Kermit Potter

Kermit Potter and the Mashup of  MuppetsThe other day, we were driving and the subject of NHL’s birthday party came up.  He had wanted a Muppets themed party, but switched awhile back to Harry Potter (inspired, no doubt, by the fact that we’re reading the series together).  Then, when the difficulty of making Harry Potter cupcakes became apparent, he reverted back to Muppets.

As we went back and forth, I jokingly suggested putting Harry Potter glasses on the Kermit cupcakes to make Kermit Potter.  We laughed and then ran with the idea.  Mrs. Piggy would have to be Hermione Granger, of course.  Slightly hapless, but well meaning Ron Weasley would be best played by Fozzie Bear.  Meanwhile, completely hopeless Neville Longbottom would have Beaker taking his place.  Hagrid was an easy pick: Sweetums (the large, brown, hairy Muppet perhaps best remembered for running after the other Muppets in The Muppet Movie after being mistakenly left behind).

We couldn’t decide on who should play Voldemort, but I voted for Gonzo.  (He’s done villains before since he’s Darth Vader in the Muppets Star Wars sets that Disney sells.)  Of course, he’d be Weirdomort with a huge shnozz instead of serpent-like slits.  As we debated this, NHL had a stroke of genius.  The Dementors, he declared, should be Gonzo’s chickens.  (Instead of the Dementor’s Kiss, the Cluckmentor’s Peck?)  Mind you, NHL is still on Prisoner of Azkaban so he doesn’t know how the Dementors will align with Voldemort.

We’re still conflicted who Dumbledore should be.  Jim Henson is a big possibility, but I think he should be a Muppet figure.  It would have to be a "wise" figure to which Harry…. I mean Kermit Potter goes to for help.  Maybe Dr. Bunsen Honeydew?

The identity of Severus Snape was another problem until I stumbled upon a site that did their own Muppet-Harry Potter mashup.  (Sadly, I’ve lost the link to that site.)  Snape is a proud individual who sees himself as better than rabble like Harry and his friends.  Thus, Sam the American Eagle is perfect for the job.  Lupid was an easy pick: Rowlf the dog.  For Dobby the House Elf, we chose Rizzo the Rat.  Finally, Professor Trelawney was thought of as the Swedish Chef (even though he’d be playing a female character), but then I figured that Janice would be a better fit.

What Muppet would you cast in a Muppet-Harry Potter mashup and as which Harry Potter character?

Geeky Zodiac Fun

A couple of days ago, ThinkGeek tweeted this (highly accurate) Geek Zodiac.

Geek Zodiac

(Credit Where Credit Is Due: This is from TheGeekZodiac.com.)

At first, we had some fun with this, finding out where each of us fall in the zodiac.  I’m a Superhero, B’s a Undead/Slayer, NHL’s a Time Traveler, and JSL’s a Treasure Hunter.  (So *that’s* why he loves humming the Indiana Jones theme song!)  After figuring out our extended family, though, we moved on to other things.

Until, that is, WiredGeekDad tweeted about President Obama being a wizard.  They were referring to this totally non-photoshopped photo.

Obama Wizard

This photo was taken by AP’s Carolyn Kaster.  She got the angling just right so that it looked like Obama was summoning a fireball.  (I don’t think debate moderators will allow that as a rebuttal, Mr. President… Then again, how would they stop him?)

Suddenly, the geek zodiac sprung back to my mind.  Could it be?  A quick check of Wikipedia (for President Obama’s birth year) and the Geek Zodiac revealed: President Obama is a Wizard in the Geek Zodiac.  Surely, this isn’t a coincidence.  (Obligatory: Don’t call me Shirley.)

Being a geek, I couldn’t let it end at this.  I suddenly had to know just what each of the Presidents’ Geek Zodiacs were.  Here are the results.

Presidential Zodiac

(Click to expand that. )

Some interesting items of note:

  • James Madison was the only Time Traveler President.
  • Grover Cleveland was the only Astronaut President.
  • The book and movie were wrong.  Abraham Lincoln wasn’t a Slayer (Vampire Hunter), but a Pirate.  (Eyepatch and stovepipe hat? Why not?)
  • Both Bill Clinton and George W Bush were Ninja/Samurai.  (No political commentary intended.)
  • The father of our country (aka George Washington)? A Robot.  I’m betting he was a Presi-bot built by Ben Franklin.
  • We have had 3 Alien presidents: Martin Van Buren, Dwight D Eisenhower, and James "Face Hugger" Monroe.
  • The three most popular groups for Presidents to come from (with 5 each): Wizards, Pirates, and Treasure Hunters.

What Geek Zodiac sign are you?

Geeky Upgrade

IMG_20120803_073708_watermarkedThis past week has been quite the geeky upgrade.  It all started on Friday.  Ok, technically that’s not “this week”, but it is within the past 7 days.  As part of my birthday present, I received three Lego minifigures that I’m going to use to create some Lego tie clips.

