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Showing posts from July, 2024

Kenya Boy and its complicated relationship with Queerness

We have no idea that Kenya Boy has inspired 3 video games, two movies (live action and animation), a manga with 2 runs, a retelling for younger audiences and a live action tv show.  And now for something different! A revised backstory for Zega will unfortunately involve his wife dying of tuberculosis (after all, even though it's native to Africa, it still has shaped human history, but who cares) before Zega himself got raped by his superior (and almost dying because of it). Even sadder was that he surely was pelted on by most people in his village within every frigging whim possible. Zega also seems to be one of a few surviving seniors in a Kenyan Maasai village, since the typical life expectancy of a Maasai person is currently a somewhat measly 55-60 years old (an improvement with somehow more varied diets and slightly more vaccines in comparison to decades ago when it was a measlier 41-45 years old), partly due to both a relatively large lack of vaccines and partly due to high in

Cryptids in the Ultus series

The Ultus series is very creative for featuring a massive cast of cryptids, monsters and creatures alike, such as northern lions, Diehl’s gorillas and, oh my god, inaccurate prehistoric creatures. Then again, it should be noted that in its original time period, even a bunch of mythical West-Central African creatures, like the Dodu (Doduo) and the Bung Bung, were barely even noticed outside their now independent countries of origin, apart from gossipy tall tales made by fucked up explorers about them and all that.  Some of my favourite creatures who appear in my dreams are furry giant apemen (apish men) called Dodus (Doduos). They, though still dangerous, do have a rather unfair rap, which is mainly thanks to primate poachers (regardless of ethnicity) misappropriating them a lot. That said, they might’ve begun their cultural lives as simply wild jungle bogeymen that scare not only gorillas and chimps but also young children, before being labelled misleadingly as ‘cryptids’ decades later

The Akim tv series

There will be a plausible 2d/3d animated adaptation of Roberto Renzi and Augusto Pedrazza’s Akim. It’s going to be made by  Given that the comic book continuities of Akim are quite inconsistent thanks to being written and drawn by various cartoonists mainly in Western European countries, it’s for the best that such an adaptation will be a seasonal anthology. To make an impact on the world of online tv outside of Western Europe, it’ll also have more drama than even Jungle Emperor Leo can handle!  Season 1 has a North Carolingian character based on early illustrations of his otherwise British comic book counterpart. Unlike said comic book Jim Rank, his hair and eyes are both brownish, and he clearly is mixed race. A Coastal Deep South version of Rita Turner is going to be rather less ‘stay in the kitchen’ and more like a mishmash of Spider Gwen and Jane Parker. They have two adoptive kids instead of one. As a young schoolboy coming to Tigora (basically Western Uganda, but with a differen

The Dawson’s Creek

I can’t help but harp about the historical importance of Dawson’s Creek’s unintended magical realism, because my dad used to watch that hugely popular show. Both the classic show and Young Americans do not need a sequel either for both legal and budget reasons. However, indirect and mostly seemingly unrelated prequels are probably going to be better than a sequel to both as a result.  Strangely enough, the best candidate for a Dawson’s Creek prequel is an anglophone adaptation of a popular Mexican comic book classic named Rubi, about a depraved as hell villainess prowling her way through the urban jungle.