard NASA’s Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security-Regolith Explorer (OSIRIS-REx) spacecraft. This will be the first U.S. mission to collect a sample of an asteroid and return it to Earth for study.

OSIRIS-REx is scheduled to launch in September and travel to the asteroid Bennu. The #WeTheExplorers campaign invites the public to take part in this mission by expressing, through art, how the mission’s spirit of exploration is reflected in their own lives. Submitted works of art will be saved on a chip on the spacecraft. The spacecraft already carries a chip with more than 442,000 names submitted through the 2014 “Messages to Bennu” campaign.

“The development of the spacecraft and instruments has been a hugely creative process, where ultimately the canvas is the machined metal and composites preparing for launch in September,” said Jason Dworkin, OSIRIS-REx project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “It is fitting that this endeavor can inspire the public to express their creativity to be carried by OSIRIS-REx into space.”

A submission may take the form of a sketch, photograph, graphic, poem, song, short video or other creative or artistic expression that reflects what it means to be an explorer. Submissions will be accepted via Twitter and Instagram until March 20. For details on how to include your submission on the mission to Bennu, go to:

http://www.asteroidmission.org/WeTheExplorers

“Space exploration is an inherently creative activity,” said Dante Lauretta, principal investigator for OSIRIS-REx at the University of Arizona, Tucson. “We are inviting the world to join us on this great adventure by placing their art work on the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft, where it will stay in space for millennia.”

The spacecraft will voyage to the near-Earth asteroid Bennu to collect a sample of at least 60 grams (2.1 ounces) and return it to Earth for study. Scientists expect Bennu may hold clues to the origin of the solar system and the source of the water and organic molecules that may have made their way to Earth.

Goddard provides overall mission management, systems engineering and safety and mission assurance for OSIRIS-REx. The University of Arizona, Tucson leads the science team and observation planning and processing. Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver is building the spacecraft. OSIRIS-REx is the third mission in NASA's New Frontiers Program. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages New Frontiers for the agency's Science Mission Directorate in Washington.

Source: NASA.Gov

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Submitted this artwork (which I drew in the summer of 1997, before I started my senior year in high school) for OSIRIS-REx's #WeTheExplorers campaign.

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Pardon My Language, But...

2/17/16: Hiking in the city of Fullerton before Nancy shared some heartbreaking news (joyous news to her) with me.

...FUUUUUUUCK! So earlier today, I went hiking with Nancy in the city of Fullerton in Orange County. Things were going great until she got a phone call right after we left Craig Regional Park (one of our hiking spots) to walk over to a nearby bank where Nancy deposited a check. After that call, Nancy hung up her phone, turned to look at me, and nonchalantly said, "Oh by the way, I'm having a baby." (That call was obviously from the doctor with whom she paid a visit yesterday. Found this out right after she dropped the bombshell.) What was my response to that, you ask? Well— Over the past 2-3 years or so, I must've totally did a bang-up job hiding my true feelings about Nancy, or getting myself friend-zoned, considering the fact that she was surprised at my reaction to her news. She thought it was just mere shock, but it was more than that. It was shock, anger and devastation (even though I lied to her and said that "this was great news" a few seconds later). I should've known this day was coming since she first told me she was engaged in late 2012, got married last summer, and now will become a mother—to another man's child.

I know, I know... I'm a complete dumbass for continuing to talk to Nancy despite the fact she told me right off the bat when we first met that she was off-limits. For the last year or so, I was trying to distance myself from Nancy by coming up with excuses to not hike with her whenever she texted me, and for sounding non-enthusiastic whenever she texted me about other things. But it was us working together in Pasadena last week that brought back my strong feelings for her...and why I was gonna say 'yes' to Nancy whenever she texted me to hang out from that point on. (We also got together last Monday; getting Filipino grub at some bakeshop in Artesia, near Long Beach.)

The big question is: What do I do now? Do I cut things off with Nancy (again, I know: I should've cut her off when we first met)? Unfriend her on Facebook? Remove the photos of us hiking from Facebook and my personal website (if you look real hard, you'll find 'em)? Delete her phone number from my phone? All of these would be the prudent thing to do if not for the fact I might see her at work again. If ever I needed a good reason to go lookin' for another job, this would be it.

So yea... Today was a horrendous day. You know that God or karma is playing a huge joke on me when the one girl I've met who made me think about settling down and get married is already settled down and now married to someone else. Yea, fuck you karma. If only you guys saw just how loudly I yelled "Fuuuuuck" (twice) inside my car as I drove away from Nancy and the park [we returned to our vehicles (on my own volition) right away, after Nancy shared what was supposed to be joyous news] to head home five hours ago. But I didn't head home right away... I drove to random locations and walked around their parking lots for several minutes pondering about the girl I truly cared about who officially and fully got away from me.

This is much, much more devastating than when Denise—a Vietnamese girl I knew back in college—told me that she had a boyfriend in an e-mail back in January of 2001.

FUUUUUUUCK!

2/17/16: Hiking in the city of Fullerton before Nancy shared some heartbreaking news (joyous news to her) with me.

Monday, February 15, 2016

Come Back, OTHER SPACE!


