Friday Fun: Your Formative Geek Media


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Star Wars in the theater at 10 years old, then Narnia and the Tripods Trilogy, then the Hobbit & LOTR, Dune, & D&D - ‘77 to ‘82 was fantastic for me! Although I was definitely too young for Dune - it made much more sense when I reread it high school.
 

Hmmm...

Probably, first would be J.R.R. Tolkien....maybe Moorcock exposure. Tarzan? (Tarzan becomes incredibly fantasy after the first book).

Then came Wargames...and then D&D.

I loved Nickel and Dime SF books back in the day. The old SF Radio shows that came on.
 

  • The Hobbit -- my first memory is sitting on my dad's lap on a very 1970s couch and him reading me the first page
  • Rankin-Bass' The Hobbit
  • The Magician's Nephew (in publication order, where its revelations make one recontextualize the rest of the series so far)
  • Ralph Bakshi's Wizards
  • My dad's OD&D photocopies (all the booklets except for Blackmoor, weirdly)
  • The Road to Oz
  • Treasure Island
  • The Princess Bride
 

In rough order of when I encountered them:
Star Trek: TOS and Star Trek: Animated
James Bond movies
Star Wars (I was 9 for the first theatrical run)
The Hobbit by Rankin/Bass
Battlestar Galactica
Flash Gordon cartoon
HG Wells books
Barsoom books
Lord of the Rings
 


Star Trek, Doctor Who, Star Wars (The original), Logan's Run, Six Million Dollar Man, Planet of the Apes, The Twilight Zone, Battlestar Galactica, The Dragonlance books, The Elric of Melnibone books He-Man, Star Blazers, and AD&D, of course.
 

The Transformers: My first love. I was very young when it came out, and my first memory is getting an Optimus Prime for Christmas. While I liked the series a lot, it was the toys that really stuck with me. They hit the perfect middle ground of fun thing and engineering demonstration for me. Transforming toys are an art form deeply intertwined with technical engineering knowledge. Growing up Transformers media became less important, but the toys only grew. Now I'd say collecting transforming toys is my primary hobby.

The Lord of the Rings: My father read books to me as a child, and one of my favorites was the Hobbit. Being a reclusive smarty pants this led me to reading the Lord of the Rings in the 6th grade. That book really jump started my love of fantasy. While the I really do love the story, it's the world building that always stuck with me. The feeling that this alternate world actually exists beyond the story is something I really value in media.

Super Metroid: There are many games that I loved growing up, but Super Metroid hit me particularly hard. The primary thing that stuck with me was the atmosphere and environmental story telling. Super Metroid is a master class in immersion without breaking gameplay. Then on top of that it has incredible pacing, interesting puzzles, and incredible audio and visuals.

Batman the Animated Series: Is probably responsible for my love of the character to this day. It's a great series that takes time to delve into the psychologies of the characters as well as provide action.

Baldur's Gate: This was my first taste of the PC player driven, more simulationist side of gaming. The freedom given to the player in this was something I hadn't played before, and I was hooked.

Deus Ex: Then this game showed how far the potential of the player driven simulationist side of gaming can go. Few games to this day try to have a world this interactive and reactive. If you do something, the world and characters will probably notice and react to it. If you think you can do something you probably can.

Edit: somehow I forgot about TNG.

Star Trek the Next Generation: This was a family event for me. We eagerly awaited every episode and loved the series. It was a constantly engaging show, probably the first for me that tackled currently relevant topics. Most media I watched growing up had more general messages. Star Trek actively advocated for a progressive, better world.
 
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I’m almost literally a lifelong geek because my Dad is one, so I grew up reading & watching superheroes, sci-fi, fantasy & horror, with a heavy dose of legends & mythology as well.

Seriously: a teacher in charge of creating my 2nd grade reading program got me a textbook that consisted entirely of short stories or excerpts from the works of JRRT, Robert Bloch, Anne McCaffrey and others. I was reading Marvel & DC comics by that time, and finished that year reading The Iliad. Reruns of Batman, Star Trek, Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits were pretty much required.
 

*All the 'pocket' books reprinting lots of old sci-fi/fantasy like Burrows, Asimov, and all the famous names that wrote 'pulp fiction' way back when.

*Doctor Who- Classic Who, back in the Time Before Time when only a few geeks even knew this show existed. Back when the only way to watch it was late night on PBS.

*Blakes Seven- Shown on the other PBS channel. A good 50% of all my intelligent items or such have the Orac personality....

*Star Trek, The Original and Next Gen

*Marvel Comics in general

*Late 70/80 cartoons, Transformers, G.I.Joe, Voltron, Robotech and more....
 

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