Introduction To Psycho Drive-In!

Just wanted to give you an update on Crossroads Alpha – we’ve added a new site, Psycho Drive-In!

Psycho Drive-In is a site that focuses on video reviews with its own unique edge – television, movies, and more.  It’s actually the video section of Comics Bulletin moving to it’s own site and striking out to build it’s own direction.  You’ll also notice it’s a bit of a descendent of Indie Haven, from where the theme and look come.

It’s also a site you can write for – I’ve already gotten one new recruit for it – and there’s plenty of things to write on.  There’s also a lot to read if you want a nice juicy review or recommendation!

So go on by!

– Steven Savage

Update 2/23/2014

Well wish I had more to report, but last week, despite the vacation, became a real time sucker.  So what’s been up?

  • The Next Book formatting is almost done or is close.  It looks really good, but I want to be careful as it’s nearly 300 pages – and I want to look over the ebooks as well.  Still aiming end of March.
  • Crossroads Alpha‘s recruiting drive went well.  If you want to write for any of the sites, let me know!  Be sure to visit, we just added Psycho Drive In!
  • I really have not done much with Seventh Sanctum because of my schedule, but am still kicking around some new generator ideas – I really want to get to something with plot twists or writing prompts, but we’ll see.  Also thanks to “Guardians of the Galaxy” I am thinking of silly generators for Bad Ass Animals like Rocket Raccoon (“Howitzer Hyena! Bomb Budgie!”) or SF hero titles like Star Lord (“Planet Protector!  Galaxy Queen!”) – though that might be useful.

On top of this I’m also working to finish a certification.  So yeah, it’s a bit nuts, but I think I’m seeing light at the end of the tunnel.

 

Geek As Citizen: My Own Private IdaHell

Flames

Last week I discussed how trying to get to Heaven made us bad citizens.

Specifically, I discussed how there’s a desire to escape everything and reach some permanent paradise (that is never permanent nor really that great a paradise) that separates us from others. Relying on the unexpected tag-team of C.S. Lewis and the Buddha, I looked at how that desire to get to that special inner perfect area drove us onward yet disconnected us from others – and that getting to it was never permanent anyway.

Of course my intention was to look at how that was relevant to geeks.

My concern was that there is a distinct part of geek culture that focuses on the Great Escape, from the Singularity to the perfect job where you never work, that could disconnect us from our fellow humans and society. To try and get away and keep grasping the elusive ring, we missed what was important, and even in our success we became alienated from others. As we’re in an Age of Geek, it’s an important issue to address so we don’t become less human and worse citizens.

But there’s a flipside to this “Heaven Seeking” behavior that I’m sure we’re all equally familiar with. Some people are happy to have their own private Hell, and in some cases it’s easier and the rents are cheaper. Though we may not think of it as the same, it still creates social, emotional, and just plain human distance.

And we know hell all too well.

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