Last Saturday, Ghostbusters director Paul Feig posted the tweet above announcing that he just regained the rights to his sci-fi web comedy Other Space...which premiered on Yahoo! last April before being canceled by the Web conglomerate late last year. All I can say is, I'm stoked that we'll be getting more episodes focusing on the exploits of Stewart Lipinski (played by Deadpool's Karan Soni), Tina Shukshin (portrayed by the ever-awesome Milana Vayntrub) and the rest of their gang aboard the UMP Cruiser. Will Other Space make its triumphant return via Netflix? Hulu? The Syfy channel? Hopefully we'll find out soon!

My OTHER SPACE artwork as seen with my trusty Android smartphone.

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Photo of the Day: The 2016 NBA Slam Dunk Contest...

The Orlando Magic's Aaron Gordon leaps over team mascot Stuff the Magic Dragon during the 2016 NBA Slam Dunk Contest...on February 13, 2016.
Photo courtesy of NBA on TNT - Facebook.com

Despite the fact that it was the Minnesota Timberwolves' Zach LaVine who took home the trophy (for the second year in a row) as tonight's NBA slam dunk champion, the Orlando Magic's Aaron Gordon proved that he was totally worthy of the award when he did a lot of jaw-dropping dunks as well—including the one above (and in the video below) showing him effortlessly leaping over Stuff the Magic Dragon, Orlando's team mascot.

In related news, tomorrow will be Kobe Bryant's final appearance in the NBA All-Star Game before he retires in less than three months. It would be terrific if he took home the All-Star MVP trophy on Sunday evening... Even non-Lakers fans should agree about this.

Thursday, February 11, 2016

Is There Anything About the Universe That Albert Einstein DIDN'T Know?

An illustration depicting gravitational waves being emitted by two binary neutron stars.
R. Hurt / Caltech - JPL

NSF’s LIGO Has Detected Gravitational Waves (Press Release)

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has announced the detection of gravitational waves by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), a pair of ground-based observatories in Hanford, Washington, and Livingston, Louisiana.

Albert Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves in his general theory of relativity a century ago, and scientists have been attempting to detect them for 50 years. Einstein pictured these waves as ripples in the fabric of space-time produced by massive, accelerating bodies, such as black holes orbiting each other. Scientists are interested in observing and characterizing these waves to learn more about the sources producing them and about gravity itself.

The LIGO detections represent a much-awaited first step toward opening a whole new branch of astrophysics. Nearly everything we know about the universe comes from detecting and analyzing light in all its forms across the electromagnetic spectrum – radio, infrared, visible, ultraviolet, X-rays and gamma rays. The study of gravitational waves opens a new window on the universe, one that scientists expect will provide key information that will complement what we can learn through electromagnetic radiation.

Just as in other areas of astronomy, astronomers need both ground-based and space-based observatories to take full advantage of this new window. LIGO is sensitive to gravitational waves within the range of 10 to 1,000 cycles per second (10 to 1,000 Hz). A space-based system would be able to detect waves at much lower frequencies, from 0.0001 to 0.1 Hz, and detect different types of sources. NASA is working closely with the European Space Agency (ESA) to develop a concept for a space-based gravitational wave observatory.

ESA is currently leading the LISA Pathfinder mission, launched last December and now in its commissioning phase, to demonstrate technologies that could be used for a future space-based gravitational wave observatory. NASA contributed its ST-7 Disturbance Reduction System to the payload as part of that demonstration.

NASA missions are searching the sky for fleeting X-ray and gamma-ray signals from LIGO events. Detecting the light emitted by a gravitational wave source would enable a much deeper understanding of the event than through either technique alone.

Source: NASA.Gov

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Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Quotes of the Day...

“There is never a time or place for true love. It happens accidentally, in a heartbeat, in a single flashing, throbbing moment.”

-― Sarah Dessen, The Truth About Forever


“Sometimes I can’t see myself when I’m with you. I can only just see you.”

-― Jodi Lynn Anderson, Tiger Lily


“And in her smile I see something more beautiful than the stars.”

-― Beth Revis, Across the Universe


“I love you the way a drowning man loves air. And it would destroy me to have you just a little.”

-― Rae Carson, The Crown of Embers


“I knew the second I met you that there was something about you I needed. Turns out it wasn’t something about you at all. It was just you.”

-― Jamie McGuire, Beautiful Disaster


“I wanted to tell you that wherever I am, whatever happens, I’ll always think of you, and the time we spent together, as my happiest time. I’d do it all over again, if I had the choice. No regrets.”

-― Cynthia Hand, Boundless

Tuesday, February 09, 2016

Chillin' in Pasadena...

The Paseo Colorado in Pasadena, CA.

So earlier today, I worked with Nancy in downtown Pasadena. The last time I worked with her was two years ago this month...in Hollywood. Anyways, as we walked around old town Pasadena and Paseo Colorado (yes, the two are different) after our gig ended, I just remembered how crazy I am about her. Aw, heck— How in love I am with her. I mean, really in love with her. Unfortunately, we can't hook up...for reasons explained in the blog entry that I linked to in the opening sentence of this post. That is all.

No wait— One last thing: I really, really hope that something horrible happens to the two other Asian dudes who (also) flirted with her at work today. Really horrible things...like a pair of fatalities or something. 'Kay, I'm done.