From: blakes7-d-request@lysator.liu.se Subject: blakes7-d Digest V00 #143 X-Loop: blakes7-d@lysator.liu.se X-Mailing-List: archive/volume00/143 Precedence: list MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/digest; boundary="----------------------------" To: blakes7-d@lysator.liu.se Reply-To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se ------------------------------ Content-Type: text/plain blakes7-d Digest Volume 00 : Issue 143 Today's Topics: [B7L] Genzine lists, part 4 of 5-- LONG Re: [B7L] Blake's log entries [B7L] Blake's log entries [B7L] Re: First Impressions "Orac" Re: [B7L] Blake's log entries Re: [B7L] Blake's log entries [B7L] Ebay and Monthlies Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? [B7L] Website Updates! Re: [B7L] Ebay and Monthlies Re: [B7L] Re: blakes7-d Digest V00 #140 [B7L] RE: Ebay and Monthlies [B7L] More Dictionary Entries [B7L] Legal Man ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 22 May 2000 14:50:13 -0700 From: "Sarah Thompson" To: Cc: Subject: [B7L] Genzine lists, part 4 of 5-- LONG Message-ID: <000b01bfc438$033b64e0$56aecdcf@y1i7s9> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit B7 ZINE LIST B MULTIMEDIA GEN FICTION AND POETRY ZINES WITH B7 CONTENT AIRWAVES #1 (UK, 1984.12) AIRWAVES #3 (UK, 1985.12) AIRWAVES #4 (UK, 1986.3) AIRWAVES #5 (UK, 1986.7) AIRWAVES #6 (UK, 1986.11) AIRWAVES #7 (UK, 1987.3) AIRWAVES #10 (UK, 1988.3) AIRWAVES #13 (UK, 1989.3) AIRWAVES #14 (B7 poetry only; UK, 1989.7) AIRWAVES #15 (UK, 1989.11) AIRWAVES #16 (UK, 1990.3) AIRWAVES #17 (UK, 1990.8) AIRWAVES #18 (UK, 1991.1) AIRWAVES #19 (UK, 1991.4) AIRWAVES #20 (UK, 1991.7) AIRWAVES #21 (UK, 1991.10) AIRWAVES #22 (UK, 1992.2) AIRWAVES #23 (UK, 1992.5) AIRWAVES #24 (UK, 1992.5) AIRWAVES #26 (UK, 1992.9) AIRWAVES #29 (UK, 1993.12) AIRWAVES #30 (UK, 1994.3) AIRWAVES #31 (UK, 1994.3) AIRWAVES #32 (UK, 1994.6) AIRWAVES #33 (UK, 1994.9) AIRWAVES #34 (B7 poetry only; UK, 1994.9) AIRWAVES #35 (UK, 1994.12) AIRWAVES #36 (UK, 1994.12) AIRWAVES #37 (UK, 1995.3) AIRWAVES #38 (B7 poetry only; UK, 1995.3) AIRWAVES #39 (UK, 1995.6) AIRWAVES #40 (UK, 1995.9) AIRWAVES #41 (B7 poetry only; UK, 1995.12) AIRWAVES #43 (UK, 1996.7) AIRWAVES #44 (UK, 1996.11) AIRWAVES #46 (UK, 1997.9) ALMOST ANYTHING GOES AROUND TWICE! (Vol. 2 ?) (US, 1986.7) ANGLO FILE (US, 1985) ANYTHING GOES #3 (B7 poetry only, US, 1994.4) [B7 Complex #s 2, 5, 6/7 (mm issues of B7 zine; mostly B7) see all-B7 list] BADLANDS #1 (mostly B7; CN, 1994) BADLANDS #2 (mostly B7; CN, 1995.3) BADLANDS #3 (mostly B7; CN, 1995.5) BADLANDS #4 (mostly B7; CN, 1995) BADLANDS #5 (CN, 1996) BANZINE #1 (US, 1989) BANZINE #2 (US, 1991) BEHIND THE BLUE DOOR (DW-B7; US, 1988?) BEYOND IMAGINATION #1 (mm poetry, incl. B7; UK, 1987?) BEYOND IMAGINATION #2 (mm poetry, incl. B7; UK, 1988?) BLAKE'S BARF BAG (mostly B7; humor; US, 1989.5) CAMHANACH (UK, 1978?) THE CELESTIAL TOYBOX #9 (US, 1993) THE CELESTIAL TOYBOX #10 (US, 1994) THE CELESTIAL TOYBOX #11 (US, 1995) CHANGING CHANNELS #2 (US, 1992) CHRONICLE #1 (DW-B7; UK, 1987.12) CHRONICLE #2 (UK, 1988.4) CHRONICLE #3 (UK, 1988.10) CHRONICLE #4 (UK, 1990.3) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #55 (US, 1987.4) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #61 (US, 1988.10) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #67 (B7 poetry only; US, 1990.4) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #68 (B7 poetry only; US, 1990.7) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #69 (B7 poetry only; US, 1990.10) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #71 (B7 poetry only; US, 1991.4) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #72 (B7 poetry only; US, 1991.7) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #73 (US, 1991.10) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #74 (B7 poetry only; US, 1992.1) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #76 (US, 1994.10) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #77 (US, 1995.1) CLIPPER TRADE SHIP #78/79 (US, 1997.12) COLLECTED TALES FROM THE REBEL'S RETURN (reprint of B7 zine TALES FROM THE REBEL'S RETURN, plus non-B7 stories reprinted from ENIGMA; UK, 1999) COMMUNICATIONS CONSOLE [Conquest #s 2 and 3 (mm issues of B7 zine) see all-B7 list] CONSTELLATION (#1): GEMINI (UK, 1979) CONSTELLATION (#2): VIRGO (UK) CROSSIGNALS #1 (US, 1989) CROSSIGNALS #3 (US) CROSSROADS I (US, 1990?) CROSSROADS II (US, 1991) CROSSROADS III (US, 1992?) [Dark Heroes planned but never published? US, 1988] DESTINY #1 (not the same as US all-B7 zine of same name; UK, 1983.11) DESTINY #2 (UK, 1984.1) DESTINY #3 (UK, 1984.3) DESTINY #4 (UK, 1984.5) DESTINY #5 (UK, 1984.8) DESTINY #6 (UK, 1984.11) DESTINY #7 (UK, 1985.4) DESTINY #8 (UK) DESTINY #9 (UK) DIAL S #3, Vol. 1 (US) DIMENSIONALLY TRANSCENDENTAL #1 (US, 1982.12) DISTORTED REFLECTIONS (US) DIVERSE DIMENSIONS #3 (US, 1983.5) DIVERSE DIMENSIONS #4 (US, 1983.12) DREAMS INC. #2 (B7 poetry and nonfiction only; US, 1981.10- 11) DREAMS INC. #3/4 (US, 1982.1-4) EARTHVOICE (Earthsearch-B7-DW; UK, 1984) EARTHWINGS EDGEZINE (stories from Con at the Edge of the World, aka Edgecon; UK, 1982) ENARRARE #1 (AU, 1986?) ENARRARE #2 (AU, 1986?) ENARRARE #3 (AU, 1987) ENARRARE #4 (AU, 1987) ENARRARE #5 (AU, 1987) ENARRARE #6 (AU, 1987) ENARRARE #7 (AU, 1987) ENARRARE #8 (AU, 1992) ENARRARE #9 (AU, 1998) ENCHIRIDION #1 (Con Amore zine; mostly B7; AU, 1984.8) ENCHIRIDION #2 (Con Amore zine; mostly B7; AU, 1985) ENCHIRIDION #3 (Con Amore zine; mostly B7; AU, 1986) ENIGMA #1 (UK, 1981) ENIGMA #2 (UK, 1981) ENIGMA #3 (UK, 1981) ENIGMA #5 (UK, 1982.5) ENIGMA #6 (UK, 1983) ENIGMA #10 (no B7 in #s 7-9; UK, 1986) ENIGMA #11 (UK) ENIGMA #13 (UK) ERRANTRY #1 (US, 1983.5) ERRANTRY #2 (US, 1984.5) EVERYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN SINK #1 (US, 1985.5) EVERYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN SINK #3 (US, 1987.7) EVERYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN SINK #4 (US, 1989.5) FACE FORWARD #1 (US, 1994.5) FACE FORWARD #2 (US, 1995.5) FANTASIA #1 (US, 1988.1) FANTASIA #2: The One That Got Away (US, 1988.8) FANTASIA #3: Oops! (US, 1989.7) FANTAZY #3 (US, 1986.5) FICTION FILE #1 (UK?, 1995) FICTION FILE #2 (UK?, 1995) FICTION FILE #6 (UK?, 1996) FICTION FILE #7 (UK?, 1996) FIVE HUNDRED YEAR DIARY (multiple crossover; cartoons by Paul Gadzikowski; US, 1989) FRAK #1 (UK, 1981.8) FRAK #2 (UK, 1982?; #3 is all BG) FRAK #4 (UK, 1983?) FRAK #5 (B7 poetry only; UK, 1984.4) FRAK #10 (UK, 1988?) FRONTIER WORLDS #1 (B7-DW; UK, 1979?) FRONTIER WORLDS #1-4 (reprint) FRONTIER WORLDS #2 (UK, 1980) FRONTIER WORLDS #3 (UK, 1980) FRONTIER WORLDS #4 (UK, 1980) FRONTIER WORLDS #5 (UK, 1980.9) FRONTIER WORLDS #5-6 (reprint) FRONTIER WORLDS #6 (UK, 1980.12) FRONTIER WORLDS #7/8 (UK, 1981.4) FRONTIER WORLDS #9 (UK, 1981.6) FRONTIER WORLDS #10/11 (UK, 1981.10) FRONTIER WORLDS #12 (UK, 1982.1) FRONTIER WORLDS #13/14 (UK, 1982.4) FRONTIER WORLDS #15 (UK, 1982.10) FRONTIER WORLDS #16 (UK, 1983.1) FRONTIER WORLDS #17 (UK, 1983.5) FRONTIER WORLDS #18 (UK, 1984.2) THE GARDEN SPOT OF CETI ALPHA V (AU, 1988) GATEWAY TO TIME #4 (no B7 in earlier issues; US, 1988) GATEWAY TO TIME #5 (B7 poetry only; US, 1989) IGAREBALL (UK?) IMAGES (B7-DW; UK, 1981?) IMAGINE THAT (CN, 1992.9) INTEGRITY (US, 1991) JOVANKAN LIBERATORS #1 (B7-DW; UK, 1985) KNIGHT 2000 #10 (KR zine with KR/DW/B7 story; UK, 1987) LIGHT IS JUST NOW REACHIN' EARTH (US) LIONS AND TIGERS AND ZINES, OH MY #1 (B7 poetry and art only; US, 1993) LIONS AND TIGERS AND ZINES, OH MY #2 (B7 art only; US, 1994) LINK-UP (B7-DW newsletter with fiction; UK) [Lodestar #s 4-5 (mm issues of B7 zine) see all-B7 list] MEDTREK '82 OFFICIAL CON FANZINE (fiction zine of Medtrek convention; AU, 1982) MEDTREK 84 FANZINE (fiction zine of Medtrek convention; mostly B7; AU, 1984) MEDTREK 1991 FANZINE (fiction zine of Medtrek convention; AU, 1991) MEGAZINE #1 (AU, 1987?) MEGAZINE #2 (AU) MELANGE #8 (US, 1986) METALUNA #3 (AU, 198?) METALUNA #13 (AU, 1987?) MULTIVERSE #8 (no B7 in earlier issues; AU, 1982.8) MULTIVERSE #9 (AU, 1982.11) MULTIVERSE #10 (AU, 1983.6) MULTIVERSE #11 (AU, 1984.2) MULTIVERSE #12 (AU, 1984.8) MULTIVERSE #13 (AU, 1985.3) MULTIVERSE #14 (AU, 1986.1) MULTIVERSE #15 (AU, 1986.8) MULTIVERSE #16 (AU, 1987.4) MULTIVERSE #17 (AU, 1987.9) MULTIVERSE #18 (AU, 1988.5) MULTIVERSE #19 (AU, 1988.9) MULTIVERSE #20 (AU, 1989.2) MULTIVERSE #21 (AU, 1989.12) MULTIVERSE #22 (AU, 1990.7) MULTIVERSE #23 (AU, 1991.7) MULTIVERSE #24 (AU, 1992.7) MULTIVERSE #25 (AU, 1993.3) MULTIVERSE #26 (AU, 1994.4) MULTIVERSE #27 (AU, 1994.11) MULTIVERSE #28 (AU, 1996.1) MULTIVERSE #29 (AU, 1996.11) NEW WORLDS OF DREAMS AND SCHEMES #5 (US) OF DREAMS AND SCHEMES #8 (US, 1992.9) OF DREAMS AND SCHEMES #12 (B7 poetry only; US, 1997.5) OH BOY! #1 (QL zine with crossover story; US, 1991.5) ON THE DOUBLE #21 (US) ON THE DOUBLE #22 (US) OUTLANDS #10 (US, 1987) PAGING DOCTOR BLAKE (US, 1989?) PANNING FOR PYRITES (poetry by Mary G. T. Webber, reprinted from various zines; AU, 1990) PATHWAYS OF INFINITY (US, 1992) PEERS OF THE REALM (US, 1990.7) PERIHELION #1 (B7 poetry only; US, 1986?) PERIHELION #2 (almost-all-B7 issue of mm zine; US, 1988) PORTALS #3 (B7 art and nonfiction only; Vol. 2, no. 1; US, 1987) PORTALS #4 (Vol. 2, no. 2; US, 1987) PORTALS #5 (Vol. 3, no. 1; US, 1988) PORTALS #6 (Vol. 3, no. 2; US, 1988.10) PORTALS #7 (final issue; US, 1990.10) [Prelude mm zine about children, including B7; planned but never published? US, 1988] PRIME TIME #1 (US, 1986.5) PRIME TIME #2 (US, 1987.1) PRIME TIME #3 (US, 1987.10) PRIME TIME #4 (US, 1988.5) PRIME TIME #6 (US, 1989.11; no B7 in #5) PRIME TIME #7 (US, 1991.4) PROFESSIONAL HILARITY (DE, 1999) PYWACKET'S ECLECTICA (US, 1997.4) QUI TO TIME, The First Segment (US, 1990) QUI TO TIME, The Second Segment (US, 1991) QUI TO TIME, The Third Segment (US, 1992) QUI TO TIME, The Fourth Segment (US, 1992) QUI TO TIME, The Fifth Segment (US, 1992; only a little B7 material) RAT'S TALES #1 (UK, 1986) RAT'S TALES #2 (UK, 1987?) REFRACTIONS #1 (AU, 1995.8) REFRACTIONS #2 (AU, 1996.4) REFRACTIONS #3 (B7 poetry only; AU, 1997.6) REFRACTIONS #5 (AU, 1998.3) REFRACTIONS #6 (B7 poetry only; AU, 1999.4) REMOTE CONTROL #1 (US, 1991) REMOTE CONTROL #3 (B7 poetry only; US, 1993.5) REMOTE CONTROL #4 (US, 1993) REMOTE CONTROL #10 (US, 1998.5) RERUN #5, Vols. 1-2 (B7 poetry and art only; US, 1987; no B7 in #s 2-4) RERUN #7 (B7 poetry only; US, 1989; no B7 in #6) RERUN #8 (B7 poetry only; US, 1990; no B7 in #s 11-12) RETURN OF SCENARIO (US, 1986.6) ROBOTS, REBELS AND RENEGADES #9.1 (US, Spring 1995) [Scenario #2 see RETURN OF SCENARIO] SCORPIO-5 SOUVENIR ZINE (mostly B7; US, 1988?) SERENDIPITOUS SCENARIOS #1 (US, 1990.5) SERENDIPITOUS SCENARIOS #2 (US, 1991) SERENDIPITOUS SCENARIOS #3 (US, 1994.7) SHADOWSTAR #21/22 (US, 1986) SHADOWSTAR #23 (US, fall 1986) SHERWOOD TUNNELS #5 (formerly WHO'S/BLAKE; CN, 1990) SHERWOOD TUNNELS #6 (CN, 1991?) SHERWOOD TUNNELS #7 (CN, 1992?; no B7 in #8) THE SONIC SCREWDRIVER #2 (#1 was all DW; US, 1987) THE SONIC SCREWDRIVER #3 (US, 1987) THE SONIC SCREWDRIVER #4 (US, 1988) THE SONIC SCREWDRIVER #5 (US, 1989.6) THE SONIC SCREWDRIVER #6 (US, 1990.7) THE SONIC SCREWDRIVER #7 (US, 1992.11; no B7 in #8) SOUTHERN LIGHTS #1 (US, 1985.8) SOUTHERN LIGHTS #2 (US, 1986.8) SOUTHERN LIGHTS #3 (US, 1987.5) SOUTHERN LIGHTS #4 (US, 1988.5) SOUTHERN LIGHTS #5 (US, 1993.3) SOUTHERN LIGHTS #6 (US, 1993.5) THE SPACE MUSEUM #1 (DW-B7-HHGG; UK, 1980) THE SPACE MUSEUM #2 (UK, 1980) SPACE RAT #1 (B7-DW-HHGG; UK, 1982?) SPACE RAT #2 (UK, 1982?) SPACE RAT #3 (UK, 1983?) SPACE RAT #4 (UK, 1983?) SPACE RAT #5 (UK, 1984?) SPACE RAT #6 (UK, 1984) SPACE RAT #7 (UK, 1984) SPACE RAT #8 (UK, 1985) SPOCK #58 (ST zine with crossover story; AU?) STARLINES #2 (US, 1982.12) STARLINES #3 (US, 1983.6) STARLINES #4 (US, 1984.2) STARLINES #5 (US, 1985.6) STARLINES #6 (US, 