Because the fourth is strong today, here’s a video from Red Side comparing the sizes of various starships and planets in the Star Wars universe. The video begins with small ships, before progressing to giant city-sized ones, then on to the planets as compared to the size of earth. I
To celebrate Star Wars Day, here are several unearthed audio recording outtakes from Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, and James Earl Jones recording lines for a 1-800 number that was set up way back in 1979 so fans could call and listen to pre-recorded messages about Star Wars. That’s fun, why
Our sun: in the grand scheme of stars in the universe, there’s really nothing that special about it. It’s only special to us and our life here on earth. It’s just an average yellow dwarf, the sort of sun that would float under everyone’s radar in high school. And this
This is The Galactic Menagerie, a fan-made trailer from Youtubers Curious Refugee of what a Wes Anderson directed Star Wars movie might look like. It…looks about right. Lots of symmetry, very dry. Also, just for the record, I would watch it. Probably a bootleg filmed in the theater with a
This is a visualization from RED SIDE comparing the relative speeds of various spaceships in the Star Wars universe. It was very well made, including the background. What’s your favorite ship? Mine’s the Eagle-5. “The RV from Spaceballs?” THEY SHOULD HAVE INCLUDED IT.
Can you even call a house a home without a Star Wars theme throughout tying it all together? You cannot, and to help add a little Star Wars flair to your flooring comes this Boba Fett escaping the Great Pit of Carkoon optical illusion run from Swanlion (completely unlicensed, and
In this cleverly edited video by Youtuber eli_handle_b․wav (previously), everyone’s favorite deficient boss Michael Scott finds himself working aboard the Normandy during the events of Mass Effect II. Is he any better suited for bossing in space than on Earth? Does a cow have four stomachs? “Yes?” No — the
Note: Much larger version HERE in case you’re in the market for a new desktop background. Captured by astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy using two different telescopes, this is a composite shot of February 5th’s Snow Moon. Andrew captured the 148 megapixel image with the idea of highlighting the hidden colors of