The Strange Cosmic Horror of Junji Ito’s Uzumaki

For the past 3 years, I’ve started to warm up on horror, particularly J-Horror. Since watching Junji Ito’s Maniac anime adaptation on Netflix, I’ve been reading his original manga works too, and I found Wendigoon’s explainer of arguably his most popular saga, “Uzumaki”, to be a great listen. Warning: Heavy Spoilers.

Daddy ! Daddy ! Do !

I first caught wind of Masayuki Suzuki’s songs as the opening to the Kaguya-sama: Love is War anime series. This one has a weird title at first, but damn if it isn’t catchy.

Peter Griffin Sings “The Rose”

I’d probably say this cover is better than the original. Seth MacFarlane is a man of many beautiful voices.

Australian Summers Be Like…

Gudetama perfectly captures the lazy hot weekends for me.

Bling-Bang-Bang-Born

I’ve never read the manga or seen the show, but the opening song and video really got into my head this past week.

Confutatis

Watched Amadeus over the weekend. Putting aside the historical inaccuracies, the drama does not get boring and the music is especially riveting. Confutatis was even more so as after many times rewatching the conversation you realize that between the two minds that are in sync and highly skilled, the compressed instructions from Mozart was plausibly enough to write an entire piece by ear.

Revisiting The 39 Clues

Anyone else read The 39 Clues? This definitely hits a lot of nostalgic spots.

The 39 Clues was a staple of my grade school days. I remember seeing the cover at a Scholastic Book Fair catalog in my school. From there the obsession continued. Not living in America, I actually had to rely on the bookstores getting the imports quickly. Generally, at best I see them on shelves a month after release, at worst (as is the case with The Black Circle) it took about 3 months. There was that time with The Emperor’s Code where the book went on the shelves about a week prior to release though, I remember manually typing out the continuation to Gordon Korman’s excerpt video and posting it to the Cahill forums – Google Lens wasn’t a thing back then.

The story was good but what really got me was the cards and the Flash missions and the virtual cards/clues collection. I got all 39 clues, became a Madrigal and continued reading and playing up until around the crazy American politician/billionaire arc, or was it the one replicating famous disasters? I don’t think I finished the arc, but I got too lazy to continue reading. I revisited the new games over at the Scholastic website, though it’s sad that my collected clues and cards did not carry over. I put a lot of effort on that. I’ll also still remember my own custom agent card. I know it’s one of the first 30 cards made and my “name” was SecretAssassin1.

Regardless, the series holds a special place in me. The subsequent arcs are definitely less memorable, but I still remember the original clue hunt arc. I’ve always wanted to see a graphical representation of the story – the Japanese comic looked promising, but sadly I can’t read much of it – hence why the graphic novel definitely caught my attention. Sara’s reaction to it definitely matched a lot of my sentiment, except maybe Saladin. I like that the comic version is way cuter, but I think the Egyptian lineage and spots is important, particularly for the cryptex clue in Beyond the Grave. I do look forward to see the entire arc adapted, and will definitely buy the One False Note comic if/when it comes out.

We Are Number One (Japanese Version)

Look out for the Touhou reference!

Been a while since I shared something that isn’t a photo I took, but this popped up on my feed and brought back a ton of memories when this song was super viral. If you were in the WANO craze a few years ago, you’ll appreciate the effort and quality that went into making this.

The Color Riddle

Remember all those years ago, when I made an internet riddle game? It’s definitely been a while, huh? I’ve been wanting to make another one, but life (and procrastination) got a little too much in the way. Finally, however, after years of toiling at it bit by bit, I’ve finally finished another one, just for you. 🙂

Play now at https://color.peso.fun, or read on to learn more!

Continue reading “The Color Riddle”

Eleanor Rigby (Orchestra Version)

An amazing rendition by Cody Fry, for all the lonely people out there.