1986.8) STARSHIP BRITANNICA #1 (US, 1982?) STARSHIP BRITANNICA #2 (US, 1983?) STARSHIP BRITANNICA #3 (US, 1987.2) [Starship Britannica #4: Motley Crew (all B7/other crossovers) included in MAGNIFICENT SEVEN #9; see all-B7 list] STRANGE NEW WORLDS STRAWBERRY FILKS FOREVER (mm filks, including B7; AU, 1984) SUBSPACE CHATTER #3 SYNDICATED IMAGES #1 (AU, 1985.1; no B7 in #2, but there is a combined reprint of 1/2) SYNDICATED IMAGES #3 (AU, 1985.5) SYNDICATED IMAGES #6 (AU, 1985.11) SYZYGY #1 (US, 1987.5) SYZYGY #2 (US, 1987.11) SYZYGY #3 (US, 1988.4) SYZYGY #4 (US, 1989.1) SYZYGY #5 (US, 1991.2) SYZYGY #6 (US, 1993.7) TALES FROM THE CLOISTER CHAMBER #1 (UK, 1983.10) TEDDY BEAR TIMES (US, 1989.7) TEMPORAL TIMES #1 (US, 1991.5; no B7 in #2) TERMINAL #1 (UK, 1984) TERMINAL #2 (UK, 1985) TEXAS REVELATIONS #2 (no B7 in #1; US, 1995.3) TEXAS REVELATIONS #3 (US, 1996.3) [Time Distort #1 (mm, but mostly B7) see all-B7 list] T'SALTA #1 (AU, 1983) T'SALTA #2 (AU, 1984.12) THE ULTIMATE MARY SUE (ST & B7 Mary Sue stories from Eccentricon 87 contest; AU, 1987) UNICORN UNIVERSE (original stories by Edwina Harvey, including some AU characters resembling Avon and Vila; AU, 1985) UNION OF TRAKEN #1 (AU, 1982?) UNI-VERSE #1 (mm poetry, including B7; UK, 1981) UNI-VERSE #2 (mm poetry, including B7; UK, 1981) THE VISITOR #1 (UK, 1983.1) THE VISITOR #2 (UK, 1983.7) THE VISITOR #3 (UK, 1984.4; B7-related nonfiction only) VOICE OF ORACLE #1 (fiction zine of Oracle club; almost all B7; UK, 1983.12) VOICE OF ORACLE #2 (almost all B7; UK, 1984.4) VOICE OF ORACLE #3 (almost all B7; UK, 1984.12) VOICE OF ORACLE #4 (almost all B7; UK, 1985.4) VOICE OF ORACLE #5 (almost all B7; UK, 1986.3) VOICE OF ORACLE #6 (almost all B7; UK, 1987.6) VOICE OF ORACLE #7 (almost all B7; UK, 1988?) VOICES FROM THE PAST (newsletter of The Union of Traken, B7- DW club; includes fiction; US?, late 80s) WARP NINE #10 W.Y.F. (WHAT YOU FANCY) #1 (US, 1988.2) WHATEVER WORKS #1 (US, 1986.12) WHO'S/BLAKE #1 (CN, 1987.2) WHO'S/BLAKE #2 (CN, 1988) WHO'S/BLAKE #3 (CN, 1989.9) WHO'S/BLAKE #4 (CN, 1989.9; issues from #5 on are renamed SHERWOOD TUNNELS) WIDE OPEN SPACES #10 (US, 1986.5) XENOFILKIA #34 (B7 poetry only) XENOZINE #1? (US; B7 poetry only) ZINE AID #1 (UK, 1985?) ZINE AID #2 (UK, 1986?) ZINE AID #4 (UK, 1987?) ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 09:03:00 EST From: "J MacQueen" To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se Subject: Re: [B7L] Blake's log entries Message-ID: <20000522230300.6893.qmail@hotmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed >From: "Marian de Haan" >("18.16: The One Called Blake has set course for Anaconda Major. Planet of the Big Snakes, that sounds like. Oh joy Regards Joanne ('cause you know they'd try to eat Vila first, and I'm not having that...) ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 22 May 2000 18:20:57 PDT From: "Sally Manton" To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se Subject: [B7L] Blake's log entries Message-ID: <20000523012057.30337.qmail@hotmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed Marian wrote re the log: Now *that* conjures up some rather fascinating pictures. Avon's turn ... "14.6: Spent twelve hours on yet another primitive and buddleia-infested planet after answering what Blake decided was a call for help, and I could have told him was a trap (and did, at length, and he listened as carefully as always.) He refused to leave until we were absolutely sure there was no one to rescue from whatever well-disguised danger they didn't appear to be in. During which time he appears to have watched where he was going with his usual starry-eyed skill, and was attacked by something resembling a 4-foot furry cockroach with teeth. Unfortunately, he managed to escape getting too badly mauled and will be running his Glorious Revolution again before we have time to catch our breath to argue. And for the record, I did *not* get bitten by shoving him out of the way and trying to shield him until Cally managed to shoot it. I tripped. ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 22 May 2000 18:36:21 PDT From: "Sally Manton" To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se Subject: [B7L] Re: First Impressions "Orac" Message-ID: <20000523013621.28686.qmail@hotmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed Steve wrote: 'The Man in the White Suit' with Alec Guinness. Obviously, the formula survived the Atomic-or-whatever Wars and fell into the hands of the military. I like 'Orac'. Ensor is great fun (the way he doesn't let Blake or Cally get a word in edgewise is wonderful). I like the bits with Blake and Cally - they have a warm sibling relationship, not as showy as that he has with Avon or Jenna, but nice. The four afflicted all reacting very much in character - Jenna gritting her teeth and getting on with it ("I'm managing"); Gan choosing to be with the others (even Snarly) for comfort; Vila firmly pretending that it isn't happening; and My Darling first getting *extremely* short-tempered, then getting sick of sitting around 'waiting to die', throwing orders around ... and going down to the day. Also, Ensor's flying doodad is cute, and I love My Favourite Autocrat's enthusiasm for being ordered about by the flying doodad. Arguing, barely flinching when it shoots at him, getting sarky, and the wonderful (coming from him!) "I'm getting fed up with taking orders..." Sentimental softy me, but I always feel sorry for the goldfish ... ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 22 May 2000 21:36:43 EDT From: B7Morrigan@aol.com To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se Subject: Re: [B7L] Blake's log entries Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Sally, I really think you should write up a complete story via log entries. It would be great fun. So far it's been very funny. Trish Auron may be different, Cally, but on Earth it is considered ill-mannered to kill your friends while committing suicide." ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 22 May 2000 17:58:34 -0700 From: mistral@ptinet.net To: B7 List Subject: Re: [B7L] Blake's log entries Message-ID: <3929D7B9.FF077C28@ptinet.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Sally gave us a peek into Avon's log entry: > And for the record, I did *not* get bitten by shoving him out of the way and > trying to shield him until Cally managed to shoot it. I tripped. Sally, you are so wicked! I love it!!! Mistral -- I won't get to get what I'm after till the day I die.--Pete Townsend ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 22 May 2000 22:54:58 EDT From: JEB31538@cs.com To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se, freedom-city@blakes-7.org Subject: [B7L] Ebay and Monthlies Message-ID: <43.51e2c7a.265b4d02@cs.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit A while back someone on one of the lists asked what to do with his B7 Monthlies and wondered if he should just chuck them. I think he was told that he could DONATE them to a con such as Redemption or something. CURRENTLY on Ebay there is a set of the 25 Monthlies and the price is up to $127.49 plus postage. So if you have a set of the Monthlies or any other goodies, I strongly suggest you try Ebay to sell them. (I should take my own advice, but I'm lazy.) As for me, I have THREE complete sets of the 25 Monthlies--all complete with goodies. I am willing to sell a complete set for $50 which includes book postage in the USA to the first two Americans who want them. I will definitely keep one set. However, I doubt anyone on the list really is in need of the Monthlies. I think most of us already have more than what we really need. As for people outside of the US, postage is a real bear. I'd think surface would probably by something like $20 since these things are heavy. It could even be more. Air would simply not be even reasonable. I