Category Archives: Geeks You Should Know

Geeks You Should Know: Cassandra Peterson

c_peterson

This month’s Geek You Should Know is Cassandra Peterson. Name doesn’t ring a bell? Peterson is better known as the TV personality Elvira, Mistress of the Dark. Originally from Kansas, Peterson grew up in Colorado, but left for Las Vegas just days after finishing high school. After working as a show girl at The Dunes, Peterson began acting in small parts—including one in the James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever. Finally, in 1981, the role Cassandra was born to play arrived when a Los Angles TV station wanted to revive its late night horror movie show.  Although she was not their first choice for a host, Peterson and her persona Elvira were a perfect fit. Thus was born Elvira’s Movie Macabre.

Elvira and yours truly.

Elvira and yours truly. Phoenix Comicon 2011

Elvira is a geek superstar. She is a regular at conventions and I know from personal experience that she still draws a crowd. Although she was a little late to the signing I was at (with that outfit, who can blame her), she was incredibly nice and apologetic for her late arrival.  She may be small of stature, but she has a massive personality.

For many people, Elvira was the introduction to the world of late night B movies. Not only did Elvira host the movies on her show, but she often provided a running commentary as her sarcastic, valley girl character.  In fact, Elvira was mocking movies well before MST3K came around. Elvira has been featured in comics (a mind blowing 166 issues!), two motion pictures, games, calendars, and even pinball machines. It’s even rumored that Cassandra is the model posing on the cover of Tom Waits’ Small Change album. It does look quite a bit like her. In 2010, Peterson revived Movie Macabre and began to release public domain films on DVD with her commentary.

My personal Elvira, Mistress of the Dark one sheet.

My personal Elvira, Mistress of the Dark one sheet.

Leave a comment

Filed under Andrew Hales, Geek Life, Geeks You Should Know

Geeks You Should Know: Elon Musk

empicThis month’s Geek You Should Know is billionaire entrepreneur and engineer Elon Musk. Born in South Africa, he began his career by selling computer code for a video game at age twelve.  By age seventeen he had moved to Canada to pursue a college degree, eventually graduating from the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in economics and physics.  During the Dot Com boom in the mid 1990’s, he founded Zip2, which was later bought for just over $300 million—not bad for a guy in his 20’s. For most people, these accomplishments would be enough, but that same year Musk co-founded X.com, which we all know now as PayPal.  Three years later Musk sold PayPal to Ebay, and moved on to even bigger projects. Lately he has been making waves with both SpaceX and Tesla Motors.

Why We Should Care

This guy is basically Tony Stark without (at least as far as we know) the Iron Man suit.  While he has been fortunate to get involved in tech companies at just the right time, Elon Musk has also made a startling habit of taking on industries dominated by monolithic companies and revolutionizing the business right in front of them.  Before PayPal, banks and credit card companies were the only way to make payments on the internet.  Musk challenged that and forced the industry to play by his rules.  Many of the services that have come about in online banking since 1998 are directly or indirectly a response to PayPal.

Not only is PayPal on their with all the big name credit card companies, but they're name is the biggest. That's impressive.

Not only is PayPal listed with all the big name credit card companies, but their name is the biggest. That’s impressive.

Musk’s current projects are taking on two industries at once:  automotive and aerospace. Currently, wannabe astronauts have to spend years training, studying, hoping and praying that they can get accepted into NASA and get to be part of a mission.  If Musk has his way—and there is every indication that he will—NASA’s monopoly on space travel will quickly become non-existent.  SpaceX has recently announced its desire to construct a permanent space port in southern Texas where they can launch commercial space flights.

As for the auto industry, Musk’s Tesla Motors has been making huge strides in the electric car market. Although Tesla has had a few high profile incidents lately, their cars are miles ahead of the competition. With Musk’s vision leading the company, Tesla is not only looking at the cars themselves, but also at the infrastructure required to make these cars viable while still maintaining their green designs.

l15325-tesla-motors-logo-44198

Tesla has also been involved in some legal battles recently due to its business model. Most states have laws requiring that cars be sold from dealers who buy from the manufacturer. Tesla would like to remove the middle man, and sell the cars directly to the general public. This fight has been particularly rough in Texas, which has deeply entrenched laws.  I’m pretty confident that Tesla will win in the end, though it may get messy before it’s all done.

The world needs more people like Elon Musk.  Men and women like him are the kinds that drive industries to do new and different things and that’s why Elon Musk is a Geek You Should Know.

Leave a comment

Filed under Andrew Hales, Geek Life, Geeks You Should Know

Geeks You Should Know: Rene Descartes

With that long hair and facial hair, Descartes is already half way to a hipster.

With that long hair and facial hair, Descartes is already halfway to a hipster.