On Saturday, the boys and I watched some Bean episodes.  I had previously shown the boys Mr. Bean’s Vacation and they had fallen in love with Rowan Atkinson’s antics.  I figured that they’d like the Bean shorts more and I was right.  They laughed non-stop at Bean in a hospital (hand stuck in a teapot), Bean visiting a school (losing his pants in a changing room and tracking them down), and more.  Every place Bean went, chaos seemed to follow and Bean would either be the cause or would come up with an extremely creative (and unusual)

Sunday was the day that I took apart my laptop to fix a problem deep inside.  Though I believe I fixed that problem, it turned out that the power cord was faulty too.  A replacement has been ordered and is on its way.  Still, the lessons learned from that operation were well worth the effort.

Sunday night, I introduced NHL to Back To The Future.  He’s been hooked since that night.  We watched BTTF parts 2 and 3 and he is in love with the entire trilogy.  I was so proud of NHL when, after Marty was apparently shot and killed, he guessed that Marty had copied a scene from A Fistful of Dollars starring Clint Eastwood (a scene shown in the previous movie) and had a metal plate under his shirt.  He could barely contain himself as the third movie reached its climax.  Check that, he didn’t contain himself.  He was up off the couch, jumping up and down, and cheering Doc Brown and Marty McFly on.

Finally, I had a small geeky upgrade of my own.  For years, I’ve heard people say how great the Doctor Who series is.  I meant to watch it, but never seemed to get a chance.  With six seasons available on Netflix, though, I decided it was time to watch.  I’m only three episodes in, but I love it already.  The weirdness, time travel, and plot lines have me wanting more.  Given that I still have 80 episodes to watch before I catch up, I should be good for some time.

Have you or your kids tried any new geeky pursuits?

Laptop Surgery

On Sunday, I laid my patient down on the operating table and, having planned the procedure out, began opening him up.  No, I didn’t just switch day jobs to become a surgeon.  I was trying to fix my laptop.

You see, for the past few weeks, I’ve been having problems with my laptop charging.  I’d plug it in only to have it not recognize that it was plugged in.  I would need to wiggle my laptop around, changing positions until it finally realized that it didn’t need to run from battery.  One day, I illuminated the laptop’s power plug with a flashlight while gently pressing on said plug with a piece of plastic.  The plug wiggled like a child’s tooth that was getting ready to pop out.  I figured this was the problem, so I steeled myself for some laptop surgery to repair it.

Now, I may be "techy", but I’ve never done anything like this.  I’ve built my own desktop computers, but that’s easy.  This was a *LAPTOP* computer.  Completely different, right?  Super hard to get into, right?

Turns out, it isn’t that hard.  Luckily, HP had all of the instructions on their website.

The first step was to remove the battery.  This is very important.  Not only can’t you reach certain screws with the battery in, but you don’t want any chance of electricity coursing through the patient’s veins… I mean circuits while you’re handling his electronic guts.  That would be bad for both doctor and patient!

laptopsurgery1

After this, I took apart the patient bit by bit.  Optical drive, hard drive, WLAN card, keyboard, and even the screen came off.

laptopsurgery2

Soon, I was left with just a bare circuit board on a base.

laptopsurgery3

A quick look revealed the problem.  The plug is supposed to sit between two metal plates which hold it in place.  However one plate was cracked.  I fashioned a quick "sling" out of duct tape, but Google searches revealed that duct tape can melt inside the hot environs of a laptop.  Obviously, that would be bad for the patient, so I asked for a second opinion and got a recommendation of electrical tape.  Leaving the patient on the operating table, JSL and I ran over to Home Depot.  They confirmed that electrical tape will lose adhesion, but not melt.  One purchase later and my laptop was taped up.

laptopsurgery4

Now, I just needed to put it back together without losing any pieces.

laptopsurgery5

Here’s a hint: If you ever do this, be very careful of EVERY SINGLE PIECE YOU TOUCH.  You never know when you might turn over a piece, hear *clink* *clink* and then realize that you didn’t take one of the tiny screws out of that piece.  And once you hear the *click* *clink*, that screw is lost forever.  Luckily, I was able to transplant a screw from another part to replace the missing screw.  (That area had 3 screws holding it in place.  I think it can make due with 2 instead.)

Finally, my laptop was back together.  But was the patient well?

laptopsurgery6

The patient survived!  There were cheers all around, but I realized we weren’t out of the woods yet.  I had to try plugging in the patient.  Thankfully, this worked beautifully.  The patient was quickly recharging and gaining (battery) strength.

However, in many surgeries, there are often complications after the surgery is over and done with.  In this case, the patient began exhibiting the same weird "not charging" behavior after being sent home (aka being taken downstairs to the couch).  But it would charge some times.

I was about the deem the surgery a failure when I noticed that the power cord worked when it was bent at a certain angle.  Straighten it out and it didn’t work at all.  (Carefully bending/unbending while keeping the plug still eliminated the possibility of the laptop itself being the cause.)  So there was a secondary issue at play.

For now, I’m prescribing keeping the cord bent until a suitable replacement can be purchased.  In the meantime, this was a very valuable learning experience.  Even the techiest of us have to do things for the first time.  When you haven’t done something before, it can seem impossible and scary.  But if you plan it out and are very careful, you might just surprise yourself with what you can do!

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