am sure, though, that you can find these Monthlies more cheaply at cons in the UK if you happen to be going to any. Actually, I think I paid something like $250 each for probably two of the three sets. Issues used to run $10 to $15 apiece. Now, as the guy who asked earlier on the list found out, most people don't even want to buy them for any price--no matter how good it is. If you haven't been checking out what's happening on Ebay, you should. The past six-nine months there has always been a lively selection at Blakes 7 and Blake's 7. Be sure to check out both as the selections do vary. Ann Wortham normally has items for sale there. And occasionally Corgi models show up. It was two years ago that one went for 250 pounds in the Horizon auction. It was mint in box, of course. But on Ebay, you can find them NOT in box for anywhere from $20 to $50. Ebay is definitely something the B7 collector should be checking up on. I know I have bought photos, artwork, a Liberator handgun, Corgi Liberators, mousepad, magazines, jigsaw puzzles, gen fanzines, and newsletters in the B7 section. I do recommend Ebay. Joyce ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 22 May 2000 10:00:05 +0100 From: "Neil Faulkner" To: "b7" Subject: Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Message-ID: <000301bfc481$ec4a97c0$e535fea9@neilfaulkner> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit jj wrote: >Should have included this in the previous post *sorry*, but the other > thing > I was going to say was that just having a one word title really got me > interested to. After years of Dr Who titles along the lines of "Thingie > of > the Thingamuagumie Doodad" here was a single word! Dr Who fans in the rolegaming fanzine community came up with the generic title 'Picnic Hampers of the Daleks'. Just thought I'd throw that in. Kai wrote: > But here it was just "Duel", "Hostage", "Shadow", "Weapon" etc, very > generic and to the point, hardly any window dressing. Thinking about it > now, there are only a few titles that really go against this pattern: You missed out City at the Edge of the World, which is six words longer than most of the episode titles (and arguably worth six whole episodes by lesser writers). Also Pressure Point, though that's only two words. Interestingly (or maybe not) its working title was also a two-worder - Storm Mountain. Perhaps someone reminded Terry Nation that the budget didn't really stretch to mountains, possibly not even to storms, and whilst Drizzle Claypit might be more than feasible, it wasn't half as dramatic. And Mission to Destiny. I think they should have made an episode called Dawn of the Horizon Killer Bounty, in which the Liberator is menaced by Diane Gies armed with a giant chocolate coconut bar. > Finally, I can't help wondering whether they sometimes just gave the > writer a title and had him write a script around it, instead of giving > go-aheads to their specs. I could imagine a fourth season brainstorming > session with Chris Boucher handing title slips to writers: Which had me chuckling quietly to myself. Neat idea. Neil ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 09:40:01 +0100 From: "David A McIntee" To: Subject: Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Message-Id: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit ---------- > From: Kai V Karmanheimo > 4. "Space Fall" and "Time Squad". These seem the most confusing. Is it > Raiker falling into space or is the whole incident on London just "a > fall"? Spacefall as opposed to landfall, I think - the rebels get a new home which is a space vessel rather than land ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 10:06:51 +0100 (BST) From: Iain Coleman To: b7 Subject: Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Message-Id: Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII On Mon, 22 May 2000, Neil Faulkner wrote: > > Dr Who fans in the rolegaming fanzine community came up with the generic > title 'Picnic Hampers of the Daleks'. Just thought I'd throw that in. I came up with a title for a Dr Who / Derek & Clive crossover: "Doctor Who and the Cunts of Dagenham". It's probably best that it remains unwritten. Iain ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 01:15:49 -0700 From: mistral@ptinet.net To: B7 List Subject: Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Message-ID: <392A3E34.51E295B0@ptinet.