Rene Descartes was born March 31, 1596 in France. In 1606 he began attending Jesuit College in La Fleche and studied there until 1614. His curriculum included a study of the classics, as well as current understandings of physics, metaphysics and math. From 1616 to 1618 he studied law at Poitiers, but he never made use of his law education. Shortly after graduating he became a gentleman soldier and continued to serve until 1622. Descartes started to develop his theories during his time as a soldier but didn’t given them his full attention until after his return to France. In 1637 Descartes published Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting the Reason and Seeking Truth in the Sciences, the work he is most well known for. Descartes died in 1650 in Sweden, where he was the personal philosophy tutor for Queen Christina.

Why we care:

Descartes is most famous for his statement “Cogito ergo sum” meaning “I think, therefore I am”. This frequently gets misunderstood to be, “I exist because I think.” This is an obvious problem given how many people that we all know who don’t think and yet still exist. What Rene was actually getting at is the idea that we exist because we believe we exist.  He brought a more scientific approach to philosophy.  The idea of leaving all accepted notions and preconceptions behind and starting from a clean slate was revolutionary. This approach earned Descartes a place as the father of modern philosophy.

What Descartes is less known for, though it may be far more important, is his introduction of analytical geometry. Anyone who has taken a high school algebra course is more than familiar with the standard x-y coordinate system. Here in the U.S. we refer to this as a Cartesian coordinate system, but it is in fact an invention of Descartes (Cartesian comes from the Latin name Descartes used, Cartesuis). This is one of the most fundamental pieces of modern mathematics and it exists thanks to Descartes.

In addition to the x-y axis, he also gave us laws of refraction, explanations for rainbows, and an account of the formation of the solar system, though he suppressed much of this theory due to the pope’s attacks on Galileo. Descartes even developed laws of motion which were a precursor to Newton’s Laws, although they failed to incorporate vector forces. Descartes managed to impact multiple branches of thought and science and his work has had a lasting impact on the world, making him a Geek to Know.

2 Comments

Filed under Geek Life, Geeks You Should Know

Geeks You Should Know: Brian K. Vaughan

Like all people, we here at Therefore I Geek have heroes, but because we’re geeks many of those heroes are also geeks. With this in mind, we’re kicking off a new, reoccurring series featuring people in geek culture that we think you should know about, or at least know better and we’ve decided to start with Brian K. Vaughan.

1923505-brian_k_vaughan_imageBrian K. Vaughan got involved in comics as student at NYU in the late 90’s through a program at Marvel called the Stan-hattan Project, which gave students in NYU’s Dramatic Writing department a chance for practical experience.  Vaughan started off with a few fill issues for several series, which included Cable and Wolverine, before moving over to DC where he helped re-launch Swamp Thing. Swamp Thing of course is known as a legacy title through which many of comic’s biggest names—such as Alan Moore, Grant Morrison, and Mark Millar—have come. When this particular Swamp Thing series didn’t last very long, Vaughan made his way back to Marvel for a Cyclops mini-series.

When Marvel decided to launch a new imprint, Vaughan wrote two series, one featuring Mystique and a second called Runaways which starred a new team of heroes who were the children of Marvel’s supervillains.  Following a successful run, Vaughan left Runaways and was succeeded by none other than Joss Whedon.

Prior to the release of Runaways, Vaughan started a creator-owned series at Vertigo called Y: The Last Man. This is hailed as Vaughan’s best work and with good reason.  It is the story of Yorick Brown and his monkey trying to survive in a world in which a mysterious event has left them the only two living males on the planet.  It is a masterpiece of comics, lasting sixty issues before coming to a wonderful conclusion.  Frequently Y: The Last Man is recommended to new comic readers as it exemplifies the art form.

A man and his monkey.

A man and his monkey.

In 2004, around the middle of Y: The Last Man, Vaughan started a second major, creator-owned series:  Ex Machina. Where Y focused on a near future sci-fi story, Ex Machina mixed superheroes and politics, with the main character being a former superhero who has been elected mayor of New York City.  If there was any doubt that Vaughan was a master of comics, Ex Machina removed it by the end of issue one.  Only three years after Sept. 11, Vaughan left us breathless (with what?) and set the tone for the Ex Machina in one page.

This gives me chills every time I see it.

This gives me chills every time I see it.

Writing as good as Vaughan’s doesn’t go unnoticed outside comics for long.  Toward the end of Ex Machina, Vaughan began to write for the TV show Lost.  Many comic fans sadly believed he would never return once he’d seen the bright lights of Hollywood. Thankfully those doubters were wrong, and in 2012 Vaughan made a triumphant return to comics with Saga. The best thing I can say about Saga is that if you aren’t reading it, you should be and if you are, read it again.  It’s that good. While Vaughan has made his comeback to comics, he hasn’t left Hollywood completely as he is also performing writing and executive producer duties for Under the Dome, based on the Stephen King novel of the same name.

If you still have questions, it might be Brian K. Vaughan's fault.

If you still have questions, it might be Brian K. Vaughan’s fault.

Vaughan is a masterful storyteller in both comics and television and has worked on some of the most defining series of the last decade in both mediums. It’s this kind of contribution that makes Brian K. Vaughan a Geek to Know. Stay tuned to see who our next Geek to Know will be.

Leave a comment

Filed under Andrew Hales, Geek Life, Geeks You Should Know