Good Night

March 13th, 2009 | researchmaterial

"A man dressed as Batman villain the Joker has been shot dead by police in America after pointing a loaded shotgun at them."

12 Responses to “Good Night”

  1. Bloody hell.

  2. looks like Darwin’s Law in action.
    “You there, dressed as the joker, out of the gene pool!”

  3. Guess he was just Jokin’ around!

  4. From the very sketchy bit the story actually says about the guy dressed as they joker, he reminds me of … high-school friends.

  5. Further proof that comic books are corrupting the youth and the stupid of America.

    Hell of a way to go out for the night, Warren.

  6. Americas finest once again keeping Batman out of work

  7. [...] Via Warren Ellis. [...]

  8. Now that’s one hell of a method actor. Or maybe just an unimaginative copycat. At times I wish there were a Creator, as his, “Well, what the fuck did you do that for?” would be priceless. It’s easy as hell to die in a hail of gunfire; shooting at cops and LIVING is much harder to do. There is no real practice round or do-overs there.

  9. No. I kill the bus driver.

  10. [...] @warrenellis: Good night. http://www.warrenellis.com/?p=7094 ummm damn? [...]

  11. if only someone dressed as Batman had successfully intervened…

  12. He probably should’ve dressed up as someone who’s bulletproof.


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blissblog - 09 Feb 10

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blissblog - 09 Feb 10

Not Even A Secret One

Kieron Gillen - 09 Feb 10

Complete Plan B Archive

Kieron Gillen - 09 Feb 10

The whole run of Plan B magazine has been released as a single 670Mb PDF. That’s 46 issues of some of the finest music writing of the decade. And a lot of posturing pretentiousness too. It’s like two of my favourite things for the price of one. Or none, as it’s a free PDF.

If you’ve any interest in music in the 00s, or music full stop, this is a great thing to just have on file. You’ll discover a new band every time you browse it.

Hell, it’s even worth getting if you’re one of the games journalist sorts. For the first 10-20 issues or so, I was doing games stuff for it. And Quinns and Mathew Kumar too, who I bullied into contributing. Very much written for the non-gamer about games which get pretty much no coverage, we had fun trying to decode the concept of Outsider Games.

Whole thing here. Go gets!

Coilhouse is Hiring! Apply Here.

Coilhouse - 08 Feb 10

Back around the time of Issue 03, we launched the Small Business Advertising Program to create affordable ad space for indie companies in the print version of Coilhouse. By the time Issue 04 rolled around, the number of advertisers had grown significantly – by this time, we had record labels, jewelry and clothing designers, sculptors, other magazines, web hosts, toy makers and graphic designers advertising in our pages. Click here to see them all. With editorial duties taking up more and more of our time as the weeks go by, the moment has come for us to seek help with the advertising side of running the magazine. We’re looking to hire an Ad Manager for our Small Business Advertising Program, starting with Coilhouse Magazine #05… and possibly subsequent issues.

Full details after the jump!


Read the rest of Coilhouse is Hiring! Apply Here.


Post tags: Coilhouse

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blissblog - 08 Feb 10

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blissblog - 08 Feb 10

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blissblog - 08 Feb 10

State of South Carolina Secretary of State Subversive Agent Form

jwz - 08 Feb 10

Check the appropriate box. Do you or your organization directly or indirectly advocate, advise, teach or practice the duty or necessity of controlling, seizing or overthrowing the government of the United States, the state of South Carolina or any political division thereof?
[ ] YES [ ] NO

If yes, please outline the fundamental beliefs. If applicable, attach a copy of the bylaws or minutes of meetings from the last year.

"Inflection Points" Presentation

Open The Future - 08 Feb 10

For those folks who are interested, here's the Slideshare version of the presentation I gave last week at the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute annual meeting. I was asked to talk about foresight thinking, as the event theme was "The Big One of 2056: What Went Right?" a look at a fictional 7.8 quake in the SF region that was handled as well as they could imagine possible.

My goal was to offer a bit of reassurance to the audience that there is some real utility to thinking about the future, and to spell out (in a cursory way) the kinds of big picture issues they should keep in mind while looking ahead forty-six years.

By and large, it was a successful talk. The post-talk questions were engaged, with little push-back, and I'm told that the overall response from the audience was quite positive.

The talk was video recorded, and I'm told will eventually be available to the public. I'll link when that happens.