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit David A McIntee wrote: > ---------- > > From: Kai V Karmanheimo > > 4. "Space Fall" and "Time Squad". These seem the most confusing. Is it > > Raiker falling into space or is the whole incident on London just "a > > fall"? > > Spacefall as opposed to landfall, I think - the rebels get a new home which > is a space vessel rather than land Yep. And it always reminds me of planetfall, which is a fairly common term in SF. Mistral -- I won't get to get what I'm after till the day I die.--Pete Townsend ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 01:26:59 -0700 From: mistral@ptinet.net To: B7 List Subject: Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Message-ID: <392A40D2.B285CC4D@ptinet.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Neil Faulkner wrote: > > Finally, I can't help wondering whether they sometimes just gave the > > writer a title and had him write a script around it, instead of giving > > go-aheads to their specs. I could imagine a fourth season brainstorming > > session with Chris Boucher handing title slips to writers: > > Which had me chuckling quietly to myself. Neat idea. Sounds like a fun game to play when we've all got scads of time on our hands, actually. Mistral -- I won't get to get what I'm after till the day I die.--Pete Townsend ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 02:35:16 -0700 From: Nick Moffitt To: Blakes7@lysator.liu.se Subject: Re: [B7L] Titles Say It All? Message-ID: <20000523023516.X9925@zork.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii begin David A McIntee quotation: > > From: Kai V Karmanheimo > > 4. "Space Fall" and "Time Squad". These seem the most confusing. > > Is it Raiker falling into space or is the whole incident on London > > just "a fall"? > > Spacefall as opposed to landfall, I think - the rebels get a new > home which is a space vessel rather than land I always figured it was an allusion to "windfall", which comes from sailing metaphor. -- CrackMonkey.Org - Non-sequitur arguments and ad-hominem personal attacks LinuxCabal.Org - Co-location facilities and meeting space Pigdog.Org - The Online Handbook for Bad People of the Future You are not entitled to your opinions. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 07:10:48 EDT From: Bizarro7@aol.com To: Blakes7@lysator.liu.se, freedom-city@blakes-7.org Subject: [B7L] Website Updates! Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Hi, all! Leah and I are just back from a wonderful trip to Alaska. I've posted some updates to a number of our websites. Actually, I don't think I've announced the updates here for some time, so I'll tell you quickly about them and if you're interested, have a look! Robin of Sherwood, Highlander, Beauty & the Beast, Blakes 7, and more at our Ebay site: http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/ashton7 We've got new Highlander fiction at our fiction site, and lots of B7 stories for you to enjoy as well: http://members.aol.com/pelkiepet/stories.htm Tons of new Alias Smith & Jones fiction at our ASJ site: http://members.aol.com/asjfansfiction/fanfic.htm (also new adult ASJ fiction at our adult site... there is a link from the main site) Nature photography at our in-progress Colorado site: http://www.angelfire.com/biz4/methosela/colorado.htm A silly travelogue and nature photography at our Arkansas Road Trip site: http://www.angelfire.com/biz4/methosela/arkansas.htm And we'll soon have the Alaska site up and running. Annie ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 07:16:35 EDT From: Mac4781@aol.com To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se, freedom-city@blakes-7.org Subject: Re: [B7L] Ebay and Monthlies Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Joyce wrote: > As for people outside of the US, postage is a real bear. I'd > think surface would probably by something like $20 since these things are > heavy. It could even be more. Air would simply not be even reasonable. Per the last time I sent a a stack of zines via sea, sending a medium large parcel via sea doesn't save much. If you package items so that they meet the AIR SMALL PARCEL size requirements or if you stuff Global Priority Envelopes, you won't pay but a few dolars more and you'll get much quicker service. They also have a Global Priority box, which for what I've sent is more expensive than stuffing multiple GP envelopes (because the box has a weight limit), but it's another possibility. But, yes, anyway you do it, postage would be costly. Carol Mc ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 09:15:22 -0400 From: "Christine+Steve" To: "Blakes 7 List" Subject: Re: [B7L] Re: blakes7-d Digest V00 #140 Message-ID: <006701bfc4b9$08ae55a0$c0249ad8@cgorman> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit > << Sorry, I meant 1-word title epsiode, I left out the 'word'. I KNOW he > was in Timelash. I know about Timelash. Talking to me about isn't > restoring a trace of my memory. I have a vague notion of somewhat > toga-like costumes, but that might come from imagining from a > description. I either didn't see it, but read enough about it to know > the general stuff (name of villian, etc.) Or I saw it and promptly > forgot all details. That's all I was trying to say. > >> > > All this reminds me, for a reminder of the story, there's plenty of pics at > the DW Image Archive. The URL for sixth Doctor stories is: > http://shill.simplenet.com/dw/story-6.htm The Beeb has a very good archive of Doctor Who stories at http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho. A number of links, including Episode Guides, which details about 100 episodes. Steve. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 12:28:08 EDT From: JEB31538@cs.com To: blakes7@lysator.liu.se, freedom-city@blakes-7.org Subject: [B7L] RE: Ebay and Monthlies Message-ID: <7b.46dcb65.265c0b98@cs.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit The two sets of 25 Monthlies are gone. I do hope that a lot of you start checking out what's available on Ebay. It's a really good source of merchandise. Joyce Bowen JEB31538@cs.com ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 14:17:15 -0400 From: "Dana Shilling" To: "b7" Subject: [B7L] More Dictionary Entries Message-ID: <002f01bfc4e3$20bc60e0$496a4e0c@dshilling> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Two more entries for the Avonics-English dictionary: FRANTZ FANON: n.; discussion by fans of anthropology of B7, especially if Marxist-based GAUDA PRIME: n; a number that can't be factored, esp. 7 or 13. -(Y) ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 23 May 2000 20:16:10 +0100 (BST) From: Judith Proctor To: Lysator List cc: Freedom City Subject: [B7L] Legal Man Message-ID: Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII Thanks to banchory merchandising, we've now got some pictures from the Belle and Sebastian video up on the web site. Gareth seems to be having fun playing an exaggerated version of himself. The song isn't bad either . Judith -- http://www.hermit.org/Blakes7 - Fanzines for Blake's 7, B7 Filk songs, pictures, news, Conventions past and present, Blake's 7 fan clubs, Gareth Thomas, etc. (also non-Blake's 7 zines at http://www.nas.com/~lknight ) Redemption '01 23-25 Feb 2001 http://www.smof.com/redemption/ -------------------------------- End of blakes7-d Digest V00 Issue #143 **************************************